Experience the best of Istanbul in one day with a historical tour of iconic sites and a scenic Bosphorus cruise. Explore architectural masterpieces, marvel at Byzantine-era tile works, and enjoy a luxury yacht cruise along the Bosphorus.
Experience the best of Istanbul in one day with a historical tour of iconic sites and a scenic Bosphorus cruise. Explore architectural masterpieces, marvel at Byzantine-era tile works, and enjoy a luxury yacht cruise along the Bosphorus.
- Sultanahmet District - Whether it’s walking ancient city walls, haggling in historic bazaars, absorbing the sanctity of Ottoman mosques, sipping beer on a rooftop bar, watching the sun go down on the Golden Horn or relaxing in a Turkish bath, there’s always something more to do in Istanbul’s Old City, a place aptly known as ‘the city of the…
- Sultanahmet District - Whether it’s walking ancient city walls, haggling in historic bazaars, absorbing the sanctity of Ottoman mosques, sipping beer on a rooftop bar, watching the sun go down on the Golden Horn or relaxing in a Turkish bath, there’s always something more to do in Istanbul’s Old City, a place aptly known as ‘the city of the world’s desire’.
The heart of Istanbul remains its fascinating Old City, home to some of the most historic sites of this vibrant megapolis. Dramatically located on a peninsula pointing across the Bosphorus Strait to Asia, Sultanahmet was formerly the capital of the Byzantine and Ottoman empires.
- Hippodrome - The Hippodrome of Constantinople was a circus that was the sporting and social centre of Constantinople, capital of the Byzantine Empire. Today it is a square named Sultanahmet Meydanı in the Turkish city of Istanbul, with a few fragments of the original structure surviving.
- German Fountain - The German Fountain is a gazebo styled fountain in the northern end of old hippodrome, Istanbul, Turkey and across from the Mausoleum of Sultan Ahmed I. It was constructed to commemorate the second anniversary of German Emperor Wilhelm II’s visit to Istanbul in 1898.
- Walled Obelisk - The Walled Obelisk, Constantine Obelisk or Masonry Obelisk is situated near the Serpentine Column at the southern side of the Hippodrome of Constantinople in Istanbul, Turkey. Its original construction date is unknown, but it is named after Constantine VII, who repaired it in the tenth century.
- Obelisk of Theodosius - The Obelisk of Theodosius is the Ancient Egyptian obelisk of Pharaoh Thutmose III re-erected in the Hippodrome of Constantinople by the Roman emperor Theodosius I in the 4th century AD
- Blue Mosque - Sultan Ahmed Mosque is a historic mosque located in Istanbul, Turkey. It remains a functioning mosque, while also attracting large numbers of tourist visitors. It was constructed between 1609 and 1616 during the rule of Ahmed I. Its Külliye contains Ahmed’s tomb, a madrasah and a hospice.
- Hagia Sophia Mosque - Hagia Sophia is the former Greek Orthodox Christian patriarchal cathedral, later an Ottoman imperial mosque and now a museum in Istanbul, Turkey. Built in AD 360 at the beginning of the Middle Ages, it was famous in particular for its massive dome.
- Topkapi Palace - The Topkapı Palace, or the Seraglio, is a large museum in Istanbul, Turkey. In the 15th century, it served as the main residence and administrative headquarters of the Ottoman sultans. Construction began in 1459, ordered by Mehmed the Conqueror, six years after the conquest of Constantinople.
- Dolmabahce Palace - Dolmabahce Palace stands on the European shore of the Bosphorus and the with its various dependencies forms almost a little town, its gardens extending for a mile or more along the water’s edge.
- Grand Bazaar - The Grand Bazaar (Kapalı Çarşı), built in the 15th century, is the oldest covered market in the world. Covering an area of 54.653 square meters, it also still ranks as one of the world’s biggest covered markets. In other words, keep on reading if you want to be prepared before entering this maze of 56 interconnecting vaulted passages, housing over 4.000 shops with persistent shopkeepers eager to use their relentless sales tricks.
