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INFORMATION ABOUT GALATA TOWER
Traditionally, Galata comprises
that quarter which occupies the slopes leading town from old
Pera to the Golden Horn and the Lower Bosphorus.In modern
times the name of this section has been changed to Karakoy,
but old residents of the town still refer to it by its
ancient name.
The town of Galata took its present form chiefly under the
Genoese.After the reconquest of Constantinople from the
Latins in 1261, the Byzantine emperors granted the district
to the Genoese as a semi-independent colony with its own
podesta, or governor, appointed by the senate of
Genoa.Although they were expanding its area and
fortificationsfor more than a hundred years.Sections of
these walls and towers still exist here and there as do
several Roman Catholic churches whose dates of foundation go
back to the 14th century.
One of the city's most striking
landmarks is the Galata Tower, whose huge, cone-capped form
dominates the skyline on the Galata side of the Golden
Horn.This tower was the apex of the fortifications of
Genoese Galata.Originally known as the Tower of Christ, it
was built in 1348 in connection with the first expansion of
the Genoese colony.The tower was thoroughly rebuilt several
times during the Ottoman period and in the past decade it
has been superbly restored.It was opened to the public in
1967 and has now a modern restorant and cafe on its upper
floors; from there one commands a magnificent view of
Istanbul and its surrounding waters |
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