Istanbul plants one foot in Europe and the other in Asia, and the city spends every day reminding you of that split.
Sixteen million people live here, which makes it bigger than most countries' capitals, and they've organised themselves around the Bosphorus Strait that cuts the city in half. One side gets the mosques and bazaars that tourists photograph, the other gets business districts and residential neighbourhoods that actually house people, and both sides claim they're the real Istanbul.
This guide starts with the practical groundwork: how to get in from the airport, how to move around a city this size, and when to come. Then it walks through the great landmarks, from the monuments of the Sultanahmet core and the Bosphorus to Sinan's Süleymaniye, the Galata Tower, and the waterfront at Ortaköy, before ending with the neighbourhoods and a wider list of places worth your time once you have seen the headline sights.
