Companion Guide to Istanbul
Companion Guides (Verlag)
978-1-900639-31-6 (ISBN)
The author seems to have covered every road in the country, and has something of interest to say about virtually every site. COUNTRY LIFE
Istanbul is the only city in the world that stands astride two continents, spreading across from Europe into Asia at the southern end of the Bosphorus, the incomparably beautiful strait linking the Black Sea with the Sea of Marmara in northwestern Turkey.
This Companion Guide to Istanbul goes as far as the region around Marmara from the Bosphorus to the Dardanelles, which flows into the Aegean past the historic ruins of Troy on its Asian shore.Revised and updated for this new edition, the book is a guide to the Byzantine and Ottoman monuments and to the many other places of great historic interest around the Marmara, including Edirne, Bursa and Iznik, ancient Nicaea, as well as the renowned archaeological site of Homeric Troy. It is also an introduction to Turkey itself and to its people and their way of life, which they are more than willing to share with the traveller who takes the time to become acquainted with them.
JOHN FREELY has lived and worked on America's east coast, in Britain, and around the Mediterranean, but is long-time Professor of Physics at the University of the Bosphorus, Istanbul, and has been resident for many years in Turkey. His understanding of the land and its people has made him a respected interpreter of Turkey ancient and modern.
Born in Brooklyn, New York, of Irish parents, John Freely (1926-2017) was brought up in New York City and Inch on the Dingle Peninsula in the west of Ireland. A lifelong traveler, he had crossed the Atlantic four times by the time he was six. He enlisted in the US Navy at seventeen in 1944, serving on missions in Burma, India and China, and married Dolores ("Toots") Stanley after being demobbed in 1947. He received a doctorate in nuclear physics from New York University and did post-doctoral work at All Souls College, Oxford. He moved to Istanbul with his family to take up a teaching post at the American Robert College in 1960 and remained there for most of the rest of his life. Physicist, teacher, and author of more than sixty books of travel, history, and science, most famously the seminal guidebook 'Strolling Through Istanbul' (1972), he was a noted raconteur as well as writer, with a prodigious memory for poetry and song as well as facts and dates. He continued writing to the very end of his life: among his last books are three volumes of memoirs, 'The Art of Exile: A Vagabond Life' (2016), 'The House of Memory: Reflections on Youth and War' (2017), and the newly published 'Stamboul Ghosts' (2018).
Part 1 Istanbul: The imperial city; to the summit of the first hill; Haghia Sophia; Topkapi Sorayi; Haghia Eirene and the museums; around the first hill; from the first hill to the third; around the third hill; the Suleymaniye; to the summit of the fourth hill; around the fourth hill; the fifth and sixth hills; Kariye Camii; the seventh hill; the land walls; up the gOlden Horn; Eyup and around the Golden Horn; Galata and Beyoglu; Uskudar and the Princes Isles; the Bosphorus. Part 2 Around the Marmara: Istanbul to Edirne to the Dardanelles; Canakkale to Troy; Canakkale to Bursa; Bursa; Bursa to Istanbul via Iznik.
Erscheint lt. Verlag | 4.5.2000 |
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Reihe/Serie | Companion Guides |
Zusatzinfo | 16 b/w illus. |
Verlagsort | Woodbridge |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 138 x 216 mm |
Gewicht | 578 g |
Themenwelt | Reiseführer ► Europa ► Türkei |
ISBN-10 | 1-900639-31-9 / 1900639319 |
ISBN-13 | 978-1-900639-31-6 / 9781900639316 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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