Istanbul / Constantinople
Constantinopla – Hagia Sophia, Patriarcado Ecumênico e patrimônio bizantino
Por que este destino é importante
Istambul, a antiga Constantinopla, foi por mais de 1.000 anos a capital do Império Bizantino e do cristianismo oriental. A Hagia Sophia (537 d.C.), outrora a maior igreja da cristandade, é hoje uma mesquita – mas permanece acessível a peregrinos de todas as confissões.
O Patriarcado Ecumênico de Constantinopla ainda reside no bairro do Fanar em Istambul e é o primado honorário de toda a comunhão ortodoxa.
Constantinopla I (381), II (553) e III (681) foram realizados aqui; o Concílio de Calcedônia (451) ocorreu no atual Kadıköy.
Principais locais para visitar
Hagia Sophia
Justinian's 537 AD masterpiece. Reverted to mosque July 2020. Free entry to ground floor; 25 EUR for foreign visitors to the upper gallery (since 2024). Closed during prayer times.
Chora / Kariye Mosque
World's finest Late Byzantine frescoes including the Anastasis. Reopened May 2024 as an active mosque; figural mosaics covered during prayer. Approximately 20 EUR foreign entry.
Hagia Irene
Inside the First Courtyard of Topkapi Palace. The only major Byzantine church never converted to a mosque. Site of the Second Ecumenical Council (381 AD) that finalised the Nicene Creed.
Ecumenical Patriarchate, Saint George Church
At Fener. Relics of Saint John Chrysostom and Saint Gregory the Theologian, returned by Pope John Paul II in 2004. Free entry; small dress code.
Church of Saint Mary of the Mongols
The only Byzantine church to have remained continuously Greek Orthodox since 1453.
Little Hagia Sophia (Saints Sergius and Bacchus)
Justinian's prototype for Hagia Sophia; an active mosque today.
Pammakaristos / Fethiye Mosque
Outstanding Late Byzantine mosaics in the southern paraklesion (currently a museum).
Sant'Antonio di Padova, Beyoglu
Largest Catholic church in Istanbul, on Istiklal Caddesi. Daily Mass.
Melhor época para visitar
Abril–maio e setembro–outubro. Pode ser visitada o ano todo; invernos mais amenos do que na Europa Central.
Principais dias de festa
- 30 November - Saint Andrew (Patriarchal feast)
- 13 November - Saint John Chrysostom
- 11 May - Saints Cyril and Methodius (and refoundation of Constantinople)
Como chegar
Dois aeroportos internacionais: Istambul (IST) e Sabiha Gökçen (SAW). Excelentes conexões de transporte público urbano (bonde, metrô, balsa).
Onde se hospedar
Sultanahmet (bairro histórico) é ideal para peregrinos – a pé até a Hagia Sophia, Mesquita Azul e Grande Bazar. Beyoğlu e a costa do Bósforo para opções mais modernas.
Tours e experiências
Passeios guiados pelos locais bizantinos (Hagia Sophia, Chora, Cisterna Subterrânea). Passeios de meio dia pelo bairro do Fanar com o Patriarcado Ecumênico.
Practical information
- Hours
- Hagia Sophia ground floor open outside prayer times; upper gallery 09:00-19:00 (summer). Chora 09:00-19:00. Patriarchate 08:30-16:30.
- Fees
- Approximate 2026 - verify on muze.gov.tr. Hagia Sophia upper gallery ~25 EUR foreign visitors; Chora ~20 EUR; Hagia Irene ~10 EUR (with Topkapi combo ticket). Patriarchate free.
- Dress code
- Modest dress everywhere; women bring a scarf for mosque-status sites and the Patriarchate. Shoes removed at all mosques (bags provided).
- Accessibility
- Sultanahmet is largely accessible but cobblestoned. Hagia Sophia has stairs up to the gallery (no lift).
Dicas para peregrinos
💡 Dicas para peregrinos
- Start at the Phanar (the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople) — taxi to the Fener district, attend the 09:00 Divine Liturgy at the Patriarchal Cathedral of Saint George (Sunday is liturgically richest), then walk along the Golden Horn to Chora and the city walls.
- Hagia Sophia is now a mosque (since July 2020). Visit outside the five daily prayer times (typically 09:30-12:30 and 14:00-17:30) — entry is free; women cover hair; everyone removes shoes. The figural mosaics are temporarily veiled at prayer times but visible at other hours.
