News

Fifth news item

"You've Got to Sleep With Your Mum and Dad" is now available on Amazon. Childhood angst, marathon swimming, international exploitation and the threat of impending pinniped intimacy. on 2014-08-13
Read more »

Fourth news item

Have a look at my page on Amazon. Still plenty of summer left for challenging literature. on 2014-08-13
Read more »

Third news item

Check out my Amazon Kindle page. 'The Baby Who Killed People for Money' is now available. An utterly charming child with a unique and lucrative skill. A father with no defence against his daughter's impulses. Would you take your little girl around Europe for a spot of murder tourism? Of course you would. on 2014-06-30
Read more »

Second news item

My story on the Tate gallery website on 2013-11-11
Read more »

First news item

A Thousand Natural Shocks An anthology that includes two of my stories. Available now at Amazon. on 2013-11-11
Read more »
April 2015
M T W T F S S
 12345
6789101112
13141516171819
20212223242526
27282930  
« Previous Entries Next Entries »

Archive for April, 2015

Posted April 9, 2015
  Posted by in Uncategorized

botan012

Share This Post

Bookmark and Share Bookmark   Print This Post Print This Post    


Posted April 8, 2015
  Posted by in Uncategorized

botan101

Share This Post

Bookmark and Share Bookmark   Print This Post Print This Post    


Posted April 7, 2015
  Posted by in Uncategorized

botan111

Share This Post

Bookmark and Share Bookmark   Print This Post Print This Post    


Posted April 6, 2015
  Posted by in Uncategorized

botan061

Share This Post

Bookmark and Share Bookmark   Print This Post Print This Post    


Posted April 5, 2015
  Posted by in Uncategorized
Cistern beneath the Palace of Botaneiates

Cistern beneath the Palace of Botaneiates

Emperor Nikephorus Botaneiates ruled from 1078 to 1081. He (or a close relative) appears to have built a palace, as the unfortunate emperor Isaac II Angelos was obliged to give one of that name to the Genoese in the embarrassing kerfuffle leading up to the 1204 Latin invasion. As the various parties who were to make up the fourth crusade turned the screws on Constantinople, more and more money, properties and concessions were given in response to the demands of the eventual invaders. Some of the background to the strained relations between Isaac II and the forces of the third crusade (1189 – 1192) can be found here. A treaty of 1192 leaked another driblet of power and property from the shrivelled wineskin of Constantinople into the greedy mouth of Genoa.

Buildings of Istanbul Erkek Lisesi

Buildings of Istanbul Erkek Lisesi

Arches in the west wall.

Arches in the west wall.

From the north.

From the north.

In the grounds of the old Istanbul High School (Istanbul Erkek Lisesi) are some Byzantine remains that the academic might of Dumbarton Oaks identified as the Palace of the Botaneiates. West of the handsome late Ottoman school building (41.012416, 28.973071) is this structure.

West face of what appears to have been one of the churches.

West face of what appears to have been one of the churches.

It corresponds to the kind of brickwork characteristic of a church of the 11th century and a few arches hint at a grandeur that is very much gone. The Byzantium 1200 site has attempted an online reconstruction of the palace but this is based only on analysis of the wording of the 1192 treaty. The site appears to have contained two churches. The other may have been built over the cistern, substantial remains of which can be found downhill from the school (41.013501, 28.973445).

Point of entry

Point of entry

Street frontage of the cistern

Street frontage of the cistern

Along one of the few remaining Byzantine street frontages in Istanbul are several barred windows and doors. The window bars are so old that they have been pulled away so people can dump rubbish inside. The door to the eastern side does not appear to be locked but the weight of trash and the welding of corrosion mean that it can no longer be opened. So you get in through the window trash chute. I couldn’t find anyone with a key to the other doors. It may be available from the school. You’ll need a rope to get to the bottom. Don’t go soon after heavy rain. Water that adds romance to Yerebatan Cistern merely allows a lot of awful things to bump against your legs and keeps you wondering what horrors lie beneath the surface.

Central area of cistern

Central area of cistern

Eastern end of cistern

Eastern end of cistern

View into the cistern from the lowest of the windows

View into the cistern from the lowest of the windows

The wonderful Nicholas Artamonoff photographed the cistern in May 1945 and four of his pictures may be found here. My pictures from March 2015 show that little has changed except, if anything, the level of rubbish is lower now. Churches of this period were often built above such cisterns. One can climb onto the roof because the building above is derelict and the resident guard dog is desperate for attention. There’s not much to see.

Roof of cistern and derelict building

Roof of cistern and derelict building

One final point illustrates the tentative nature of church identification in Istanbul. The Byzantium 1200 site offers the comment that the Palace of the Botaneiates was more likely to have been in the Sarayburnu area. If this is true, this leaves us with no idea of what this place once was.

Share This Post

Bookmark and Share Bookmark   Print This Post Print This Post    


« Previous Entries Next Entries »
 
Powered by Wordpress
Web design and development by Pedalo Limited