burak özçivit

burak özçivit
burak özçivit

بوراك أوزجيفيت[2] (بالتركية: Burak Özçivit)‏ ممثل تركي من مواليد 24 ديسمبر 1984 في مدينة إسطنبول في تركيا حاليا يمثل في مسلسله الجديد المؤسس عثمان الذي يعرض حاليا على قناة اي تي في التركية وجاء بعد مسلسل قيامة ارطغرل بطولة إنجين آلتان دوزياتان

ولد بوراك أوزجيفيت في 24 ديسمبر عام 1984 في مدينة إسطنبول في تركيا ينحدر والده من غازي عنتاب ووالدته من أدرنة. درس الثانوية في مدرسة كاظم إشمان الثانوية بإسطنبول. وتخرج من قسم التصوير الفوتوغرافي بكلية الفنون الجميلة في جامعة مرمرة.[3][4][5]

ولقد صنف كأفضل عارض أزياء في تركيا عام 2003، واشتهر في العالم العربي بدورهِ في مسلسل الحب المستحيل بدور عمر، وفي عام 2013 مثل في مسلسل (طائر النمنمة) بدور البطل (بوراك) مع الممثلة فخرية أوجن، وفيلم (العشق يشبهك) مع فخرية أوجن في عام 2014.[6][7][8]
تخرج بوراك من جامعة مرمرة من كلية الفنون الجميلة قسم التصوير، وبعد تخرجهِ عمل في مجال عرض الأزياء حيث حصل على لقب أفضل عارض أزياء عام 2003، وفي عام 2005 حصل على لقب أفضل ثاني عارض أزياء في العالم ثم دخل مجال الإعلانات. وفي عام 2006 دخل عالم التمثيل حيث لعب دور مراد في المسلسل التركي Eksi. وفي عام 2007 لعب دور محمد في فيلم الرعب (الشيطان) وكان بداية نجاحهِ من هذا الفيلم. ومثل في نفس العام والعام الذي يليه بدور عمر في المسلسل الشهير الحب المستحيل وكان لهذا المسلسل الفضل الأكبر في شهرة بوراك.
وفي عام 2008 مثل في مسلسل بابا أوجاع (Baba Ocaği) وكانت الانطلاقة الأكبر للنجم بوراك اوزجيفيت عن دور بالي بك في مسلسل حريم السلطان في الجزء الثاني حيث اشتهر في الوطن العربي بهذا الدور الذي أحبه الكثير من المشاهدين.


Burak Özçivit (born 24 December 1984) is a Turkish actor and model. Best known for his roles in Çalıkuşu (2013) and Kara Sevda (2015). He is currently starring as Osman Bey in the history based and adventure series Kuruluş: Osman (2019). Throughout his acting career Özçivit has been a recipient of numerous accolades.

Burak Özçivit was born on 24 December 1984 in Istanbul, Turkey. He studied from Kazım İşmen High School. Graduated from Marmara University, Faculty of Fine Arts, Department of Photography.[1][2][3]

In 2003, Özçivit was elected the Top Model of Turkey and he began working with Model Agencies. In 2005, he was chosen the second best model of the world.
Burak Özçivit’s acting career began with the television series Eksi 18. He later starred in series Zoraki Koca ,İhanet and Baba Ocağı. He appeared in the movie Musallat and the television series Küçük Sırlar, the Turkish adaptation of Gossip Girl.[3][2][1]

He starred in Muhteşem Yüzyıl as Malkoçoğlu Balı Bey.
Then played as Kamran in the adaptation of Çalıkuşu novel with Fahriye Evcen. Together with Fahriye Evcen, he made the movie Aşk Sana Benzer. later played in the movie Kardeşim Benim opposite Murat Boz. In 2015 he starred in Turkish drama series Kara Sevda as Kemal Soydere. Özçivit is also the producer of BRK’S Production.[2][1][3]

burak özçivit

Özçivit resides in Istinye, Sarıyer, Istanbul.[4]

Özçivit got engaged to Fahriye Evcen on 9 March 2017 in Germany, and they married in Istanbul on 29 June 2017.[5]
Their son, named Karan, was born on 13 April 2019.[6]

In 2005, Özçivit won the title of Best Model of Turkey and finished second in the “Best Model of the World” competition.[7]


Burak Özçivit (born 24 December 1984) is a Turkish actor and model. Best known for his roles in Çalıkuşu (2013) and Kara Sevda (2015). He is currently starring as Osman Bey in the history based and adventure series Kuruluş: Osman (2019). Throughout his acting career Özçivit has been a recipient of numerous accolades.

Burak Özçivit was born on 24 December 1984 in Istanbul, Turkey. He studied from Kazım İşmen High School. Graduated from Marmara University, Faculty of Fine Arts, Department of Photography.[1][2][3]

In 2003, Özçivit was elected the Top Model of Turkey and he began working with Model Agencies. In 2005, he was chosen the second best model of the world.
Burak Özçivit’s acting career began with the television series Eksi 18. He later starred in series Zoraki Koca ,İhanet and Baba Ocağı. He appeared in the movie Musallat and the television series Küçük Sırlar, the Turkish adaptation of Gossip Girl.[3][2][1]

He starred in Muhteşem Yüzyıl as Malkoçoğlu Balı Bey.
Then played as Kamran in the adaptation of Çalıkuşu novel with Fahriye Evcen. Together with Fahriye Evcen, he made the movie Aşk Sana Benzer. later played in the movie Kardeşim Benim opposite Murat Boz. In 2015 he starred in Turkish drama series Kara Sevda as Kemal Soydere. Özçivit is also the producer of BRK’S Production.[2][1][3]

burak özçivit

Özçivit resides in Istinye, Sarıyer, Istanbul.[4]

Özçivit got engaged to Fahriye Evcen on 9 March 2017 in Germany, and they married in Istanbul on 29 June 2017.[5]
Their son, named Karan, was born on 13 April 2019.[6]

In 2005, Özçivit won the title of Best Model of Turkey and finished second in the “Best Model of the World” competition.[7]


Burak Özçivit (born 24 December 1984) is a Turkish actor and model. Best known for his roles in Çalıkuşu (2013) and Kara Sevda (2015). He is currently starring as Osman Bey in the history based and adventure series Kuruluş: Osman (2019). Throughout his acting career Özçivit has been a recipient of numerous accolades.

Burak Özçivit was born on 24 December 1984 in Istanbul, Turkey. He studied from Kazım İşmen High School. Graduated from Marmara University, Faculty of Fine Arts, Department of Photography.[1][2][3]

In 2003, Özçivit was elected the Top Model of Turkey and he began working with Model Agencies. In 2005, he was chosen the second best model of the world.
Burak Özçivit’s acting career began with the television series Eksi 18. He later starred in series Zoraki Koca ,İhanet and Baba Ocağı. He appeared in the movie Musallat and the television series Küçük Sırlar, the Turkish adaptation of Gossip Girl.[3][2][1]

He starred in Muhteşem Yüzyıl as Malkoçoğlu Balı Bey.
Then played as Kamran in the adaptation of Çalıkuşu novel with Fahriye Evcen. Together with Fahriye Evcen, he made the movie Aşk Sana Benzer. later played in the movie Kardeşim Benim opposite Murat Boz. In 2015 he starred in Turkish drama series Kara Sevda as Kemal Soydere. Özçivit is also the producer of BRK’S Production.[2][1][3]

burak özçivit

Özçivit resides in Istinye, Sarıyer, Istanbul.[4]

Özçivit got engaged to Fahriye Evcen on 9 March 2017 in Germany, and they married in Istanbul on 29 June 2017.[5]
Their son, named Karan, was born on 13 April 2019.[6]

In 2005, Özçivit won the title of Best Model of Turkey and finished second in the “Best Model of the World” competition.[7]


Çalıkuşu (English: The Wren) is a 2013 Turkish romantic drama television series aired on Kanal D that is based on the novel of the same name for the fourth time. Series was cancelled before completion.[1]

As a child, Feride, also known as Çalıkuşu for her childish behavior[why?], loses her mother. Her father, a military officer, entrusts her to her maternal aunt, Besime, and her husband, Seyfettin. The couple starts raising her along with their own children, Kamran and Necmiye. When she is a teenager, Feride is informed that her father is killed in action.

Having become adults, Feride and Kamran still mess with each other, not knowing of their shared fate. Kamran has become a doctor working at a hospital. Necmiye falls in love with Selim, Kamran’s friend and fellow doctor. Selim is instructed by Levent, his stepfather and an enemy of Seyfettin’s family, to date Feride; the former quickly falls in love with her. He mistakes her for another woman diagnosed with a terminal illness. He informs her of the condition and offers a cure. Feride discovers that Kamran is secretly seeing a middle-aged widow Neriman, and threatens to tell her aunt and uncle unless Kamran agrees to pretend to date Feride.

Seyfettin gets infected with the plague, a near incurable disease at the time. Kamran manages to cure him with a blood transfusion, an illegitimate act. Seeing Kamran as a love rival, Selim reports the former’s action to the local cleric. Kamran escapes, but is later captured and sentenced to death. The cleric pardons him when his own son is infected with the plague and he is forced to accept transfusion. Meanwhile, Feride realizes that she is healthy while Selim tries to poison her to prove she is sick. Necmiye finds out his plan after eating a poisoned fondant herself, becoming ill, and then giving the rest to their chickens, which are killed. She then confronts Selim in her room. Kamran enters and mistakes it for a sexual relationship between the two, and ends his friendship with Selim. Kamran forces Selim to court and marry Necmiye, which is accepted by the family. Kamran and Feride are revealed to have fallen in love.

burak özçivit

Selim kidnaps Feride. Kamran and Yusuf, a servant, manage to find her and capture Selim, who escapes and returns to see Feride, but is killed by Necmiye. Kamran takes the blame and Feride sells the mansion to a rich woman named Azelia in order to pay the blood money. Levent is sentenced to death for his schemes. As Kamran and Feride prepare to get married, Neriman reveals to him that she is pregnant by him. Seyfettin marries her in order to keep her away from Kamran, who finally decides to tell Feride. She leaves because she doesn’t want another child to be orphaned like herself. Kamran has a one-night stand with Azelia when he is drunk. Seyfettin divorces Neriman. It is revealed that the baby is not Kamran’s. Kamran buys back the family mansion. He and Feride decide to reunite and get married. On the wedding night, Neriman reveals to Feride what happened between Kamran and Azelia. Feride leaves and adopts an orphan intended to remind her of the love.

After months of searching, Kamran finds the duo in an inn and tells Feride to meet him at the train station the next day to return home with him so they can be a family again. Kamran waits for Feride at the station, the train arrives and Kamran smiles, implying their return.[2]

Endless Love (Turkish: Kara Sevda, literal translation Dark Love) is a Turkish drama series produced by Ay Yapım that premiered on Star TV on October 14, 2015. The first season consists of 35 episodes and the season finale aired on June 15, 2016. The second season premiered on September 21, 2016.[1] It consists of 39 episodes and the finale aired on June 21, 2017.[1]

Kemal is a young man who lives in a working-class neighbourhood in Istanbul. His father Hüseyin is a barber, and his mother Fehime a housewife. He has two siblings: an older brother Tarik, who is jealous of Kemal; and a younger sister Zeynep.

Nihan is a rich young woman. She has a twin brother Ozan and lives with her parents Vildan and Önder. Emir Kozcuoğlu is an arrogant businessman who holds a great love for Nihan.

Önder’s business is slowly coming to an end. Vildan, unable to give up her rich life, wants Nihan to marry Emir to save the family business, but Nihan refuses as she dislikes Emir’s arrogance and protectiveness of her. Nihan and Kemal first meet on a bus. A month later, Kemal saves Nihan’s life, and their friendship starts and slowly turns into love.

