Tumgik
#kucuks world
alarakucuk · 1 year
Photo
Tumblr media
✦ OZGE YAGIZ, CIS WOMAN, SHE/HER ✦ ALARA KUCUK the TWENTY SEVEN year old has been in Hidehill for HER WHOLE LIFE and was ACQUAINTANCE to Miyeon Kang, the murder victim. Whispers on the streets are that the WAITRESS AT THE AVERY who lives in HARTLEY AVENUE. She is said to be HARD WORKING and SHORT TEMPERED but I guess we’ll find out for ourselves. { DANI, 26, GMT, SHE/HER. }
BASICS
Full Name: Alara Elif Kucuk
Nickname: Lara
Age: 27
DOB: July 4th 1995
Parents: Cemile Kucuk (née Aksoy), Emre Kucuk
Siblings: Nadia Kucuk & two brothers (OPEN)
Hair colour: dark brown
Eye colour: dark brown
Piercings: ears, nose
Tattoos:  multiple
Sexuality: Bisexual
Occupation: Waitress at The Avery
Positive Traits: Hard Working, Good Listener, Creative, Smart
Negative Traits: Short Tempered, Impulsive, Dishonest, Sarcastic
LINKS
character playlist
pinterest
connections
BIOGRAPHY
tw: death
Alara’s family moved to Hidehill from Turkey way before she was born. She was the fourth and final child to Cemile and Emre and has two older brothers and a sister.
The family come from money and her grandparents owned a successful business back in Turkey which her dad inherited once her grandfather passed, it is also expected that one of the siblings take over the company too when their dad steps down.
Growing up Alara didn’t have any issues fitting in, she was raised in Harlow Estates, she got good grades in school and got on with all kinds of people and groups. She had a few people she didn’t get along with but for the most part her time in school was good.
Alara had one high school relationship (17-18) and at the time it felt very real for her, she was the typical girl who was head over heels and thought he was the one. She thought they’d spend the rest of their lives together but of course that wasn’t the case. Her world came crashing down after a year of being together when she found out he had been cheating on her for months just after they graduated.
This ruined her look on love for a very long time, she wouldn’t open up to anyone or even entertain the thought of being with someone else. Her mood changed, she was constantly grumpy and snapped at people over the slightest thing. She became very closed off for the most part, very short tempted and sarcastic.
Over time the old Alara returned but she definitely still has some of those traits to this day and has to work hard to open up and trust people.
Alara was also caught in a cheating scandal over her own she was 25. She was having an affair with a married man who she met at work one day, he had come in with his wife and came back in alone the next day. For weeks after that he would return to talk to her, he would tip her well and make her laugh and eventually one thing led to another and they were meeting outside of her work hours. Those turned into dates which then would end up with her at his place when his wife was out. 
Eventually the two of them would be caught out when she returned early from her plans, the two were caught in the act and luckily for her the wife agreed to keep this between them. Alara never saw him again and never spoke a word about this to anybody. She was hurt when she knew she shouldn’t be, she unfortunately caught feelings for the older man but she was thankful his wife saved her the embarrassment of this spreading around Hidehill.
HEADCANONS
2 cats: bernie (british shorthair) & lenny (maine coon)
loves to bake
blasts music all the time no matter the mood
halloween is her favourite holiday
2 notes · View notes
hug-my-love · 3 years
Text
Ben seni tesadüfen değil bile isteye tanıdım, bile isteye sevdim. Bir tesadüf eseri tanısaydım kör kütük tutulmazdım belki de varlığına.. bu kadar sevemezdim belki deliliklerini, kalbim bu denli çarpmazdı belki, gülüşlerine ayrı, bakışlarına ayrı vurulur muydum ki? Bence vurulurdum, çünkü ben böyle bir adamı tesadüflerle tanımış olsaydım bile, varlığı kalbimi tüm sessizliğiyle doldururdu. Bugün olduğu gibi üşütmezdi kış ortasında, sımsıkı sarılır öyle uyuturdu beni... Ben aslında seni nerede ve nasıl tanımış olursam olayım bugün yine sana masallar anlatarak uyuturdum... İyi ki sevdim seni sevgilim bile isteye iyi ki vuruldum sana...
