Le palais de Topkapi
The Topkapi palace
The Topkapı Palace (Turkish: Topkapı Sarayı)[1] or in Ottoman: طوبكابي بالاذي)
is a palace which was the official and primary residence in the city of the Ottoman Sultans, from 1465 to 1853. The palace was a setting for state occasions and royal entertainments and is a major tourist attraction today. The name directly translates as "Cannongate Palace", from the palace being named after a nearby, now lost gate.
Initial construction started in 1459, ordered by Sultan Mehmed II, the conqueror of Byzantine Constantinople. The palace is a complex made up of four main courtyards and many smaller buildings. At the height of its existence as a royal residence, the palace was home to as many as 4,000 people, formerly covering a larger area with a long shoreline. The complex has been expanded over the centuries, with many renovations such as after the 1509 earthquake and 1665 fire.
Le palais de Topkapi (en Turc:Topkapi Sarayi) ou en Ottoman (ابي بالاذي)
est un palais d’Istanbul, résidence urbaine principale et officielle du sultan ottoman, de 1465 à 1853, construit sur l’emplacement de l’acropole de l’antique Byzance. Il domine la Corne d'Or, le Bosphore et la mer de Marmara. Le nom de « Topkapı Sarayı » signifie littéralement « palais de la porte des Canons », d'après le nom d'une porte voisine aujourd'hui disparue. Il est entouré de remparts de 5 km de long et sa superficie est de 700 000 m² (70 ha).