Emir, aware of Nihan’s love, executes a plan that results in Ozan killing a girl. Nihan is then forced to marry Emir to save Ozan from going to jail. The next day, Kemal proposes to Nihan, but she refuses and leaves in tears. Deeply hurt and struggling to move on, Kemal decides to begin anew and moves to Zonguldak. Four years later, there is an accident in the mine where he works. Kemal saves the life of his manager Hakki, who promotes him to be his assistant.

burak özçivit

One year later, Kemal comes back to Istanbul to secure a business deal with Emir’s company, but Kemal and Emir’s mutual dislike leaves them both wary of each other. During this time, Asu Alacahan, Kemal’s business partner, moves to Istanbul because of her love for Kemal. Emir grows suspicious of Nihan’s and Kemal’s relationship and Asu determines that Nihan was the girl who broke Kemal’s heart. Emir uses Tarik’s jealousy towards Kemal’s success to turn him further away from Kemal. Meanwhile, Ozan is in love with Zeynep. When Zeynep and Ozan’s family find out about their relationship, they forced to stop seeing each other. Ozan, however, struggles to forget Zenyep and follows her constantly. In addition, Kemal’s best friend Salih is in love with Zeynep. He confesses to Zeynep, but she reveals she doesn’t feel the same way about Salih anymore.

Kemal realises Nihan is unhappy in her marriage and is forced to maintain it. He tries to work out the reason behind Nihan’s marriage to Emir, but in the process, Nihan and Kemal unknowingly start to rekindle their old romance. Kemal is close to discovering the truth, but Nihan is fearful Ozan may go jail if Kemal finds out, so she asks him to stop the romance. Kemal, believing that Nihan is unable to trust him, distances himself from her once more.

After breaking Salih and Ozan’s heart, Zeynep finds herself in the arms of Emir. They sleep together in a hotel, but Emir throws her out the room and reveals this was a ploy to hurt Kemal. Zeynep, though initially traumatised, plans her revenge on Emir. She fools Ozan into believing that she loves him and becomes the daughter-in-law of Emir’s household, shocking both Kemal and Nihan’s families. Zeynep’s father then disowns her and says he only has children from now on. Kemal regrets leaving her sister under the responsibility of his older brother. He gets into a fight with the latter and discloses to his family that he is working with Emir. Kemal offers financial support to her sister to move out of Emir’s house into one of her own thinking that Zeynep truly loves Ozan, but Zeynep is unwilling to do so.

Kemal eventually discovers the truth about Nihan’s compulsion to stay married to Emir. However, he grows suspicious of the situation, so he and Nihan work out whether Ozan really killed a girl or if it was all set up by Emir. Nihan and Kemal goes to search for a girl named Karen who was also present on the day of the murder. However, Karen gets caught by Emir and he fools Tariq into killing the girl. Meanwhile, Emir is being blackmailed by an unknown person who has video evidence of Ozan murdering the girl. Kemal also discovers and informs Emir that he has a brother.

After Nihan attempts suicide to get rid of Emir, Nihan and Kemal decide to run away together, and Ozan is persuaded to turn himself over to the police for his crime. Zeynep, who is still in love with Emir, reveals Nihan and Kemal’s location to Emir. Emir finds them and tells Nihan to leave Kemal immediately, or a gunman will shoot Kemal dead. When Kemal returns, Nihan breaks off the relationship and leaves with Emir. Kemal returns to his life in Istanbul and decides to marry Asu.

Later, it is revealed that Asu is Emir’s sibling and the blackmailer his assistant Tufan. Asu fears Emir will kill her after finding out the truth. However, Emir, who secretly witnessed Kemal’s proposal to Asu, decides to team up with her to separate Kemal and Nihan forever.

At Kemal and Asu’s engagement, the two exchange rings, causing Nihan to faint. Ozan, who is currently out on bail, attempts to escape with Zeynep, but he gets caught by the police and imprisoned. While in jail, Ozan is anonymously sent intimate pictures of Zeynep and Emir. He threatens Zeynep but gets sent to the hospital for food poisoning.

Sometime after Ozan’s hospitalisation, Önder goes to Ozan’s room, only to find that he has apparently hanged himself. Grief-stricken, Önder has a fatal heart attack. Meanwhile, Nihan finds out she is pregnant with Kemal’s child, and Kemal finds out about Zeynep and Emir’s affair. He walks to Emir’s house to confront him, and Emir pulls a gun on Kemal. The two men get into a fight which ends with Emir being shot in the leg. Kemal instantly calls the police, confesses the deed, and walks out of the house to wait for the police to arrive. He then sees Nihan approaching him, intending to tell him about her pregnancy, but she gets stunned when she receives a call informing her that Ozan hanged himself. Kemal gets angry at Nihan for not telling him about Emir and Zeynep, and Nihan accuses Kemal of killing her brother, shocking him. Zeynep, having witnessed this, breaks down and tries to run away, but in the process, loses her baby and returns to her maternal home. Emir is then sent to the hospital fighting for his life, Kemal is imprisoned for attempted murder, and Nihan leaves Istanbul to raise her child away from everyone.

At the start of the second season, Emir is released from the hospital but is wheelchair-bound due to his leg. Nihan is living in another country, and Kemal is released from jail. Shortly after coming out of the hospital, Emir stages a kidnapping of Deniz, Nihan’s daughter. Nihan goes to Kemal for help, but he refuses to listen to her. Helpless and with no other choice, Nihan goes back to Emir. Kemal starts planning his wedding with Asu while Nihan goes back to playing happy families with Emir. Later, Kemal and Nihan work together to find Ozan’s killer.

Meanwhile, Emir tries to hide that Ozan’s death was a murder. Kemal learns that Asu is Emir’s sibling and breaks off the relationship. In an attempt to protect Kemal from Emir, Nihan hides from Deniz that Kemal is her father. Emir and Tufan plan to eavesdrop on a phone conversation with Nihan and Kemal, with Asu taking Kemal’s phone number. The next day, Emir takes Deniz to the edge of the ocean and plans to kill her, but Nihan intervenes, begging Emir not to do it and that she will not tell anything to Kemal.

Eventually, Kemal dies in a mine Emir had set up. They both step on a mine but the Anti-Bomb team is only able to deactivate Emir’s mine. Knowing Emir will forever chase Deniz and Nihan, Kemal tells everyone to leave while holding Emir by the arm. He tells Nihan he loves her and to read the letter he last wrote for her. Kemal lifts his foot and the explosion kills him and Emir. Nihan reads the letter that Kemal wrote and it tells her not to be sad but to continue living for their daughter. Four years later Nihan is a school teacher and the ending scene leaves with Nihan having dinner with family and friends imagining Kemal is with them. She finally understands that their love isn’t just any kind of love. It’s an Endless Love.

&

Neslihan Atagül Doğulu



Kuruluş: Osman (transl. Establishment: Osman) is a Turkish historical drama television series, created by Mehmet Bozdağ starring Burak Özçivit.[1][2] It focuses on the life of Osman I, founder of the Ottoman Empire. It is the sequel to Diriliş: Ertuğrul, which was centered around the life of Ertuğrul, father of Osman, which was played by Engin Altan Düzyatan.[3]

The TV show includes Osman Gazi’s internal and external struggles and how he establishes[2] and controls the Ottoman Empire. It portrays his struggles against Byzantium and the Mongols of the Ilkhanate (İlhanlı) and how he was able to secure independence from the Sultanate of Rum to establish a sovereign state that would stand up to the Byzantine and Mongol Empires and would honour the Turks.

The character of Osman faces many enemies and traitors in his quest and the show illustrates how he was able to overcome these obstacles and fulfill his mission with the help of his loyal companions, family, and friends.

burak özçivit

The series follows Diriliş: Ertuğrul which was situated around Osman’s father, Ertuğrul, and how he faced enemies and traitors. In the series, he was played by Engin Altan Düzyatan and it began in December 2014. Season 5 of the show concluded with Ertuğrul convincing Berke to start a war with Hulagu. This war was known as the Berke-Hulagu war and resulted in the division of the Mongol Empire into four khanates. In Kuruluş: Osman, Osman faces one of the khanates called the Ilkhanate (İlhanlı in Turkish and the show).

10 or 15 years[a] after the Berke-Hulagu war, Ertuğrul Gazi goes to Konya and he leaves his brother, Dündar Bey, in charge of his tribe. Dündar Bey is easily swain by others into doing their misdeeds, he falls into the trap of the devious Selçuk Sançak Bey, Alişar [tr], and the merciless princess of Kulucahisar, Sofia, who seeks to kill all the Turks. Osman, Dündar’s nephew, can see through Alişar and Sofia’s plans and warns him about them, despite his refusal to listen. As they continue to build more tension against the Kayı, Geyhatu sends Komutan Balgay to cause more trouble and stop the Kayı, especially Osman, from rebelling against the Mongols. Dündar, who bows down to the Mongols becoming the Sançak Bey, can’t see Alişar’s anger over his position being given over to him and he believes him when Alişar blames Osman for his son’s killing. Soon after, along with the threat from Kulucahisar, Dündar is shown the truth, Alişar is beheaded by Osman, and Osman has married his love, Bala. Following this, after many difficulties, Balgay is killed while Kulucahisar is conquered by the Kayı with Sofia’s death happening in the process.

Aya Nikola is sent to become the new Tekfur of İnegöl followed by Ertuğrul’s return in the tribe. Meanwhile, Yavlak Arslan, the new Uç Bey, seeks to create his own state and sees Osman as an obstacle, later on they unite against the new threat created by the new Han of the İlhanlı (transl. Ilkhanate), who allies with Nikola against the Turks of Anatolia. Bala also faces the arrival of Targun, Nikola’s spy who allies with Osman to save her father, İnal Bey. Along with these problems, Osman is elected as the new Bey after his father’s death.

Burak Özçivit (Osman Bey)

Ragıp Savaş (Dündar Bey)

These actors are credited in all episodes of the series:

These actors joined the main cast later in the series:

The series is written and produced by Mehmet Bozdağ and directed by Metin Günay. The theme music is by Alpay Göktekin (died 5 May 2020)[11] and Zeynep Alasya. It was filmed in Riva, Istanbul and broadcasting of season 1 began in November 2019 on ATV.[12]

The show has been well received in Turkey. In December 2019, Kuruluş: Osman attracted record viewership on ATV, in its fourth weekend of broadcast, the 4th episode of the series recorded a countrywide rating of 14.46.[13] Mehmet Bozdağ claims that the show has also been a great success in Albania, he said that the show is the “most watched TV show” in the country. In Albania, the show is called “Osmani”.[14] The show has also been gaining popularity in Pakistan for being the sequel to Diriliş: Ertuğrul.[15]

Istanbul (/ˌɪstænˈbʊl/ IST-an-BUUL,[7][8]US also /ˈɪstænbʊl/ IST-an-buul; Turkish: İstanbul [isˈtanbuɫ] (listen)), formerly Byzantium and Constantinople, is the largest city in Turkey and the country’s economic, cultural and historic center. The city straddles the Bosporus strait, and lies in both Europe and Asia, with a population of over 15 million residents.[4] Istanbul is the most populous city in Europe,[b] and the world’s fifteenth-largest city.

