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城堡

Old Palace

Turkey · Asia

Old Palace
Old Palace. Photo via Wikimedia Commons.

關於

Eski Saray (Turkish for "Old Palace"), also known as Sarây-ı Atîk-i Âmire, was a palatial building in Constantinople under the Ottoman Empire in the Beyazıt neighborhood of the Fatih district, between the Süleymaniye Mosque and the Bayezid II Mosque.

Construction of the palace began shortly after the 1453 conquest and was completed in 1458. Historians of the period including Doukas and Michael Critobulus stated that it was completed in 1455.

Evliya Çelebi stated in his Seyahatnâme that the construction of the palace began in 1454 on the site of an old church and that the palace was surrounded by a solid rectangular wall covered with a blue lead that had a perimeter of 12,000 arşın, approximately equivalent to 9 kilometres (5.6 mi).

Historian Tursun Beg, a contemporary of Mehmed II, mentioned that the palace housed mansions, a harem, the Imperial Council, the throne room where the Sultan carried out state affairs, and its grounds included an area for hunting.

When the construction of Topkapi Palace was completed in 1481, the Imperial Council and the administration was shifted to the Topkapi, while the Old Palace housed the Imperial Harem of the Empire. Until the reign of Suleiman, Ottoman concubines including the Mother, sisters, consorts and daughters of the Sultans were not allowed to stay in the Topkapi palace and mostly stayed in the Old Palace. Mehmed the Conqueror had specifically issued a decree to the effect that no women would be allowed to reside in the same building where government affairs were conducted.

內容改寫自 Wikipedia (CC BY-SA)。照片來自 Wikimedia Commons.

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