132 notes · View notes
kucuks-world · 3 years
Text
Manitle aramızın gayet iyi olmasına rağmen ayrıldığımızı düşünerek ağlayan ben.......
52 notes · View notes
seni7haks · 3 years
Text
Dunya dunya,
Hani derler ya,
Dunya kucuk,
Evet, karsina cikan
tesadufler dogrudur.
Allah ve meleklerin
yollar onlari sana.
Buna inan.
My oh my world,
You know when they say,
The world is small,
Yes, the coincidences you
bump into are true.
They are delivered to you
from God and your angels.
Believe this.
~Seni Haks
Tumblr media
8 notes · View notes
filmhousehdizlem · 2 years
Text
Natalia portman children world kucuk vakti fotosu
Tumblr media
1 note · View note
ledodemaclarinette · 2 years
Text
4. GÜN
Bugun gunlerden Pazar, haftamin genelde en yogun gunu, sevgili yeni albumumle ancak yataga gecince kavusabildim. Malum gorevimi yerine getirirken dinlemeye basladim.
Bana gore son derece vasat basladigi icin kucuk bir hayal kirikligi yasadim. Sonrasinda ablamiz costu. Hemen hemen tum sarkilarini begendim. Bu sefer cok daha zengindi sarkilar. He su var, benim gibi blues taste i olmayan bir insan seviyorsa bir tik populere mi hizmet etmis acaba? Belki asil blues severler bu ne bicim blues falan diye ayiplamistir bu albumu. Gercek blues bu mu degil mi?
Little Low Mama Blues, Grievin' Hearted Blues, Don't Fish in My Sea, Blues Oh Blues, Ma Rainey's Black Bottom, Gone Daddy Blues, Oh Papa Blues, Misery Blues, Dead Drunk Blues, Slow Driving Moan, Blues The World Forgot, Hellish Rag, Georgia Cake Walk, Moonshine Blues, New Boo Weavil Blues.
Resmen hepsini begendim. Bu albumu arada, uygun oldugunu dusundugum anlarda acip dinlerim. Cizirtinin iyi gidecegi ortamlarda.
Hepsini begendim, acar dinlerim derken benim icin hala bir kucuk ceylan antep'in hamamlari kadar cosku verici degil. Ama cizirtili blues'a ihtiyac duyacagim anlarim olursa kime kosacagimi ve hangi albumde hangi sarkilari dinleyecegimi artik biliyorum.
Dort gunluk Ma Rainey kesif yolculugum burada sona eriyor. Kendisiyle kah ceviri yaptim, kah biber dogradim, kah yagmuru izleyip kahve ictim. Guzel bir beraberlik yasadik. Kendisini artik saliyorum. Siradaki kisiyi de belirledim. Yarin kendisiyle tanismak icin sabirsizlaniyorum. Bu albumdeki begendigim sarkilari bir tur daha dinleyip yatayim ben.
0 notes
okuokubil · 3 years
Link
Roblox little world küçük dünya hileli auto farm script hileli script kodlarını ücretsiz olarak indirin
0 notes
orbemnews · 3 years
Link
Rajie Cook, Who Helped Make Sense of Public Spaces, Dies at 90 Rajie Cook often joked that museumgoers were more likely to encounter his artwork in their travels than a portrait by Matisse or a landscape by van Gogh. They saw it whenever they took an elevator to an upper gallery or stopped in the restroom. In 1974 Cook & Shanosky Associates, a design firm started by Mr. Cook and Don Shanosky a few years earlier, won a contract to develop a set of symbols that could be universally understood, and that would efficiently convey the kinds of information people in a public place might need — which restroom was for which gender, the location of the nearest elevator, whether smoking was permitted and so on. The signage the two came up with, 34 pictographs (with others added later), is still in use today: the generic male and female figures; the cigarette in a circle with the red line through it; the minimalist locomotive and plane to signify train station and airport. But Mr. Cook’s artistic interests went well beyond utilitarian signs. By the time Cook & Shanosky folded in 2002, Mr. Cook had already begun dabbling in a different sort of art, creating three-dimensional sculptural assemblages — boxes incorporating found objects. Most of them were inspired by his exploration of his own heritage as the son of Christian Palestinian immigrants, and by what he saw on his many trips to the Middle East. He thought of the works, which have been exhibited in museums and galleries, as “art activism.” One box contained the names of children who had been casualties of the continuing Israeli-Palestinian conflicts, with the bottom quarter of the box filled with spent cartridges. Some of the children were Jewish, but most were Palestinians, something Mr. Cook thought was not reflected in coverage by American news outlets. “Only part of the story is being told,” he said in a 2018 interview with Palestine Museum US in Woodbridge, Conn. Mr. Cook died on Feb. 6 at a hospice center in Newtown, Pa., near his home in