Wow. In most of my travels recently, I’ve gotten to a new country and needed a day to adjust and transition. I’m usually feeling sad about leaving the last place and saying goodbye to new friends while I try to adjust to the good and bad ‘differences’ of my new “home.” Sometimes I don’t have a great first impression, then I scratch beneath the surface, meet the people, and usually ended up liking each place after all.
I fell in love with Istanbul the moment my taxi dropped me off in the old town. My first night I went out, had a beer, ate with brand new friends, and even spoke with some other expats about finding a job here. I always know if I like a city if I still drag my ass out at night even after a very long, jet-lagging day on a plane. I did the same thing in Hong Kong—another city I really liked. Istanbul had cast its spell on me in about thirty minutes. The old quarter is quintessentially just that—it has that old
European vibe with narrow medieval, cobblestone streets full of bars and cafes that spill out onto the sidewalk. The night air swells with sounds of clinking glasses, romantic whispers, and laughter. Plus the high summer season has not really hit yet so the small crowds are just my style. I find it so much easier meeting people as a solo traveler when there are not hordes of backpackers and other travelers mobbing through the streets at full volume.
Turkey is one place where “East meets West” literally. It’s especially true here in Turkey’s largest city, Istanbul, because here the continents of Europe and Asia actually come together, separated only by the Bosporus Strait, which flows 18 miles from the Black Sea in the north to the Sea of Marmara in the south. And in the less literal sense–on the vibrant streets of this city of 12 million people, miniskirts and trendy boots mingle with Muslim head scarves and prayer beads. Turkey is a secular country that is 99% Muslim, but you might not know that in trendy Istanbul.
For sixteen centuries Istanbul, originally known as Byzantium, played a major part in world politics: first as the capital of
the Eastern Roman Empire, when it was known as Constantinople, then as capital of the Ottoman Empire, the most powerful Islamic empire in the world, when it was renamed Istanbul.
Today, Turkey is no little chick. It is roughly 815,000 square kilometers – 3% of which are on the European continent and 97% are in Asia. This diverse land of 70 million people shares its borders with Greece, Bulgaria, Armenia, Syria, Iraq, Iran, and Georgia. With 7000 kilometers of coastline, snow capped mountains and volcanoes, natural wonders; Turkey seems to have it all.
The bad news? Turkey sits directly on at least three active earthquake faults. Thirteen major quakes have rocked Turkey since 1939—the latest was a 7.4 magnitude whopper in 1999 which killed more than 18,000 people. I’ll try not to think about that part.
May 21, 2007 at 1:46 pm
I love reading your posts for so many reasons – most important to “be with you” wherever you go but the historical information you give us is invaluable accompanied by pictures worthy of National Geographic magazine!
So – then I get to the part about the earthquakes and now I can’t wait til you’re some place else! Be safe my little traveller!
May 21, 2007 at 2:08 pm
Any country that can remain at peace with that group of neighbors is doing something right. Enjoy your bi-continental experience. I think mini skirts have become the international symbol of civilization and progress. If only we could have mini skirts everywhere, what a harmonious world it would be!
May 21, 2007 at 4:47 pm
So far, so gorgeous…! Istanbul looks like an amazing place to start the transition from Asia to Europe. What an amazing book you’ll be able to write after all this – “Around the World in Just One Year with Lisa Lubin.” Maybe a world version of “Nickled and Dimed in America”, with a little more travel, a little less work… I can already see it on the New York’s best sellers list!