Cool area of history.
This large plaza near the Blue Mosque was once the area that hosted chariot races during the Roman Empire under Constantine's rule. Today is known as
the Sultanahmet Square. Still located in the hippodrome is what is left of the serpentine column- the marker where racers turned around and came back to the finish line. This column was brought from Delphi in ancient Greece during the Greco-Persian wars. It was made from the shields of the defeated Persian soldiers. Wow.
Near the column is The Obelisk of Theodosius, a monolithic granite column which was initially erected in ancient Egypt in 1600 BC. The emperor moved it from Egypt to Constantinople by ship, it took 60 years to arrive.
Another column, the Walled Obelisk or Column of Constantine, was once a grand column surrounded by bronze and silver plates. Believed to have been built in the 10th century in honor of Emperor Constantine VII. During the Crusade in the Sack of Constantinople in 1204, the Walled Obelisk was stripped of its bronze and silver plating. So today a naked column stands at the end of the hippodrome.
The last structure in the plaza was a gift from Kaiser Wilhelm II of Germany. The German ruler had a friendship with the Ottoman Sultan Abdulhamid II, and the fountain was a symbol of their company. The small fountain is a pretty magnificent structure, with breathtaking golden mosaics under its dome.
History, that's all I could think of. All the incredible people that walked in that area for centuries before me. read more