What is now called Asian
Istanbul was probably
inhabited by people as early
as 3000 BC. Eventually, in
the 7th century, Greek
colonists led by King Byzas
established the colony of
Byzantium, the Greek name
for a city on the Bosphorus. Byzas chose
the spot after consulting an
oracle of Delphi who told
him to settle across from
the "land of the blind
ones." Indeed, Byzas
concluded, earlier settlers
must have been deprived of
their sight to have
overlooked this superb
location at the mouth of the Bosphorus strait. This
proved an auspicious
decision by Byzas, as
history has shown Istanbul's
location important far
beyond what these early
Greek settlers might
possibly have conceived.
Byzas gave his name to the
city: Byzantium.
In the early 100's BC, it
became part of the Roman
Empire and in 306 AD,
Emperor Constantine the
Great made Byzantium capital
of the entire Roman Empire.
From that point on, the city
was known as Constantinople.
The
mid 400's AD was a time of
enormous upheaval in the
empire. Barbarians conquered
the western Roman Empire
while the Eastern, also
called the Byzantine Empire,
kept Constantinople as its
capital. In 532 during the
reign of Justinian I,
antigovernment riots destroyed the
city. It was rebuilt, and
outstanding structures such
as Hagia Sophia stand as
monuments to the heights Byzantine culture
reached.
The attribute that made the
city so desirable, its
incomparable location for
trade and transport between
three continents, was also
its nemesis. For the next
several hundred years
Persians, Arabs, nomadic peoples, and
members of the Fourth
Crusade (who for a time
governed the city) attacked
Constantinople.
Finally, weakened by almost
constant battle, the Ottoman Turks lead by
Sultan Mehmet II conquered
Constantinople in 1453.
Renamed Istanbul, it became
the third and last capital
of the Ottoman Empire. It was
the nerve center for
military campaigns that were
to enlarge the Ottoman Empire dramatically. By the mid
1500's, Istanbul, with a
population of almost half a
million, was a major
cultural, political, and
commercial center. Ottoman rule continued
until it was defeated in WWI
and Istanbul was occupied by
the allies.
When the Republic of Turkey was born in 1923 after the
War of Independence, Kemal
Ataturk moved the
capital to the city of Ankara. But Istanbul has
continued to expand
dramatically; today its
population is approximately
13 million and increases at
an estimated 700,000
immigrants per year.
Industry has expanded even
as tourism has grown. It
continues to be a city that
creates its own history at
the intersection where both
Continents meet.
There are many interesting museums, castles, palaces, mosques, churches, and historic
hammams. Some of the
interesting districts of the
city are:
Haydarpasa,
Uskudar,
Eyup,
Galata,
Perapalas, Ortaköy, Bosphorus,
Taksim, Eminönü and Sultanahmet.
Princess Islands are a
popular summer resort for
local people.