- Bosphorus Strait - Istanbul is a bridge between Europe and Asia, the Black Sea and the Mediterranean, a position that endows it with one of the most unique and beautiful settings in the world. For, between the hills on the European and Asiatic shores flows the Bosphorus, the brightest gem in the diadem of nature.
“This beautiful strait, sometimes spelled Bosporus and sometimes Bosphorus, was so called from the earliest ages by the ancients; from the mythology of 10, the mistress of Jupiter, having passed over it in the shape of a cow. It resembles the Dardanelles, in length, breadth and current, and like it, is a narrow separation which divides Europe from Asia; but it has many features familiar to itself. Instead of being a solitary stream running between deserted shores, it is a body of water full of life and animation, winding its way through banks covered with palaces and villages, shaded with magnificent forest trees, presenting to the eye, at every mile, a new scene of crowded existence.”
- Rumeli Fortress - At the narrowest point of the Bosphorus stands the Rumelihisarr Fortress, built by Sultan Mehmet, the Conqueror on the European shore. The Sultan himself on the 26th day of March 1452 laid the foundation stone of the Fortress with a view to controlling the passage of the ships through the Bosphorus and using it as a base for his attack on the city.
- Ortakoy - Ortaköy Mosque, officially the Büyük Mecidiye Camii in Beşiktaş, Istanbul, Turkey, is situated at the waterside of the Ortaköy pier square, one of the most popular locations on the Bosphorus.
- Bosphorus Bridge - Which was inaugurated on October 29, 1973 on the fiftieth anniversary of the Turkish Republic, has the longest span in Europe and the fourth in the world. This suspension bridge has a total length of 1560 metres (1706 yards) and a width of 33.4 metres (110ft).
- Fatih Sultan Mehmet Bridge - The Fatih Sultan Mehmet Bridge, also known as the Second Bosphorus Bridge, is a bridge in Istanbul, Turkey spanning the Bosphorus strait. When completed in 1988, it was the 5th-longest suspension bridge span in the world; today it is the 24th.
- Beylerbeyi Palace - Situated on the Asiatic shore of the Bosphorus between the villages of Kuzguncuk and Cengelköy, the palace was built by Sultan Abdülaziz in 1865. Beylerbeyi Palace seen from the Bosphorus floats like a white vision in a fairy tale. It is the most extravagant royal house of the 19th Century on which millions were spent.
- KIz Kulesi - About 180 metres away from the shores of Üsküdar stands this tower which bears two different names. Europeans who named it the Leander’s Tower thought that it was here where Leander was drowned while attempting to swim the Bosphorus to reach his beloved Hero, the priestess of Aphrodite. But, in fact, Leander never crossed here even in the legend which refers to the Hellespont, Dardanelles.
- Kucuksu Pavilion - The summer Palace of Kucuksu, sometimes called the Palace of Göksu, is situated between the villages of Anadoluhisan and Kandilli on the Asiatic shore of the Bosphorus.
- Anadolu Hisari Fort - On the opposite bank stands the Anadoluhisari Fortress by the Göksu stream.
This romantic castle which adorns the Asiatic shore of the Bosphorus was built in 1395 by Sultan Bayazit, the Thunderbolt and named as “Güzelcehisar”. Later it was extended by Mehmet, the Conqueror. Today, as the first possession of Turks on the Bosphorus, it serves as the landmark of Turkish rule.
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Halic - GOLDEN HORN
The Golden Horn, also known by its modern Turkish name, Haliç, is a major urban waterway and the primary inlet of the Bosphorus in Istanbul, Turkey. - Bosphorus Strait - The Bosphorus has an inlet, a natural harbor which is an arm of the Sea of Marmara, called the Golden Horn. It is a deeply drowned valley about 7 km long. Two streams, Ali Bey and Kagithane flow into the Golden Horn which was so named as the early inhabitants saw it as shaped like the horns of a stag or water buffalo. Turks call it the Halic, i.e. the Gulf.
The Bosphorus itself has two pleasant rivulets on its Asiatic shore, called Göksu and Kucuksu which empty themselves into the Bosphorus between the villages of Anadoluhisari and Kandilli.
