Hagia Sophia Mosque - İstanbul

Hagia Sophia was built three times in the same place. The present Hagia Sophia is known as the “Third Hagia Sophia”. The first construction of Hagia Sophia began during the reign of Constantine I, who adopted Christianity as the official religion of the Roman Empire. Built as a basilica with a wooden roof on the first of the seven hills of Istanbul and known as the 'Great Church' at that time, this building was inaugurated in 360 during the reign of Constantine II. In 404, there are no remains of this building, which was largely ruined as a result of a fire that broke out during the rebellion.

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Divriği Great Mosque - Sivas

The earliest settlement in and around Divriği dates back to the Hittite Period. The mosque was built by Ahmet Shah and his wife Turan Melek together with the mosque in 1228-1229 when the region was under the rule of Mengücekoğulları. This masterpiece of Islamic architecture consists of a mosque with two domed tombs and an adjacent hospital. In addition to its architectural features, the buildings are on the UNESCO World Heritage List for their rich examples of Anatolian traditional stonemasonry. Divriği Great Mosque and Darüşşifa is Turkey's first architectural structure to be included in this list.

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Göbeklitepe - Şanlıurfa

Göbeklitepe or Göbekli Tepe is a Neolithic archaeological site located near Örencik village in Haliliye district, 18 km northeast of Şanlıurfa province in the Southeastern Anatolia Region of Turkey. Dating to around 9600-9500 BC, Göbeklitepe is the oldest known historical structure in the world so far.

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Topkapı Palace - İstanbul

Topkapi Palace is the palace in Sarayburnu, Istanbul, which was used as the administrative center of the state for 400 years of the 600-year history of the Ottoman Empire and where the Ottoman sultans lived. Up to 4,000 people once lived in it.

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Çatalhöyük - Konya

Çatalhöyük is an archaeological site near Küçükköy in the Çumra district of Konya, which was used as a settlement during the Neolithic and Copper Age from 7000 BC.

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Sümela Manastırı - Trabzon

Sumela Monastery (Greek: Μονή Παναγίας Σουμελά, Panagias Soumelas or Theotokos Sumela) is a Greek Orthodox monastery and church complex located on the western slopes of the Virgin Mary Stream (Ancient Greek name: Panagia) within the boundaries of the Altındere Valley National Park in the Maçka district of Trabzon, on the Kara (Ancient Greek name: Mela) hill and 1,150 m above sea level. In 1923, it had to be abandoned due to the Greek Expulsion and the problem of population exchange.

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