A short primer on ceremonial routes and thresholds across Topkapi’s courtyards.

> Quick take: **Access narrows**, **axes clarify**, and **thresholds speak** — routes choreograph rank in motion.
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## How Routes Work
- **Filtering**: more gates, more guards, fewer people.
- **Alignment**: straight lines signal formal movement; angled turns slow the body.
- **Signals**: doors, carpets, and grilles announce status and sequence.
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## Reading Courtyards as Script
- Second Courtyard: supply + policy — wide, serviceable lanes.
- Third Courtyard: ceremony — centered axes and controlled approaches.
- Fourth Courtyard: repose — drift lines, pauses, and seats.

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## Visitor Exercise
1. Pick a doorway; note what it asks you to do (bow? slow? remove shoes?).
2. Walk the center line, then the edge — how does it change your view and speed?
3. Count thresholds between a public space and a private one.
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## Why It Matters
Ceremonies weren’t improvised — space enforced order. These routes encoded who may proceed, how fast, and with what posture.
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## Bottom Line
Routes are **messages** you can walk — once you notice them, the palace starts talking back.

I built this to help you meet Topkapi Palace with calm, context, and care—so gardens, galleries, and Bosphorus light can speak clearly of centuries.
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