Maiden's Tower
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Istanbul
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Location | On an islet off the Asiatic shore at the southern entrance of the Bosporus in Istanbul, Turkey |
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Coordinates | 41°01′16.2″N 29°00′15.3″E / 41.021167°N 29.004250°ECoordinates: 41°01′16.2″N 29°00′15.3″E / 41.021167°N 29.004250°E |
Year first constructed | 1110 |
Construction | stone tower, masonry cupola (first inactive) concrete tower (active) |
Tower shape | square parallelepiped tower with balcony and octagonal prism room with cupola (first) pyramidal tower with light (active) |
Markings / pattern | unpainter tower (first) white tower with narrow red horizontal band (active) |
Height | 9 metres (30 ft) (active) |
Focal height | 23 m (75 ft) (first) 11 metres (36 ft) (active) |
Characteristic | Fl WR 3s. |
Admiralty number | E4903.8 |
NGA number | 17372 |
Turkey number | TUR-038 |
Managing agent | Hamoğlu Holding Co. |
The Maiden's Tower (Turkish: Kız Kulesi), also known as Leander's Tower (Tower of Leandros) since the medieval Byzantine period, is a tower lying on a small islet located at the southern entrance of the Bosphorus strait 200 m (220 yd) from the coast of Üsküdar in Istanbul, Turkey.
After the naval victory at Cyzicus, the ancient Athenian general Alcibiades possibly built a custom station for ships coming from the Black Sea on a small rock in front of Chrysopolis (today's Üsküdar). In 1110 Byzantine Emperor Alexius Comnenus built a wooden tower protected by a stone wall. From the tower an iron chain stretched across to another tower erected on the European shore, at the quarter of Mangana in Constantinople. The islet was then connected to the Asiatic shore through a defense wall, whose underwater remains are still visible. During the Ottoman conquest of Constantinople (Istanbul) in 1453, the tower held a Byzantine garrison commanded by the Venetian Gabriele Trevisano. Subsequently, the structure was used as a watchtower by the Ottoman Turks during the reign of Sultan Mehmed the Conqueror.
The tower, often named Leander's Tower in reference to the legend of Hero and Leander (which took place in the Dardanelles strait, also known as the Hellespont in antiquity), was destroyed during the earthquake of 1509, and burned in 1721. Since then it was used as a lighthouse, and the surrounding walls were repaired in 1731 and 1734, until in 1763 it was erected using stone. From 1829 the tower was used as a quarantine station, and in 1832 was restored by Sultan Mahmud II. Restored again by the harbour authority in 1945, the most recent restoration began in 1998 for the James Bond movie The World Is Not Enough, and steel supports were added around the ancient tower as a precaution after the 17 August 1999 earthquake.