Washington Crossing, his family said. He was 90. For much of his career, Mr. Cook was known as Roger Cook, thanks to a fourth-grade teacher’s whim. “My teacher thought Rajie was too difficult to pronounce,” he recently told Bucks County magazine, “and suggested that I be called Roger instead. In a flash, my birth name was changed, but my parents raised no objections in deference to the educator.” Only decades later, when he began exploring his heritage through art, did he revert to his given name. His last name, too, was someone else’s idea, imposed on the family long before his birth. His paternal grandfather’s last name had been Suleiman, but he was given the nickname Kucuk, the Turkish word for small, by Turkish occupiers because of his small stature; later, when the British occupied Palestine, they turned that into Cook. Rajie Cook was born on July 6, 1930, in Newark to Najeeb and Jaleelie (Totah) Cook. His interest in art manifested itself early. “In grammar school, I was usually the student who sat in the back row, sketching and drawing while the teacher and the rest of the class were focused on other subject matter,” he wrote in “A Vision for My Father,” a memoir published in 2016. After graduating from Bloomfield High School in New Jersey in 1949, he enrolled at Pratt Institute in New York, where he earned a degree in 1953. In 1960, while he was working for a Philadelphia advertising agency, N.W. Ayer & Son, a freelance illustrator named Don Shanosky was assigned to one of his projects. Mr. Cook moved to the New York design company Graphic Directions in 1962, and in 1965 he again encountered Mr. Shanosky, who was applying for a job there, which he won. In 1967 the two struck out on their own, forming Cook & Shanosky Associates and setting up shop in Manhattan. Mr. Shanosky, who now lives in Florida, said in a phone interview that they ran an announcement in Graphis Magazine about the new firm. “The image that we used kind of sums up how he and I related to one another,” he said. “It was two hands, one pencil. That kind of symbolized how we worked.” Their designs, whether for annual reports, advertisements or a government client, were always joint efforts, not credited to one or the other. And their philosophy was straightforward. “We held firm to the principle that design communicates to its maximum efficacy without frills, contrivances and other extraneous material,” Mr. Cook wrote in his book, “that if the core idea is a good one, it will shout loudest when it is not overshadowed by ornamentation.” That philosophy was a good fit for the pictogram assignment. The project was intended to prepare for the American bicentennial celebration, which was expected to draw a lot of foreign visitors who would need help navigating airports, historic sites and other public spaces. The effort was overseen by the Department of Transportation and the American Institute of Graphic Arts (now known simply as AIGA), and that meant there were a lot of eyes on Cook & Shanosky, which at the time was still a small shop. The firm was given parameters about what the symbols needed to do, and it drew on existing symbols from throughout the world. “We kept in mind that people seeing the pictographs would be speaking different languages, using different alphabets,” Mr. Cook wrote, “and in some cases were illiterate.” Once the initial designs were offered came the review by a committee, which had plenty of opinions. “Because most of the committee were designers themselves, there was a lot of, ‘Did you try this?’” Mr. Shanosky recalled. The committee members came armed with a roll of black tape and a roll of white tape. “They would say, what if this was moved there, or what if this were shorter,” he said. “They would cover up our black symbol with white tape to make it shorter, or use black tape to make it longer” — before, usually, agreeing on something very much like what he and Mr. Cook had initially presented. Mr. Cook reproduced some of the notes the firm received from these reviews in his book, including these ones regarding the symbol for drinking fountain, a figure bent at the waist over a stylized depiction of a fountain: “Figure: Lower body out of proportion with trunk.” “Is arm necessary?” “Arm necessary to indicate that figure is not bowing.” In 1985 President Ronald Reagan presented Mr. Cook and Mr. Shanosky with an award for “outstanding achievement in design for the government of the