Astonishing Ancient Underground Basilica Cistern: A Marvel Of The Hidden Subterranean World

MessageToEagle.com – The astonishing Basilica Cistern, also known as the “Sunken Palace” located underneath the streets and houses of Istanbul, Turkey is a true marvel of the hidden subterranean world.

In 1545 Peter Gyllius, a Frenchman visiting Constantinople heard remarkable stories of locals drawing up fresh water and even fishing from holes in their cellars.

He became so intrigued by these fascinating stories and the legends of great underground temples, that he decided to explore and find this enigmatic place.

Basilica Sistern
Image credit: Wikipedia – Dpnuevo

Upon further investigation, he rediscovered a subterranean marvel, the largest of the long-forgotten palatial cisterns of the Byzantine Empire. Fish swam in an artificial freshwater lake the size of two football fields and the vaulted brick ceilings were held up by 336 thirty-foot pillars scavenged from nearby Roman ruins.

The Basilica Cistern was founded by Justinianus I, of the Byzantine Empire (527-565), and was built on the site of an early Roman basilica, hence the cistern’s namesake. Nicknamed the “Sinking Palace” by locals, the forest of Roman columns rising from the black pools of water in the Basilica Cistern certainly do look like the skeleton of a once grand residence, slowly succumbing to a watery grave.

Basilica cistern
The entrance to the Basilica Cistern. Image credit: Wikipedia – David Bjorgen.

The cistern lies underground, just below the tram lines and busy streets of Istanbul’s Old Town. The largest of several hundred cisterns below the surface of Istanbul, its 336 massive columns support a space large enough to hold 27 million gallons of water (carried in from 12 miles away via clay pipes and aqueducts).

Palace once held an emergency water supply for all of Constantinople, but today has been drained, save a foot or two of rainwater teeming with goldfish.

Inside there are two giant Gorgon-head pillar bases that pose a mystery. It is suspected that they may have been pulled out of an older pagan temple, where motifs of the famous Gorgon Medusa were used as a protective emblem.

Both heads are casually used as column bases; one positioned upside down, the other tilted to the side.

Basilica cistern
One of the Gorgon heads. Image credit: Exploitrip

It is suspected that they may have been pulled out of an older pagan temple, where motifs of the famous Gorgon Medusa were used as a protective emblem. It is possible that the placement of these two faces – upside down and sideways, at the base of pillars – may have been a deliberate display of the power of the new Christian Empire.

Medusa, a sea nymph, was the most beautiful of the three gorgon sisters. She was courted by Poseidon, and made love to him in a temple of Athena.

Basilica cistern
The second head was placed upside down.

Furious, the Goddess Athena transformed Medusa into a monstrous chthonic beast with snakes instead of hair, whose frightening face could turn onlookers to stone. She was beheaded while sleeping by the hero Perseus, who thereafter used her head as a weapon until giving it to the goddess Athena to place on her shield.

Basilica cistern

Having coupled with Poseidon previously, two beings sprang from her body when she was beheaded.

One, Pegasus, was a winged horse later tamed by Bellerophon to help him kill the chimera.

The other, Chrysaor of the Golden Sword, remains relatively unknown today.

See also:

In classical antiquity and today, the image of the head of Medusa finds expression in the evil-averting device.

The mystery of the Medusa heads trapped under the cistern’s columns may never be fully understood.

The cistern was cleaned and renovated in 1985 by the Istanbul Metropolitan Municipality and opened to the public in 1987.

The Basilica Cistern is undoubtedly the largest and most unusual tourist attraction in the country. If you’re in the area, make sure to pay it a visit. It’s worth it and of course, don’t forget it’s the cooleset place in the city.

MessageToEagle.com

References:

The Mystery of the Sinking Palace

Basilica Cistern

The Basilica Cistern, the Coolest Spot in Town