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Martyrium of Saints Karpos and Papylos, Samatya

karpos-papylos-2 [1]

Only the crypt remains but it is an amazing piece of brickwork. It is underneath the Church of St Menas (41.00033,28.93202), almost directly across the road from St George of the Cypresses and in an area of Samatya with an unfeasibly high concentration of churches. In the 1990s, it was used as a workshop. The Mobil car service place (Modern Oto) used to be the point of entry. When I went there in 2014, the lovely old couple in the office at the back explained that they used to be able to let people through from there but some decades ago the entrance was blocked up. I decided to hang around the doors on the street frontage, looking suspicious and taking useless photos. Sure enough, after ten minutes, two young men turned up to ask me what I was doing. At first they denied that it had been a church. Eventually, they unlocked the doors and let me in.

karpos-papylos-12 [2]

The place has had a bit of a transformation. The gorgeous brick dome that looks like the tomb of Atreus is looking better than ever. The space is being used to show films at the moment. The plan is to open it as a café in 2015 but official permission is slow in coming. In the meantime, it is one of the most beautiful buildings in Istanbul.

karpos-papylos-3 [3]

Van Millingen didn’t know of this crypt as it was only rediscovered in the 1930s. It seems to date from the 5th or 6th century.

As a comparison, here is the interior of the dome in one of the towers in the Byzantine fortress at Rumeli Feneri [4]

As a comparison, here is the interior of the dome in one of the towers in the fortress at Rumeli Feneri

St Menas, Samatya. The Martyrium is underneath this church. [5]

St Menas, Samatya. The Martyrium is underneath this church.

The ambulatorio (closed passage around the outside of the church) did open as a cafe in October 2015. Unfortunately, government regulations mean that the Byzantine sections cannot yet be opened to the public. This has given rise to the ridiculous phenomenon of this cafe inside a beautiful and significant structure being wood-panelled and draped in cloth so the brickwork cannot be seen. Pictures are provided to give the connoisseur some idea of what he or she is inside.

Turkish coffee in hidden splendour

Turkish coffee in hidden splendour

The barista (who makes only çay and really good Turkish coffee) said that the martyrium will be open for business in February 2016, inşallah.

It isn’t. In June 2016, the kahvehane appears to have closed.

Currently a loss-making concern

Currently a loss-making concern

 

Westernmost part of the martyrium [6]

Easternmost part of the martyrium, looking north-west from the street entrance.

This plan of the martyrium comes from Thomas Matthews' site: http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/fineart/html/Byzantine/ [7]

This plan of the martyrium comes from Thomas Matthews’ site: http://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/fineart/html/Byzantine/

The café is in the ambulatory, the almost circular passage around the outside of the structure. The theatre/cinema section is in the central room. The entrance to that section is into the apse, in the south-east of the building.

This reference is the most comprehensive recent guide to the martyrium that I can find:

Beygo, A. (2005) Istanbul Samatya’da Karpos Papylos Martyrion’u. Yüksek Lisans Tezi, Istanbul Teknik Ãœniversitesi, Fen Bilimleri Enstitüsü. Available online at: https://polen.itu.edu.tr/bitstream/11527/7118/1/3687.pdf Accessed 21st June 2016

Matthews, Thomas (2001): The Byzantine Churches of Istanbul. Institute of Fine Arts, New York University. Available athttp://www.nyu.edu/gsas/dept/fineart/html/Byzantine/ [8]

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