Walk the ceremonial spine of imperial Istanbul: the Sultanahmet (Blue) Mosque with its cascade of domes and 20,000 hand-painted Iznik tiles, the ancient Hippodrome where Byzantine chariots once raced around a 3,500-year-old Egyptian obelisk, and then descend into the Basilica Cistern, a sunken sixth-century forest of 336 columns lit like an underground cathedral with two enigmatic Medusa heads at its feet. Three civilizations, Roman, Byzantine and Ottoman, layered within a 10-minute walk.
What to expect
The Blue Mosque is an active place of worship: shoes off, modest dress, headscarf for women, and it closes to tourists during the five daily prayers, so timing matters. The Basilica Cistern's atmospheric Night Shift (after 19:30) is the connoisseur's slot, quieter and more theatrically lit, but tickets are sold only same-day at the door. The Hippodrome is open public space between the two.
These exact sites form the backbone of the ship's USD 150-200 'Highlights of Istanbul' coach day. On your own the hard costs are tiny (the mosque is free, the cistern under EUR 40) and the walking distances are minimal, so book direct and pocket the difference. The ship tour only earns its markup if you have a very short port call and want the door-to-door coach.
Good to know
All three sit within a few minutes of each other in Sultanahmet, a 15-20 minute tram ride from Galataport via the Tophane T1 stop. Cistern accepts card or Istanbulkart only, no cash. Carry a scarf for the mosque. If your ship overnights, the Cistern Night Shift is a standout; otherwise do the cluster mid-morning before the mosque's midday prayer closure.
Sail there
Luxury cruises that call at Istanbul — book through us, the fare is identical and your concierge stays on your side.