Report of the new Findings from Byzantine Istanbul
https://doi.org/10.34780/5166-653z
Abstract
Excavations and researches in Istanbul in recent years have uncovered important finds that will shed light on the city’s Byzantine past. These are: the substructure of the northern building in the Zeyrek Mosque, the old Pantocrator monastic church, and the chapel adjacent to the parekklesion to its south plus a badly damaged fresco on the wall near the apse of the diakonikon of the naos; at the Beyazıt excavation an Early Byzantine church ruin; the remains of the ruined church found during the restoration work at the place called Anemas Dungeons; frescos and the inscription discovered at Samatya in the Martyrion of Karpos Papylos; a cross-in-square Byzantine cistern found in the west of the former Byzantine Church of Saint Andrew currently Koca Mustafa Paşa Mosque; a Middle Byzantine ruin hidden behind the Şengül Hamamı (Ottoman Bath) near Gülhane Parkı at Sultanahmet; and the beautifully preserved fresco of a warrior saint from the monastic church of Constantine Lips, present day Fenari İsa Camisi respectively.
Parole chiave:
Istanbul, Byzantine, Architecture, Fresco