Istanbul

[is-tahn-bool, -tan-; is-tahn-boo l, -tan-; Turkish is-tahm-boo l] /ˌɪs tɑnˈbul, -tæn-; ˈɪs tɑnˌbʊl, -tæn-; Turkish ɪsˈtɑm bʊl/
noun
1.
a port in NW Turkey, on both sides of the Bosporus: built by Constantine I on the site of ancient Byzantium; capital of the Eastern Roman Empire and of the Ottoman Empire; capital removed to Ankara 1923.
Also, Stambul, Stamboul.
Formerly (a.d. 330–1930) Constantinople.
Examples from the web for Istanbul
  • In ottoman times these duties had been fulfilled by the bureaucracy in Istanbul.
British Dictionary definitions for Istanbul

Istanbul

/ˌɪstænˈbuːl/
noun
1.
a port in NW Turkey, on the western (European) shore of the Bosporus: the largest city in Turkey; founded in about 660 bc by Greeks; refounded by Constantine the Great in 330 ad as the capital of the Eastern Roman Empire; taken by the Turks in 1453 and remained capital of the Ottoman Empire until 1922; industrial centre for shipbuilding, textiles, etc. Pop: 9 760 000 (2005 est)) Ancient name Byzantium Former name (330–1926) Constantinople
Word Origin and History for Istanbul

Turkish name of Constantinople, a corruption of Greek phrase eis tan (ten) polin "into the city," which is how the local Greek population referred to it. Picked up in Turkish 16c., though Turkish folk etymology traces the name to Islam bol "plenty of Islam." Greek polis "city" has been adopted into Turkish as a place-name suffix as -bolu.

Istanbul in Culture
Istanbul [(is-tahm-bool, is-tam-bool, is-tahm-boohl, is-tam-boohl)]

Largest city in Turkey, located in the northwestern part of the country on both sides of the Bosporus.

Note: Formerly called Byzantium, then Constantinople, the city was the capital consecutively of the eastern branch of the Roman Empire, of the Byzantine Empire, and of the Ottoman Empire.
Note: It is the seat of the Eastern Orthodox Church.