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The Topkapı Palace Museum Becomes The Next Istanbul Landmark To Offer Night Visits

The Topkapı Palace Museum Becomes The Next Istanbul Landmark To Offer Night Visits

Forbes30-06-2025
View of the Gate of Salutation (the Middle Gate) leading to the Second Courtyard of Topkapi Palace in Istanbul, Turkey. The Topkapi Palace is a popular tourist attraction in Turkey. getty
The Topkapı Palace Museum has become the next major Istanbul landmark to announce it will be offering nighttime visits for tourists this summer. The evening visits will run every Saturday evening from 9 p.m. to 11 p.m., from now until September 14.
The sprawling palace and museum require careful planning to visit. It's easy to spend an entire day exploring its Harem, pavilions, and collection of relics and artifacts — which during the hot summer days in Istanbul can start to feel like akin to marathon. The addition of nighttime hours means visitors will have more time to take in the history of the palace at cooler temperatures.
'Topkapı Palace is situated on one of Istanbul's famous seven hills. Visitors will not only see its galleries, sections and artifacts but also get the chance to view Istanbul from some of its highest vantage points, especially the Fourth Courtyard,' Ilhan Kocaman, deputy director of Topkapı Palace, explained.
The nighttime visits will be held in two different groups, with all tours starting and ending at the Imperial Gate (Bâb-ı Hümâyûn), with tickets and audioguides available at the main entrance of the palace.
The air view of Topkapı Palace with Golden Horn. Top view of The Topkapı Palace which is a museum from 1923, was served as the main residence and administrative headquarters of the Ottoman sultans. The palace located at the Seraglio Point, called Sarayburnu in Turkish, in Historical Peninsula. The Palace surrounded by high walls. All the sections of building and parks around it can seen with a view from top. The neigbourhood of Fatih, Sarayburnu and the Karaköy can seen with the Galata Bridge which obe handles flow of traffic on Golden Horn. getty
'We aim to allow visitors to see as many areas as possible at night, just as they would during the day,' Kocaman added. The biggest draw of visiting at night — even if you've been there during the day? The nighttime views of the Bosphorus, the Golden Horn and the Sea of Marmara from the seaside palace reflect a totally different perspective of Istanbul.
The Topkapı Palace is of great significance to Istanbul and to the larger history of the Ottoman Empire. It was the administrative center of the Ottoman Empire from 1465 until the completion of the Dolmabahçe Palace in Beşiktaş in 1856. It also served as the main residence of the Ottoman sultans and their families during this time.
View from the sea of the Topkapi Palace. getty
Due to its historical significance and well-preserved example of Mimar Sinan architecture, the Topkapı Palace was recognized as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1985 and sees more than three million visitors each year.
Tickets to the Topkapı Palace cost around $60 per person for a self-guided tour with an audio guide or about $80 for a tour with an authorized local tour guide. Entrance is free for visitors under the age of six.
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Hotel Review: Aurora Anguilla Resort & Golf Club
Hotel Review: Aurora Anguilla Resort & Golf Club

Forbes

time2 hours ago

  • Forbes

Hotel Review: Aurora Anguilla Resort & Golf Club

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As non-Americans avoid the US, Las Vegas workers can't cash in on Trump's 'no tax on tips' policy. Here's why

Yahoo

time3 hours ago

  • Yahoo

As non-Americans avoid the US, Las Vegas workers can't cash in on Trump's 'no tax on tips' policy. Here's why

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How to do the classic cross-country family trip? Try breaking it into pieces
How to do the classic cross-country family trip? Try breaking it into pieces

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

How to do the classic cross-country family trip? Try breaking it into pieces

"See America First." That slogan was once plastered on posters everywhere. It was the tourism industry's attempt — 100 years ago — to get Americans to spend their dollars at home. It was, at the time, famous. It was also premature. It wasn't until 1956, when Eisenhower's Federal-Aid Highway Act authorized the building of a network of modern interstate roads, that it became possible for the average family to pack up the station wagon and head out west to visit Yellowstone, The Rockies, and The Grand Canyon. America, the drive-able The 1950s and '60s was the golden age of the cross-country trip. It was in the air. Books like "On the Road," even movies as different as Hitchcock's "North by Northwest" (1959) and "Easy Rider" (1969) have as their background an epic journey across the continent. Do families still go on these kinds of vacations? Not so much, said Laura Stiles, a travel agent in Hillsdale. 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A trek across the country, putting in a full 8-hour driving day, takes a minimum of five days, probably more. So it's essentially a week out and a week back — before you even add in time for sightseeing, activities, and so on. How many dads and moms, these days, have that much leisure? "People don't have the luxury of a long vacation anymore," Chapman said. "At least not the average person." But families are still seeing America, Stiles says. They're just seeing it in bite-size chunks. "I plan a lot of trips where maybe one year the family will do the Southwest, and another year they'll do the Pacific coast, and another year they'll do Yellowstone," Stiles said. "They're flying to their destination, and then renting a car and driving from point A to point B, seeing the national parks along the way. So I don't think it's gone away. But I think it's being done differently." 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Another thing that helps: becoming less of a chauffeur, and more of a curator. Your job is not merely to drive your kids to different attractions. It's to make them come alive. This — like so much else about a good trip — requires preparation. Find out interesting facts and stories to share with your kids. Research fun activities to do when you're there. Be pro-active "Just getting somewhere and seeing it, getting out of the car, saying hi Grand Canyon, bye Grand Canyon, and leaving, is not the way to see something," Stiles said. Do your groundwork, and you'll find all kinds of things to do at the Grand Canyon — to use that example — besides looking at it. "The National Park Service runs programs for families and kids," Stiles said. "There's a whole schedule of activities, from guided hikes, to looking at the stars through a telescope, to painting the Grand Canyon at sunset. You meet at a certain point and they supply everything and you just do a watercolor." Meanwhile, plan on stopping at a theme park or two. "They need to have something to look forward to, between the museums and national parks," Stiles said. If it all sounds daunting to you — the working parent with limited patience and limited time off — there is good news. You may not have the resources for a multi-week, cross-country expedition. But someone else in your family just might. Grandma and grandpa, these days, are staying active longer. And that could be a golden opportunity — for them, and for your kids. And for you, to see a little down time. "There's a lot of trips going on where grandparents are taking their grandkids," she said. "It's a growing trend." This article originally appeared on How to plan cross-country road trip with our experts' help Solve the daily Crossword

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