Chora Museum, Istanbul

Chora Museum, Istanbul

Chora Museum, Istanbul

The Chora Museum, also known as the Kariye Museum or Church of the Holy Savior (or St. Savior) in Chora, is a Byzantine church in the Edirnekapı neighborhood near the Byzantine walls, about 3 miles from Sultanahmet (Hagia Sophia, Blue Mosque, Topkapi Palace, Hippodrome etc.)

The building itself is unassuming, you might walk past without even noticing it. Please don’t! In my humble opinion, it’s one of the best sites in Istanbul, and that’s saying a lot. Inside is a collection of the best Byzantine art in Istanbul and among the best anywhere.

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Gallipoli

In honor of Memorial Day here in the U.S., an encore posting ~

the Gallipoli Peninsula and the Dardanelles Strait

I’m currently reading a book, The Daughters of Mars by Thomas Keneally (author of Schindler’s List). I can’t give it an enthusiastic recommendation (a solid B, based on the grading system of my book club) but if you’re interested in a unique perspective on the First World War, do check it out. At the center of the story are two young Australian nurses, also sisters, who volunteer early in the war.

They are initially posted to a hospital ship treating casualties of the prolonged Gallipoli campaign. Here is the relevance for this blog. Gallipoli is a peninsula in European Turkey, on the northern side of the Dardanelles, the straight that connects the Aegean Sea to the Sea of Marmara, which connects to the Bosphorus Straight, which connects to the Black Sea. It has been a coveted waterway for millenia. During World War I, the Allies, namely the U.K., France and Russia, sought entry to the Dardanelles as a supply route to Russia, with access to Istanbul, capital of the Ottoman Empire, a strong motive as well. The Central Powers – Germans, Austro-Hungarians and Ottomans – blocked and mined the straight and held off the Allies at Gallipoli.

ANZAC Cove, where the Australia New Zealand Army Corps landed on April 25, 1915

ANZAC Cove, where the Australia New Zealand Army Corps landed on April 25, 1915

After an initial British naval assault failed, fighting raged on land for eight months, from April 25 to mid December of 1915, when the Allies began retreating, having gained nothing. Allied and Turkish casualties together, including dead, wounded, and sick from rampant infectious disease, numbered over 500,000.

Ari Burnu Cemetery, Gallipoli

Ari Burnu Cemetery, Gallipoli

Australia and New Zealand remember their losses at Gallipoli (as well as those lost in other wars and peace keeping missions) on April 25th each year, ANZAC Day (ANZAC stands for Australia New Zealand Army Corps). The campaign was pivotal in the national identities of both countries.

Lone Pine Memorial and Cemetery, Gallipoli

Lone Pine Memorial and Cemetery, Gallipoli

Ataturk Monument and New Zealand Memorial at Chunuk Bair, Gallipoli

Ataturk Monument and New Zealand Memorial at Chunuk Bair, Gallipoli

Chunuk Bair battle site

Chunuk Bair battle site

Cape Helles Memorial, where British and French forces landed on April 25, 1915

Cape Helles Memorial, where British and French forces landed on April 25, 1915

Among Turks, Gallipoli is strongly associated with the birth of their independent Republic and is memorialized each March 18th, the anniversary of the defeat of the Allied naval attack. The father of modern Turkey, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, was a commander at Gallipoli and distinguished himself as a great leader there.

In 1934, Ataturk addressed the following to the ANZACs: “Those heroes who shed their blood and lost their lives … you are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us where they lie side by side here in this country of ours… You, the mothers who sent  sons from far away countries, wipe away your tears. Your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land, they have become our sons as well.” It’s inscribed on memorials at Gallipoli and in Canberra, Australia.

Turkish Memorial and Cemetery, Gallipoli

Turkish Memorial and Cemetery, Gallipoli

Canakkale Martyrs Monument, Gallipoli

Canakkale Martyrs Monument, Gallipoli

Canakkale, a short ferry ride across the Dardanelles, makes a good hub for visiting Gallipoli. The Gallipoli National Park encompasses dozens of memorials, cemeteries and tombs spread out over 125 square miles. A few hours is enough time to see some of the memorials and soak up the solemn atmosphere and beautiful scenery. Those with special interest can spend days walking the peninsula. Even a short visit leaves a lasting impression.

It’s Fig Season in Turkey!

photo by Capucine Fachot-Charbonneau, The Istanbul Guide

photo by Capucine Fachot-Charbonneau, The Istanbul Guide

As you walk down almost any street in Istanbul, save for the main arteries, there’s a distinct perfume of late summer afternoons. The figs have arrived and so has their sweet, heady aroma. Though dried figs are available all year round in Istanbul, there’s nothing like biting into a fresh one, as its perfume hits the back of the throat, and the crunchy seeds heighten the pleasure derived from its sweet chewiness.

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Love Yogurt? Thank Turkey.

