Yassıada

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Yassıada (Greek: Plati) is one of the Princes' Islands in the Sea of Marmara, near Istanbul.

The island, which has an area of 0.05km², is officially a neighbourhood in the Adalar district of Istanbul, Turkey.

Yassıada (Plati) was used by the Byzantines for sending prominent figures into exile. One such person was the Armenian Patriarch (Catholicos) Narses who was first sent to this island before being imprisoned at Büyükada in the 4th century AD. In the 11th century AD the Byzantines used the island for political prisoners. The remains of the 4 underground prison cells from this period can still be seen. The Byzantines also built a monastery and church on the island. Yassıada (Plati) was captured by the Latin Crusaders during the Fourth Crusade in 1204.

In 1857 the island was purchased by the British ambassador Henry Bulwer, brother of novelist Edward Bulwer-Lytton, who built himself a mansion and a small castle-like structure to live undisturbed on this distant island. The tiny castle and the wharf in front of it are still standing today. Henry Bulwer also organized agricultural production on the island to self-sustain his little kingdom at least to a certain degree, but later sold Yassıada to the Khedive of Ottoman Egypt & Sudan, Ismail Pasha, who, however, didn't build any new structures and completely neglected the island.

With the establishment of the Turkish Republic in 1923 the island became a property of the Turkish state, and in 1947 Yassıada was handed over to the Turkish Navy which edificed several school buildings.

It is also where the trials of the members of the former ruling party, Demokrat Partı, were held after the military coup of 1960. Several of the defendants were sentenced to death, and three of these, including the former Prime Minister of Turkey Adnan Menderes, were executed.

After the end of the trials, Yassıada was given back to the Turkish Navy and lessons continued to take place at the naval school buildings until 1978.

In 1993 the island became a property of Istanbul University's department of Marine Life and Sea Products, which used it for lessons and research. But the strong winds on the island made life hard for the students and eventually lessons were made elsewhere.

Today the island is a favourite location for scuba diving schools like Balıkadam Türkiye as well as amateur divers.

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