ISTANBUL TURKEY | Grand Bazaar (Kapal çarsi) |WalkingTour | June 2024| 4K

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    The Grand Bazaar (Turkish: Kapaliçargi, meaning
    'Covered Market'; also Büyük Carsi, meaning 'Grand Market') in Istanbul is one of the largest and oldest covered markets in the world, with 61 covered streets and over 4,000 shops on a total area of 30,700 m2, attracting between 250,000 and
    400,000 visitors daily. In 2014, it was listed No.1 among the world's most-visited tourist attractions with 91,250,000 annual visitors. The Grand Bazaar at Istanbul is often regarded as one of the first shopping malls of the world.
    Location
    The Grand Bazaar is located inside the Walled city of Istanbul, in the district of Fatih and in the neighbourhood (mahalle) bearing the same name (Kapaliçarsi). It stretches roughly from west to east between the mosques of Beyazit and of Nuruosmaniye. The Bazaar can easily be reached from Sultanahmet and Sirkeci by trams (Beyazit-Kapaliçargi stop).
    History
    The construction of the future Grand Bazaar's core started during the winter of 1455/56, shortly after the Ottoman conquest of Constantinople and was part of a broader initiative to stimulate economic prosperity in Istanbul. Sultan Mehmed II had an edifice erected devoted to the trading of textiles and jewels near his palace in Constantinople. It was named Cevâhir Bedestan ("Bedesten of Gems") and was also known as Bezzâzistan-i Cedid ("New Bedesten") in Ottoman Turkish. The word bedesten is adapted from the Persian word bezestan, derived from bez ("cloth"), and means "bazaar of the cloth sellers". [10] The building - named alternately in Turkish is ("Internal"), Atik ("Ancient"), or Eski ("Old") Bedesten - lies on the slope of the third hill of Istanbul, between the ancient Fora of Constantine and of Theodosius. It was also near the first sultan's palace, the Old Palace (Eski Saray), which was also in construction in those same years, and not far from the Artopoleia (in Greek) (Артопшлєа), the city's
    bakers' quarter in Byzantine times.
    The Byzantine (Comnenian) Eagle outside the eastern gate of the Old Bedesten
    The construction of the Bedesten ended in the winter of 1460/61, and the building was endowed to the waqf of the Hagia Sophia Mosque. Analysis of the brickwork shows that most of the structure originates from the second half of the 15th century, although a Byzantine relief representing a Comnenian eagle, still enclosed on the top of the East Gate (Kuyumcular Kapisi)) of the Bedesten has been used by several scholars as proof that the edifice was a Byzantine structure.
    In a market near the Bedesten, named in Turkish Esir Pazari, the slave trade was active, a use also carried over from Byzantine times. Other important markets in the vicinity were the second-hand market (Turkish: Bit Pazari), the "Long Market" (Uzun farsi), corresponding to the Greek Makros Embolos (Mapós 'EuBolos, "Long Portico"), a long porticoed mall stretching downhill from the Forum of Constantine to the Golden Horn, which was one of the main market areas of the city, while the old book market (Sahaflar farsisi) was moved from the Bazaar to the present picturesque location near the Beyazia Mosque only after the 1894 Istanbul earthquake.
    Istanbul Grand Bazaar (Kapali çarsi) Walking Tour |
    June 2024| 4K
    00:00 start
    01:00 Grand Bazaar entrance
    02:01 walking grand Baza 
    07:18 doner
    09:35 Turkish carpets
    10:11 gold price

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