The two streams flowing into the Golden Horn were named by foreigners as the Sweet Waters of Europe, while Göksu and Kucuksu were known as the Sweet Waters of Asia.
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Halic - Golden Horn, Istanbul, Turkey
As the sun sets in Istanbul, its yellow light blazes on the waters of the Golden Horn, giving this freshwater estuary its romantic name…we think. (The name in English is a direct translation of the Byzantine name Chrysokeras.)
“Golden Horn” is its Western name. Its Turkish name, Haliç, (hah-LEECH, from Arabic) has nothing to do with gold or horns. Haliç, short for Haliç-i Dersaadet, means “The Bay of Istanbul.”
- Galata Tower - The Galata Tower — called Christea Turris by the Genoese — is a medieval stone tower in the Galata/Karaköy quarter of Istanbul, Turkey, just to the north of the Golden Horn’s junction with the Bosphorus.
- 2.5-Hours Bosphorus Cruise on Luxury Yacht
- Professional tour guide in English
- Lunch
- Snacks
- Fresh Season Fruits Served during the sunset cruise on the Bosphorus
- Cookies including baklava Served during the sunset cruise on the Bosphorus
- 2.5-Hours Bosphorus Cruise on Luxury Yacht
- Professional tour guide in English
- Lunch
- Snacks
- Fresh Season Fruits Served during the sunset cruise on the Bosphorus
- Cookies including baklava Served during the sunset cruise on the Bosphorus
- Museum Tickets (Topkapi Palace Entrance Ticket is 1.700 TL for main entrance and Harem Section)
- Entrance ticket fee for Hagia Sophia (25 euro per person)
- Museum Tickets (Topkapi Palace Entrance Ticket is 1.700 TL for main entrance and Harem Section)
- Entrance ticket fee for Hagia Sophia (25 euro per person)
ISTANBUL HERITAGE EXPEDITION ACCOMPANIED BY A SUNSET VOYAGE ON THE BOSPHORUS
Experience a comprehensive journey through Istanbul’s most prominent landmarks such as the Blue Mosque, Hagia Sophia, Topkapi Palace, Grand Bazaar, paired with an opulent Bosphorus yacht cruise, all in a single day. Enjoy exclusive, rapid access at Topkapi Palace and expedited…
ISTANBUL HERITAGE EXPEDITION ACCOMPANIED BY A SUNSET VOYAGE ON THE BOSPHORUS
Experience a comprehensive journey through Istanbul’s most prominent landmarks such as the Blue Mosque, Hagia Sophia, Topkapi Palace, Grand Bazaar, paired with an opulent Bosphorus yacht cruise, all in a single day. Enjoy exclusive, rapid access at Topkapi Palace and expedited entry to the majestic Ottoman Palace during this day-long expedition.
Explore the rich historic and cultural sites Istanbul has to offer during your full-day tour. Behold architectural marvels, be captivated by the stunning Byzantine tile art, and view the royal artifacts of Ottoman rulers. Alongside, immerse yourself in the vibrant traditions of an energetic bazaar.
After unravelling the mysteries of Istanbul’s old city, embark on a magical sunset cruise on the Bosphorus. Float down the Bosphorus as it unfolds views of the magnificent Dolmabahce Palace, iconic Bosphorus Bridges, and elegantly constructed waterfront villas dotted on both sides of the Bosphorus.
- Topkapi Palace is closed on Tuesdays, we visit Dolmabahce Palace on Tuesdays.
- The old city, Sultanahmet is closed for car traffic, travelers visit the sights by walking. There is quite a lot of walkings, so please wear comfortable shoes and get ready for a long walking day right before a very enjoyable luxury yacht cruise.
- The sunset cruise ends at 21.00 from 01st May to end of July.
- The tour guide will contact you one day before to coordinate the hotels pick services (if your hotel is in the city center) or the meeting point.
- The Grand Bazaar is closed on Sundays and it may be replaced with Spice Bazaar or Arasta Bazaar
- Ladies are recommended to bring scarfs to use while visiting the Blue Mosque
- Museum tickets are not included, the tour guide can provide fast-track musem entry tickets on the tour.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.