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apse, atrium, Barocco sempre giovane, Constantine I, dome, Hagia Eirene, Haydn, Hindemith, Hurriet Daily News, Istanbul, Istanbul Bach Days, Jiří Bárta, Locatelli, mosque, museum, Nazlı Erdoğan, Ottoman Empire, Pachelbel, St. Irene Church, Stamitz, Telemann, Topkapi Palace, Turkish Ministry of Culture, western art music
Hagia Eirene (St. Irene Church) stands on what is believed to be the oldest site of Christian worship in Istanbul. Roman Emperor Constantine I ordered the church in the fourth century, making it the first church built in Constantinople, and it is also the only church that was not turned into a mosque after the Ottomans conquered Istanbul in 1453. Eventually the Topkapi Palace walls enclosed the church, and the building was pressed into service as an armory and booty warehouse.
In the early twentieth century, the former church was transformed into a military museum, and now, under the control of the Turkish Ministry of Culture, the church’s original atrium, an apse containing five rows with built-in seats, and a great simple black cross on a gold background in the half-dome above the apse, combine to create an extraordinary atmosphere for performances of western art music.
During the recent Istanbul Bach Days, the ensemble Barocco sempre giovane ensemble appeared at Hagia Eirene with soloists Nazlı Erdoğan and Jiří Bárta to perform works by Locatelli, Pachelbel, Stamitz, Telemann, Bach, Hindemith and Haydn.
– Hurriet Daily News