Saturday, July 25, 2009

Dancing down the aisle


"JK Wedding Entrance"

YouTube Wedding Dance

Video Rocks


By Associated Press

ST. PAUL, Minn. (AP) — The video of a Minnesota couple who boogied down a church aisle with their wedding party to the surprise of their guests is a hit on YouTube.

Kevin Heinz and Jillian Peterson, their seven bridesmaids, five groomsmen and four ushers danced down the aisle to the Chris Brown song "Forever" before the couple exchanged vows June 20 in St. Paul.

Peterson said Friday on NBC's "Today" show that she grew up dancing and loves dance as a way of expression. She says she didn't have any trouble talking Heinz into it for their wedding.

After posting the video on YouTube for family members, Heinz says the number of hits just exploded. The video has gotten more than 1.4 million hits on YouTube as of Friday.


http://www.komonews.com/news/offbeat/51580662.html


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4-94JhLEiN0

Friday, July 24, 2009

Sunday, July 19, 2009

40 years after landing on the moon






Neil Alden Armstrong (upper photo) and Edwin Eugene "Buzz" Aldrin jr


Apollo 11 mission to the moon
Monday july 20th 1969 (USA time; in Europe july 21st) Neil Armstrong set first foot on the moon, 20 minutes later Buzz Aldrin followed. Meanwhile Mike Collins was inside the command module staying in orbit around the moon, waiting for his companions to return.

Saturday, July 18, 2009

Akyaka beach


Akyaka


I like to enjoy the beautifull seaside, nature and friendly people of this small village at the Turkish southern costal border.

Nature mixes here the sweet water of the river together with the salty sea. It's an oasis for birds, small animals, fish and people.

Monday, July 13, 2009

North Sea Jazz 2009 Rotterdam

Listening to Duffy's album rockferry's takes you from "serious" by "stepping stone" and "delayed devotion" to "distant dreamer". Her voice has a golden jazzy sound, a mix of syrup and honey....






British Adele knows how to touch people with "Crazy for you" and Bob Dylan's cover "I make you feel my love". Her craving sound with jazzy accents makes her unique.

The king of pop is dead




Michael Jackson 1958 - 2009

The end of history, past, present and future is not the end of Jackson's legacy. "You are not alone" is one of my favourite songs together with "PYT (Pretty Young Thing) and Billy Jean". And of course I remember his famous moonwalk. Let's smile and remember.

Istanbul



Istanbul old city view with Blue Mosque and Aya Sofia. Below view from Rumeli Hisar.



http://www.allabouturkey.com/region
http://turkije.leukestart.nl
http://www.flickr.com/photos/brewbooks


ISTANBUL CITY

Eminönü is a district of Istanbul in Turkey. This is the heart of the walled city of Constantine, the focus of a history of incredible richness. Eminönü covers the point on which the Byzantine capital was built. The Galata Bridge crosses the Golden Horn into Eminönü and the mouth of the Bosphorus opens into the Marmara Sea. And up on the hill stands Topkapı Palace, the Blue Mosque (Sultanahmet Camii) and Hagia Sophia (Aya Sofya). Thus Eminönü is the main tourist destination in Istanbul. It was a http://www.flickr.com/photos/atila_y/3111434108/part of the Fatih district until 1928, which covered the whole peninsular area of old Istanbul within the medieval city walls - that area which was formerly the Byzantine capital Constantinople. Since the resident population of Eminönü is low today, it is scheduled to rejoin the Fatih district.

History

The Golden Horn was a natural port, particularly the Eminönü/Sirkeci shore, which being on a peninsula was also eminently defensible. It was for this port that İstanbul was built, and from here that İstanbul grew, with the oldest neighbourhoods being the port districts along the Golden Horn. In time the Byzantine port was also occupied by merchants from Genoa and Pisa, who eventually acquired their own wharfs and waterfront districts.

The Golden Horn was still a thriving port in Ottoman times, occupied by importers, warehousemen, sailors and traders of every description, the centre of trade in the city, a labryinth of narrow streets wokshops and markets leading uphill to Topkapı Palace, the Ottoman capital.

The district's name, Eminönü, also reflects its' place in history. Translated from Turkish to English it roughly means 'in front of justice'. Emin meaning 'justice', önü meaning 'in front of'. The name most probably came from the Ottoman courts and customs houses on the docks.

