Growing up a short drive from a port, my family's favorite vacation has always been cruises. Since my first one as a baby, I've set sail nearly 30 times.
21.01.2024 - 00:23 / euronews.com / Rebecca Ann Hughes
Istanbul, a cacophonous metropolis that straddles East and West, is home to more than 3,000 mosques.
One of these, Hagia Sophia, is the city’s star attraction. It began life as a Christian church, was converted into a mosque in 1453, to a museum in 1935 and then again to a mosque in 2020.
Until this week, entry to the mosaic-spangled religious building was free. Now, authorities have introduced a €25 fee to help fund its conservation.
While Hagia Sophia, a microcosm of the city’s history, should still be on your travel itinerary, the new charge could be motivation to explore some of Istanbul’s lesser-visited mosques.
The approach to Hagia Sophia is underwhelming: heavy anti-terrorism barricades and security scanners obscure the view of the building while an entry queue snakes around the square in front.
But the time taken waiting can be well spent swatting up on the structure’s aeons of history. When Emperor Constantinople made Istanbul (then christened Constantinople) his Byzantine capital in 330AD, he brought with him Christianity.
The emperor’s first church and a second church on the site perished, but the third church dating from 537AD is the basis of what remains today.
With the Ottoman conquest of the city in 1453, the Orthodox church was converted by Sultan Mehmed II into a mosque with mainly superficial alterations.
The essential structure - a vast domed central space flanked by semi-domes - was preserved. It became an architectural paradigm emulated in Ottoman mosques for a millennium after.
The swathes of glittering mosaics depicting figures from the Bible were plastered over while those outside in the vestibule were left uncovered.
Upon conversion to a museum under the new secular Turkish Republic in 1935, elements including the marble floor decorations and mosaics were brought to light again.
Much of the interior’s original mystique has been erased by modern electric lighting. The scent of incense is replaced by socks ripe from a day of sightseeing. The sacred space’s tranquillity is interrupted by the crush of visitors.
But there is still wonder to be found in the soft golden tiles overhead, radiant from the sunlight that streams through the forty small windows encircling the base of the dome.
The lower portions of the walls are enriched with panels and pillars of sumptuous green, dark red and grey veined marble.
The 1,500-year-old building, which is a designated World Heritage Site, has suffered over the centuries from earthquakes, poor conservation and now some 3.5 million annual visitors.
Turkish authorities say the new entry fee - as well as the installation of security cameras, fire detection and emergency communication systems - are part of recommendations by UNESCO to ‘streamline’ visitor
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Tourists can’t visit Hagia Sophia for free anymore. Since Monday, foreign tourists have had to pay an admission fee of €25 (about $27) to enter the mosque and UNESCO World Heritage Site, according to Turkey’s Ministry of Culture and Tourism.
Last November, Venice authorities unveiled a pilot program for their long-mooted plan to charge day-trippers to visit the city.
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