Founded as Byzantion by Megarian colonists in 660 BCE, and renamed as Constantinople in 330 CE,[9] the city grew in size and influence, becoming a beacon of the Silk Road and one of the most important cities in history. It served as an imperial capital for almost sixteen centuries, during the Roman/Byzantine (330–1204), Latin (1204–1261), Byzantine (1261–1453), and Ottoman (1453–1922) empires.[10] It was instrumental in the advancement of Christianity during Roman and Byzantine times, before its transformation to an Islamic stronghold following the Fall of Constantinople in 1453 CE.[11] In 1923, after the Turkish War of Independence, Ankara replaced the city as the capital of the newly formed Republic of Turkey. In 1930 the city’s name was officially changed to Istanbul, an appellation Greek speakers used since the eleventh century to colloquially refer to the city.[12]

Over 13.4 million foreign visitors came to Istanbul in 2018, eight years after it was named a European Capital of Culture, making the city the world’s fifth-most popular tourist destination.[13] Istanbul is home to several UNESCO World Heritage Sites, and hosts the headquarters of numerous Turkish companies, accounting for more than thirty percent of the country’s economy.[14][15]

The first known name of the city is Byzantium (Greek: Βυζάντιον, Byzántion), the name given to it at its foundation by Megarean colonists around 660 BCE.[16] Megaran colonists claimed a direct line back to the founders of the city, Byzas, the son of the god Poseidon and the nymph Ceroëssa.[16] Modern excavations has raised the possibility that these name Byzantium might reflect the sites of native Thracians settlements that preceded the fully fledged town.[17] Constantinople comes from the Latin name Constantinus, after Constantine the Great, the Roman emperor who refounded the city in 324 CE.[16] Constantinople remained the most common name for the city in the West until Turkish Postal Service Law of 28 March 1930 insisted that mail be addressed to Istanbul.[18][19]Kostantiniyye (Ottoman Turkish: قسطنطينيه‎), Be Makam-e Qonstantiniyyah al-Mahmiyyah (meaning “the Protected Location of Constantinople”) and İstanbul were the names used alternatively by the Ottomans during their rule.[20]

burak özçivit

The name İstanbul (Turkish pronunciation: [isˈtanbuɫ] (listen), colloquially [ɯsˈtambuɫ]) is commonly held to derive from the Medieval Greek phrase “εἰς τὴν Πόλιν” (pronounced [is tim ˈbolin]), which means “to the city”[21] and is how Constantinople was referred to by the local Greeks. This reflected its status as the only major city in the vicinity. The importance of Constantinople in the Ottoman world was also reflected by its Ottoman name “Der Saadet” meaning the “gate to Prosperity” in Ottoman. An alternative view is that the name evolved directly from the name Constantinople, with the first and third syllables dropped.[16] Some Ottoman sources of the 17th century, such as Evliya Çelebi, describe it as the common Turkish name of the time; between the late 17th and late 18th centuries, it was also in official use. The first use of the word “Islambol” on coinage was in 1703 (1115 AH) during the reign of Sultan Ahmed III.[22] In modern Turkish, the name is written as İstanbul, with a dotted İ, as the Turkish alphabet distinguishes between a dotted and dotless I. In English the stress is on the first or last syllable, but in Turkish it is on the second syllable (tan).[23] A person from the city is an İstanbullu (plural: İstanbullular), although Istanbulite is used in English.[24]

Neolithic artifacts, uncovered by archeologists at the beginning of the 21st century, indicate that Istanbul’s historic peninsula was settled as far back as the 6th millennium BCE.[25] That early settlement, important in the spread of the Neolithic Revolution from the Near East to Europe, lasted for almost a millennium before being inundated by rising water levels.[26][27][28][29] The first human settlement on the Asian side, the Fikirtepe mound, is from the Copper Age period, with artifacts dating from 5500 to 3500 BCE,[30] On the European side, near the point of the peninsula (Sarayburnu), there was a Thracian settlement during the early 1st millennium BCE. Modern authors have linked it to the Thracian toponym Lygos,[31] mentioned by Pliny the Elder as an earlier name for the site of Byzantium.[32]

The history of the city proper begins around 660 BCE,[33][c] when Greek settlers from Megara established Byzantium on the European side of the Bosphorus. The settlers built an acropolis adjacent to the Golden Horn on the site of the early Thracian settlements, fueling the nascent city’s economy.[39] The city experienced a brief period of Persian rule at the turn of the 5th century BCE, but the Greeks recaptured it during the Greco-Persian Wars.[40] Byzantium then continued as part of the Athenian League and its successor, the Second Athenian League, before gaining independence in 355 BCE.[41] Long allied with the Romans, Byzantium officially became a part of the Roman Empire in 73 CE.[42] Byzantium’s decision to side with the Roman usurper Pescennius Niger against Emperor Septimius Severus cost it dearly; by the time it surrendered at the end of 195 CE, two years of siege had left the city devastated.[43] Five years later, Severus began to rebuild Byzantium, and the city regained—and, by some accounts, surpassed—its previous prosperity.[44]

Constantine the Great effectively became the emperor of the whole of the Roman Empire in September 324.[45] Two months later, he laid out the plans for a new, Christian city to replace Byzantium. As the eastern capital of the empire, the city was named Nova Roma; most called it Constantinople, a name that persisted into the 20th century.[46] On 11 May 330, Constantinople was proclaimed the capital of the Roman Empire, which was later permanently divided between the two sons of Theodosius I upon his death on 17 January 395, when the city became the capital of the Eastern Roman (Byzantine) Empire.[47]

The establishment of Constantinople was one of Constantine’s most lasting accomplishments, shifting Roman power eastward as the city became a center of Greek culture and Christianity.[47][48] Numerous churches were built across the city, including Hagia Sophia which was built during the reign of Justinian the Great and remained the world’s largest cathedral for a thousand years.[49] Constantine also undertook a major renovation and expansion of the Hippodrome of Constantinople; accommodating tens of thousands of spectators, the hippodrome became central to civic life and, in the 5th and 6th centuries, the center of episodes of unrest, including the Nika riots.[50][51] Constantinople’s location also ensured its existence would stand the test of time; for many centuries, its walls and seafront protected Europe against invaders from the east and the advance of Islam.[48] During most of the Middle Ages, the latter part of the Byzantine era, Constantinople was the largest and wealthiest city on the European continent and at times the largest in the world.[52][53]

Constantinople began to decline continuously after the end of the reign of Basil II in 1025. The Fourth Crusade was diverted from its purpose in 1204, and the city was sacked and pillaged by the crusaders.[54] They established the Latin Empire in place of the Orthodox Byzantine Empire.[55] Hagia Sophia was converted to a Catholic church in 1204. The Byzantine Empire was restored, albeit weakened, in 1261.[56] Constantinople’s churches, defenses, and basic services were in disrepair,[57] and its population had dwindled to a hundred thousand from half a million during the 8th century.[d] After the reconquest of 1261, however, some of the city’s monuments were restored, and some, like the two Deisis mosaics in Hagia Sofia and Kariye, were created.[citation needed]

Various economic and military policies instituted by Andronikos II, such as the reduction of military forces, weakened the empire and left it vulnerable to attack.[58] In the mid-14th-century, the Ottoman Turks began a strategy of gradually taking smaller towns and cities, cutting off Constantinople’s supply routes and strangling it slowly.[59] On 29 May 1453, after an eight-week siege (during which the last Roman emperor, Constantine XI, was killed), Sultan Mehmed II “the Conqueror” captured Constantinople and declared it the new capital of the Ottoman Empire. Hours later, the sultan rode to the Hagia Sophia and summoned an imam to proclaim the Islamic creed, converting the grand cathedral into an imperial mosque due to the city’s refusal to surrender peacefully.[60] Mehmed declared himself as the new “Kaysar-i Rûm” (the Ottoman Turkish equivalent of Caesar of Rome) and the Ottoman state was reorganized into an empire.[61]

Following the conquest of Constantinople[e], Mehmed II immediately set out to revitalize the city. Cognizant that revitalization would fail without the repopulation of the city, Mehmed II welcomed everyone–foreigners, criminals, and runaways– showing extraordinary openness and willingness to incorporate outsiders that came to define Ottoman political culture.[63] He also invited people from all over Europe to his capital, creating a cosmopolitan society that persisted through much of the Ottoman period.[64] Revitalizing Istanbul also required a massive program of restorations, of everything from roads to aqueducts.[65] Like many monarchs before and since, Mehmed II transformed Istanbul’s urban landscape with wholesale redevelopment of the city center.[66] There was a huge new palace to rival, if not overshadow, the old one, a new covered market (still standing as the Grand Bazaar), porticoes, pavilions, walkways, as well as more than a dozen new mosques.[65]Mehmed II turned the ramshackle old town into something that looked like an imperial capital.[66]

Social hierarchy was ignored by the rampant plague, which killed the rich and the poor alike in the sixteenth century.[67] Money could not protect the rich from all the discomforts and harsher sides of Istanbul.[67] Although the Sultan lived at a safe remove from the masses, and the wealthy and poor tended to live side by side, for the most part Istanbul was not zoned as modern cities are.[67] Opulent houses shared the same streets and districts with tiny hovels.[67] Those rich enough to have secluded country properties had a chance of escaping the periodic epidemics of sickness that blighted Istanbul.[67]

The Ottoman Dynasty claimed the status of caliphate in 1517, with Constantinople remaining the capital of this last caliphate for four centuries.[11]Suleiman the Magnificent’s reign from 1520 to 1566 was a period of especially great artistic and architectural achievement; chief architect Mimar Sinan designed several iconic buildings in the city, while Ottoman arts of ceramics, stained glass, calligraphy, and miniature flourished.[68] The population of Constantinople was 570,000 by the end of the 18th century.[69]

A period of rebellion at the start of the 19th century led to the rise of the progressive Sultan Mahmud II and eventually to the Tanzimat period, which produced political reforms and allowed new technology to be introduced to the city.[70] Bridges across the Golden Horn were constructed during this period,[71] and Constantinople was connected to the rest of the European railway network in the 1880s.[72] Modern facilities, such as a water supply network, electricity, telephones, and trams, were gradually introduced to Constantinople over the following decades, although later than to other European cities.[73] The modernization efforts were not enough to forestall the decline of the Ottoman Empire.[citation needed]

Sultan Abdul Hamid II was deposed with the Young Turk Revolution in 1908 and the Ottoman Parliament, closed since 14 February 1878, was reopened 30 years later on 23 July 1908, which marked the beginning of the Second Constitutional Era.[74] A series of wars in the early 20th century, such as the Italo-Turkish War (1911–1912) and the Balkan Wars (1912–1913), plagued the ailing empire’s capital and resulted in the 1913 Ottoman coup d’état, which brought the regime of the Three Pashas.[75]

The Ottoman Empire joined World War I (1914–1918) on the side of the Central Powers and was ultimately defeated. The deportation of Armenian intellectuals on 24 April 1915 was among the major events which marked the start of the Armenian Genocide during WWI.[76] Due to Ottoman and Turkish policies of Turkification and ethnic cleansing, the city’s Christian population declined from 450,000 to 240,000 between 1914 and 1927.[77] The Armistice of Mudros was signed on 30 October 1918 and the Allies occupied Constantinople on 13 November 1918. The Ottoman Parliament was dissolved by the Allies on 11 April 1920 and the Ottoman delegation led by Damat Ferid Pasha was forced to sign the Treaty of Sèvres on 10 August 1920.[citation needed]

Following the Turkish War of Independence (1919–1922), the Grand National Assembly of Turkey in Ankara abolished the Sultanate on 1 November 1922, and the last Ottoman Sultan, Mehmed VI, was declared persona non-grata. Leaving aboard the British warship HMS Malaya on 17 November 1922, he went into exile and died in Sanremo, Italy, on 16 May 1926. The Treaty of Lausanne was signed on 24 July 1923, and the occupation of Constantinople ended with the departure of the last forces of the Allies from the city on 4 October 1923.[78] Turkish forces of the Ankara government, commanded by Şükrü Naili Pasha (3rd Corps), entered the city with a ceremony on 6 October 1923, which has been marked as the Liberation Day of Istanbul (Turkish: İstanbul’un Kurtuluşu) and is commemorated every year on its anniversary.[78] On 29 October 1923 the Grand National Assembly of Turkey declared the establishment of the Turkish Republic, with Ankara as its capital. Mustafa Kemal Atatürk became the Republic’s first President.[79][80] According to historian Philip Mansel:

