As for other cisterns of the city, the identification of the cistern of Aspar followed only around the middle of the 20th century. It is known from the Byzantine sources that the reservoir lay near the
palace of Manuel, the monasteries of
Kaiouma, of the
Chrysobalanton,
of Manuel, of the
Theotokos of "tá Koronės" (), and of the monastery of
Saint Theodosia. There were two crucial elements which led to the structure's identification: its erection near the wall of Constantine, and its description as "large" (). The reservoir has been successively identified with: a cistern located near the
Bodrum Mosque; the vaulted cistern located southeast of the
Çukurbostan of the
Gate of Adrianople of the
Theodosian walls and known as
Zina Yokusu Bodrumi; the cistern near the
Sivasli Dede Mescid, placed to the southeast of the
Yavuz Selim Mosque; the
Çukurbostan of the
Gate of Charisius, (later certainly identified with the
Cistern of Aetius). The first two reservoirs can be excluded since they are too far from the wall of Constantine, moreover, the second is small. The third cistern has large dimensions, but lies also too far from the ancient wall, while the fourth, although lying near the wall, is also too small. The only reservoir which satisfies both requisites, of large dimensions and of a position near the old wall, is that known in Istanbul as
Yavuz Selim Çukurbostanı because of its proximity with the Yavuz Selim Mosque; this led to its identification with the Cistern of Aspar towards the middle of the 20th century. ==Description==