Saturday, December 3, 2011

Better late then never

Okay so I have been so behind in posting and took so many pictures when my Mom, Mickey and Sherry came to visit that I am only going to post my favorites and I will load the rest on face book.

My Mom, Mickey and Sherry came in October and we started in Istanbul, Stephanie and I met them there and had a wonderful time eating good food, seeing the sights and shopping!

Window shopping for dessert, this place really good sweets we ate here for dinner one night, and all we had was dessert, almond baklava and kunfee! I should have taken pictures of it.









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Roasting chestnuts on an open fire.

The Grand Bazaar, it was a maze of shopping after awhile everything looked the same.

Grand Bazaar in Istanbul is one of the largest and oldest covered markets in the world, with more than 58 covered streets and over 4,000 shops which attract between 250,000 and half a million visitors daily.


















































While we were in Istanbul we took a boat trip on the Bosphorus strait it is the boundary between Europe and Asia. There were some beautiful houses and it was nice to see the city from a different view.























































The next day we went to the cistern, here is a little info from Wikipedia:
The Basilica Cistern (Turkish: Yerebatan Sarayı - "Sunken Palace", or Yerebatan Sarnıcı - "Sunken Cistern"), is the largest of several hundred ancient cisterns that lie beneath the city of Istanbul (formerly Constantinople), Turkey. The cistern, located 500 feet (150 m) southwest of the Hagia Sophia on the historical peninsula of Sarayburnu, was built in the 6th century during the reign of Byzantine Emperor Justinian I.



































Located in the northwest corner of the cistern, the bases of two columns reuse blocks carved with the visage of Medusa. The origin of the two heads is unknown, though it is thought that the heads were brought to the cistern after being removed from a building of the late Roman period. There is no written evidence that suggests they were used as column pedestals previously. Tradition has it that the blocks are oriented sideways and inverted in order to negate the power of the Gorgons' gaze,however it is widely thought that one was placed sideways only to be the proper size to support the column. The upside down Medusa was placed that way specifically because she would be the same height right side up.According to popular myth, Medusa was one of the three Gorgons, the terrifying female creatures from Greek Mythology. Legend has it that Medusa, with her hair of snakes, could turn anyone who looked at her into stone, and therefore images of Gorgons were used to protect great buildings. Another version of the story claims that Medusa was the only mortal Gorgon, a beautiful girl with long hair and dark eyes who had long been in love with Perseus, the son of Zeus. Athene, also in love with Perseus, turned Medusa's hair into snakes in a jealous rage. From then on, every person Medusa looked at was petrified. After learning of Medusa's curse, Perseus beheaded her, taking her head to war with him and turning his enemies into stone. It is said that many Byzantium era sword handles and columns were engraved with her head upside down.[8]















































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