United States.” Mr. Cook is survived by his wife, Margit (Schneider) Cook, whom he married in 1955; two daughters, Cynthia Rhodin and Cathryn Cook; three siblings, Lillian, Wade and Edward Cook; three grandchildren; and a great-grandson. Mr. Cook said he took up making sculptural assemblages after encountering the work of the artist Joseph Cornell, who was known for his shadow boxes. Mr. Cook’s work was featured in numerous exhibitions, including one called “Made in Palestine” in 2003 at the Station Museum of Contemporary Art in Houston. “I remember my dad — he died at the age of 94 — old and blind and sitting by the radio saying he was waiting to hear something good on the radio about peace in the Middle East,” Mr. Cook told The New York Times in 2004, when he was interviewed about the controversies sometimes caused by exhibitions of Palestinian art. “I’m 74, and I don’t know if I’ll ever hear it either. I don’t want to die at 94 still waiting for peace.” Source link Orbem News #cook #Dies #Helped #public #Rajie #Sense #Spaces
0 notes
mubahood360 · 3 years
Text
Turkish retailer LC Waikiki Opens First Store in Uganda
Turkish retailer LC Waikiki Opens First Store in Uganda
LC Waikiki, one of the world’s leading fashion retail brands, has opened its first store at Acacia Mall in Kampala.Opening this store makes Uganda the second country in East Africa where LC Waikiki expands its brand.Speaking at the opening ceremony, Sedah Kucuk, one of the brainchild founders of LC Waikiki said that this is part of its Africa growth strategy and in line with its mission ‘Everyone…
Tumblr media
View On WordPress
0 notes
oldcityhotels · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Kucuk Ayasofya Church
Rome, Hellenism and Orient had unified here in a unique, and never imitate bled monument. Apart from the Kucuk Ayasofya church, Hagia Eirene Church, the Underground Palace (Yerebatan Sarayi) and Binbirdirek are what have survived since those glittering days. First, however; Haghia Sophia, the church of “the divine wisdom”, is the most significant indicator of the power and splendor of the Justinian period.
In spite of the internal competition and the threat of rapidly spreading Islam, the commercial power in Bosporus stayed as the most magnificent and great focus point of the Medieval age until the 13^ century. However, it was also the center of competition of noble dynasties struggling to rule this power, a corrupted administration, several intrigues and horrifying murders. After the Byzantine army had been defeated in Malazgirt in 1071, Asia Minor was taken by Selcuks; this was the first sign for the coming catastrophe of the East Roman Empire.
Constantinople experienced
In 1204, Constantinople experienced the most hurtful stroke of its history; the Fourth Crusade armies led by Venetian Duke Enrico Dandolo backed by Venetian Navy, passed the Golden Horn barrier and plundered the invaluable masterpieces of the richest city of the era, for 58 days. That was when the city of Constantine and Justinian had fallen down. After the short rule of “Latin” Crusade State in 12 61, Constantinople lived its second best period during the paleographer emperors’ period. Marvellous mosaics, the frescoes at Kariye and Fethiye Mosques have survived from those days until today.
The Ottomans passed the Dardanelles in r 354 and stepped into the European land for the first time in Gallipoli. Bursa replaced Edirne as the new capital in 1361. The Christian- Orthodox Constantinople had already become an island in the sea of Muslims. In 14 5 2, Constantinople was totally isolated from the Black Sea commerce by the construction of Rumeli Hisari fortresses in a time span as short as two months. The Europeans did not react while the Byzantines were trapped.
On May 29, 1453; the Janissaries of Fatih Sultan Mehmet (Mehmet the Conqueror) entered the city that had been under their besiege for a long time. The greatest Ottoman Sultan, called “The Man who Opened an Era” by a biographer, considered himself heir of Byzantium and the hero of a new Alexander romance.
Constantinople capital
He declared Constantinople as the capital and gave it a new name by inspiring the Greek words “is tippling” (into the city): the Allied forces in the end of World War I occupied Istanbul, Istanbul. The country regained its freedom after the Independence War that had begun in the leadership of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.
