Yerebatan Cistern: Difference between revisions
imported>Andre982d Database image, Landmarks Infobox |
imported>StPerkele |
||
| Line 22: | Line 22: | ||
<gallery captionalign="left"> | <gallery captionalign="left"> | ||
The Yerebatan Cistern.jpg|Artwork | The Yerebatan Cistern.jpg|Artwork | ||
PILLAR2.png|Ezio gazing at the "Peacock-eyed" column. | |||
</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
Revision as of 20:12, 14 December 2011
|
Where are the paintings? This article is in need of more images and/or better quality pictures from official media in order to achieve a higher status. You can help the Assassin's Creed Wiki by uploading better images on this page. |
| This article is about the location. You may be looking for The Yerebatan Cistern. |
The Yerebatan Cistern or Basilica Cistern is the largest of several hundred ancient cisterns that lie beneath the city of Constantinople, Turkey. The cistern, located 500 feet (150 m) southwest of the Hagia Sofia, was built in the 6th century during the reign of Byzantine Emperor Justinian I.
History
Niccolò Polo had the first of the Masyaf Keys hidden in the Yerebatan Cistern in 1257. In 1511, the Italian Mentor Ezio Auditore da Firenze entered the Cistern via a secret passage in Sofia Sartor's shop. There he found Byzantines had been searching for the Key for thirteen months, without success. Ezio stealthily made his way through the Yerebatan Cistern and recovered the Key, as well as a map to the location of the others.[1]
Gallery
-
Artwork
-
Ezio gazing at the "Peacock-eyed" column.
