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Istanbul, TURKEY

Bosphorus Bridge
in Istanbul, connecting Europe (left) and Asia
(right)
Istanbul (Turkish:
İstanbul;
historically Byzantium and later
Constantinople; see the other names of
Istanbul) is the largest city of Turkey, the
largest city proper and second largest
metropolitan area in Europe, and the fourth
largest city proper in the world. The city
covers 27 districts of the Istanbul province. It
is located on the Bosphorus Strait and
encompasses the natural harbor known as the
Golden Horn, in the northwest of the country. It
extends both on the Europe (Thrace) and on the
Asia (Anatolia) side of the Bosphorus, and is
thereby the only metropolis in the world which
is situated on two continents. In its long
history, Istanbul served as the capital city of
the Roman Empire (330–395), the East Roman
(Byzantine) Empire (395–1204 and 1261–1453), the
Latin Empire (1204–1261), and the Ottoman Empire
(1453–1922). The city was chosen as joint
European Capital of Culture for 2010. The
historic areas of Istanbul were added to the
UNESCO World Heritage List in 1985.
In 2008, during the construction works of the
Yenikapı subway station and the Marmaray tunnel
at the historic peninsula on the European side,
a previously unknown Neolithic settlement dating
from circa 6500 BC has been discovered. The
first human settlement on the Anatolian side,
the Fikirtepe mound, is from the Copper Age
period, with artifacts dating from 5500–3500 BC.
In nearby Kadıköy (Chalcedon) a port
settlement dating back to the Phoenicians has
been discovered. Cape Moda in Chalcedon was the
first location which the Greek settlers from
Megara chose to colonize in 685 BC, prior to
colonizing Byzantion on the European side of the
Bosphorus under the command of King Byzas in 667
BC. Byzantion was established on the site of an
ancient port settlement named Lygos,
founded by Thracian tribes between the 13th and
11th centuries BC, along with the neighbouring
Semistra,
of which Plinius had mentioned in his
historical accounts. Only a few walls and
substructures belonging to Lygos have survived
to date, near the Seraglio Point (Turkish:
Sarayburnu),
where the famous Topkapı Palace now stands.
During the period of Byzantion, the Acropolis
used to stand where the Topkapı Palace stands
today.
After siding with Pescennius Niger against
the victorious Roman emperor Septimius Severus,
the city was besieged by the Romans and suffered
extensive damage in 196 AD. Byzantium was
rebuilt by Severus and quickly regained its
previous prosperity, being temporarily renamed
as Augusta Antonina by the emperor, in
honor of his son.
The location of Byzantium attracted
Constantine I in 324 after a prophetic dream was
said to have identified the location of the
city; but the true reason behind this prophecy
was probably Constantine's final victory over
Licinius at the Battle of Chrysopolis (Üsküdar)
on the Bosphorus, on 18 September, 324, which
ended the civil war between the Roman
Co-Emperors, and brought an end to the final
vestiges of the Tetrarchy system, during which
Nicomedia (present-day İzmit, 100 km (62 mi)
east of Istanbul) was the most senior Roman
capital city. Byzantium (now renamed as Nova
Roma which eventually became
Constantinopolis, i.e. "The City of
Constantine") was officially proclaimed the new
capital of the Roman Empire six years later, in
330. Following the death of Theodosius I in 395
and the permanent partition of the Roman Empire
between his two sons, Constantinople became the
capital of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire.
As well as being the centre of an imperial
dynasty, the unique position of Constantinople
at the centre of two continents made the city a
magnet for international commerce, culture and
diplomacy. The Byzantine Empire was distinctly
Greek in culture and became the centre of Greek
Orthodox Christianity, while its capital was
adorned with many magnificent churches,
including the Hagia Sophia, once the world's
largest cathedral.
The seat of the Patriarch of
Constantinople, spiritual leader of the Eastern
Orthodox Church, still remains in the Fener
(Greek: Phanar) district of Istanbul.
In 1204, the Fourth Crusade was launched to
capture Jerusalem, but had instead turned on
Constantinople, which was sacked and desecrated.
The city subsequently became the centre of the
Catholic Latin Empire, created by the crusaders
to replace the Orthodox Byzantine Empire, which
was divided into a number of splinter states, of
which the Empire of Nicaea was to recapture
Constantinople in 1261 under the command of
Michael VIII Palaeologus.