Ataturk could foresee the future and was realistic as well as being a perfect statesman and one of the greatest politicians of the 2th century. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk realized what no other statesman could do in the 20 century and changed his people’s lives completely. This was an exact cultural revolution. He established a common platform much further and deeper than it can be observed. The republic was declared in 1923 and Ankara became the capital, Istanbul has remained the biggest and the most significant city of Turkey up to now. The words of a Turkish poet are still valid: “The best part of Ankara is the way back to Istanbul.”
Source: https://www.doholidays.com/kucuk-ayasofya-church/
0 notes
istanbulwinter · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Kucuk Ayasofya Church
Rome, Hellenism and Orient had unified here in a unique, and never imitate bled monument. Apart from the Kucuk Ayasofya church, Hagia Eirene Church, the Underground Palace (Yerebatan Sarayi) and Binbirdirek are what have survived since those glittering days. First, however; Haghia Sophia, the church of “the divine wisdom”, is the most significant indicator of the power and splendor of the Justinian period.
In spite of the internal competition and the threat of rapidly spreading Islam, the commercial power in Bosporus stayed as the most magnificent and great focus point of the Medieval age until the 13^ century. However, it was also the center of competition of noble dynasties struggling to rule this power, a corrupted administration, several intrigues and horrifying murders. After the Byzantine army had been defeated in Malazgirt in 1071, Asia Minor was taken by Selcuks; this was the first sign for the coming catastrophe of the East Roman Empire.
Constantinople experienced
In 1204, Constantinople experienced the most hurtful stroke of its history; the Fourth Crusade armies led by Venetian Duke Enrico Dandolo backed by Venetian Navy, passed the Golden Horn barrier and plundered the invaluable masterpieces of the richest city of the era, for 58 days. That was when the city of Constantine and Justinian had fallen down. After the short rule of “Latin” Crusade State in 12 61, Constantinople lived its second best period during the paleographer emperors’ period. Marvellous mosaics, the frescoes at Kariye and Fethiye Mosques have survived from those days until today.
The Ottomans passed the Dardanelles in r 354 and stepped into the European land for the first time in Gallipoli. Bursa replaced Edirne as the new capital in 1361. The Christian- Orthodox Constantinople had already become an island in the sea of Muslims. In 14 5 2, Constantinople was totally isolated from the Black Sea commerce by the construction of Rumeli Hisari fortresses in a time span as short as two months. The Europeans did not react while the Byzantines were trapped.
On May 29, 1453; the Janissaries of Fatih Sultan Mehmet (Mehmet the Conqueror) entered the city that had been under their besiege for a long time. The greatest Ottoman Sultan, called “The Man who Opened an Era” by a biographer, considered himself heir of Byzantium and the hero of a new Alexander romance.
Constantinople capital
He declared Constantinople as the capital and gave it a new name by inspiring the Greek words “is tippling” (into the city): the Allied forces in the end of World War I occupied Istanbul, Istanbul. The country regained its freedom after the Independence War that had begun in the leadership of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.
Ataturk could foresee the future and was realistic as well as being a perfect statesman and one of the greatest politicians of the 2th century. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk realized what no other statesman could do in the 20 century and changed his people’s lives completely. This was an exact cultural revolution. He established a common platform much further and deeper than it can be observed. The republic was declared in 1923 and Ankara became the capital, Istanbul has remained the biggest and the most significant city of Turkey up to now. The words of a Turkish poet are still valid: “The best part of Ankara is the way back to Istanbul.”
Source: https://www.doholidays.com/kucuk-ayasofya-church/
0 notes
hug-my-love · 3 years
Text
Umudumsun, yolumsun...
Tumblr media
4 notes · View notes
kucuks-world · 3 years
Text
Yksye şurada kalmış 1 ay kaldı ve benim tek yaptığım şey oyun oynamak uyumak manitle konuşmak ben bitmişim aga dönüşü yok artık
30 notes · View notes
istanbulcistern · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Kucuk Ayasofya Church
Rome, Hellenism and Orient had unified here in a unique, and never imitate bled monument. Apart from the Kucuk Ayasofya church, Hagia Eirene Church, the Underground Palace (Yerebatan Sarayi) and Binbirdirek are what have survived since those glittering days. First, however; Haghia Sophia, the church of “the divine wisdom”, is the most significant indicator of the power and splendor of the Justinian period.