The nature of the place did of course change in the industrial age; the Galata Bridge was built across the Golden Horn; steamships came, then electricity, then the railway and the Istanbul terminal of the Orient Express was naturally sited at Sirkeci Station. The sea walls still surrounded the city, and the sea gates of the port of Eminönü were the point of entry for goods, and for people. Eminönü was bounded to Fatih until 1928. She became district of İstanbul in 1928.

Following the huge railway station, other grand stone buildings followed in the late Ottoman period, commercial buildings, the central post office among others. And in the early days of the Republic of Turkey, Eminönü was renovated extensively; the big square was opened up in front of Yeni Cami (by clearing out the tollbooths at the end of the Galata Bridge); The Spice bazaar was restored; the fish market was cleared off the shore of the Golden Horn and a road opened up to the new bridge at Unkapanı.

By the 1950s, the area was continuously clogged up with traffic, which was eased somewhat by the construction of the large coast road around the point and all the way out to Istanbul airport.


Eminönü today

Although the government has moved to Ankara and Istanbul has expanded rapidly to becoming the enormous city we have today with the centre of business now in huge shiny buildings elsewhere in the city, Eminönü is still buzzing. It still has the busiest ferry crossings for the Bosphorus and for the Marmara Sea, still has the only car ferry across the Bosphorus and still has the only mainline railway terminus (where trains can be caught to Eastern Thrace (Trakya) and Europe) and people flood into the area on boats, buses, or the light metro from Aksaray.

During the daytime the area is packed with merchants and their customers, hordes of shoppers and many tourists. Add to this a number of key government buildings including the governor's office and the main campus of Istanbul University in Beyazit. At night it is very, very quiet. There is some housing in Eminönü but most of the buildings are offices, shops and workshops, and if you do happen to be there in the evening the contrast with the daytime is eery and somewhat menacing. In the daytime there are 2,000,000 people in Eminönü, but the district has only 30,000 residents. The people that do live in Eminönü are working class and conservative.


Things to see

Eminönü has many historical mosques and buildings, many of Istanbul's best-known landmarks. Recent development has improved Eminönü greatly and many of its winding streets which can at first seem imposing, have been developed and improved, while Eminönü has started to repair the many mosques.

Sultanahmet - which contains Topkapı Palace, Aya Sofia, the Blue Mosque and Aya Irini among about a thousand other incredible pieces of architecture;
Süleymaniye - the huge mosque complex of Suleyman the Magnificent;
Yeni Cami (The new mosque) - the mosque that dominates the waterfront by the Galata Bridge; there is a wide open space in front where people feed the pigeons.
The Grand Bazaar - as much to look at as to shop in.
The Spice Bazaar - another Ottoman caravanserai, not as huge as the Grand Bazaar but right on the water, next to Yeni Camii;

Shopping in Eminönü

The area is heaving with shoppers; especially at weekends people come from all over the city, looking for discount clothing, or plastic accessories, staionery and cheap toys in the streets behind the Spice Bazaar. You will not find the classy boutiques of the big shopping centres, the clientele in Eminönü is much more traditional and working class. The narrow climbing street called Mahmutpaşa for example is the place where those of a conservative nature come to buy a coat or a headscarf, or to kit their boys out in the costume they wear on circumcision day.

Eminönü is crawling with thousands of people hawking goods on handcarts, makeshift stalls or a blanket laid out in the street, as well as the millions of little shops and workshops in the streets, bazaars and the big stone fortresses from the Ottoman era called Han in Turkish. Every inch is retail space, even the underpasses taking people from the ferries are lined with shops, kebab grillers and boys selling cigarettes.

There are so many businesses packed into such a small area that a single street or even a single building can be the centre of a particular trade, and turning a corner will take you into a totally different atmosphere. Here you are surrounded by stall after stall of denim jeams, and across one block you are submerged in the scent of coffee and spices. The variety is breathtaking and Eminönü takes some exploring.

Some well known sub-districts (semt) include:

Sirkeci - the waterfront by the railway station where all the ferries dock. The streets behind the docks are the places to buy electronic goods, photographic equipment, bicycles, and all kinds of stationery. All of things in their real or fake versions.
Sultanhamam behind the spice bazaar, the area of toys, beads and plastic jewelry that takes you up to the previously mentioned Mahmutpaşa.
Tahtakale along the Golden Horn from the Spice Bazaar, come here for all kinds of kitchen equipment, garden tools, and electricals such as telephones. If your car radio is stolen come to Tahtakale and buy it back again!!