There is a Turkish saying, “Zemheride yoğurt isteyen, cebinde inek taşır” – “The one who wants yogurt in midwinter carries a cow in his pocket.” We’re lucky to be in the heart of summer, as our pockets aren’t big enough for cows. In fact, Istanbul natives know that yogurt is the ideal antidote to the city’s sweltering heat. With its powerful health properties and addictive taste, yogurt is a fermented friend to rely on: slurp down some cooling yogurt soup, dollop it on the side of bulgur pilav, drizzle it with garlic over crispy mantı, or sip it in the form of salty ayran.
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Foto Friday Favs

Dhofar, Oman

Dhofar, Oman

Amra Castle, Jordan

Amra Castle, Jordan

camel races, Oman

camel races, Oman

Chora Museum, Istanbul, Turkey

Chora Museum, Istanbul, Turkey

Deira, Dubai

Deira, Dubai

Ya'lla group at Karnak Temple in Luxor, Egypt

Ya’lla group at Karnak Temple in Luxor, Egypt

El Aqabat in Egypt's Western Desert

El Aqabat in Egypt’s Western Desert

Fez medina, Morocco

Fez medina, Morocco

Ibn Tulun Mosque, Cairo, Egypt

Ibn Tulun Mosque, Cairo, Egypt

on the Nile in Egypt

on the Nile in Egypt

Sinan the Architect

Suleymaniye Mosque, Istanbul, Turkey

Suleymaniye Mosque, Istanbul, Turkey

The great Ottoman architect Sinan had a long, illustrious career spanning most of the 16th century, the height of Ottoman power. His work pretty much set the tone for subsequent Ottoman architecture

Sinan’s parents were Christian Greeks and, as part of the system known as Devsirme, Sinan was taken as a young boy, converted to Islam and educated and trained to serve the empire. This system arose out of the practice of enslaving prisoners of war during the early years of the empire. By Sinan’s time, the system was meant as a way to balance power among the ruling classes by offering non-Turkic sons the opportunity to reach elevated positions.

Sinan was drafted into the elite Janissary corps of the sultan’s standing army.
There he served as a construction officer, working on bridges and fortifications.
In his extensive travels around the empire as a soldier he was exposed to many great buildings. He distinguished himself as a brilliant engineer and in 1538 was appointed by Sultan Suleyman the Magnificent as head royal architect. He served in that position until his death in 1588.

Sinan built over 360 buildings, including mosques, medersas (Koranic schools), mausoleums, hospitals, aqueducts, public baths, palaces and mansions. His mosque designs were influenced by the Hagia Sophia, with a hovering central dome and open, airy interiors. In his exteriors he used smaller domes and half-domes to draw the eye upwards to the central dome.

One of his first buildings was the Sehzade Mosque, built to mark the death of the sultan’s son.

Sehzade Mosque, Istanbul

Sehzade Mosque, Istanbul

Perhaps his best known building is the Suleymaniye Mosque, which commands a prominent spot overlooking the Bosphorus in Istanbul. Like many of Sinan’s mosques, Suleymaniye comprises a complex with schools, a hospital, baths, shops, a kitchen and stables, in addition to the mosque.

Suleymaniye Mosque, Istanbul

Suleymaniye Mosque, Istanbul

The Selimiye Mosque in Edirne was one of his late projects and is generally considered his masterpiece. It has some of the tallest minarets ever built and the dome equals that of Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia in diameter.

© Nexus7 - Selimiye Mosque Interior Photo

© Nexus7 – Selimiye Mosque Interior Photo

Sinan is buried in a modest tomb of his own design in a garden near the Suleymaniye Mosque.

Want to see some of Sinan’s work in person? Click here to see Turkey tours.

Foto Friday – Zoom 4

Chora Museum, Istanbul

Chora Museum, Istanbul

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Athens Acropolis

Athens Acropolis

Fez, Morocco

Fez, Morocco

Hagia Sophia, Istanbul

Hagia Sophia, Istanbul

Hagia Sophia, Istanbul

Hagia Sophia, Istanbul

Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Jerusalem - photo by Noam Chen, courtsey of Israel Ministry of Tourism

Church of the Holy Sepulchre, Jerusalem – photo by Noam Chen, courtsey of Israel Ministry of Tourism

Knossos Palace, Crete

Knossos Palace, Crete

Russian Orthodox Church of Mary Magdalene, Jerusalem - photo by Noam Chen courtesy of Israel Ministry of Tourism

Russian Orthodox Church of Mary Magdalene, Jerusalem – photo by Noam Chen courtesy of Israel Ministry of Tourism

Santorini, Greece

Santorini, Greece

Spice Bazaar, Istanbul

Spice Bazaar, Istanbul

Foto Friday – Zoom 3

Church of All Nations, Jerusalem - photo by Noam Chen, courtesy of Israel Ministry of Tourism

Church of All Nations, Jerusalem – photo by Noam Chen, courtesy of Israel Ministry of Tourism

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca

Hassan II Mosque, Casablanca

Chora Museum, Istanbul

Chora Museum, Istanbul

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Cienfuegos, Cuba

Bou Inania Madrasa, Fez

Bou Inania Madrasa, Fez

Hagia Sophia, Istanbul

Hagia Sophia, Istanbul

Havana, Cuba

Havana, Cuba

Holy Sephulchre, Jerusalem - photo by Noam Chen courtesy of Israel Ministry of Tourism

Holy Sephulchre, Jerusalem – photo by Noam Chen courtesy of Israel Ministry of Tourism

Chora Museum, Istanbul

Chora Museum, Istanbul

Hagia Sophia, Istanbul

Hagia Sophia, Istanbul

Knossos Palace, Crete

Knossos Palace, Crete