ABSTRACT

This substantial account of Constantinople — or Istanbul as it is known today — is both a history and a guide to that magnificent and fabled metropolis where east and west have met for many centuries. Written in 1915 when, as Stamboul, the city was the last stop on the Orient Express, it is illustrated with many rare period photographs. This book for the general reader evokes all the colour and richness of the ultimate oriental city, ancient capital of the Byzantine and Ottoman empires, captured on the brink of modernization in the first years after the revolution. The author describes everyday life in the city, - the features of permanent interest such as mosques, gardens, fountains, the traces of Byzantium and the quays of the Golden Horn as well as the feasts, custom’s, festivals and holidays that once enlivened Constantinople but are now only a memory. The work concludes with an account of the revolution and of the effects of World War I on the city. This is a portrait of the Istanbul that all travellers hope to find - and still can, in the pages of this book.

chapter I|32 pages

Stamboul

chapter II|41 pages

Mosque Yards

chapter III|40 pages

Old Constantinople

chapter IV|35 pages

The Golden Horn

chapter V|41 pages

The Magnificent Community

chapter VI|38 pages

The City of Gold

chapter VII|38 pages

The Gardens of the Bosphorus

chapter VIII|19 pages

The Moon of Ramazan

chapter IX|15 pages

Mohammedan Holidays

chapter X|19 pages

Two Processions

chapter XI|34 pages

Greek Feasts

chapter XII|64 pages

Fountains

chapter XIII|20 pages

A Turkish Village

chapter XIV|23 pages

Revolution 1908

chapter XV|34 pages

The Capture of Constantinople 1909

chapter XVI|85 pages

War Time 1912–1913