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TOPKAPI PALACE

Topkapi Palacewas the official and primary
residence in the city of the Ottoman Sultans, from 1465 to 1853. The
palace was a setting for state occasions and royal entertainments
and is a major tourist attraction today. The name directly
translates as "Cannongate Palace", from the palace being named after
a nearby, now lost gate.
Initial construction started in 1459, ordered by Sultan Mehmed II,
the conqueror of Byzantine Constantinople. The palace is a complex
made up of four main courtyards and many smaller buildings. At the
height of its existence as a royal residence, the palace was home to
as many as 4,000 people, formerly covering a larger area with a long
shoreline. The complex has been expanded over the centuries, with
many renovations such as after the 1509 earthquake and 1665 fire.
Topkapı Palace gradually lost its importance at the end of the 17th
century, as the Sultans preferred to spend more time in their new
palaces along the Bosporus. In 1853, Sultan Abdül Mecid I decided to
move the court to the newly built Dolmabahçe Palace, the first
European-style palace in the city. Some functions, such as the
imperial treasury, the library, mosque and mint, were retained
though.
After the end of the Ottoman Empire in 1921, Topkapı Palace was
transformed by government decree on April 3, 1924 into a museum of
the imperial era. The Topkapı Palace Museum is under the
administration of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism. The palace
complex has hundreds of rooms and chambers, but only the most
important are accessible to the public today. The complex is guarded
by officials of the ministry as well as armed guards of the Turkish
military. The palace is full of examples of Ottoman architecture and
also contains large collections of porcelain, robes, weapons,
shields, armor, Ottoman miniatures, Islamic calligraphic manuscripts
and murals, as well as a display of Ottoman treasure and jewelry.
Topkapı Palace is among those monuments belonging to the "Historic
Areas of Istanbul", which became a UNESCO World Heritage Site in
1985.
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