Istanbul Military Museum, is dedicated to one thousand years of Turkish Military History. It is one of the leading museums of its kind in the world. The museum is open to the public everyday except Mondays and Tuesdays.
Istanbul Military Museum and culture center was renovated and reopened at its present building in 1993 with a very successful and contemporary exhibition concept. Today in 22 rooms about nine thousand pieces from the Ottoman era through World War I are exhibited, out of a total collection of fifty thousand objects.
The museum initially opened in Hagia Eirene Church. Later in 1950, it was moved to the First Army Headquarters building in Cumhuriyet Caddesi, Harbiye, not far from Taksim Square in Istanbul. A fine collection of historical weapons, uniforms and tools of various periods of the army are on display. The highlights are the magnificent campaign tents and standards. Outside the museum, interesting Ottoman cannons and mortars, a rail gun, aircraft, helicopters are on display.
Try to visit in the afternoon so that you can enjoy the concert given by the Mehter, which occurs most days between 3pm and 4pm. The large museum is spread over two floors.
On the ground floor are displays of weapons and Turkish military uniforms through the ages, as well as glass cases holding battle standards, both Turkish and captured. These include Byzantine, Greek, British, Austro-Hungarian, Italian and Imperial Russian standards. Also on show are an old-fashioned diorama of the Conquest and a tapestry woven by Ottoman sailors (who must have had lots of time on their hands) showing the flags of all of the world’s important maritime nations.
The upper floor has a Çannakale (Gallipoli) diorama and a room devoted to Atatürk, who was, of course, a famous Ottoman general before he became founder and commander-in-chief of the republican army and first president of the Turkish Republic. Perhaps the best reason to visit this museum is to view the short concert by the Mehter. Turkish historians argue that the Mehter was the world’s first true military band. Its purpose was not to make pretty music for dancing, but to precede the conquering Ottoman paşas (governors) into vanquished towns, impressing upon the defeated populace their new, subordinate status. Children in particular will love watching them march with their steady, measured pace, turning all together to face the left side of the line of march, then the right side.
There is also a room which is dedicated to Atatürk,the very eminent Turk, who studied here in this building when it was a military academy between 1899-1905.
The Janissary Band “Mehter Takımı“, world’s oldest military band gives concerts of march music in traditional uniforms each afternoon. The Ottomans was the first to use musicians in military campaigns and to integrate music into the life and work of the army. After a town had been conquered, the Mehter preceded the conquering Ottoman commander on a procession through the town, playing slow-cadence marches in exotic minor modes. The boom of kettledrums, invented by the Mehter, the wail of oboes and clash of cymbals, (another Turkish invention) was meant to glorify the conquest and impress upon the populace that they were now part of an entirely different civilization.
The easiest way to get to the museum is to walk up Cumhuriyet Caddesi from Taksim Sq, this will take around 15 minutes.
Swords, guns and history, a beautiful museum of military history. We toured the Askeri museum on a rainy day and saw very few people. You could easily spend a 1/2 day in this museum.
Well worth seeing, looked around the rest of the exhibits and worth it just for the Starfighter and Sioux exhibits outside.
The museum houses many displays although you may have seen similar stuff in other museums. The highlight is the band performance. It actually lasted for 40 minutes only, the pleasant surprise is the 20 mins photo opportunity with the colourfully dressed Ottaman band members at the end, so don't leave early.
Went to this Military Museum on a lazy afternoon. The museum was not crowded at all and I felt so peaceful and unhurried. Most of the exhibits have English translation. The layout was in chronological order and did a good job of telling the history of Turkey from the military perspective.
Loved this museum. As a previous reviewer said, please don't hesitate to see this museum simply because it is called a military museum. Within its walls you will find the history of the Turkish people and the Turkish empires. The murals are spectacular.
When planning a visit to Istanbul, there are many excellent places to see. Visitors might overlook the Military Museum because you want to go to the more famous attractions. However, if you have the time to fit in three to four hours for this museum, it would be worth it.
Devote a long time for this museum. This museum is one of the most beautiful and cleanest and organized museums I visited. It summarizes a long history of wars and sultans and civilizations and summarizes one of the greatest conquests throughout the ages that is the conquest of Constantinople by Sultan Mehmet the Conqueror.
If you've seen Istanbul's main attractions or want something different in between, the Mehter Military Band performs traditional music from 3pm to 4pm on Wednesday afternoons at the back entrance to the Military Museum (New District, 20-minute walk or one Metro stop from Taksim Square).
You can find almost everything from documents and pictures to cloths and weapons related to military concepts. some scenes from Ottomon wars, WW I, WW II, and many more.
Endless collections of different types of swords, helmets, guns etc, but what we liked most was staged battles and important moments in the military history of Turkey.