Turkey -- Istanbul
Found in 9 Collections and/or Records:
Constantinople, taken from Pera, looking over the Golden Horn, burying ground in foreground., November 1851
Photograph of Constantinople, taken from Pera, looking over the Golden Horn, with burying ground in foreground.
Gate of the Sublime Porte, Constantinople, November 1851
Photograph of Gate of the Sublime Porte, Constantinople.
Mosque of Sultan Ackmed [Ahmed], Constantinople, November 1851
Photograph of Mosque of Sultan Ackmed [Ahmed], Constantinople.
Photographic prints of a panorama view from the Beyazit Tower, Constantinople
This item consists of two colour photographic prints, conjoined, depicting a panoramic view from the Beyazit Tower, Constantinople, c 1900.
Section 10: Constantinople [2-9 November 1851], November 1851
This series consists of five boxes of photographs showing scenes of Ireland, Paris, Switzerland, Rome, Pompei, Athens, Istanbul, Jerusalem, Cairo, Thebes, Abu Simbel, Nubia, Petra, and more.
Street & fountain of Galata. Constantinople, November 1851
Photograph of street & fountain of Galata, Constantinople.
Tomb of Sultan Ackmed [Ahmed] & Mosque of Santa Sophia, Constantinople, November 1851
Photograph of Tomb of Sultan Ackmed [Ahmed] & Mosque of Santa Sophia, Constantinople.
"Viewer's key" to a panorama of Constantinople and the town of Scutari, by Robert Barker
This is a viewer's key for a panorama by Robert Barker, representing the City of Constantinople and the Town of Scutari [now Üsküdar, a district of Istanbul Province] from the Leander Tower, printed by J. Adlard in ca 1801. It is an exploded circular diagram, with the illustrated features numbered, and a letterpress explanatory key.
"Viewer's key" to Panorama of Constantinople and surrounding country
This is a viewers' guide to a panorama of Constantinople and surrounding country exhibited in Leicester Square, London, in 1801. The item is captioned "The Lower Circle of Observation exhibits a View of Constantinople and the Surrounding Country".
Westminster: [R. Barker], printed by J. Adlard, 1801. Broadside, 370 x 313 mm.