In the last decades of the Byzantine Empire,
the city had decayed as the Byzantine state
became increasingly isolated and financially
bankrupt, its population had dwindled to some
thirty or forty thousand people whilst large
sections remained uninhabited. Due to the ever
increasing inward turn the Byzantines took, many
facets of their surrounding empire were now
falling apart, leaving them vulnerable to
attack. Ottoman Turks began a strategy by which
they took selected towns and smaller cities over
time, enveloping Bursa in 1326, Nicomedia in
1337, Gallipoli in 1354, and finally Adrianople
in 1362. This essentially cut off Constantinople
from its main supply routes, strangling it
slowly.
On 29 May 1453, Sultan Mehmed II "the
Conqueror" captured Constantinople after a
53-day siege (during which the last
Roman/Byzantine emperor, Constantine XI, died
near the Porta Aurea while defending the city)
and proclaimed that Constantinople was now the
new capital of the Ottoman Empire. Sultan
Mehmed's first duty was to rejuvenate the city
economically, creating the Grand Bazaar and
inviting the fleeing Orthodox and Catholic
inhabitants to return. Captured prisoners were
freed to settle in the city whilst provincial
governors in Rumelia and Anatolia were ordered
to send four thousand families to settle in the
city, whether Muslim, Christian or Jew, to form
a unique cosmopolitan society. The Sultan also
endowed the city with various architectural
monuments, including the Topkapı Palace and the
Eyüp Sultan Mosque. Religious foundations were
established to fund the construction of grand
imperial mosques (such as the Fatih Mosque which
was built on the spot where the Church of the
Holy Apostles once stood), adjoined by their
associated schools, hospitals and public baths.
Suleiman the Magnificent's reign of the Ottoman
Empire from 1520 to 1566 was a period of great
artistic and architectural achievements. The
famous architect Sinan designed many mosques and
other grand buildings in the city, while Ottoman
arts of ceramics and calligraphy also
flourished
Istanbul is
located in the north-west Marmara Region of
Turkey. It encloses the southern Bosphorus which
places the city on two continents—the western
portion of Istanbul is in Europe, while the
eastern portion is in Asia. The city boundaries
cover a surface area of 1,830.92 square
kilometres (707 sq mi), while the metropolitan
region, or the Province of Istanbul, covers
6,220 square kilometres (2,402 sq mi).
Architecture
Throughout its long
history, Istanbul has acquired a reputation for
being a cultural and ethnic melting pot. As a
result, there are many historical mosques,
churches, synagogues, palaces, castles and
towers to visit in the city. Some of these
historical structures, which draw millions to
the city every year, reflect the heart and soul
of Istanbul.
Ancient Greek
The famous Maiden's
(Leander's) Tower, one of the symbols of
Istanbul, was originally built by the ancient
Athenian general Alcibiades in 408 BC to control
the movements of the Persian ships in the
Bosphorus strait.
Roman
The most important
monuments of Roman architecture in the city
include the Column of Constantine (Turkish:
Çemberlitaş),
which was erected in 330 by Constantine the
Great for marking the declaration of the new
capital city of the Roman Empire. The
Mazulkemer Aqueduct, the Valens Aqueduct,
the Column of the Goths at the Seraglio
Point, the Milion which served for
calculating the distances between Constantinople
and other cities of the Roman Empire, and the
Hippodrome of Constantinople which was built
following the model of the Circus Maximus in
Rome are other Roman era structures in the city.
Construction of the Walls of Constantinople
began under Constantine the Great, who enlarged
the previously existing walls of Byzantium in
order to defend the new Roman capital city which
quickly grew following its proclamation as Nova
Roma. A new set of walls was built further west
during the reign of Theodosius II, and rebuilt
after an earthquake in 447 in their current
shape.