Cağaloğlu -Istanbul's Fleet Street - a maze of printers, booksellers and traditionally newspapers;

Divan Yolu, the relatively calm, tree-lined, tram-way avenue from Sultanahmet to the university, including the Roman column called Çemberlitaş.
Beyazıt -the home of Istanbul University and the far end of the Grand Bazaar;
Grand Bazaar - In the bazaar itself you will find gold, jewelry, carpets, antiques, and souvenirs. In the streets around you will more of the same plus all kind of clothing and leather goods.

Mercan - below the bazaar, the place to buy any kind of bag or briefcase,
Lâleli - buzzing with hotels, bars and people from former Soviet Republics buying discount clothing;

Kumkapı - the fish market, and restaurants about as numerous as the fish themselves.

Eating in Eminönü

In the daytime the choice of food is incredible, and in particular the area is covered with 'lokanta' serving soups, stews and hot vegetable dishes at lunchtime. You will find these in all the bazaars and shopping streets, for example the street called Hocapaşa near Sirkeci station has a great variety. Eminönü offers any number of fast foods and snacks including döner, lahmacun and the grilled mackerel sandwiches on the waterfront by the ferry docks. These used to be sold from boats, this is now banned but you can still find mackerel grillers in the area.

In Sirkeci, across the road from the railway station, Konyali is one of Istanbul's oldest eateries, well-known for its pastries.

Behind the Spice Bazaar is Haci Muhittin, one of the oldest sweet-makers, famous for Turkish Delight and many other traditional sweets from Ottoman times, even drinks made of tamarind.

The köfte restaurants of Sultanhamet are famous throughout Istanbul.
Sultanahmet Fish House is a nice place to have lunch or dinner with reasonable rates. www.sultanahmetfishhouse.com

Much of the district is closed down in the evening although you will still find food in the following places:

Up in Sultanahmet, where there are so many hotel guests;
in the fish restaurants of Kumkapi; and in one or two other well-known spots such as Hamdi Restaurant near Yeni Cami or the Balikci Sabahattin fish restaurant in Cankurtaran.

From http://www.flickr.com/photos/atila_y/3111434108/

ISTANBUL University


Istanbul university historical view and Main university entrance, Beyazit square nowadays

One of the main characteristics of Istanbul University is its leadership in actualizing novelties required by circumstances. It has a guiding and influential role to play in the social and cultural life of our country. We can see this clearly when we examine the line of historical development of the University.

The foundation of Istanbul University, one of the oldest educational institutions not only of Turkey, but also of the world, was accomplished when Mehmet the Conqueror conquered Istanbul. Education began to be dispensed in theological schools (medreses as they were then called) and, until the end of the 16th Century,these schools were instrumental in educating the ruling cadres of the Ottoman society. However, when the medreses were no longer able to retain their grip on the modern world,a restructuring process began, and as a result, the institutions of higher education called Darulfunun, the nuclei of Istanbul University, were established. Through the educational reforms instigated by the founding of the Republic, the medreses were abolished in 1924, and, as a first step in modernization, the Istanbul Darulfunun was established, comprising the fields of medicine, law, literature, theology, and science. The institution was renamed Istanbul University in accordance with Atatürk's university reform, and higher education was restructured in Turkey to meet the demands of contemporary conditions. During these early years, Istanbul University welcomed foreign academics who were fleeing Germany and they became members of the teaching staff.

When the Turkish Republic was founded, Istanbul University was the only institution of higher education. That is the reason why it is the provender for all the universities existing in Turkey today, and the academics educated here have initiated the establishment of the other institutions. Thus, Istanbul University has always been instrumental in the training and strengthening of our country's scientific cadres.

In addition to its scientific impact, Istanbul University has also been a leader in the movement towards enlightenment and modernization that began with the Republic by acting as a bridge between science and life. It is aware of its role in the perpetuation of Atatürk's principles and reforms, and will persevere in this line in all issues pertaining to public life with no concessions from its decisive stand.

Istanbul University functions as a reflection of Turkey's history of science and independence.

As was the case in its history, Istanbul University is still in the vanguard of scientific success. Our alumni figure in all strata of society and serve their country through the important positions they hold.

Flamenco Rotterdam june 28th







What a wonderfull experience this is. The passion of la Guardia Flamenca in a piece from Carmen, Flamenco dancing, Maria Fernandez singing, the food, and the hot weather wich makes you breath the hospitality of Spain and Flamenco. And I knew I just fell in love with this dance and all it's surrounding enchantment.