Eventually, we’re in a cab, with the meter on (having avoided the touts), speeding down the empty highway toward Sultanahmet, passing through a rough break in an ancient fortification, skirting the old city walls.
Unable to check-in until early afternoon, we find ourselves out on the cobbled thoroughfare of Divan Yolu giddy with exhaustion, walking into the Bosphorus sunrise, or at least attempting to make it to the shore.
We saw the water from across the highway, at the entrance to the old city, and decided to turn back in search of an increasingly urgent breakfast, which we eventually found at the stunning rooftop of a small hotel. Despite the directions given to us to a better eating area by a chirpy German-sounding dude emptying a kettle into the gutter, who seemed about the only person out and about before eight, apart from the first of an endless parade of street cleaners, and the stirring vagrants dotting the park benches, we had top-notch views and a distinctly Eastern European breakfast of bread, pale cheese, sliced cucumber and tomato, with the added surprise of olives and salty fetta, and tea, instant coffee and reconstituted orange juice to wash it down. All of this tasted rather fine with the 270-degree views over rooftops to the wandering watercraft of the Bosphorus, and the amiable company of a couple from western
Very Old Baptism bath, Topkapi Palace, Istanbul, Turkey
Naava’s plan was to head straight to the
Before the palace, we make a crucial stop – Andrew’s first Turkish coffee, at the outdoor cafe in front of the Blue Mosque. Look, it’s not the greatest coffee, and the one I had later near our hotel in Sultanahmet was better, but as the first, it will always remain dear to my caffeine-dependent heart.
Meanwhile, back at the palace, an army of groundsweepers keeps the place tidy, lending a soft, scratching heartbeat, while ever-louder strains of French, German, Italian, English, American, Australian, Arabic and Turkish melt into and eventually overwhelm the still, humid morning air.
Tiles, Tiles, Tiles, Topkapi Palace, Istanbul, Turkey
There’s no point in giving you a grand overview of the palace, but for me the highlights were the reliquary, containing what are said to be Moses’s staff, David’s sword and Abraham’s cooking pot, among fragments of Mohammed’s beard, his seal, mantle and the swords of his friends, and the display of royal costume, in which delicate, invaluable silk kaftans survive gleaming, much as they would have hundreds of years ago.
Post-palace, the Harem is a gloriously decorated series of gates, corridors, chambers and courtyards largely devoid of furniture and exhibition pieces, though still well worth the visit.
Studious Naava, Topkapi Palace, Istanbul, Turkey
By this stage completely non-functioning, we stroll back up to Divan Yolu, and stuff ourselves with Turkish pizza and salad. I take a gamble with Ayran, the national dairy drink, a twisted ottoman equivalent to lassi, which tastes something like thin, salty, liquid white cheese. No doubt an acquired taste, and the last one I’ll order.
Sheep Cheese Pizza and Ayran, Istanbul, Turkey
And now, as I write this, we’re checked into the Faros Hotel with a studio room overlooking the street and an alley offshoot, listening to the madness outside, trying with all our might not to fall asleep before we head out to find the nearest secret synagogue for Friday night action.
Blue Mosque, Istanbul, Turkey