In spite of the internal competition and the threat of rapidly spreading Islam, the commercial power in Bosporus stayed as the most magnificent and great focus point of the Medieval age until the 13^ century. However, it was also the center of competition of noble dynasties struggling to rule this power, a corrupted administration, several intrigues and horrifying murders. After the Byzantine army had been defeated in Malazgirt in 1071, Asia Minor was taken by Selcuks; this was the first sign for the coming catastrophe of the East Roman Empire.
Constantinople experienced
In 1204, Constantinople experienced the most hurtful stroke of its history; the Fourth Crusade armies led by Venetian Duke Enrico Dandolo backed by Venetian Navy, passed the Golden Horn barrier and plundered the invaluable masterpieces of the richest city of the era, for 58 days. That was when the city of Constantine and Justinian had fallen down. After the short rule of “Latin” Crusade State in 12 61, Constantinople lived its second best period during the paleographer emperors’ period. Marvellous mosaics, the frescoes at Kariye and Fethiye Mosques have survived from those days until today.
The Ottomans passed the Dardanelles in r 354 and stepped into the European land for the first time in Gallipoli. Bursa replaced Edirne as the new capital in 1361. The Christian- Orthodox Constantinople had already become an island in the sea of Muslims. In 14 5 2, Constantinople was totally isolated from the Black Sea commerce by the construction of Rumeli Hisari fortresses in a time span as short as two months. The Europeans did not react while the Byzantines were trapped.
On May 29, 1453; the Janissaries of Fatih Sultan Mehmet (Mehmet the Conqueror) entered the city that had been under their besiege for a long time. The greatest Ottoman Sultan, called “The Man who Opened an Era” by a biographer, considered himself heir of Byzantium and the hero of a new Alexander romance.
Constantinople capital
He declared Constantinople as the capital and gave it a new name by inspiring the Greek words “is tippling” (into the city): the Allied forces in the end of World War I occupied Istanbul, Istanbul. The country regained its freedom after the Independence War that had begun in the leadership of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.
Ataturk could foresee the future and was realistic as well as being a perfect statesman and one of the greatest politicians of the 2th century. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk realized what no other statesman could do in the 20 century and changed his people’s lives completely. This was an exact cultural revolution. He established a common platform much further and deeper than it can be observed. The republic was declared in 1923 and Ankara became the capital, Istanbul has remained the biggest and the most significant city of Turkey up to now. The words of a Turkish poet are still valid: “The best part of Ankara is the way back to Istanbul.”
Source: https://www.doholidays.com/kucuk-ayasofya-church/
0 notes
istanbularttr · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Kucuk Ayasofya Church
Rome, Hellenism and Orient had unified here in a unique, and never imitate bled monument. Apart from the Kucuk Ayasofya church, Hagia Eirene Church, the Underground Palace (Yerebatan Sarayi) and Binbirdirek are what have survived since those glittering days. First, however; Haghia Sophia, the church of “the divine wisdom”, is the most significant indicator of the power and splendor of the Justinian period.
In spite of the internal competition and the threat of rapidly spreading Islam, the commercial power in Bosporus stayed as the most magnificent and great focus point of the Medieval age until the 13^ century. However, it was also the center of competition of noble dynasties struggling to rule this power, a corrupted administration, several intrigues and horrifying murders. After the Byzantine army had been defeated in Malazgirt in 1071, Asia Minor was taken by Selcuks; this was the first sign for the coming catastrophe of the East Roman Empire.
Constantinople experienced
In 1204, Constantinople experienced the most hurtful stroke of its history; the Fourth Crusade armies led by Venetian Duke Enrico Dandolo backed by Venetian Navy, passed the Golden Horn barrier and plundered the invaluable masterpieces of the richest city of the era, for 58 days. That was when the city of Constantine and Justinian had fallen down. After the short rule of “Latin” Crusade State in 12 61, Constantinople lived its second best period during the paleographer emperors’ period. Marvellous mosaics, the frescoes at Kariye and Fethiye Mosques have survived from those days until today.
The Ottomans passed the Dardanelles in r 354 and stepped into the European land for the first time in Gallipoli. Bursa replaced Edirne as the new capital in 1361. The Christian- Orthodox Constantinople had already become an island in the sea of Muslims. In 14 5 2, Constantinople was totally isolated from the Black Sea commerce by the construction of Rumeli Hisari fortresses in a time span as short as two months. The Europeans did not react while the Byzantines were trapped.