- Buy the Istanbul Museum Pass (Müzekart Plus) before arriving — it covers Topkapı, Hagia Irene (the original cathedral, site of the 381 Council), the Archaeological Museums and the Chora Mosque, saving roughly 40-50% on individual tickets.
- Chora (Kariye) reopened as a mosque in 2024 with the same arrangement as Hagia Sophia — the 14th-century mosaics and frescoes remain visible. Visit at 09:00 when light through the windows is best for photography.
- Take the Bosphorus ferry from Eminönü to Kadıköy (Chalcedon) on the Asian side — the 451 AD Council of Chalcedon was held at the church of Saint Euphemia, near today's Kadıköy ferry terminal. The site is a marked square; allow 2-3 hours including the ferry.
- Avoid driving in Istanbul — use the metro (Marmaray under the Bosphorus is a marvel) and the IDO ferry network. Yellow taxis are cheap (UBER and BiTaksi apps work well) but traffic can extend a 20-minute drive to 90 minutes.
- For Saint Andrew's Day (30 November), book accommodation near the Phanar 4-6 months ahead — the joint Catholic-Orthodox delegation tradition continues annually and the streets around the Patriarchate are closed for the patriarchal procession.
Você sabia?
ℹ️ Você sabia?
- Hagia Sophia was the largest cathedral in the world from its consecration in 537 AD until Seville Cathedral was completed in 1520 — nearly a thousand years. The dome was an engineering miracle that collapsed twice (in 558 and 989) before achieving its present form.
- The Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople has been continuously occupied since the apostolic era. The current Patriarch, Bartholomew I, was elected in 1991 — his predecessors stretch back through the Council of Nicaea (where the See's bishop, Saint Metrophanes, was represented) all the way to Saint Andrew the Apostle, traditional founder of the See in 38 AD.
- The five domes of the Hagia Sophia complex (the main dome, two semi-domes and two side aisles) are not arranged on a Latin cross plan but a centred Greek cross — the iconic Byzantine architectural form that influenced every great Orthodox church from Saint Mark's Venice to Saint Basil's Moscow.
- Istanbul's Christian population dropped from approximately 350,000 (mostly Greek) in 1920 to under 3,000 today — the result of the 1923 Lausanne Treaty population exchange, the 1955 Istanbul pogrom, and the 1964 expulsions. The Phanar serves a tiny diaspora and global Orthodoxy rather than a local Greek community.
- Chora's Anastasis fresco (the Resurrection scene in the parecclesion) is widely regarded as the supreme masterpiece of Byzantine painting — comparable in importance to Michelangelo's Sistine ceiling. Painted around 1315-1321 under Theodore Metochites' patronage.
Biblical references
- Acts 16:6-10 — “Paul's Bithynia route, traditionally understood to skirt the future Constantinople region.”
Leitura sugerida antes de partir
| Title / Reference | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| Byzantium: The Surprising Life of a Medieval Empire (Judith Herrin) | The best single-volume introduction to Byzantine civilisation. Reads like a great novel; historically rigorous. |
| Constantinople: City of the World's Desire 1453-1924 (Philip Mansel) | The standard English-language history of Ottoman Constantinople. Strong on the Phanar, the Orthodox Patriarchate's survival, and the lost cosmopolitan world destroyed in 1923. |
| Hagia Sophia: A History (Robert Nelson) | The architectural and theological biography of the great cathedral from Justinian to today. Essential for understanding what you are walking through. |
Nearby destinations to combine
Iznik / Nicaea
First Council of Nicaea (325 AD) and Pope Leo XIV's 1700th anniversary visit
Ephesus
House of the Virgin Mary, Basilica of St John and the First Church of Revelation
Cappadocia
Rock-hewn churches of the Cappadocian Fathers
Incluído nestas rotas
- Byzantine Heritage — Istanbul, Iznik, Ravenna and Mount Athos
- Seven Ecumenical Councils — Nicaea - Constantinople - Ephesus - Chalcedon - and the Three Imperial Sequels
Frequently asked questions
Names in other languages
| Turkish | Istanbul / Konstantiniyye |
|---|---|
| Greek | Konstantinoupolis |
| German | Istanbul / Konstantinopel |
| Russian | Konstantinopol / Stambul |
| French | Constantinople / Istanbul |
| Italian | Istanbul / Costantinopoli |
| Arabic | Astanabul |