Nisantasi

North and northeast of Beyoglu lie the lands of Istanbul’s haute   bourgeoisie and the playgrounds of the super-rich. The inland area of Nisantası comprises smart streets of modern  apartment blocks, fashion boutiques, good restaurants and people-watching cafés. It doesn’t attract too many visitors, who tend to have homegrown versions of the Bosphorus Shore, but it’s worth seeing to form a holistic impression of the city, which isn’t just about fading historical relics. The Beyman Brasserie in the Beyman department store on Abdi Ipekci Caddesi, a leafier and more genteel take on Bond Street, is an excellent point from which to get the measure of the area. From there you can saunter in and out of the usual slew of designer operations – Gucci, Vuitton, Burberry and so on – before refreshing yourself at top restaurants such as Loft or Borsa. In short, Nisantası is a showcase for sleek, modern Istanbul.

The Bosphorus, stretching 14 miles from the Sea of Marmara to the mouth of the Black Sea, is rather more timeless. Its name is mythical: Zeus seduced Io, and so his wife, Hera, took revenge by turning Io into a heifer incessantly tormented by a gadfly. To escape the midge she swam the straits, hence ‘Bosphorus’ – ‘ford of the ox’. Its treacherous currents, which run north–south and vice-versa (driven by differing water pressures if you must know), are immortalized in the legend of Jason and the Argonauts who famously navigated the channel’s vicious, clashing rocks. But anyone who takes a recommended Bosphorus cruise (see Culture) will marvel more at the Greek gift for exaggeration than the danger, since the rocks quite clearly do not move.

More recently the Bosphorus has been the fantastical playground of the city’s elite. It was here that the sultans moved after abandoning the Topkapı, building first the rather tasteless rococo pile that is the Dolmabahçe, the Çıragan Palace, the Beylerbeyi Palace (on the Asian shore) and, finally, Yıldız Palace, which sits on a hillside of lovely woods, ponds and streams, just over the road from the Çıragan. Their wealthy subjects meanwhile studded the shoreline all the way up to the Black Sea with their yalıs (wooden summer mansions), still some of the world’s most desirable properties.

Despite, presumably, possessing neither palace nor yalı, you can enjoy the Bosphorus at any of the excellent cafés, clubs and restaurants as you journey northwards along its shore. The area of Oratköy, with its Italian-style piazza, is a trendy hotspot, just past the kilometre-long Atatürk bridge. Kuruçesme is home to super-clubs Rainer, Sortie and Angelique, as well the trendy Assk Café and Italian restaurant Mia Mensa. Further along, Bebek, the loveliest of the Bosphorus villages, as they were before being encompassed by Greater Istanbul, boasts the renowned fish restaurant Poseidon, a fabulous bar at the back of the stylish Bebek Hotel, and Meshur Bebek Badem Ezmesci purveyors of what may be the finest badem ezmesci (marzipan) in the world.

Round the next bend stand icons of antiquity and modernity: the imposing Ottoman castle, Rumeli Hisarı (and on the opposite shore its twin Anadolu Hisarı), and the Fatih Mehmet Bridge, a world-beating suspension bridge linking Europe to Asia. Funnily enough, it’s sited exactly where King Darius of Persia built a pontoon bridge in 512 BC so he could attack the Scythians. Just another place where the city’s present is in play with its past.


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