Byzantine
The early Byzantine
architecture followed the classical Roman model
of domes and arches, but further improved these
architectural concepts, as evidenced with the
Hagia Sophia, which is the largest structure on
Sultanahmet Square in the Eminönü district. The
Hagia Sophia was designed by Isidorus and
Anthemius as the third church to rise on this
location, between 532 and 537, following the
Nika riots (532) during which the second church
was destroyed (the first church, known as the
Megala Ekklessia ("Great Church") was
inaugurated by Constantius II in 360; the second
church was inaugurated by Theodosius II in 405,
while the third and current one was inaugurated
by Justinian in 537). The Church of Saints
Sergius and Bacchus (commonly known as the
Little Hagia Sophia), which was the first
church built by Justinian in Constantinople and
edificed between 527 and 536, had earlier
signaled such an improvement in the design of
domed buildings, which require complex solutions
for carrying the structure. The present-day
Hagia Irene (which was originally built by
Constantine in the 4th century, but was later
enlarged by Justinian in the 6th century) and
the Basilica Cistern are also from this period.
The most important
churches which were built after the Byzantines
recovered Constantinople from the Latin
Crusaders in 1261 include the Pammakaristos
Church and Chora Church. Also in this period,
the Genoese Podestà of Galata, Montano de
Marinis, built the Palazzo del Comune
(1316), an identical copy of the San Giorgio
Palace in Genoa, which still stands in ruins on
a parallel side street to the north of Bankalar
Caddesi (Banks Street) in Galata, together with
its adjacent buildings and numerous Genoese
houses from the early 1300s. The Genoese also
built the Galata Tower, which they named as
Christea Turris (Tower of Christ), at the
highest point of the citadel of Galata, in 1348.
Ottoman
The Ottoman Turks
built the Anadoluhisarı on the Asian side of the
Bosphorus in 1394, and the Rumelihisarı at the
opposite (European) shore, in 1452, a year
before the conquest of Constantinople. The main
purpose of these castles, armed with the long
range Balyemez (Faule Metze)
cannons, was to block the sea traffic of the
Bosphorus and prevent the support ships from the
Genoese colonies on the Black Sea ports, such as
Caffa, Sinop, and Amasra, from reaching
Constantinople and helping the Byzantines during
the Turkish siege of the city. The first mosque
on the European side of Istanbul was built
inside the Rumeli Castle in 1452.
Following the
Ottoman conquest of the city, Sultan Mehmed II
initiated a wide scale reconstruction plan,
which included the construction of grand
buildings such as the Topkapı Palace, Grand
Bazaar and the Yedikule (Seven Towers) Castle
which guarded the main entrance gate of the
city, the Porta Aurea (Golden Gate). The
first grand mosque which was built in the city
proper was the Eyüp Sultan Mosque in around
1459. The mosque was built on the site of the
grave of Abu Ayyub al-Ansari, a companion of the
Prophet Muhammad who had died outside the land
walls of Constantinople (walls of Theodosius II)
in 669, during the early skirmishes which
preluded the Arab siege (674-678) to take the
city. The first imperial mosque inside the city
walls was the Fatih Mosque (1470) which was
built on the site of the Church of the Holy
Apostles, an important Byzantine church
originally edificed in the time of Constantine
the Great. Many other imperial mosques were
built in the following centuries, such as the
famous Süleymaniye Mosque (1557) which was
ordered by Suleiman the Magnificent and designed
by the great Ottoman architect Sinan, and the
famous Sultan Ahmet Mosque (1616) which is also
known as the Blue Mosque for the blue
tiles that adorn its interior. In the centuries
following Mehmed II, many new important
buildings, such as the Süleymaniye Mosque,
Sultanahmet Mosque, Yeni Mosque and numerous
others were constructed.
In the 18th and 19th
centuries, traditional Ottoman architectural
styles were gradually replaced by European
styles, such as the Baroque style interiors of
the Aynalıkavak Palace (1677–1679) and
Nuruosmaniye Mosque (1748–1755, the first
Baroque style mosque in the city, also famous
for its Baroque fountain), and the 18th century
Baroque additions to the Harem section of the
Topkapı Palace. Following the Tanzimat reforms
which effectively started Turkey's
Europeanization process in 1839, new palaces and
mosques were built in Neoclassical, Baroque and
Rococo styles, or a mixture of all three, such
as the Dolmabahçe Palace, Beylerbeyi Palace and
Ortaköy (Mecidiye) Mosque.
