Word: istanbul
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...their stay, these visitors would have seen mechanical golden songbirds on the boughs of jeweled trees and a hydraulic throne that lifted the Emperor 30 ft. above his subjects. Today, the relics of the Byzantine Empire - which for more than 1,000 years stretched from its capital (now called Istanbul) into the eastern Mediterranean, Russia, the Middle East and beyond - continue to dazzle. Running through March 2009, a major exhibit at London's Royal Academy of Arts showcases some of the era's finest works. Yet it also attempts to peel back the artifice that has long made the Byzantine...
...Hitting Speed Bumps For all its worries, there's still a tremendous vibrancy in Turkey. You can see it in Istanbul, a city of 15 million, with its growing roster of expensive hotels, new upscale shopping malls - and perpetual traffic jams. But you can also find it in other parts of Turkey, in places like the Mediterranean port of Iskenderun...
...biggest changes is to be found in Bursa, a 90-minute boat ride from Istanbul across the Marmara Sea. Just outside the old town is a sprawling Renault plant that dates back almost four decades. During the first years of its operation, the factory produced small cars for the Turkish domestic market - models that were already at the end of their life in Western Europe. But since 2000, Renault has used the Turkish plant as a significant export hub. It makes Renault's Mégane and Clio cars there for the rest of Europe, and has been upgrading...
...retailing business includes many of the world's top brands, from high-end names such as Prada and Bottega Veneta to more affordable ones like Benetton. Along with their competitors, the Boyners have been on a roll. New shopping malls have sprung up across the country, especially in Istanbul, where some of the most recent examples were deliberately aimed at upscale, upwardly mobile clients. The Boyners have fully participated in this boom; for luxury goods alone, they doubled their retail space over the past two years. But now luxury is taking a fall, and sales of all types of merchandise...
...Boyner says, "We have a saying here: "If you go into the hammam, you have to sweat." If a downturn at home is the price of greater integration into the world economy, so be it - as long as it doesn't last too long. - with reporting by Pelin Turgut / Istanbul...