The first of the seven hills on the promontory has been the most important
and dynamic part of the city in all ages. When the city
was first founded, the acropolis was a typical Mediterranean
trading center surrounded by city walls. This trading center
was enlarged and rebuilt during Roman times. The most prominent
buildings and monuments of the Roman era were built in
the vicinity of the Hippodrome. Very few relics of these
works have endured to the present day.
The imperial palace, known as the "Great Palace",
used to spread over an area extending from
the Hippodrome down to the seashore. Only the
mosaic floor panel of a large hall remains
from this palace today. The Augusteion, the
most important square of the city, used to
be here, and between the square and the main
avenue there was the Millairium victory arch.
The road used to extend as far as Rome and
the stone marking the first kilometer was located
here. The baths, temples, religious, cultural,
administrative and social centers were all
in this district. The area maintained its importance
in the Byzantine and Turkish eras. Therefore
some of the most important monuments of Istanbul such as the Hagia Sophia,
Sultan Ahmet Mosque, the Museum of Turkish and Islamic Art and the Basilica
Cistern are all located around the Hippodrome.
The main streets in the city (those leading down to the harbor and
those extending toward the city walls in the west) started
at the Hippodrome and followed the slopes of the hills.
The streets were lined with business establishments and
mansions. The side streets were narrow and some were stepped.
Some of the main streets had two-galleried sidewalks. There
were spacious squares along the route and the side roads
forking from these squares led to the city gates. The main
avenue was called the Mese, and Via Egnetia, the road to
Rome, started at the Golden Gate (Altmkapi).
Hippodrome means square for horses. The Hippodrome was built by the Roman Emperor
Septimius Severus towards the end of the 2nc* century and it was extended to
an immense size by Constantine the Great. Some historians claim that it could
seat thirty thousand spectators, while others put the figure at sixty thousand.
The main attraction was the two or four-horse chariot races. In Roman and Byzantine
times, the Hippodrome served as the city's main meeting, entertainment and
sports center until the 10tn century. Like many of the other monuments in the
city, it lost its importance with the Latin invasion in 1204. Besides the chariot
races and gladiator fights with wild animals, there were performances by musicians,
dancers and acrobats. There were many public holidays during Roman times to
allow opportunities for all these activities.
The Hippodrome was shaped like a gigantic "U" and the imperial box,
built like a balcony with four bronze horses on its roof, was situated
on the eastern side. The sand-covered surface of the Hippodrome was
divided into two by a low wall around which the chariots raced. On
this wall stood monuments brought here from different corners of
the empire and the statues of famous riders and their horses. Successful
chariot drivers were very wealthy and could have anything they wanted.
Originally there were 4 teams of drivers whose supporters' clubs
formed large quarrelling factions and competed for position and prestige
in the city. From time to time politics intermingled with the races, and the
clashes between competing forces turned into bloody massacres.
The original ground level of the Hippodrome was 4 or 5 meters lower than the
present surface. Three monuments have remained to our day: the Egyptian Obelisk,
the Serpent Column and the Walled Obelisk. In the Turkish era, too, festivals,
^ceremonies and performances used to be organized here. The Palace of Ibrahim
Pasa opposite Sultan Ahmet Mosque is the sole example of the imposing private
residences of the 16th century. This elegant building now houses the Museum
of Turkish and Islamic Art.
Only the round southern end of the vast Hippodrome has survived.
This is a brick structure decorated with tall vaults. In later ages,
all of the stone blocks and columns of the Hippodrome were used for
building material. The ruins in the park to the right of the entrance
to the Hippodrome belong to 4th" and
5th century private palaces, and a little further along there are the remains
of the Byzantine Hagia Euphemia church.