A 1942 wealth tax assessed mainly on non-Muslims led to the transfer or liquidation of many businesses owned by religious minorities.[82] From the late 1940s and early 1950s, Istanbul underwent great structural change, as new public squares, boulevards, and avenues were constructed throughout the city, sometimes at the expense of historical buildings.[83] The population of Istanbul began to rapidly increase in the 1970s, as people from Anatolia migrated to the city to find employment in the many new factories that were built on the outskirts of the sprawling metropolis. This sudden, sharp rise in the city’s population caused a large demand for housing, and many previously outlying villages and forests became engulfed into the metropolitan area of Istanbul.[84]

Istanbul is located in north-western Turkey and straddles the strait Bosporus, which provides the only passage from the Black Sea to the Mediterranean via the Sea of Marmara.[14] Historically, the city has been ideally situated for trade and defense: The confluence of the Sea of Marmara, the Bosphorus, and the Golden Horn provide both ideal defense against enemy attack and a natural toll-gate.[14] Several picturesque islands—Büyükada, Heybeliada, Burgazada, Kınalıada, and five smaller islands—are part of the city.[14] Istanbul’s shoreline has grown beyond its natural limits. Large sections of Caddebostan sit on areas of landfill, increasing the total area of the city to 5,343 square kilometers (2,063 sq mi).[14]

Despite the myth that seven hills make up the city, there are in fact more than 50 hills within the city limits. Istanbul’s tallest hill, Aydos, is 537 metres (1,762 ft) high.[14]

The nearby North Anatolian Fault is responsible for much earthquake activity, although it doesn’t physically pass through the city itself.[85]North Anatolian Fault caused the earthquakes in 1766 and 1894.[85] The threat of major earthquakes plays a large role in the city’s infrastructure development, with over 500,000[85] vulnerable buildings demolished and replaced since 2012.[86] The city has repeatedly upgraded its building codes, most recently in 2018,[86] requiring retrofits for older buildings and higher engineering standards for new construction.

Istanbul has borderline Mediterranean climate (Köppen Csa), humid subtropical climate (Köppen Cfa) and oceanic climate (Köppen Cfb) with generally cool winters and warm to hot summers (mean temperature peaking at 21.5 °C (70.7 °F) in August).[87] Spring and fall are usually mild, with varying conditions dependent on wind direction.[88][89]

Istanbul’s weather is strongly influenced by the Sea of Marmara to the south, and the Black Sea to the north. This moderates temperature swings and produces a mild year-round climate with little seasonal temperature variation. Because of its hilly topography and maritime influences, Istanbul exhibits a multitude of distinct microclimates.[90] Within the city, rainfall varies widely owing to the rain shadow of the hills in Istanbul, from around 635 millimeters (25.0 in) on the southern fringe at Florya to 1,167 millimeters (45.9 in) on the northern fringe at Bahçeköy.[91]

Lake-effect snow is common and forms when cold air, upon contact with the Black Sea, develops into moist and unstable air that ascends to form snow squalls along the lee shores of the Black Sea.[92] These snow squalls are heavy snow bands and occasionally thundersnows, with accumulation rates approaching 5–8 centimeters (2.0–3.1 in) per hour.[93]

The highest recorded temperature at the official downtown observation station in Sarıyer was 41.5 °C (107 °F) and on July 13, 2000.[92] The lowest recorded temperature was −16.1 °C (3 °F) on February 9, 1929.[92] The highest recorded snow cover in the city center was 80 centimeters (31 in) on January 4, 1942, and 104 centimeters (41 in) in the northern suburbs on January 11, 2017.[94][92][95]

The Fatih district, which was named after Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror (Turkish: Fatih Sultan Mehmed), corresponds to what was, until the Ottoman conquest in 1453, the whole of the city of Constantinople (today is the capital district and called the historic peninsula of Istanbul) on the southern shore of the Golden Horn, across the medieval Genoese citadel of Galata on the northern shore. The Genoese fortifications in Galata were largely demolished in the 19th century, leaving only the Galata Tower, to make way for the northward expansion of the city.[100] Galata (Karaköy) is today a quarter within the Beyoğlu (Pera) district, which forms Istanbul’s commercial and entertainment center and includes İstiklal Avenue and Taksim Square.[101]

Dolmabahçe Palace, the seat of government during the late Ottoman period, is in the Beşiktaş district on the European shore of the Bosphorus strait, to the north of Beyoğlu. The Sublime Porte (Bâb-ı Âli), which became a metonym for the Ottoman government, was originally used to describe the Imperial Gate (Bâb-ı Hümâyun) at the outermost courtyard of the Topkapı Palace; but after the 18th century, the Sublime Porte (or simply Porte) began to refer to the gate of the Sadrazamlık (Prime Ministry) compound in the Cağaloğlu quarter near Topkapı Palace, where the offices of the Sadrazam (Grand Vizier) and other Viziers were, and where foreign diplomats were received. The former village of Ortaköy is within Beşiktaş and gives its name to the Ortaköy Mosque on the Bosphorus, near the Bosphorus Bridge. Lining both the European and Asian shores of the Bosphorus are the historic yalıs, luxurious chalet mansions built by Ottoman aristocrats and elites as summer homes.[102] Farther inland, outside the city’s inner ring road, are Levent and Maslak, Istanbul’s main business districts.[103]

During the Ottoman period, Üsküdar (then Scutari) and Kadıköy were outside the scope of the urban area, serving as tranquil outposts with seaside yalıs and gardens. But in the second half of the 20th century, the Asian side experienced major urban growth; the late development of this part of the city led to better infrastructure and tidier urban planning when compared with most other residential areas in the city.[104] Much of the Asian side of the Bosphorus functions as a suburb of the economic and commercial centers in European Istanbul, accounting for a third of the city’s population but only a quarter of its employment.[104] As a result of Istanbul’s exponential growth in the 20th century, a significant portion of the city is composed of gecekondus (literally “built overnight”), referring to illegally constructed squatter buildings.[105] At present, some gecekondu areas are being gradually demolished and replaced by modern mass-housing compounds.[106] Moreover, large scale gentrification and urban renewal projects have been taking place,[107] such as the one in Tarlabaşı;[108] some of these projects, like the one in Sulukule, have faced criticism.[109] The Turkish government also has ambitious plans for an expansion of the city west and northwards on the European side in conjunction with plans for a third airport; the new parts of the city will include four different settlements with specified urban functions, housing 1.5 million people.[110]

Istanbul does not have a primary urban park, but it has several green areas. Gülhane Park and Yıldız Park were originally included within the grounds of two of Istanbul’s palaces—Topkapı Palace and Yıldız Palace—but they were repurposed as public parks in the early decades of the Turkish Republic.[111] Another park, Fethi Paşa Korusu, is on a hillside adjacent to the Bosphorus Bridge in Anatolia, opposite Yıldız Palace in Europe. Along the European side, and close to the Fatih Sultan Mehmet Bridge, is Emirgan Park, which was known as the Kyparades (Cypress Forest) during the Byzantine period. In the Ottoman period, it was first granted to Nişancı Feridun Ahmed Bey in the 16th century, before being granted by Sultan Murad IV to the Safavid Emir Gûne Han in the 17th century, hence the name Emirgan. The 47-hectare (120-acre) park was later owned by Khedive Ismail Pasha of Ottoman Egypt and Sudan in the 19th century. Emirgan Park is known for its diversity of plants and an annual tulip festival is held there since 2005.[112] The AKP government’s decision to replace Taksim Gezi Park with a replica of the Ottoman era Taksim Military Barracks (which was transformed into the Taksim Stadium in 1921, before being demolished in 1940 for building Gezi Park) sparked a series of nationwide protests in 2013 covering a wide range of issues. Popular during the summer among Istanbulites is Belgrad Forest, spreading across 5,500 hectares (14,000 acres) at the northern edge of the city. The forest originally supplied water to the city and remnants of reservoirs used during Byzantine and Ottoman times survive.[113][114]

Istanbul is primarily known for its Byzantine and Ottoman architecture, and despite its development as a Turkish city since 1453, contains both Christian and ancient monuments.

There are three ancient monuments in the city.[116] The most ancient is the Egyptian Obelisk.[116] Built of red granite, 31 m (100 ft) high, it came from the Temple of Karnak at Luxor, erected in 1500 BC.[116] It was brought to Istanbul in 357 CE by the order of Constantine II and put up in the Hippodrome.[116] When re-erected, the Egyptian Obelisk was mounted on a decorative base, with a statue that depicted Theodosius I and his courtiers.[116] Next in age is the Serpentine Column, from 479 BCE.[116] It was brought from Delphi in the time of Augustus and also erected in the Hippodrome.[116] The slightly smaller Column of Constantine Porphyrogenitus, was another of Augustus’s trophies. Built of porphyry, 35 m (115 ft) high, it came from Heliopolis, erected in 330 CE to inaugurate the new Byzantine capital.[116] Originally part of a sculpture of Emperor Constantine the Great dressed as Apollo, the column first stood at the entrance to the Forum of Constantine.[116]

There are traces of the Byzantine era throughout the city, from ancient churches that were built over early Christian meeting places like Chora Church, Hagia Irene to public places like the Hippodrome, the Augustaion. It is the Hagia Sophia, however, that fully conveys the period of Constantinople as a city without parallel in Christendom.

Hagia Sophia, topped by a dome 31 meters (102 ft) in diameter over a square space defined by four arches, is the pinnacle of the Byzantine architecture.[117]Hagia Sophia stood as the world’s largest cathedral in the world until it was converted into a mosque in the 15th century.[117] The minarets date from that period.[117]

Over the next four centuries, the Ottomans transformed of Istanbul’s urban landscape with a vast building scheme building towering mosques and ornate palaces. Blue Mosque, another landmark of the city, faces Haghia Sophia in Sultanahmet Square.

Among the oldest surviving examples of Ottoman architecture in Istanbul are the Anadoluhisarı and Rumelihisarı fortresses, which assisted the Ottomans during their siege of the city.[119] Over the next four centuries, the Ottomans made an indelible impression on the skyline of Istanbul, building towering mosques and ornate palaces.

Topkapı Palace, dating back to 1465, is the oldest seat of government surviving in Istanbul. Mehmet II built the original palace as his main residence and the seat of government.[120] The present palace grew over the centuries as a series of additions enfolding four courtyards and blending neoclassical, rococo, and baroque architectural forms.[121] In 1639 Murat IV made some of the most lavish additions, including the Baghdad Kiosk, to commemorate his conquest of Baghdad the previous year.[122] Government meetings took place here until 1786, when the seat of government was moved to the Sublime Porte.[120] After several hundred years of royal residence, it was abandoned in 1853 in favor of the baroque Dolmabahçe Palace.[121]Topkapı Palace became public property following the abolition of monarchy in 1922. [121] After extensive renovation, it became one of Turkey’s first national museums in 1924.[120]

The imperial mosques include Fatih Mosque, Bayezid Mosque, Yavuz Selim Mosque, Süleymaniye Mosque, Sultan Ahmed Mosque (the Blue Mosque), and Yeni Mosque, all of which were built at the peak of the Ottoman Empire, in the 16th and 17th centuries. In the following centuries, and especially after the Tanzimat reforms, Ottoman architecture was supplanted by European styles.[123] An example of which is the imperial Nuruosmaniye Mosque. Areas around İstiklal Avenue were filled with grand European embassies and rows of buildings in Neoclassical, Renaissance Revival and Art Nouveau styles, which went on to influence the architecture of a variety of structures in Beyoğlu—including churches, stores, and theaters—and official buildings such as Dolmabahçe Palace.[124]

Since 2004, the municipal boundaries of Istanbul have been coincident with the boundaries of its province.[125] The city, considered capital of Istanbul Province, is administered by the Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality (MMI), which oversees the 39 districts of the city-province.

burak özçivit

The current city structure can be traced back to the Tanzimat period of reform in the 19th century, before which Islamic judges and imams led the city under the auspices of the Grand Vizier. Following the model of French cities, this religious system was replaced by a mayor and a citywide council composed of representatives of the confessional groups (millet) across the city. Pera (now Beyoğlu) was the first area of the city to have its own director and council, with members instead being longtime residents of the neighborhood.[126] Laws enacted after the Ottoman constitution of 1876 aimed to expand this structure across the city, imitating the twenty arrondissements of Paris, but they were not fully implemented until 1908, when the city was declared a province with nine constituent districts.[127][128] This system continued beyond the founding of the Turkish Republic, with the province renamed a belediye (municipality), but the municipality was disbanded in 1957.[129]

Small settlements adjacent to major population centers in Turkey, including Istanbul, were merged into their respective primary cities during the early 1980s, resulting in metropolitan municipalities.[130][131] The main decision-making body of the Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality is the Municipal Council, with members drawn from district councils.