On May 29, 1453; the Janissaries of Fatih Sultan Mehmet (Mehmet the Conqueror) entered the city that had been under their besiege for a long time. The greatest Ottoman Sultan, called “The Man who Opened an Era” by a biographer, considered himself heir of Byzantium and the hero of a new Alexander romance.
Constantinople capital
He declared Constantinople as the capital and gave it a new name by inspiring the Greek words “is tippling” (into the city): the Allied forces in the end of World War I occupied Istanbul, Istanbul. The country regained its freedom after the Independence War that had begun in the leadership of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.
Ataturk could foresee the future and was realistic as well as being a perfect statesman and one of the greatest politicians of the 2th century. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk realized what no other statesman could do in the 20 century and changed his people’s lives completely. This was an exact cultural revolution. He established a common platform much further and deeper than it can be observed. The republic was declared in 1923 and Ankara became the capital, Istanbul has remained the biggest and the most significant city of Turkey up to now. The words of a Turkish poet are still valid: “The best part of Ankara is the way back to Istanbul.”
Source: https://www.doholidays.com/kucuk-ayasofya-church/
0 notes
travelistanbul · 5 years
Photo
Tumblr media
Kucuk Ayasofya Church
Rome, Hellenism and Orient had unified here in a unique, and never imitate bled monument. Apart from the Kucuk Ayasofya church, Hagia Eirene Church, the Underground Palace (Yerebatan Sarayi) and Binbirdirek are what have survived since those glittering days. First, however; Haghia Sophia, the church of “the divine wisdom”, is the most significant indicator of the power and splendor of the Justinian period.
In spite of the internal competition and the threat of rapidly spreading Islam, the commercial power in Bosporus stayed as the most magnificent and great focus point of the Medieval age until the 13^ century. However, it was also the center of competition of noble dynasties struggling to rule this power, a corrupted administration, several intrigues and horrifying murders. After the Byzantine army had been defeated in Malazgirt in 1071, Asia Minor was taken by Selcuks; this was the first sign for the coming catastrophe of the East Roman Empire.
Constantinople experienced
In 1204, Constantinople experienced the most hurtful stroke of its history; the Fourth Crusade armies led by Venetian Duke Enrico Dandolo backed by Venetian Navy, passed the Golden Horn barrier and plundered the invaluable masterpieces of the richest city of the era, for 58 days. That was when the city of Constantine and Justinian had fallen down. After the short rule of “Latin” Crusade State in 12 61, Constantinople lived its second best period during the paleographer emperors’ period. Marvellous mosaics, the frescoes at Kariye and Fethiye Mosques have survived from those days until today.
The Ottomans passed the Dardanelles in r 354 and stepped into the European land for the first time in Gallipoli. Bursa replaced Edirne as the new capital in 1361. The Christian- Orthodox Constantinople had already become an island in the sea of Muslims. In 14 5 2, Constantinople was totally isolated from the Black Sea commerce by the construction of Rumeli Hisari fortresses in a time span as short as two months. The Europeans did not react while the Byzantines were trapped.
On May 29, 1453; the Janissaries of Fatih Sultan Mehmet (Mehmet the Conqueror) entered the city that had been under their besiege for a long time. The greatest Ottoman Sultan, called “The Man who Opened an Era” by a biographer, considered himself heir of Byzantium and the hero of a new Alexander romance.
Constantinople capital
He declared Constantinople as the capital and gave it a new name by inspiring the Greek words “is tippling” (into the city): the Allied forces in the end of World War I occupied Istanbul, Istanbul. The country regained its freedom after the Independence War that had begun in the leadership of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.
Ataturk could foresee the future and was realistic as well as being a perfect statesman and one of the greatest politicians of the 2th century. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk realized what no other statesman could do in the 20 century and changed his people’s lives completely. This was an exact cultural revolution. He established a common platform much further and deeper than it can be observed. The republic was declared in 1923 and Ankara became the capital, Istanbul has remained the biggest and the most significant city of Turkey up to now. The words of a Turkish poet are still valid: “The best part of Ankara is the way back to Istanbul.”
Source: https://www.doholidays.com/kucuk-ayasofya-church/
0 notes