Szabolcs N.
Google
The Maiden’s Tower is one of the most famous landmarks on the Asian side of Istanbul. The tower stands on a small islet in the Bosphorus.
Its first builder was the Athenian general Alcibiades, who constructed it in 408 BC after defeating the Persian navy. Around 1110, Byzantine Emperor Alexios I Komnenos rebuilt it, and later, between 1509 and 1763, the Ottomans reconstructed it several times. The tower gained its current appearance in 1998 after restoration.
According to a famous Turkish legend, the tower was built by the Sultan for his beloved daughter. A fortune teller had predicted that the princess would be bitten by a venomous snake on her birthday and die. To protect her, the Sultan locked her in the tower — far from the mainland, yet still close to his palace.
For centuries, the tower served as a lighthouse, and today it often hosts private boats that dock nearby.