The Municipal Council is responsible for citywide issues, including managing the budget, maintaining civic infrastructure, and overseeing museums and major cultural centers.[132] Since the government operates under a “powerful mayor, weak council” approach, the council’s leader—the metropolitan mayor—has the authority to make swift decisions, often at the expense of transparency.[133] The Municipal Council is advised by the Metropolitan Executive Committee, although the committee also has limited power to make decisions of its own.[134] All representatives on the committee are appointed by the metropolitan mayor and the council, with the mayor—or someone of his or her choosing—serving as head.[134][135]

District councils are chiefly responsible for waste management and construction projects within their respective districts. They each maintain their own budgets, although the metropolitan mayor reserves the right to review district decisions. One-fifth of all district council members, including the district mayors, also represent their districts in the Municipal Council.[132] All members of the district councils and the Municipal Council, including the metropolitan mayor, are elected to five-year terms.[136] Representing the Republican People’s Party, Ekrem İmamoğlu has been the Mayor of Istanbul since 27 June 2019.[137]

With the Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality and Istanbul Province having equivalent jurisdictions, few responsibilities remain for the provincial government. Similar to the MMI, the Istanbul Special Provincial Administration has a governor, a democratically elected decision-making body—the Provincial Parliament—and an appointed Executive Committee. Mirroring the executive committee at the municipal level, the Provincial Executive Committee includes a secretary-general and leaders of departments that advise the Provincial Parliament.[135][138] The Provincial Administration’s duties are largely limited to the building and maintenance of schools, residences, government buildings, and roads, and the promotion of arts, culture, and nature conservation.[139]Ali Yerlikaya has been the Governor of Istanbul Province since 26 October 2018.[140]

Throughout most of its history, Istanbul has ranked among the largest cities in the world. By 500 CE, Constantinople had somewhere between 400,000 and 500,000 people, edging out its predecessor, Rome, for the world’s largest city.[143] Constantinople jostled with other major historical cities, such as Baghdad, Chang’an, Kaifeng and Merv for the position of the world’s largest city until the 12th century. It never returned to being the world’s largest, but remained the largest city in Europe from 1500 to 1750, when it was surpassed by London.[144]

The Turkish Statistical Institute estimates that the population of Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality was 15,519,267 at the end of 2019, hosting 19 percent of the country’s population.[145] 64.4% of the residents live on the European side and 35.6% on the Asian side.[145]

Istanbul ranks as the seventh-largest city proper in the world, and the second-largest urban agglomeration in Europe, after Moscow.[146][147] The city’s annual population growth of 1.5 percent ranks as one of the highest among the seventy-eight largest metropolises in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. The high population growth mirrors an urbanization trend across the country, as the second and third fastest-growing OECD metropolises are the Turkish cities of Izmir and Ankara.[15]

Istanbul experienced especially rapid growth during the second half of the 20th century, with its population increasing tenfold between 1950 and 2000.[148] This growth was fueled by internal and international migration. Istanbul’s foreign population with a residence permit increased dramatically, from 43,000 in 2007[149] to 856,377 in 2019.[150][151]

Istanbul has been a cosmopolitan city throughout much of its history, but it has become more homogenized since the end of the Ottoman era. Muslims form roughly 86% of the population in the city.[153][154][155][156]Arabs form the city’s largest ethnic minority, with an estimated population of more than 2 million.[157] Following Turkey’s support for the Arab Spring, Istanbul emerged as a hub for dissidents from across the Arab world, including former presidential candidates from Egypt, Kuwaiti MPs, and former ministers from Jordan, Saudi Arabia (including Jamal Khashoggi), Syria, and Yemen.[158][159][160] With almost two million residents claiming full or partial Kurdish ancestry, Kurds form the second-largest ethnic minority in Istanbul. Although the Kurdish presence in the city dates back to the early Ottoman period,[161] the majority of Kurds in the city originate from villages in eastern and southeastern Turkey.[162]

Greeks and Armenians form the largest Christian population in the city. While Istanbul’s Greek population was exempted from the 1923 population exchange with Greece, changes in tax status and the 1955 anti-Greek pogrom prompted thousands to leave.[163] Following Greek migration to the city for work in the 2010s, the Greek population rose to nearly 3,000 in 2019, still greatly diminished since 1919, when it stood at 350,000.[163] There are today 123,363 Armenians in Istanbul, down from a peak of 164,000 in 1913.[164]

The majority of the Levantines (Turkish: Levanten) in Istanbul and Izmir are the descendants of traders/colonists from the Italian maritime republics of the Mediterranean (especially Genoa and Venice) and France, who obtained special rights and privileges called the Capitulations from the Ottoman sultans in the 16th century.[165] The community had more than 15,000 members during Atatürk’s presidency in the 1920s and 1930s, but today is reduced to only a few hundreds, according to Italo-Levantine writer Giovanni Scognamillo.[166] They continue to live in Istanbul (mostly in Karaköy, Beyoğlu and Nişantaşı), and Izmir (mostly in Karşıyaka, Bornova and Buca).

Istanbul became one of the world’s most important Jewish centers in the 16th and 17th century.[167] Romaniote and Ashkenazi communities existed in Istanbul before the conquest of Istanbul, but it was the arrival of Sephardic Jews that ushered a period of cultural flourishing. Sephardic Jews settled in the city after their expulsion from Spain and Portugal in 1492 and 1497.[167] Sympathetic to the plight of Sephardic Jews, Bayezid II sent out the Ottoman Navy under the command of admiral Kemal Reis to Spain in 1492 in order to evacuate them safely to Ottoman lands.[167] In marked contrast to Jews in Europe, Ottoman Jews were allowed to work in any profession.[168]Ottoman Jews in Istanbul excelled in commerce, and came to particularly dominate the medical profession.[168] By 1711, using the printing press, books came to be published in Spanish and Ladino, Yiddish, and Hebrew.[169] In large part due to emigration to Israel, the Jewish population in the city dropped from 100,000 in 1950[170] to 25,000 in 2020.

Politically, Istanbul is seen as the most important administrative region in Turkey. Many politicians, including President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, are of the view that a political party’s performance in Istanbul is more significant than its general performance overall. This is due to the city’s role as Turkey’s financial center, its large electorate and the fact that Erdoğan himself was elected Mayor of Istanbul in 1994.[citation needed] In the run-up to local elections in 2019, Erdoğan claimed ‘if we fail in Istanbul, we will fail in Turkey’.[171]

The contest in Istanbul carried deep political, economic and symbolic significance for Erdoğan, whose election of mayor of Istanbul in 1994 had served as his launchpad.[172] For Ekrem İmamoğlu, winning the mayorship of Istanbul was a huge moral victory, but for Erdoğan it had practical ramifications: His party, AKP, lost control of the $4.8 billion municipal budget, which had sustained patronage at the point of delivery of many public services for 25 years.[173]

More recently, Istanbul and many of Turkey’s metropolitan cities are following a trend away from the government and their right-wing ideology. In 2013 and 2014, large-scale anti-AKP government protests began in İstanbul and spread throughout the nation. This trend first became evident electorally in the 2014 mayoral election where the center-left opposition candidate won an impressive 40% of the vote, despite not winning. The first government defeat in Istanbul occurred in the 2017 constitutional referendum, where Istanbul voted ‘No’ by 51.4% to 48.6%. The AKP government had supported a ‘Yes’ vote and won the vote nationally due to high support in rural parts of the country. The biggest defeat for the government came in the 2019 local elections, where their candidate for Mayor, former Prime Minister Binali Yıldırım, was defeated by a very narrow margin by the opposition candidate Ekrem İmamoğlu. İmamoğlu won the vote with 48.77% of the vote, against Yıldırım’s 48.61%. Similar trends and electoral successes for the opposition were also replicated in Ankara, Izmir, Antalya, Mersin, Adana and other metropolitan areas of Turkey.[citation needed]

Administratively, Istanbul is divided into 39 districts, more than any other province in Turkey. As a province, Istanbul sends 98 Members of Parliament to the Grand National Assembly of Turkey, which has a total of 600 seats. For the purpose of parliamentary elections, Istanbul is divided into three electoral districts; two on the European side and one on the Asian side, electing 28, 35 and 35 MPs respectively.[citation needed]

Istanbul had the eleventh-largest economy among the world’s urban areas in 2018, and is responsible for 30 percent of Turkey’s industrial output,[176]31 percent of GDP,[176] and 47 percent of tax revenues.[176] The city’s gross domestic product adjusted by PPP stood at US$537.507 billion in 2018,[5] with manufacturing and services accounting for 36 percent and 60 percent of the economic output respectively.[176] Istanbul’s productivity is 110 percent higher than the national average.[176] Trade is economically important, accounting for 30 percent of the economic output in the city.[14] In 2019, companies based in Istanbul produced exports worth $83.66 billion and received imports totaling $128.34 billion; these figures were equivalent to 47 percent and 61 percent, respectively, of the national totals.[177]

Istanbul, which straddles the Bosporus strait, houses international ports that link Europe and Asia. The Bosporus, providing the only passage from the Black Sea to the Mediterranean, is the world’s busiest and narrowest strait used for international navigation, with more than 200 million tons of oil passing through it each year.[178]International conventions guarantee passage between the Black and the Mediterranean seas,[179] even when tankers carry oil, LNG/LPG, chemicals, and other flammable or explosive materials as cargo. In 2011, as a workaround solution, the then Prime Minister Erdoğan presented Canal Istanbul, a project to open a new strait between the Black and Marmara seas.[179] While the project was still on Turkey’s agenda in 2020, there has not been a clear date set for it.[14]

Shipping is a significant part of the city’s economy, with 73.9 percent of exports and 92.7 percent of imports in 2018 executed by sea.[14] Istanbul has three major shipping ports — the Port of Haydarpaşa, the Port of Ambarlı, and the Port of Zeytinburnu — as well as several smaller ports and oil terminals along the Bosporus and the Sea of Marmara.[14] Haydarpaşa, at the southeastern end of the Bosporus, was Istanbul’s largest port until the early 2000s.[180] Since then operations were shifted to Ambarlı, with plans to convert Haydarpaşa into a tourism complex.[14] In 2019, Ambarlı, on the western edge of the urban center, had an annual capacity of 3,104,882 TEUs, making it the third-largest cargo terminal in the Mediterranean basin.[180]

Istanbul has been an international banking hub since the 1980s,[14] and is home to the only stock exchange in Turkey. Borsa Istanbul was originally established as the Ottoman Stock Exchange in 1866.[181] In 1995, keeping up with the financial trends, Borsa Istanbul has moved its headquarters from Bankalar Caddesi — traditionally the financial center of the Ottoman Empire and Turkey,[181] — to the district of Maslak, which hosts the headquarters of the majority of Turkish banks.[182] By 2022,[183] Borsa Istanbul is scheduled to move to a new planned district in Ataşehir, which will host the headquarters of Turkish banks, including the Central Bank that is currently headquartered in Ankara.[184] Whereas 2.4 million foreigners visited the city in 2000,[citation needed] there were 13.4 million foreign tourists in 2018, making Istanbul the world’s fifth most-visited city.[185] Istanbul is, after Antalya, Turkey’s second-largest international gateway, receiving a quarter of the nation’s foreign tourists. Istanbul has more than fifty museums, with Topkapı Palace, the most visited museum in the city, bringing in more than $30 million in revenue each year.[14]

