As
Byzantium went into decline so the
Mese lost its importance. It was, however, revived after the
Ottoman Conquest of Constantinople in 1453. Since the
Ottomans chose to develop a new palace on more or less the same site as the Byzantines had done, the road leading from the
Land Walls once again became important. In the center of Istanbul, the street became known as
Divan Yolu or the Road to the Divan, in recognition of the fact that dignitaries would process along it for meetings in the Divan inside
Topkapı Palace (Topkapı Sarayı). So important was this road that to this day it is still lined with Ottoman monuments including mosques (
Firuz Ağa Mosque), libraries (Köprülü Kütüphanesi) and the tombs of some of the sultans, including
Mahmud II,
Abdülaziz and
Abdülhamid II. As it heads west
Divan Yolu becomes
Yeniçeriler Caddesi (Janissary Street) and then
Ordu Caddesi (Army Street). From
Beyazıt Square, which stands at the site of the old Forum of Theodosius, the northwestern branch of the
Mese is traced by several streets, but mainly
Fevzi Paşa Caddesi; the southwestern branch continues to follow
Ordu Caddesi until it crosses Atatürk Boulevard, at which point it primarily traces
Cerrahpaşa Caddesi and
Koca Mustafapaşa Caddesi southwest towards the old Theodosian Walls. The modern Divan Yolu is lined with cafes, restaurants, hotels, bookshops and other amenities aimed at tourists. Of passing interest on the modern street is the Lale Restaurant which was, in the 1970s, the famous
Pudding Shop that served as a gathering place for hippies heading for
Kathmandu and appeared in the Alan Parker film
Midnight Express. The section of the former
Mese east of Atatürk Boulevard (
Divan Yolu,
Yeniçeriler Caddesi, and
Ordu Caddesi) is by served
Line T1 of the
Istanbul Tram, between Aksaray station in the west and Sultanahmet station in the east. == References==