Issue 35, 2006

Istanbul Elegy

£50.00 / $76.09 / 138.71 TL
(Based on day rates)

The poetic photographs of Othmar Pferschy. On horseback through Cappadocia. Istanbul’s grand railway stations. David Barchard on Europe after the Crimean War. A birthday tribute to the archaeologist James Mellaart. Plus: delicate asparagus

Highlights

  • The Grape Survivors

    Kevin Gould waxes lyrical over Château Musar, a legendary wine from the old Ottoman Levant, and salutes the brave new Turkish winemakers who stay true to their roots.

  • Othmar’s Dream

    After the grim years of the early 1920s, Turkey experienced a brief period of euphoria. A new Republic was born, and new faces appeared in this land of hope, among them the brilliant but now forgotten photographer Othmar Pferschy (1898–1984), who turned up on the Orient Express in 1926 and stayed for forty years.

  • James Mellaart: The Man Who Changed History

    We were greatly saddened to learn of the death of one of the great archaeologists of the 20th century, James Mellaart, whose discovery of Çatalhüyük in the 1950s fundamentally altered our understanding of the past. In 2005, on his eightieth birthday, he talked to Christian Tyler. We publish the article here in full, and at the same time offer Jimmie’s family our utmost sympathy.

  • Shafts of Light

    According to Celâüddin Hızır, asparagus should be eated lightly boiled and dressed with olive oil (as a salad), or cooked with eggs (as a light dish), or prepared with meat (as a main dish) – which is exactly how, six hundred years later, we still enjoy it today.
    More cookery features

  • Must We Lose Our Temples of Travel?

    You embarked in Paris or Vienna and alighted at Sirkeci station, an Oriental fantasy in the shadow of the Topkapı Palace. This was the train that brought Istanbul into the heart of modern Europe: the fabled Orient Express.

  • By Horse Through the Volcanic Valleys

    Cappdocia, ‘Land of the Beautiful Horse’, was once famous for the fine steeds that bore its valiant knights. Few horses are left, but they can still transport you into another world. The photographer Jürgen Frank captures the eerie magic of the Anatolian plateau, Susan Wirth is exhilarated by five days in the saddle and David Barchard guides us through the epic landscape.

Inside the issue

Books

  1. The Byerley Turk, by Jeremy James. Reviewed by Donna Landry. [available online]
  2. Tales from an Expat Harem, Reviewed by Maureen Freely. [available online]
  3. A Byzantine Settlement in Cappadocia, by Robert Ousterhout. Reviewed by David Barchard. [available online]

Food and Wine

  1. Shafts of light
    The wondrous asparagus, by Berrin Torolsan
  2. The Grape Survivors
    Lebanon's Château Musar, by Kevin Gould
    [available online]

Regulars

  1. Connoisseur
    Exhibitions and sales in London, Istanbul and Washington
  2. Private View, by Andrew Finkel
  3. Letters from our readers
  4. Music
    New releases reviewed by Ateş Orga
  5. Village Voices, by Azize Ethem
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Issue 35, 2006
£50.00 / $76.09 / 138.71 TL

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