Istanbul was historically known as a cultural hub, but its cultural scene stagnated after the Turkish Republic shifted its focus toward Ankara.[187] The new national government established programs that served to orient Turks toward musical traditions, especially those originating in Europe, but musical institutions and visits by foreign classical artists were primarily centered in the new capital.[188] Much of Turkey’s cultural scene had its roots in Istanbul, and by the 1980s and 1990s Istanbul reemerged globally as a city whose cultural significance is not solely based on its past glory.[189]

By the end of the 19th century, Istanbul had established itself as a regional artistic center, with Turkish, European, and Middle Eastern artists flocking to the city. Despite efforts to make Ankara Turkey’s cultural heart, Istanbul had the country’s primary institution of art until the 1970s.[190] When additional universities and art journals were founded in Istanbul during the 1980s, artists formerly based in Ankara moved in.[191]Beyoğlu has been transformed into the artistic center of the city, with young artists and older Turkish artists formerly residing abroad finding footing there. Modern art museums, including İstanbul Modern, the Pera Museum, Sakıp Sabancı Museum and SantralIstanbul, opened in the 2000s to complement the exhibition spaces and auction houses that have already contributed to the cosmopolitan nature of the city.[192] These museums have yet to attain the popularity of older museums on the historic peninsula, including the Istanbul Archaeology Museums, which ushered in the era of modern museums in Turkey, and the Turkish and Islamic Arts Museum.[186]

The first film screening in Turkey was at Yıldız Palace in 1896, a year after the technology publicly debuted in Paris.[193] Movie theaters rapidly cropped up in Beyoğlu, with the greatest concentration of theaters being along the street now known as İstiklal Avenue.[194] Istanbul also became the heart of Turkey’s nascent film industry, although Turkish films were not consistently developed until the 1950s.[195] Since then, Istanbul has been the most popular location to film Turkish dramas and comedies.[196] The Turkish film industry ramped up in the second half of the century, and with Uzak (2002) and My Father and My Son (2005), both filmed in Istanbul, the nation’s movies began to see substantial international success.[197] Istanbul and its picturesque skyline have also served as a backdrop for several foreign films, including From Russia with Love (1963), Topkapi (1964), The World Is Not Enough (1999), and Mission Istaanbul (2008).[198]

Coinciding with this cultural reemergence was the establishment of the Istanbul Festival, which began showcasing a variety of art from Turkey and around the world in 1973. From this flagship festival came the International Istanbul Film Festival and the Istanbul International Jazz Festival in the early 1980s. With its focus now solely on music and dance, the Istanbul Festival has been known as the Istanbul International Music Festival since 1994.[199] The most prominent of the festivals that evolved from the original Istanbul Festival is the Istanbul Biennial, held every two years since 1987. Its early incarnations were aimed at showcasing Turkish visual art, and it has since opened to international artists and risen in prestige to join the elite biennales, alongside the Venice Biennale and the São Paulo Art Biennial.[200]

Istanbul has numerous shopping centers, from the historic to the modern. The Grand Bazaar, in operation since 1461, is among the world’s oldest and largest covered markets.[201][202]Mahmutpasha Bazaar is an open-air market extending between the Grand Bazaar and the Egyptian Bazaar, which has been Istanbul’s major spice market since 1660. Galleria Ataköy ushered in the age of modern shopping malls in Turkey when it opened in 1987.[203] Since then, malls have become major shopping centers outside the historic peninsula. Akmerkez was awarded the titles of “Europe’s best” and “World’s best” shopping mall by the International Council of Shopping Centers in 1995 and 1996; Istanbul Cevahir has been one of the continent’s largest since opening in 2005; Kanyon won the Cityscape Architectural Review Award in the Commercial Built category in 2006.[202]İstinye Park in İstinye and Zorlu Center near Levent are among the newest malls which include the stores of the world’s top fashion brands. Abdi İpekçi Street in Nişantaşı and Bağdat Avenue on the Anatolian side of the city have evolved into high-end shopping districts.[204][205]

Istanbul is known for its historic seafood restaurants. Many of the city’s most popular and upscale seafood restaurants line the shores of the Bosphorus (particularly in neighborhoods like Ortaköy, Bebek, Arnavutköy, Yeniköy, Beylerbeyi and Çengelköy). Kumkapı along the Sea of Marmara has a pedestrian zone that hosts around fifty fish restaurants.[206] The Princes’ Islands, 15 kilometers (9 mi) from the city center, are also popular for their seafood restaurants. Because of their restaurants, historic summer mansions, and tranquil, car-free streets, the Prince Islands are a popular vacation destination among Istanbulites and foreign tourists.[207] Istanbul is also famous for its sophisticated and elaborately-cooked dishes of the Ottoman cuisine. Following the influx of immigrants from southeastern and eastern Turkey, which began in the 1960s, the foodscape of the city has drastically changed by the end of the century; with influences of Middle Eastern cuisine such as kebab taking an important place in the food scene. Restaurants featuring foreign cuisines are mainly concentrated in the Beyoğlu, Beşiktaş, Şişli, and Kadıköy districts.

Istanbul has active nightlife and historic taverns, a signature characteristic of the city for centuries if not millennia. Along İstiklal Avenue is the Çiçek Pasajı, now home to winehouses (known as meyhanes), pubs, and restaurants.[208] İstiklal Avenue, originally known for its taverns, has shifted toward shopping, but the nearby Nevizade Street is still lined with winehouses and pubs.[209][210] Some other neighborhoods around İstiklal Avenue have been revamped to cater to Beyoğlu’s nightlife, with formerly commercial streets now lined with pubs, cafes, and restaurants playing live music.[211] Other focal points for Istanbul’s nightlife include Nişantaşı, Ortaköy, Bebek, and Kadıköy.[212]

Istanbul is home to some of Turkey’s oldest sports clubs. Beşiktaş JK, established in 1903, is considered the oldest of these sports clubs. Due to its initial status as Turkey’s only club, Beşiktaş occasionally represented the Ottoman Empire and Turkish Republic in international sports competitions, earning the right to place the Turkish flag inside its team logo.[213]Galatasaray SK and Fenerbahçe SK have fared better in international competitions and have won more Süper Lig titles, at 22 and 19 times, respectively.[214][215][216] Galatasaray and Fenerbahçe have a long-standing rivalry, with Galatasaray based in the European part and Fenerbahçe based in the Anatolian part of the city.[215] Istanbul has seven basketball teams—Anadolu Efes, Beşiktaş, Darüşşafaka, Fenerbahçe, Galatasaray, İstanbul Büyükşehir Belediyespor and Büyükçekmece—that play in the premier-level Turkish Basketball Super League.[217]

Many of Istanbul’s sports facilities have been built or upgraded since 2000 to bolster the city’s bids for the Summer Olympic Games. Atatürk Olympic Stadium, the largest multi-purpose stadium in Turkey, was completed in 2002 as an IAAF first-class venue for track and field.[218] The stadium hosted the 2005 UEFA Champions League Final and will host the 2020 UEFA Champions League Final.[219]Şükrü Saracoğlu Stadium, Fenerbahçe’s home field, hosted the 2009 UEFA Cup Final three years after its completion. Türk Telekom Arena opened in 2011 to replace Ali Sami Yen Stadium as Galatasaray’s home turf,[220][221] while Vodafone Park, opened in 2016 to replace BJK İnönü Stadium as the home turf of Beşiktaş, hosted the 2019 UEFA Super Cup game. All four stadiums are elite Category 4 (formerly five-star) UEFA stadiums.[f]

The Sinan Erdem Dome, among the largest indoor arenas in Europe, hosted the final of the 2010 FIBA World Championship, the 2012 IAAF World Indoor Championships, as well as the 2011–12 Euroleague and 2016–17 EuroLeague Final Fours.[225] Prior to the completion of the Sinan Erdem Dome in 2010, Abdi İpekçi Arena was Istanbul’s primary indoor arena, having hosted the finals of EuroBasket 2001.[226] Several other indoor arenas, including the Beşiktaş Akatlar Arena, have also been inaugurated since 2000, serving as the home courts of Istanbul’s sports clubs. The most recent of these is the 13,800-seat Ülker Sports Arena, which opened in 2012 as the home court of Fenerbahçe’s basketball teams.[227] Despite the construction boom, five bids for the Summer Olympics—in 2000, 2004, 2008, 2012, and 2020—and national bids for UEFA Euro 2012 and UEFA Euro 2016 have ended unsuccessfully.[228]

The TVF Burhan Felek Sport Hall is one of the major volleyball arenas in the city and hosts clubs such as Eczacıbaşı VitrA, Vakıfbank SK, and Fenerbahçe who have won numerous European and World Championship titles.[citation needed]

Between 2005 and 2011, Istanbul Park racing circuit hosted the annual Formula One Turkish Grand Prix.[229] Istanbul Park was also a venue of the World Touring Car Championship and the European Le Mans Series in 2005 and 2006, but the track has not seen either of these competitions since then.[230][231] It also hosted the Turkish Motorcycle Grand Prix between 2005 and 2007. Istanbul was occasionally a venue of the F1 Powerboat World Championship, with the last race on the Bosphorus strait on 12–13 August 2000.[232][unreliable source?] The last race of the Powerboat P1 World Championship on the Bosphorus took place on 19–21 June 2009.[233] Istanbul Sailing Club, established in 1952, hosts races and other sailing events on the waterways in and around Istanbul each year.[234][235]

Most state-run radio and television stations are based in Ankara, but Istanbul is the primary hub of Turkish media. The industry has its roots in the former Ottoman capital, where the first Turkish newspaper, Takvim-i Vekayi (Calendar of Affairs), was published in 1831. The Cağaloğlu street on which the newspaper was printed, Bâb-ı Âli Street, rapidly became the center of Turkish print media, alongside Beyoğlu across the Golden Horn.[236]

Istanbul now has a wide variety of periodicals. Most nationwide newspapers are based in Istanbul, with simultaneous Ankara and İzmir editions.[237]Hürriyet, Sabah, Posta and Sözcü, the country’s top four papers, are all headquartered in Istanbul, boasting more than 275,000 weekly sales each.[238]Hürriyet’s English-language edition, Hürriyet Daily News, has been printed since 1961, but the English-language Daily Sabah, first published by Sabah in 2014, has overtaken it in circulation. Several smaller newspapers, including popular publications like Cumhuriyet, Milliyet and Habertürk are also based in Istanbul.[237] Istanbul also has long-running Armenian language newspapers, notably the dailies Marmara and Jamanak and the bilingual weekly Agos in Armenian and Turkish.[citation needed]

Radio broadcasts in Istanbul date back to 1927, when Turkey’s first radio transmission came from atop the Central Post Office in Eminönü. Control of this transmission, and other radio stations established in the following decades, ultimately came under the state-run Turkish Radio and Television Corporation (TRT), which held a monopoly on radio and television broadcasts between its founding in 1964 and 1990.[239] Today, TRT runs four national radio stations; these stations have transmitters across the country so each can reach over 90 percent of the country’s population, but only Radio 2 is based in Istanbul. Offering a range of content from educational programming to coverage of sporting events, Radio 2 is the most popular radio station in Turkey.[239] Istanbul’s airwaves are the busiest in Turkey, primarily featuring either Turkish-language or English-language content. One of the exceptions, offering both, is Açık Radyo (94.9 FM). Among Turkey’s first private stations, and the first featuring foreign popular music, was Istanbul’s Metro FM (97.2 FM). The state-run Radio 3, although based in Ankara, also features English-language popular music, and English-language news programming is provided on NTV Radyo (102.8 FM).[240]

TRT-Children is the only TRT television station based in Istanbul.[241] Istanbul is home to the headquarters of several Turkish stations and regional headquarters of international media outlets. Istanbul-based Star TV was the first private television network to be established following the end of the TRT monopoly; Star TV and Show TV (also based in Istanbul) remain highly popular throughout the country, airing Turkish and American series.[242]Kanal D and ATV are other stations in Istanbul that offer a mix of news and series; NTV (partnered with U.S. media outlet MSNBC) and Sky Turk—both based in the city—are mainly just known for their news coverage in Turkish. The BBC has a regional office in Istanbul, assisting its Turkish-language news operations, and the American news channel CNN established the Turkish-language CNN Türk there in 1999.[243]

In 2015, more than 57,000 students attended 7,934 schools,[244] including the renowned Galatasaray High School, Kabataş Erkek Lisesi, and Istanbul Lisesi. Galatasaray High School was established in 1481 and is the oldest public high school in Turkey.[244]

Some of the most renowned and highly ranked universities in Turkey are in Istanbul. Istanbul University, the nation’s oldest institute of higher education, dates back to 1453 and its dental, law, medical schools were founded in the nineteenth century.

