Across the country, there are thousands of archeological
sites, historical places and ancient cities, as well as
magnificent scenic spots and natural wonders. Since Roman
times, Asiatic Turkey has been known as both "Asia
Minor" and "Anatolia". The European part
of Turkey is called Thrace.
These lands have been continually inhabited since the
Stone Age. Because Anatolia is located like a natural bridge
between continents, no other country in the world has acquired
so many historical treasures.
The Aegean Sea, the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus form
the western boundaries of the Anatolian peninsula. Beside
the Dardanelles are the ruins of the famous city of Troy — a
memento of thousands of years of history- and on the shores
of the Bosphorus rises Istanbul in all her beauty and splendor,
keeping the memories of her past alive.
There are many legends related to the foundation of Istanbul.
According to the best known one, around 650 BC, a sea tribe
from the Aegean left their city Megara and began to look
for a new homeland under the leadership of Byzas.
According to the customs of the age, before any such undertaking
an oracle had to be consulted. The oracle in the Apollo
temple in the famous town of Delphi advised Byzas to settle
opposite the "land of the blind". The migrants
searched for such a land for a long time. When they came
to the headland of present-day Istanbul, they were delighted
with the fertile lands and the advantages offered by the
natural harbor, the Golden Horn. They also noticed the
people living across the stretch of water. The migrants
decided that those people must have been blind if they
could not appreciate the opportunities of this ideal place
and settled on the opposite shore, and they were convinced
that they had found the land the oracle had described.
Excavations have revealed finds dating back to the 3rd
millennium BC at the tip of the Golden Horn and on the
Asian side.
The city of Byzantium existed as an independent state,
but succumbed from time to time to the superior powers
ruling the region. The acropolis of the city stood where
Topkapi Palace stands today. It had a well-protected harbor,
still used today, in the Golden Horn. A fortified city
wall starting here surrounded the city and reached the
Sea of Marmara. Byzantium was an important seaport and
a center of trade under the Roman Empire. However, it sided
with the wrong party during a struggle for the throne in
191 AD, and after a siege that lasted two years, it was
conquered and razed by the Roman Emperor Septimius Severus.
The same emperor later reconstructed the city on a larger
scale. New city walls were built and the city was adorned
with new buildings.
By the 4th century AD the Roman Empire had expanded considerably,
and the capital Rome lost its central position in the empire.
While looking for another city as his new capital, the
Emperor Constantine the Great finally chose Istanbul, realizing
the strategic position of the city at the intersection
of sea and land routes and the importance of its perfect
climate.
New city walls were constructed, enlarging the city again,
and numerous temples, governments, palaces, baths and a
hippodrome were built .
Finally in 330 AD it was officially declared . the capital
of the Roman Empire. Many ceremonies were organized for
the occasion, which marked the beginning of a golden age.
Although the city was initially called the Second Rome
or New Rome, these names were soon forgotten to be replaced
by "Byzantium" and in later ages by "Constantinopolis",
while the people favored the name "Polis".
The successors of Constantine the Great continued to improve
and beautify the city by building new avenues, aqueducts,
monuments and edifices. The first churches in the city
were also built after the time of Constantine.
The Roman Empire was divided into two in 395 AD. Although
the Western Empire collapsed in the 5th century, the Eastern
Empire, which was administered from the capital, Istanbul
survived for over 1,000 years afterwards.
This empire was named as the Byzantine Empire by modern
historians. Byzantium had a very interesting history, because
its development was influenced both by the earlier Anatolian
civilizations and, more importantly, by Christianity; its
laws and rules were adopted from Rome, but its pomp and
ceremonies from the East.
The city was enlarged once more with the erection of new
city walls in the first half of the 5th century. The magnificent
city walls on the landward side that we see today were
built by Emperor Theodosrus If. They are 6,492 m long.
In the 6th century, the city, that now had a population
of over half a million, lived through another golden age
during the reign of Emperor Justinian. The famous Hagia
Sophia is the work ot this emperor.
The later history of the Byzantine Empire and its capital
Istanbul is filled with palace and church intrigues and
Persian and Arab attacks. The throne frequently changed
hands after bloody feuds between royal families. Between
726-842, all kinds of religious images were outlawed in
the city during the iconoclastic movement.This led to much
destruction (and much concealment) of paintings and statues.
The Latin invasion was a dark page in the history of Istanbul. It started with
the invasion of the city by the armies of the Fourth Crusade in 1204, and for
many years all the churches, monasteries and monuments in the city were robbed
of their treasures. Although the Byzantines regained control of the city in
1261, Istanbul never fully recovered its former wealth.
increasing threats of the expanding Ottoman Empire finally
came to an climax when, following a siege of fifty-three
days in 1453, the city was captured by the Turks. The large
caliber cannons of Sultan Mehmet, the Conqueror, used for
the first time in history, were one of the factors that
enabled the Turks to penetrate the city walls of Istanbul.
Another factor contributing to the conquest was that the
Byzantine Empire had reached the end of its natural life
span.
Mehmet, who was only 21 years old then, moved the capital
of the Ottoman Empire to Istanbul, increased the population
of the city by bringing in immigrants from different regions
of the country, and started to reconstruct the deserted
and wrecked city. He granted freedom of worship and social
rights to the former inhabitants.
It was thanks to the rights granted by Mehmet that the
Patriarchate of the Greek Orthodox is even today located
in Istanbul. Some of the dilapidated churches in the city,
including Hagia Sophia, were renovated and converted into
mosques.
Istanbul was fully reconstructed within a short period
after it was conquered by the Turks. A century later, Turkish
art had left its mark on the city, and domes and minarets
dominated the skyline.
In the 16th century, when the Ottoman Sultans assumed
the office of Caliphate, (chief civil and religious authority
of Islam) Istanbul became the center of the Islamic world
as well. The city was totally reconstructed and acquired
a magical ambiance under the sultans. Although no wars
featured in Istanbul's history during this time, frequent
fires repeatedly devastated large sections of the city.
The Imperial Topkapi Palace built on the site of the old
acropolis commands an extraordinarily beautiful view of
the Bosphorus and the Golden Horn. As a result of closer
contacts with the West, mosques and palaces in European
style were built along the shores of the Bosphorus by the
19th century.
These numerous palaces, built in a very short time, also
symbolize the decline of another empire. For at the end
of World War I Istanbul witnessed the collapse of the Ottoman
Empire.
The Ottoman Empire was broken up and while the internal
and external enemies were fighting among themselves for
a larger share of the spoils, one of the valiant commanders
of the Turkish army was engaged in a struggle on behalf
of the Turkish Nation.
This national hero, Mustafa Kemal, founded the Republic
of Turkey after a war of independence that lasted more
than four years.
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk assumed the Presidency of this first
republic in Asia, and changed the course of his country
toward the principles of western civilization. The Sultan
and his family were exiled, the Caliphate was abolished,
the Latin alphabet was adopted, the fez and veil were outlawed,
and women were granted voting rights.
By the time Ataturk died in 1938, the Republic of Turkey
was already recognized as a member of the western world.
The relocation of the capital to Ankara never reduced the
importance of Istanbul, and this incomparable city continued
to maintain its enchanting appearance and life style.
The Republic of Turkey has now proceeded for 75 years
on the path of reason, based on scientific thought and
facts, that was pointed out by Ataturk.
The people of the country are determined to continue their
march in the direction of contemporary civilization. The
next millennium will be an even more prosperous age for
the secular and democratic republic. The citizens of the
country will follow in the footsteps of Ataturk as individuals
who are independent, enlightened, unfettered in life and
religion, at liberty in prayer and education, free in will,
and loyal to the country.