and stately Mesquitas, whereof the biggest is Sultan
Solimans a great warriour, which liued in the time
of Charles the fifth; but the fairest is Santa Sophia,
which in the time of the Christian emperours was the
chiefe cathedrall church, and is still in greatest
account with the great Turke: it is built round
like other Greekish churches, the pavements and walles
be all of marble, it hath beneath 44 pillars of diuers
coloured marble of admirable height and bignesse,
which stand vpon great round feet of brasse, much
greater then the pillars, and of a great height, some
ten yards distant from the wall: from which vnto
these pillars is a great gallery built, which goeth
round about the church; and vpon the outside of the
gallery stand 66 marble pillars which beare vp the
round roofe being the top of the church: it hath
three pulpits or preaching places, and about 2000 lampes
brought in by the Turke. Likewise vpon one side
in the top is the picture of Christ with the 12 Apostles,
but their faces are defaced, with two or three ancient
tombs of Christians: to the West sticketh an arrow
in the toppe of the Church, which, as the Turks report,
Sultan Mahomet shot when he first tooke the city.
Neere adioyning be two chapels of marble, where lie
buried most of the emperours with their children and
sultanas. The 16 of Iuly, accompanied with some
other of our nation we went by water to the Blacke
sea, being 16 miles distant from Constantinople, the
sea al the way thither being little broader then the
Thames; both sides of the shore are beautified with
faire and goodly buildings. At the mouth of this
Bosphorus lieth a rocke some fourescore yards from
the maine land, wherevpon standeth a white marble
pillar called Pompeys pillar, the shadow whereof was
23 foote long at nine of the clocke in the forenoone:
over against it is a turret of stone upon the maine
land 120 steps high, hauing a great glass-lanthorne
in the toppe foure yards in diamiter and three in height,
with a great copper pan in the midst to holde oile,
with twenty lights in it, and it serueth to giue passage
into this straight in the night to such ships as come
from all parts of those seas to Constantinople:
it is continually kept by a Turke, who to that end
hath pay of the grand Signior. And thus hauing
spent eleuen moneths in Constantinople, accompanied
with a chause, and carying certaine mandates from
the grand Signior to the Bassa of Aleppo for the kinde
vsage of our nation in those parts, the 30 of Iuly
I tooke passage in a Turkish carmosale or shippe bound
for Sidon; and passing thorow Propontis, hauing Salimbria
with Heraclia most pleasantly situated on the right
hand, and Proconesus now called Marmora on the left,
we came to Gallipoly, and so by Hellespont, betweene
the two castles before named called Sestos and Abydos,
famous for the passages made there both by Xerxes
and great Alexander, the one into Thracia, the other
into Asia, and so by the Sigean Promontory, now called
Cape Ianitzary, at the mouth of Hellespont vpon Asia