Harbor of Julian: Difference between revisions
imported>Assassino96 Editing a gallery |
imported>VatsaAWB m →Database entry: AWB Edit, replaced: Topkapi → Topkapı |
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''A small port on the southern edge of Constantinople’s peninsula that opens into the sea of Marmara. Though small, the Harbor of Julian would have been the perfect port to receive Byzantine royalty in Constantinople’s earliest days, due to its close proximity to the Hippodrome and the now defunct Byzantine Great Palace, which once stood immediately to the harbor’s east.'' | ''A small port on the southern edge of Constantinople’s peninsula that opens into the sea of Marmara. Though small, the Harbor of Julian would have been the perfect port to receive Byzantine royalty in Constantinople’s earliest days, due to its close proximity to the Hippodrome and the now defunct Byzantine Great Palace, which once stood immediately to the harbor’s east.'' | ||
''In Ottoman times, after the opening of the grand Bazaar near the northern edge of the peninsula, merchants found it easier to bring their goods to the city via the northern ports, and this – combined with the Sultan’s move to | ''In Ottoman times, after the opening of the grand Bazaar near the northern edge of the peninsula, merchants found it easier to bring their goods to the city via the northern ports, and this – combined with the Sultan’s move to Topkapı Palace on First Hill – made the Harbor of Julian a less attractive port.'' | ||
==Gallery== | ==Gallery== | ||
<gallery captionalign="left"> | <gallery captionalign="left"> | ||
Revision as of 18:46, 22 December 2011
Harbor of Julian was a small port on the southern edge of Constantinople’s peninsula that opens into the sea of Marmara.
Database entry
A small port on the southern edge of Constantinople’s peninsula that opens into the sea of Marmara. Though small, the Harbor of Julian would have been the perfect port to receive Byzantine royalty in Constantinople’s earliest days, due to its close proximity to the Hippodrome and the now defunct Byzantine Great Palace, which once stood immediately to the harbor’s east.
In Ottoman times, after the opening of the grand Bazaar near the northern edge of the peninsula, merchants found it easier to bring their goods to the city via the northern ports, and this – combined with the Sultan’s move to Topkapı Palace on First Hill – made the Harbor of Julian a less attractive port.