The Ottoman sultans usually spent the summer seasqrt here. In 1719 Ahmet III enlarged and attached it to the Beşiktaş’ Palace nearby. The Palace was later burnt down and rebuilt in 18W. Mahmut II resided here for a time. Then again the wooden palace was severely damaged by fire. In 1853 Sultan Abdülmecit had the/palace built in the form in which we now see it and thenceforward several sultans used it for residence, except Abdülhamit II.
The palace is divided into several sections. There are the sultan’s quarters, the various reception rooms for different ceremonial purposes, the quarters of the Valide Sultan, the sultan’s mother, the quarters of the ladies of the ccurt and of the heir to the throne, the glass kiosk and more than two hundred rooms. In the sultan’s own quarters and the reception rooms here are eight great halls, The biggest of all is 47 metres (155 ft.) in length. The style of architecture is mixed, being the work of European and natives architects in the nineteenth century.
In the interior decoration porphyry, crystal and other such precious materials were used lavishly. For the decoration and upholstery French and Italian specialists were employed. Part of the furniture was importrd from abroad and part made locally. In the private apartments many .mitations of the style of the palace of Versailles are to be seen and I- may be said that nowhere else in the world has money been sona lavühed so prodigally, and it is packed with European luxuries. The quiy on the water side is 600 metres, (660 yards) in length. In the later y.’ars of the empire the Ottoman sultans and caliphs resided in this jalace, so it is an important spot, both historically and for its treasure.
After the abolition of the sultanate and caliphate and exile of all members of the imperial dynasty and the proclamation of the republic, the palace was nationalised. Here, in Room No. in 1938 the great revolutionary and first President of the Republic, Atatürk, at nine o’clock in the evening of 10th October, passed away.
Following the tramlines beyond the great palace in the direction of Besiktas we come to the gate of the Museum of Fine Arts and Sculpture. Beyond the Museum we continue in the direction of the Bosphorus and come to a small park alongside the Beşiktaş landing-stage. Here is the tomb and statue of Barbaros Hayreddin Pasa.
Palace Interior
The palace can only be seen on a guided tour, which İs split into two parts: the first visits the Selamlik, the public wing, while the second covers the Harem.
If you are short of time, more worth while is the Selamlık. Here, the ornate, curved staircase that leads to the Salon of the Ambassadors, the imperial reception room, is jaw-dropping with its crystal and marble balusters. Equally so is a giant chandelier, the largest in the world, which hangs down from the gilded ceiling of the immense Throne Room.
The Harem is less ostentatious than the public rooms, but fascinating nonetheless. For all its Western architecture and lifestyle, it still has separate sections for the official wives and concubines, with a central meeting room for tea and embroidery.
The Last Sultans
When Sultan Abdul Mecit was laying out the plans for Dolmabahce. the Ottoman Empire was well into its last century. Its economy had been crumbling for some time, due, in part, to a fatwah on the printing press along with other scientific advancements, waves of nationalist uprising throughout Ottoman lands and a string of disastrous military defeats to a new foe in the north. Abdul Mecit’s successor, Abdul Aziz, was more concerned with his harem of thousands than with matters of state. And the death knell of the sultans sounded when the last true autocrat, Abdül Hamid II, retreated within the walls of Yıldız Palace. In 1853 Tsar Nicholas I branded the Ottoman Empire the ‘Sick Man of Europe’. The last sultan, Mehmet VI, was deposed in 1922 and left Istanbul quietly one night with his family on a train from Sirkeci Station, thus bringing to a close the reign of a dynasty that had lasted for almost five centuries.
Mustafa Kemal Atatürk
You may notice that all of the clocks inside Dolmabahçe Palace are set to 9.05am. This was the time of death on 10 November 1938 of Mustafa Kemal Atatürk, founder of the Turkish Republic and its first president.
The self-proclaimed ‘Father of the Turks‘ is the country’s most venerated modern leader. It is hard to pass a day in Istanbul without seeing an image of the man who liberated the country from occupying forces after World War I, before executing a series of modernising reforms. These included abolishing the sultanate and caliphate, moving the capital to Ankara and replacing the Sharia (Islamic holy law) with civil, trade and penal codes adopted from the Swiss, French and Italians. Atatürk also gave women the vote, dropped the Ottoman script for the Latin alphabet and switched the fez hat for a European fedora.
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Rather nice palace built in the XIXth century after the Napoleonic style. Extravagant halls with incredible chandeliers, French or British (4.5 tons: the biggest chandelier in the world!). The problem is the fact that you are not allowed to visit it on your own. You have to be part of a group.
I loved this Palace, based on the European style of palace, crystal chandeliers in just about every room, wonderful furniture and colourful gardens. Ahmed our guide was excellent, and told us that the palace was built between 1843 and 1856. Kemal Ataturk passed away in his bedroom in the Palace. So full of history. It is situated on reclaimed land…
Concerned by other reviewers about the crowds we got to the palace at 9:30am on a sunday (opens at 8:30am but we are in european time of late nights so didnt get there as early as i had hoped). English tour was at 10am so we looked at crystal palace and surrounds first. Thrilled that it was really quiet.
If you stay in the old city, you simply take tram no. 2 to the end of the line and from there walk about 10 minutes and there it is. Make sure you go there on a beautiful day, so that you enjoy to the max the garden and surroundings.
We were advised to go early to visit this palace, as the queques can be long. We only had to wait about 10 minutes for the English tour, so we were lucky. The gardens and grounds are beautiful and you can take photos of the gardens and buildings and wander around there at your leisure.
You should really go as soon as it opens in the morning to avoid the many long lines, unless you are with a tour group that seems to get to skip the lines. Lines for security, the ticket window, the entrance gate, the palace itself… You can only go into the palace with a guide.
There's a stark contrast between this palace and Topkapi. Dolmabahce was built in the European style. There wasn't a hint of oriental influence in its design. It was the last residence of the Ottoman sultans, and the place where Ataturk lived and died.
Based on many of the great palaces of Europe, Dolmabache was the Sultan's summer retreat on The Bosphorus. Incorporating a crystal staircase and four and a half ton chandelier, sent by Queen Victoria (how did she get that to the Post Office?) this is the type of place that would have made Lenin fume and Louis XIV homesick.
Arrived early and given a 9.30 tour time but queued until after 10am – random other groups allowed to go in front of us – and when we did get in our guide was told to hurry us through so we got a very abbreviated tour. Harem tour was better – better guide and less frenzied pace.
Went to the palace today and while I do agree with all the nice words in other reviews here about the palace itself, I've got some mixed feelings. Yes, the palace is marvelous and yes, it shouldn't be missed.