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Nurtepe (Istanbul Metro)

2020 establishments in TurkeyIstanbul metro stationsKağıthaneRailway stations opened in 2020
M7 Nurtepe istasyonu
M7 Nurtepe istasyonu

Nurtepe is an underground station on the M7 line of the Istanbul Metro in Kağıthane. The station is located on Sokollu Street in the Nurtepe neighborhood of Kağıthane. The station has a total of 3 entrances, the entrance number 1 is Nurtepe Mosque, entrance number 2 is Sokollu Street/Zühre Street and entrance number 3 is Hacı Ethem Üktem Primary School. The M7 line operates as fully automatic unattended train operation (UTO). The station consists of an island platform with two tracks. Since the M7 is an ATO line, protective gates on each side of the platform open only when a train is in the station.Connection to IETT city buses is available from at street level.Nurtepe station was opened on 28 October 2020. The station was built between Alibeyköy Creek and Kâğıthane Creek.

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

Nurtepe (Istanbul Metro)

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Latitude Longitude
N 41.080659 ° E 28.9633407 °
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34060
Türkiye
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M7 Nurtepe istasyonu
M7 Nurtepe istasyonu
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Monument of Liberty, Istanbul
Monument of Liberty, Istanbul

The Monument of Liberty or Monument of Eternal Liberty (Turkish: Hürriyet Anıtı; Ottoman Turkish: Abide-i Hürriyet), located in the Şişli district of Istanbul, Turkey, is a memorial in honor of the soldiers killed defending the Ottoman parliament against rebelling forces during the 31 March Incident. The Tanzimat reforms, which began in 1839, along with other subsequent liberalization processes, were strongly opposed by conservatives in the Ottoman Empire. They hoped to re-affirm the monarchic powers of the Sultan Abdulhamid II as absolute monarch, even though the Sultan himself came to power accepting a Constitution and opening the first Ottoman parliament, the General Assembly of the Ottoman Empire, in 1876 during the First Constitutional Era. Parliament was adjourned in 1878 with the pretext of the Russian War and Abdulhamid II reigned as an absolute monarch for over 30 years until 1908, when Parliament resumed its activities in the Second Constitutional Era, upon pressure of the progressive forces in the Empire. However, a reactionary uprising that began on April 13, 1909 (March 31, 1325 AH in Rumi calendar) caused the democratic process to be interrupted once again. Progressive forces of the "Hareket Ordusu" (Turkish for "Army of Action") that came from the Rumelia, under the command of Mahmud Șevked Pasha, suppressed the countercoup on July 23, 1909. Abdulhamid II was deposed by the Committee of Union and Progress, the foremost constitutionalist party, and sent to exile in Salonica, then part of the Ottoman Empire. The monument was inaugurated in 1911, at the second anniversary of the 31 March Incident. The complex also holds the graves of four notable Ottoman high-ranked officials, which were moved here in a later time. The monument, seen today as a symbol of modernity, democracy, and secularism in Turkey, serves as a place of some official ceremonies and public gatherings.