Istanbul has more than 93 colleges and universities,[244] with 400,000 students[245] enrolled in 2016. The city’s largest private universities include Sabancı University, with its main campus in Tuzla, Koç University in Sarıyer, Özyeğin Üniversitesi near Altunizade. Istanbul’s first private university, Koç University, was founded as late as 1992, because private universities were officially outlawed in Turkey before the 1982 amendment to the constitution.[244]

Four public universities with a major presence in the city, Boğaziçi University, Galatasaray University, Istanbul Technical University (the world’s third-oldest university dedicated entirely to engineering), Istanbul University provide education in English (all but Galatasaray University) and French.[244]

Istanbul is also home to several conservatories and art schools, including Mimar Sinan Academy of Fine Arts, founded in 1882.[246]

Istanbul’s first water supply systems date back to the city’s early history, when aqueducts (such as the Valens Aqueduct) deposited the water in the city’s numerous cisterns.[247] At the behest of Suleiman the Magnificent, the Kırkçeşme water supply network was constructed; by 1563, the network provided 4,200 cubic meters (150,000 cu ft) of water to 158 sites each day.[247] In later years, in response to increasing public demand, water from various springs was channeled to public fountains, like the Fountain of Ahmed III, by means of supply lines.[248] Today, Istanbul has a chlorinated and filtered water supply and a sewage treatment system managed by the Istanbul Water and Sewerage Administration (İstanbul Su ve Kanalizasyon İdaresi, İSKİ).[249]

The Silahtarağa Power Station, a coal-fired power plant along the Golden Horn, was the sole source of Istanbul’s electricity between 1914, when its first engine room was completed, and 1952.[250] Following the founding of the Turkish Republic, the plant underwent renovations to accommodate the city’s increasing demand; its capacity grew from 23 megawatts in 1923 to a peak of 120 megawatts in 1956.[250][251] Capacity declined until the power station reached the end of its economic life and shut down in 1983.[250] The state-run Turkish Electrical Authority (TEK) briefly—between its founding in 1970 and 1984—held a monopoly on the generation and distribution of electricity, but now the authority—since split between the Turkish Electricity Generation Transmission Company (TEAŞ) and the Turkish Electricity Distribution Company (TEDAŞ)—competes with private electric utilities.[251]

The Ottoman Ministry of Post and Telegraph was established in 1840 and the first post office, the Imperial Post Office, opened near the courtyard of Yeni Mosque. By 1876, the first international mailing network between Istanbul and the lands beyond the Ottoman Empire had been established.[253] Sultan Abdülmecid I issued Samuel Morse his first official honor for the telegraph in 1847, and construction of the first telegraph line—between Istanbul and Edirne—finished in time to announce the end of the Crimean War in 1856.[254] A nascent telephone system began to emerge in Istanbul in 1881 and after the first manual telephone exchange became operational in Istanbul in 1909, the Ministry of Post and Telegraph became the Ministry of Post, Telegraph, and Telephone.[253][255]GSM cellular networks arrived in Turkey in 1994, with Istanbul among the first cities to receive the service.[256] Today, mobile and landline service is provided by private companies, after Türk Telekom, which split from the Ministry of Post, Telegraph, and Telephone in 1995, was privatized in 2005.[253][256] Postal services remain under the purview of what is now the Post and Telegraph Organization (retaining the acronym PTT).[253]

In 2000, Istanbul had 137 hospitals, of which 100 were private.[257][needs update] Turkish citizens are entitled to subsidized healthcare in the nation’s state-run hospitals.[237] As public hospitals tend to be overcrowded or otherwise slow, private hospitals are preferable for those who can afford them. Their prevalence has increased significantly over the last decade, as the percentage of outpatients using private hospitals increased from 6 percent to 23 percent between 2005 and 2009.[237][258] Many of these private hospitals, as well as some of the public hospitals, are equipped with high-tech equipment, including MRI machines, or associated with medical research centers.[259] Turkey has more hospitals accredited by the U.S.-based Joint Commission than any other country in the world, with most concentrated in its big cities. The high quality of healthcare, especially in private hospitals, has contributed to a recent upsurge in medical tourism to Turkey (with a 40 percent increase between 2007 and 2008).[260] Laser eye surgery is particularly common among medical tourists, as Turkey is known for specializing in the procedure.[261]

Istanbul’s motorways network are the O-1, O-2, O-3, O-4 and O-7. By the end of 2019, the total length of Istanbul Province’s toll motorways network (otoyollar) is 513 km and highways network (devlet yollari) is 327 km, totaling 840 km of expressway roads (minimum 2×2 lanes), excluding secondary roads and urban streets.[262][263] The density of expressway network is 15.7 km/100 km2 (2019). The O-1 forms the city’s inner ring road, traversing the 15 July Martyrs (First Bosphorus) Bridge, and the O-2 is the city’s outer ring road, crossing the Fatih Sultan Mehmet (Second Bosphorus) Bridge. The O-2 continues west to Edirne and the O-4 continues east to Ankara. The O-2, O-3, and O-4 are part of European route E80 (the Trans-European Motorway) between Portugal and the Iran–Turkey border.[264] In 2011, the first and second bridges on the Bosphorus carried 400,000 vehicles each day.[265] The O-7[266] or Kuzey Marmara Otoyolu, is a motorway that bypass Istanbul to the north. The O-7 motorway from Kinali Gişeleri to Istanbul Park Service has 139 km, with 8 lanes (4×4). The completed section of highway crosses the Bosphorus Strait via the Yavuz Sultan Selim (Third Bosphorus) Bridge, entered service on 26 August 2016.[267] The O-7 motorway connects Istanbul Atatürk Airport with Istanbul Airport. Environmentalist groups worry that the third bridge will endanger the remaining green areas to the north of Istanbul.[268][269] Apart from the three Bosphorus Bridges, the dual-deck, 14.6-kilometer (9.1 mi) Eurasia Tunnel (which entered service on 20 December 2016) under the Bosphorus strait also provides road crossings for motor vehicles between the Asian and European sides of Turkey.[270]

Istanbul’s local public transportation system is a network of commuter trains, trams, funiculars, metro lines, buses, bus rapid transit, and ferries. Fares across modes are integrated, using the contactless Istanbulkart, introduced in 2009, or the older Akbil electronic ticket device.[271]Trams in Istanbul date back to 1872, when they were horse-drawn, but even the first electrified trams were decommissioned in the 1960s.[272] Operated by Istanbul Electricity, Tramway, and Tunnel General Management (İETT), trams slowly returned to the city in the 1990s with the introduction of a nostalgic route and a faster modern tram line, which now carries 265,000 passengers each day.[272][273] The Tünel opened in 1875 as the world’s second-oldest subterranean rail line (after London’s Metropolitan Railway).[272] It still carries passengers between Karaköy and İstiklal Avenue along a steep 573-meter (1,880 ft) track; a more modern funicular between Taksim Square and Kabataş began running in 2006.[274][275]

The Istanbul Metro comprises five lines (the M1, M2, M3 and M6 on the European side, and the M4 and M5 on the Asian side) with several other lines (the M7, M8, M9 and M11) and extensions under construction.[276][277] The two sides of Istanbul’s metro are connected under the Bosphorus by the Marmaray tunnel, inaugurated in 2013 as the first rail connection between Thrace and Anatolia, having 13.5 km length.[278] The Marmaray tunnel together with the suburban railways lines along the Sea of Marmara, is part of intercontinental commuter rail line in Istanbul, from Halkalı on the European side to Gebze on the Asian side. Marmaray rail line has 76.6 km, and the full line opened on 12 March 2019.[279] Until then, buses provide transportation within and between the two-halves of the city, accommodating 2.2 million passenger trips each day.[280] The Metrobus, a form of bus rapid transit, crosses the Bosphorus Bridge, with dedicated lanes leading to its termini.[281]İDO (Istanbul Seabuses) runs a combination of all-passenger ferries and car-and-passenger ferries to ports on both sides of the Bosphorus, as far north as the Black Sea.[282][283] With additional destinations around the Sea of Marmara, İDO runs the largest municipal ferry operation in the world.[284] The city’s main cruise ship terminal is the Port of Istanbul in Karaköy, with a capacity of 10,000 passengers per hour.[285] Most visitors enter Istanbul by air, but about half a million foreign tourists enter the city by sea each year.[286][non-primary source needed]

International rail service from Istanbul launched in 1889, with a line between Bucharest and Istanbul’s Sirkeci Terminal, which ultimately became famous as the eastern terminus of the Orient Express from Paris.[72] Regular service to Bucharest and Thessaloniki continued until the early 2010s, when the former was interrupted for Marmaray construction and the latter was halted due to economic problems in Greece.[287][288] After Istanbul’s Haydarpaşa Terminal opened in 1908, it served as the western terminus of the Baghdad Railway and an extension of the Hejaz Railway; today, neither service is offered directly from Istanbul.[289][290][291] Service to Ankara and other points across Turkey is normally offered by Turkish State Railways, but the construction of Marmaray and the Ankara-Istanbul high-speed line forced the station to close in 2012.[292] New stations to replace both the Haydarpaşa and Sirkeci terminals, and connect the city’s disjointed railway networks, are expected to open upon completion of the Marmaray project; until then, Istanbul is without intercity rail service.[292] Private bus companies operate instead. Istanbul’s main bus station is the largest in Europe, with a daily capacity of 15,000 buses and 600,000 passengers, serving destinations as distant as Frankfurt.[293][294]

Istanbul had three large international airports, two of which are currently in active service for commercial passenger flights. The largest is the new Istanbul Airport, opened in 2018 in the Arnavutköy district to the northwest of the city center, on the European side, near the Black Sea coast. All scheduled commercial passenger flights were transferred from Istanbul Atatürk Airport to Istanbul Airport on April 6, 2019, following the closure of Istanbul Atatürk Airport for scheduled passenger flights.[295] The IATA airport code IST was also transferred to the new airport.[296] Once all phases are completed in 2025, the airport will be able to accommodate 200 million passengers a year.[297]

Istanbul Atatürk Airport, located 24 kilometers (15 mi) west of the city center, on the European side, near the Marmara Sea coast, was formerly the city’s largest airport. After its closure to commercial flights in 2019, it was briefly used by cargo aircraft and the official state aircraft owned by the Turkish government, until the demolition of its runway began in 2020. It handled 61.3 million passengers in 2015, which made it the third-busiest airport in Europe and the eighteenth-busiest in the world in that year.[298]

Sabiha Gökçen International, 45 kilometers (28 mi) southeast of the city center, on the Asian side, was opened in 2001 to relieve Atatürk. Dominated by low-cost carriers, Istanbul’s second airport has rapidly become popular, especially since the opening of a new international terminal in 2009;[299] the airport handled 14.7 million passengers in 2012, a year after Airports Council International named it the world’s fastest-growing airport.[300][301] Atatürk had also experienced rapid growth, as its 20.6 percent rise in passenger traffic between 2011 and 2012 was the highest among the world’s top 30 airports.[298]

Air pollution in Turkey is acute in İstanbul with cars, buses and taxis causing frequent urban smog,[302] as it is one of the few European cities without a low-emission zone. As of 2019[update] the city’s mean air quality remains of a level so as to affect the heart and lungs of healthy street bystanders during peak traffic hours,[303] and almost 200 days of pollution were measured by the air pollution sensors at Sultangazi, Mecidiyeköy, Alibeyköy and Kağıthane.[304]


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Judging by the reaction he received at a public event this week, Burak Özçivit is a pretty big deal in the Gulf.

