Thursday, 14 February 2008

istanbul photos big red tanker on



Istanbul photos: big red tanker on the Bosphorus

One of the best things about staying where I did was watching the

boats on the Bosphorus.

Click on the photo to enlarge. You can spot the Maiden's Tower, right

behind the tanker.

You can see why this city was (and is) such a strategic place for

commerce and was the capital of empires. The Bosphorus (or Bosporus,

both spellings are correct) links the Black Sea (to the left, beyond

the photo) to the Sea of Marmara (to the right, beyond the photo) and

thus the Mediterranean. And, of course, Asia is on one side of the

Bosphorus (across the water in this photo) and Europe on the other

side (where I was staying).

Fun factoid: I just learned that the new opera house (the newest, that

is: there are six of them!) is on the Asian side.

Look slightly South and West of Istanbul and note the Dardanelles's

important location: between the Sea of Marmara and the Mediterranean.

Another strategic place for battles. (As one of our visitors in

Istanbul said, Helen of Troy was probably not the main reason for the

Trojan War! More on Troy here, courtesy of the latest archeological

investigations.)

I've posted maps for Estadounidenses who don't know geography. ;-)

This map has early 20th century names: Istanbul was still called

Constantinople.

Here's a reference map of what we call "The Middle East."

Best online collection of maps, by the way, is the Perry-Casta�eda


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