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Church of St Mary Chalcoprateia/Khalkopratia

View of St Mary Chalcoprateia from the roof of the Carpet Shop [1]

View of St Mary Chalcoprateia from the roof of the Carpet Shop

Mamboury claims to have identified this in 1912. It seems to have been founded in about 460, which makes it significantly older than the existing Aya Sofya and about the same age as the Monastery of St John of Studion. It may have been a synagogue that served the coppersmiths’ district and was converted later. It is difficult to find now. It is behind the new Dongyang hotel and part of its wall forms the back of a carpet shop (41.009682,28.978189) The shopowner allowed me to clamber through a trapdoor and onto the roof in exchange for some furniture-moving labour. The walls of the apse are well preserved, probably because nobody can get to them. There are the remains of a spiral staircase, probably from a minaret during its brief Muslim history.

Spiral staircase in the church [2]

Spiral staircase in the church

The church was once a large basilica, famed for containing the girdle of the Virgin Mary, since looted and now in a monastery on Mt Athos. St Mary Chalcoprateia served as the Patriarchate between the destruction of the second incarnation of Aya Sofya in the Nika rebellion of 532 and the building of the third.

A capital in the Archaeological Museum, probably from St Mary Chalcoprateia. [3]

A capital in the Archaeological Museum, probably from St Mary Chalcoprateia.

That's the remains of St Mary Chalcoprateia stcking out above the carpet shop. [4]

That’s the remains of St Mary Chalcoprateia sticking out above the carpet shop.

North wall [5]

North wall

[6]

Still an imposing wall from ground level

[7]

Southern and south-western walls meet at an obtuse angle

[8]

Doorway in south wall

The surviving hulk is probably the remains of an apse at the eastern end of the former basilica. There are several other remains associated with St Mary Chalcoprateia.

[9]

Wall on north side of Zeynep Sultan Camii Sokak

The lower section of this wall appears to be of Byzantine origin.

There is apparently an octagonal Chapel of St Jacob located beneath the Zeynep Sultan Hotel. Pictures of this are on this page [10] of the Mon Kassia blog posted in 2012 by Tatiana Senina. The chapel appears to have been part of the complex attached to St Mary Chalcoprateia.

 

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1 Comment To "Church of St Mary Chalcoprateia/Khalkopratia"

#1 Pingback By Enormousfish | İmrahor İlyas Bey Camii/Church of John the Baptist of the Stoudion/The Monastery of the Stoudius | Adam Kaya Heskith | Author and Writer | Enormousfish On July 11, 2016 @ 10:56 am

[…] still an impressive beast. It’s the only existing Byzantine basilica except for St Mary Chalkoprateia, which is far more of a wreck. It has lovely mosaic pavements and just enough sculpture remaining […]