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Grand Bazaar Kapali Carsi Kapalıcarsı Istanbul Turkey carpets carpet tapis handicraft trade handy man moustage portrait

Grand Bazaar Kapali Carsi Kapalıcarsı Istanbul Turkey carpets carpet tapis handicraft trade handy man  moustage portrait Stock Photo
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Image details

Contributor:

Peter Horree / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

B4C202

File size:

56.1 MB (2 MB Compressed download)

Releases:

Model - no | Property - noDo I need a release?

Dimensions:

3608 x 5433 px | 30.5 x 46 cm | 12 x 18.1 inches | 300dpi

Date taken:

3 September 2008

More information:

The Grand Bazaar is well known for its jewelry, pottery, spice, and carpet shops. Many of the stalls in the bazaar are grouped by type of goods, with special areas for leather coats, gold jewelry The Grand Bazaar feels like a gigantic labyrinth: Endless alleys crossing each other, and only a few of them leading outside the market. With 10, 000 vendors, it's hard to come out empty-handed, although making up your mind what and where to buy will take good eyes - and good negotiation skills! It is in the heart of the Old Town. Each visitor, entering it for the first time through one of its 17 gates, will inevitably get lost in the many lanes and will be glad to recover eventually at one of the tea houses. The ancient shopping mall stretches from the Nuruosmaniye up to the Beyazıt Mosque over an area of approximately 34, 000 ft. and offers everything a tourist could want -- from carpets and jewels to leather clothing. The market is traditionally organized according to individual trades; each handicraft has its own area. Nowadays, goods are mainly sold and not manufactured anymore, even if there are still individual coppersmiths and cutters. Nevertheless the basic structure has been retained. The Old Bedesten (a masonry structure for storage and safekeeping) is located in the center. Here you can buy old silver jewels and original Russian or Greek icons. This oldest part of the bazaar was built by Mehmet II shortly after the conquest of Constantinople. In the following hundred years, the other areas were added gradually. A particularly interesting corner is the book bazaar (Sahaflar) next to the Beyazıt Mosque. If you leave the bazaar through one of the gates facing the Golden Horn, you can walk to the sea through the craftsmans' quarter of Tahtakale