place

Osmanbey (Istanbul Metro)

2000 establishments in TurkeyIstanbul metro stationsIstanbul metro stubsRailway stations opened in 2000Turkish railway station stubs
Şişli
İstanbul 4284
İstanbul 4284

Osmanbey is an underground rapid transit station on the M2 line of the Istanbul Metro. It is located in south-central Şişli under Halaskargazi Avenue. Osmanbey was opened on 16 September 2000 and is one of the six original stations on the M2 line. It has an island platform serviced by two tracks.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Osmanbey (Istanbul Metro) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Osmanbey (Istanbul Metro)
Halaskar Gazi Cadde,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 41.0538 ° E 28.9872 °
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Address

Selin Kılıç Beuaty

Halaskar Gazi Cadde 103
34380 (Cumhuriyet Mahallesi)
Türkiye
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Phone number
Selin Kılıç Beuaty

call+905321698150

Website
selinkilic.com

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İstanbul 4284
İstanbul 4284
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Nearby Places

Feriköy Protestant Cemetery
Feriköy Protestant Cemetery

Feriköy Protestant Cemetery (Turkish: Feriköy Protestan Mezarlığı) officially called Evangelicorum Commune Coemeterium is a Christian cemetery in Istanbul, Turkey. As the name of the cemetery indicates, it is the final resting place of Protestants residing in Istanbul. The cemetery is at Feriköy neighborhood in Şişli district of Istanbul, nearly 3 km (1.9 mi) north of Taksim Square. The land for this cemetery was donated in 1857 by the Ottoman government to the leading Protestant powers of that time, the United Kingdom, Prussia, the United States, the Netherlands, Sweden, Norway, Denmark and the Hanseatic League together with the Grand Duchy of Oldenburg.In Istanbul, all members of the Reformed Churches belong to the Protestant Cemetery in Feriköy. Burial sites are being distributed by the Consulate General. Since its opening, a total of roughly 5,000 individuals have been interred at the site. Resembling a museum of funerary art, the cemetery contains examples of different styles of monuments and memorials from the 17th century to the present. The stones proper up along the walls are one of the last tangible links to the old Frankish burial ground in the Grand Champs des Morts, Pera's 'Great Field of the Dead' which was lost in the wake of urban expansion during the 19th century. The consuls general of Germany, the United Kingdom, the United States, the Netherlands, Sweden, Hungary and Switzerland have the duty of managing the cemetery. They exchange the task of management biennially.