Table of Contents
Bodrum Castle
The Crusaders built this castle as a castle for Saint Peter in the fifteenth century, and it is currently considered one of the best preserved monuments in the world, which dates back to the Middle Ages, and is a museum that receives many visitors every year.
Aya Sofia
Hagia Sophia was originally a Greek Orthodox Church in the period from 537 AD to 1453 CE, and then it turned into an imperial mosque after Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror ordered its transformation into a mosque, and it continued so during the period from May of 1453 CE to 1931 CE, until She ended up as a museum in Istanbul.
Sulaymaniyah Mosque
This mosque is considered one of the most magnificent Ottoman mosques, although it is not the largest, and it was built with a mandate from Sultan Suleiman I, to be the fourth imperial mosque in Istanbul, and it was built in the period between 1550-1557 AD, and he and the surrounding buildings were designed from Before the architect Sinan, who is considered the most famous architect, whose grave is located outside the walled mosque garden, the mosque has four minarets, and a front yard surrounded by three sides, and the balcony in the garden behind the mosque provides a wonderful view of the Golden Horn and the Bosphorus.
Mount Nimrod
This mountain is 2,134 m high, and it is considered one of the other World Heritage sites for UNESCO, and it includes huge statues of King Antiochus I Theos, and many gods of the Greeks, Armenians, Medes, Nisreen, and Asadin. From the mountain.
Topkapi Palace
This palace located in the city of Istanbul is a great example of Ottoman architecture, and it has been the main seat of the Ottoman Sultans for 400 years, and its history dates back to the fifteenth century, and was at that time a center of social and political life in Istanbul, and it was listed as a World Heritage site UNESCO.