Samatya

Samatya (Greek: Ψαμάθεια, romanized: Psamatheia; Armenian: Սամաթիա) is a quarter of the Fatih district of Istanbul.

It is located along the Marmara Sea, and borders to the west on the neighborhood of Yedikule (the "Castle of the Seven Towers").

The name originates from the Greek word psamathion (Ψαμάθιον), meaning "sandy", because of the great quantity of sand found in the quarter.

[1] About 383 AD, the first monastic institution was established in Constantinople, at Psamatheia, at that time still outside the walled city.

[2] Up to recent times, Samatya was mostly inhabited by Armenians, who were settled here in 1458 by Sultan Mehmet II,[3] and who own there the church of Surp Kevork, also called Sulu Manastiri (Water's monastery) – previously an Eastern Orthodox church which dates back to before the Ottoman conquest,[3] and by Greeks, who have the churches of Hristos Analipsis and Haghios Menas.

Samatya quarter of Istanbul during the Ottoman period
Aerial view of the Yedikule Fortress , Yedikule neighbourhood and the Samatya quarter in the background