Explore Istanbul and around
One of the least visited but most fascinating areas of the Old City, the northwest quarter is bounded on the west by the major thoroughfare of Fevzi Paşa Caddesi, to the north by the land walls of Theodosius, the Golden Horn to the east and on the south by traffic-choked Atatürk Bulvarı. Once home to a cosmopolitan population of Muslims, Christians and Jews it’s now a devoutly Muslim area, particularly in the district of Fatih where you will notice many women in chadors and bearded men in şalvar pants, long baggy shirts and skullcaps (dress appropriately).
The most notable sights are a former Byzantine church, now the Zeyrek Camii, two notable Ottoman mosques, the Fatih and Yavuz Selim, the magnificent Byzantine mosaics in the Fethiye Camii, and the spiritual centre of the Orthodox Christian world, the Greek Patriarchate. A spiritual centre of a different order awaits a couple of kilometres up the Golden Horn from the Patriarchate, the Eyüp area, sacred to Muslims worldwide as it boasts the tomb of Eyüp Ensari, standard-bearer of the Prophet Mohammed.
To get here take a ferry up the Golden Horn to Fener or Balat from either Eminönü or Karköy, or a #99 (for the Atatürk Bridge) or #38/E (for the Zeyrek Camii) bus from Eminönü – or walk up from the Laleli or Aksaray tram stops.
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