In 1545, Petrus Gyllius, a French scholar visiting Istanbul, heard strange stories about people drawing water – and sometimes even fish — from their cellars.
After further exploration, Gyllius discovered something amazing – an enormous underground cistern located under what was once a basilica.
The “Basilica Cistern” was built in 532 by Byzantine Emperor Justinian the Great in Constantinople to store fresh water for the emperor’s palace and surrounding buildings. The largest of several hundred ancient cisterns in Istanbul, it was the size of two football fields and once held 80,000 cubic meters of water – enough to fill 27 Olympic-sized swimming pools.
Visitors today may descend the 52 stone steps to find themselves amidst 336 30-ft marble columns scavenged from Roman ruins. In the past tourists could tour the cistern in rowboats, but since it was dredged in the late 1980s, visitors can walk across a boardwalk overlooking shallow water.
Fish still swim in it, and it is said that they were originally used as a security measure – like a canary in a coalmine. If the water was poisoned, the fish would float to the top.