The Turkish actor, who found fame in the region with the role of Malkoçoğlu Balı Bey in the hit series “Muhteşem Yüzyıl” – dubbed “Hareem Al Sultan” in the Arab world – was flown in for his very first appearance in the UAE. Along with co-stars Meryem Uzerli and Meltem Cumbul, Burak, he met fans at City Walk Dubai’s Hareem Al Sultan exhibition, which features silicone replicas of characters, as well as costumes and other accessories from the hit show. And as you can see from the video he shared on his Instagram page, fans were pretty excited.

A video posted by Burak Özçivit (@burakozcivit) on Nov 24, 2016 at 10:33pm PST

 

burak özçivit

We managed to catch 10 minutes with the star. Here’s what he had to say about Bali Bey, his upcoming projects and meeting his Arab fans.

You’ve mentioned you’ve already visited Kuwait before, but this is your first time in the UAE. You haven’t had much time to explore Dubai though, have you?

It’s my first time [in Dubai], so I’m really curious about the city. I haven’t had much time to see it, but as soon as I arrived I posted on Instagram that I want to explore it, so I’m excited about being here.

You’re one of the most followed Turkish celebrities on social media (at the time of publishing), but you don’t follow many. However, who is your favourite person to follow online?

Actually, I don’t follow many people myself. I mostly use Instagram to share what I do, because that’s what people ask of me. I use it more for my own sharing.

Fans know me from what I do, from the characters I portray and whatnot. But they also want to know Burak outside of the roles I play, so I try to share as much as I can on social media because I think it’s important.

My followers on social media are my fans. Fans can connect with the actors through the screen, but sometimes they want to feel special in the eye of the actors. They want to share something with the actors and Instagram is a great platform for that.

 

You’re well-known in the region from your role as Malkoçoğlu Balı Bey in ‘Muhteşem Yüzyıl’. Did you ever expect the series to blow up and be so successful?

What’s important is to do what you do with the utmost care and to give your best to it. I think this is what happened here [with Hareem Al Sultan].

This doesn’t just apply to acting. I think it’s relevant to most careers out there, to always do your best. However, it’s also important not to plan too much and kind of go with the flow. Too much planning can sometimes kill a project or its success.

turkey

You’ve played numerous roles over the past decade – one of your most recent being alongside Fahriye Evcen in “Aşk Sana Benzer” – but which character have you personally related to the most?

I find a piece of myself in all of the characters I’ve portrayed but Balı Bey is unique. He always had a stance, a solid grounding, and I identify with that a lot.

Does Hollywood appeal to you at all? Or even Arab cinema?

You probably know this, as actors we have a very intense work schedule. In fact, I don’t know how I managed to come here. I literally didn’t sleep to come here.

That’s why for me to be able to pursue other projects outside of Turkey, I need to get a little break from my projects in Turkey.

Maybe after this current project there might be other opportunities, but when you have something going on, on a regular basis, it’s difficult to think of other projects.

turkey

 

So how do you juggle it all? Do you have a good work-life balance?

A work-life balance is really important. My personal life is important to me. I’ve been doing this for the past 12 years so I’ve kind of come to manage this better now.

You’ve now done Kuwait and Dubai in the UAE. Any plans to visit other countries in the region, like Egypt or Lebanon, for instance?

I’ve been saying this all day today… I’ve been really late in coming to Dubai. Why haven’t I come here before? I’d love to come back, and I’d like to visit other places as well, such as Lebanon and Egypt, if I can. I’ve already been to Kuwait and now Dubai.

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Judging by the reaction he received at a public event this week, Burak Özçivit is a pretty big deal in the Gulf.

The Turkish actor, who found fame in the region with the role of Malkoçoğlu Balı Bey in the hit series “Muhteşem Yüzyıl” – dubbed “Hareem Al Sultan” in the Arab world – was flown in for his very first appearance in the UAE. Along with co-stars Meryem Uzerli and Meltem Cumbul, Burak, he met fans at City Walk Dubai’s Hareem Al Sultan exhibition, which features silicone replicas of characters, as well as costumes and other accessories from the hit show. And as you can see from the video he shared on his Instagram page, fans were pretty excited.

A video posted by Burak Özçivit (@burakozcivit) on Nov 24, 2016 at 10:33pm PST

 

burak özçivit

We managed to catch 10 minutes with the star. Here’s what he had to say about Bali Bey, his upcoming projects and meeting his Arab fans.

You’ve mentioned you’ve already visited Kuwait before, but this is your first time in the UAE. You haven’t had much time to explore Dubai though, have you?

It’s my first time [in Dubai], so I’m really curious about the city. I haven’t had much time to see it, but as soon as I arrived I posted on Instagram that I want to explore it, so I’m excited about being here.

You’re one of the most followed Turkish celebrities on social media (at the time of publishing), but you don’t follow many. However, who is your favourite person to follow online?

Actually, I don’t follow many people myself. I mostly use Instagram to share what I do, because that’s what people ask of me. I use it more for my own sharing.

Fans know me from what I do, from the characters I portray and whatnot. But they also want to know Burak outside of the roles I play, so I try to share as much as I can on social media because I think it’s important.

My followers on social media are my fans. Fans can connect with the actors through the screen, but sometimes they want to feel special in the eye of the actors. They want to share something with the actors and Instagram is a great platform for that.

 

You’re well-known in the region from your role as Malkoçoğlu Balı Bey in ‘Muhteşem Yüzyıl’. Did you ever expect the series to blow up and be so successful?

What’s important is to do what you do with the utmost care and to give your best to it. I think this is what happened here [with Hareem Al Sultan].

This doesn’t just apply to acting. I think it’s relevant to most careers out there, to always do your best. However, it’s also important not to plan too much and kind of go with the flow. Too much planning can sometimes kill a project or its success.

turkey

You’ve played numerous roles over the past decade – one of your most recent being alongside Fahriye Evcen in “Aşk Sana Benzer” – but which character have you personally related to the most?

I find a piece of myself in all of the characters I’ve portrayed but Balı Bey is unique. He always had a stance, a solid grounding, and I identify with that a lot.

Does Hollywood appeal to you at all? Or even Arab cinema?

You probably know this, as actors we have a very intense work schedule. In fact, I don’t know how I managed to come here. I literally didn’t sleep to come here.

That’s why for me to be able to pursue other projects outside of Turkey, I need to get a little break from my projects in Turkey.

Maybe after this current project there might be other opportunities, but when you have something going on, on a regular basis, it’s difficult to think of other projects.

turkey

 

So how do you juggle it all? Do you have a good work-life balance?

A work-life balance is really important. My personal life is important to me. I’ve been doing this for the past 12 years so I’ve kind of come to manage this better now.

You’ve now done Kuwait and Dubai in the UAE. Any plans to visit other countries in the region, like Egypt or Lebanon, for instance?

I’ve been saying this all day today… I’ve been really late in coming to Dubai. Why haven’t I come here before? I’d love to come back, and I’d like to visit other places as well, such as Lebanon and Egypt, if I can. I’ve already been to Kuwait and now Dubai.

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Sevgili ailem ve dostlarım,
24 Aralık benim doğum günüm sizlerden hediye ya da kutlama beklemiyorum. Sizlerden iyilik istiyorum @turkkanserdernegi için bir kampanya açtım.

Büyük küçük fark etmeksizin yapacağınız bağışlar beni çok sevindirecek.pic.twitter.com/myPC2bd3UA

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⁦@KurulusDizisi⁩pic.twitter.com/HjW8afeT6w

Bu akşamki etiketimiz #Kuruluşpic.twitter.com/ydkIf2uO3h

Bu akşamki etiketimiz #VatanSevgimizpic.twitter.com/H1fNQkmmD0

#KuruluşOsman yeni sezon ilk bölümüyle 7 Ekim Çarşamba saat 20.00’de #atv’de!pic.twitter.com/sirzjQWuh5

“Vaktidir Gayri!”

#KuruluşOsman ikinci sezonuyla yakında #atv’de! @mmehmetbozdag @KurulusDizisipic.twitter.com/kv7L9qzZPO

2.sezon geliyor… @kurulusdizisi @bozdagfilmpic.twitter.com/rv6A0xkoIP

Hayat Eve Sığar #HayatEveSığarpic.twitter.com/GthtrBsdnD

“Ya şehadet, ya muzafferiyet!”

Kuruluş “Osman” yeni bölümüyle çarşamba saat 20.00’de atv’de!pic.twitter.com/Bfx6XpDTj1

#Kuruluşateşipic.twitter.com/DthhzXSEyA

“Bu savaşı güvercin gibi teyakkuzda olanlar değil, kartal gibi, şahin gibi taarruzda olanlar kazanacak! Hayallerimizden bir devlet çıkacak!”

#KuruluşOsman İlk bölümüyle 20 Kasım Çarşamba Atv’de başlıyor!

@bozdagfilm @kurulusdizisi @atvcomtrpic.twitter.com/UjizSpVfvf

“Yüce Rabbim şahidim olsun babamın kutlu sancağını asla düşürmeyeceğiz. Ben ve benim evlatlarım bu kutlu sancağı yedi cihana yaymak için yitesiye mücadele edeceğiz.”

#KuruluşOsman 1.Bölümüyle 20 Kasım Çarşamba #Atv’de!

@bozdagfilm @atvcomtr @kurulusdizisipic.twitter.com/BjRTpFc42o

İmdi milletimizin ikbali için ve mazlumların kurtuluşu için devlet olma vaktidir! Benimle birlikte devlet olmaya var mısınız? #DevletOlmak

Kuruluş Osman çok yakında atv’de …
@kurulusdizisi @atvcomtrpic.twitter.com/637ImYMEo3

Burak Özçivit ile yeni sezonda başarıyı üstünde taşı. @burakozcivit
#altinyildizclassics #BaşarıyıÜstündeTaşıpic.twitter.com/coJnBD6JdJ

O; kutlu bir hilalin gölgesinde mazluma adalet, nice dert sahibine derman oldu. Cenk meydanında gazi, Oğuz kavlince devlet oldu.

Lâ Galibe İllâllah…

Kuruluş Osman çok yakında ekranlarda… @KurulusDizisipic.twitter.com/EsSxtsEBq6

Senin kumaşın başka. Senin ışığın yeter. @AltnyldzClsscs
Sonbahar/Kış 2018-19pic.twitter.com/CY4Uh58KVg

Altınyıldız Classics ile ikinci sezon. Çok yakında görüşmek üzere…
#isiginyeter #yildizgibigiyin @altinyildizclassicspic.twitter.com/fNNMM88fN6

Senin içinde bir yıldız var, #yıldızgibigiyin @altinyildizclassicspic.twitter.com/fxLIv5skyM

#ClearMen #gösterkendinipic.twitter.com/yimi7BBS4B

pic.twitter.com/muF997dOkh

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