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İlhan Akşit

    Historische Schätze in Antalya
    Ephesos. Museum und Ausgrabungsstätten
    Hagia Sophia
    Westanatolische Zivilisationen
    Das Sonnenland Lykien
    Topkapi Palast
    • 2014
    • 2010

      The Glory of The Byzantine Empire A History of Istanbul The City Walls Byzantine Palaces Roads, Squares and Monuments The Galata Tower Leander's tower The Hippodrome Byzantine Cisterns Churches and Monasteries Hagia Sophia Hagia Eirene Chora Monastery (Kariye Museum) The Splendor of the Ottoman Empire The Magnificence of the Ottomans Classical - Era Mosques Neo - Classical Era Mosques Fatih Complex Şehzade Mosque Süleymaniye Mosque Rüstem Pasha Mosque Yeni Mosque Sultan Ahmed Mosque Tombs of the Sultans Aqueducts, Fountains and Baths Castles, Towers and Fortresses Yedikule Hisary Rumeli Hisary Ottoman Palaces Topkapı Palace Dolmabahçe Palace Beylerbeyi Palace Yıldız Palace Pauilions and Summer Palaces The Museums of Istanbul Istanbul Archaeological Museums Museum of Turkish and Islamic Arts Inns and Bazaars Waterside Mansions by the Bosphorus Roman - Byzantine Emperors and Ottoman Sultans

      Capital of Three Empires Istanbul
    • 2009

      Anatolian Civilizations And Historical Sites The Palaeolithic Age, also known as the Old Stone Age, is the oldest and longest period of humanitys history. Humans in this period first used caves and rock shelters as their dwellings. During this period, when hunting and gathering economiy prevailed, early humans strived to facilitate their lives through the simple tools they made of small stones. This age studied under three development stages as the Lower, Middle and Upper Palaeolithic Age. The oldest settlement in Anatolia dating to this age is Yarimburgaz Cave near Kucukcekmece Lake, starting from the Lower Palaeolithic Age and continuing until the Roman and Byzantine Periods...

      Anatolian Civilizations and Historical Sites
    • 2007
    • 2004
    • 2000