Starting from the
early 19th century, the areas around İstiklal
Avenue were filled with grandiose embassy
buildings belonging to prominent European
states, and rows of European (mostly
Neoclassical and later Art Nouveau) style
buildings started to appear on both flanks of
the avenue. Istanbul especially became a major
center of the Art Nouveau (Liberty) movement in
the late 19th and early 20th centuries, with
famous architects of this style like Raimondo
D'Aronco building many palaces and mansions in
the city proper and on the Princes' Islands. His
most important works in the city include several
buildings of the Yıldız Palace complex, and the
Botter House on İstiklal Avenue. The
famous Camondo Stairs on Bankalar Caddesi
(Banks Street) in Karaköy (Galata) is also a
beautiful example of Art Nouveau architecture.
Other important examples are the Hıdiv Kasr
(Khedive Palace) on the Asian side of the
Bosphorus, Flora Han in Sirkeci, and
Frej Apartman in the Şişhane quarter of
Beyoğlu.
Paris,
FRANCE

Paris (pronounced
/ˈpærɪs/ in English;
[paʁi]
(help·info) in
French) is the capital of France and the
country's largest city. It is situated on the
river Seine, in northern France, at the heart of
the Île-de-France region (also known as the
"Paris Region"; French:
Région
parisienne). The city of Paris,
within its limits largely unchanged since 1860,
has an estimated population of 2,167,994
(January 2006), but the Paris aire urbaine
(or metropolitan area) has a population of
nearly 12 million,[3]
and is one of the most populated metropolitan
areas in Europe.
An
important settlement for more than two
millennia, Paris is today one of the world's
leading business and cultural centres, and its
influence in politics, education, entertainment,
media, fashion, science and the
arts all contribute to its status as one of
the world's major global cities. According to
2005 estimates, the Paris urban area is Europe's
biggest city economy, and is fifth in the
world's list of cities by GDP.
Paris and
the Paris Region, with €533.6 billion
(US$731.3 billion) in 2007, produces more than a
quarter of the gross domestic product (GDP) of
France.[8]
The Paris Region hosts 37 of the Fortune Global
500 companies in several business districts,
notably La Défense, the largest purpose-built
business district in Europe. Paris also hosts
many international organizations such as UNESCO,
the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and
Development (OECD), the International Chamber of
Commerce (ICC) and the informal Paris Club.
Paris is
one of the most popular tourist destinations in
the world, with 45 million tourists every year
in the Paris Region, 60% of whom are foreign
visitors. There are numerous iconic landmarks
among its many attractions, along with
world-famous institutions and popular parks.
Bodrum,
TURKEY

Bodrum (from
Petronium; formerly Halicarnassus
(Turkish:
Halikarnas, Ancient Greek:
Ἁλικαρνασσός)) is a Turkish port town in
Muğla Province, in the southwestern Aegean
Region of the country. It is located on the
southern coast of Bodrum Peninsula, at a point
that checks the entry into the Gulf of Gökova,
and it faces the Greek island of Kos. Today, it
is an international center of tourism and
yachting. The city was called Halicarnassus of
Caria in ancient times. The Mausoleum of
Mausolus, one of the Seven Wonders of the
Ancient World, was here.
Bodrum
Castle, built by the Crusaders in the 15th
century, overlooks the harbor and the
International Marina. The castle grounds
includes a Museum of Underwater Archeology and
hosts several cultural festivals throughout the
year.
The first
recorded settlers in Bodrum region were the
Carians and the harbor area was colonized by
Dorian Greeks as of the 7th century BC and the
city later fell under Persian rule. Under the
Persians, it was the capital city of the satrapy
of Caria, the region that had since long
constituted its hinterland and of which it was
the principal port. Its strategic location
ensured that the city enjoyed considerable
autonomy and evidence from the period such as
the recently discovered Salmakis (Kaplankalesi)
Inscription, now in Bodrum Museum of Underwater
Archaeology, attest to the particular pride its
inhabitants had developped
[1]. A famous native was Herodotus,
the Greek historian (484-420 BC).
Mausolus
ruled Caria from here, nominally on behalf of
the Persians and independent in practical terms
for much of his reign between 377 to 353 BC.
When he died in 353 BC, Artemisia II of Caria,
who was both his sister and his widow, employed
the ancient Greek architects Satyros and Pythis,
and the four sculptors Bryaxis, Scopas,
Leochares and Timotheus to build a monument, as
well as a tomb, for him. The word "mausoleum"
derives from the structure of this tomb. It was
a temple-like structure decorated with reliefs
and statuary on a massive base. It stood for
1700 years and was finally destroyed by
earthquakes. Today only the foundations and a
few pieces of sculpture remain.
Alexander
the Great laid siege to the city after his
arrival in Carian lands and, together with his
ally, the queen Ada of Caria, captured it after
heavy fighting.
Crusader
Knights arrived in 1402 and used the remains of
the Mauseoleum as a quarry to build the still
impressively standing Bodrum Castle (Castle
of Saint Peter), which is also particular in
being one of the last examples of Crusader
architecture in the East.
The
Knights Hospitaller of Rhodes were given the
permission to build it by the Ottoman sultan
Mehmed I, after Tamerlane had destroyed their
previous fortress located in Izmir's inner bay.
The castle and its town became known as
Petronium, whence the modern name Bodrum
derives. Conveniently, the word "Bodrum" means
basement in Turkish, and a common pun in
reference to the town's liberal morals decline
its name as "Bedroom".
In 1522,
Suleyman the Magnificent conquered the base of
the Crusader knights on the island of Rhodes,
who then withdrew to Malta, leaving The Castle
of Saint Peter and Bodrum to the Ottoman Empire.
Manama,
Kingdom of Bahrain

The
Kingdom of Bahrain (in Arabic:
مملكة البحرين,
transliteration:
Mamlakat al-Baḥrayn,
literally Kingdom of the Two Seas) is an
island microstate in the Persian Gulf. Saudi
Arabia lies to the west and is connected to
Bahrain by the King Fahd Causeway, which
officially opened on 25 November 1986. Qatar is
to the southeast across the Gulf of Bahrain. The
planned Qatar–Bahrain Friendship Bridge will
link Bahrain to Qatar as the longest fixed link
in the world. Bahrain is home to the royal Sadeq
family (Father Tariq, Mother Wafa, children
Hayaa, Belal, and Feras. The oldest, Zeyad, was
born without a tongue), who live in the northern
town of Bu ghazal.
Bahrain is a
popular tourist destination with over eight
million tourists a year. Most of the visitors
are from the surrounding Arab states but there
is an increasing number of tourists from outside
the region due to a growing awareness of the
kingdom’s heritage and its higher profile with
regards to the Bahrain International F1 Circuit.
The Lonely Planet describes Bahrain as "an
excellent introduction to the Persian Gulf",
because of its authentic Arab heritage and
reputation as relatively liberal and modern. The
kingdom combines Arab culture, gulf glitz and
the archaeological legacy of five thousand years
of civilization. The island is home to castles
including Qalat Al Bahrain which has been listed
by UNESCO as a World Heritage Site. The Bahrain
National Museum has artifacts from the country's
history dating back to the island's first human
inhabitatants 9000 years ago.
In a region
experiencing an oil boom, Bahrain has the
fastest growing economy in the Arab world, the
United Nations Economic and Social Commission
for Western Asia found in January 2006. Bahrain
also has the freest economy in the Middle East
according to the 2006 Index of Economic Freedom
published by the Heritage Foundation/Wall Street
Journal, and is twenty-fifth freest overall in
the world. In 2008, Bahrain was named the
world’s fastest growing financial center by the
City of London’s Global Financial Centres Index.
Bahrain's banking and financial services sector,
particularly Islamic banking, have benefited
from the regional boom. In Bahrain, petroleum
production and processing account for about 60%
of export receipts, 60% of government revenues,
and 30% of GDP. Economic conditions have
fluctuated with the changing fortunes of oil
since 1985, for example, during and following
the Persian Gulf crisis of 1990-91. With its
highly developed communication and transport
facilities, Bahrain is home to multinational
firms. A large share of exports consists of
petroleum products made from imported crude oil.
Construction proceeds on several major
industrial projects. In 2004, Bahrain signed the
US-Bahrain Free Trade Agreement, which will
reduce certain barriers to trade between the two
nations. Unemployment, especially among the
young, and the depletion of both oil and
underground water resources are major long-term
economic problems. In 2008, the jobless figure
was a 3.8%, but women are over represented at
85% of the total. Bahrain in 2007 became the
first Arab country to institute unemployment
benefits as part of a series of labour reforms
instigated under Minister of Labour.
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