beyond the
Bathra, the other on that Side of the City where stands the Church of St.
Barbara: The first was erected by
Leo in his Life-time, the second since his Death; when upon the Flight of
Zeno, his Son in Law, his Brother
Basiliscus was crown’d Emperor in his stead. I have reason to believe, when I consider the natural Situation and Order in which the
Wards stand, that Part of the second
Ward was inclos’d in the Palace: For this
Ward, according to the ancient Description of it, at its first Entrance stood upon a Level; at some Distance it rose by a gentle Ascent, and at last, with very deep Precipices, fell into the Sea. I am of Opinion, that these Precipices descended on that Spot of Ground where the Kitchens, and
Bagnio’s of the
Grand Seignor stand at present. But where-ever they might stand in ancient Times, all the steep Places that were formerly enclosed within the
Palace are now levell’d, where now there stands an old Church commonly call’d
Sophia the Less. Some of the most ancient Inhabitants affirm it to be the Church of St.
Irene, which
Socrates tells us was built by
Constantine the Great. I take it to be the same Church which the People of the second
Ward call the
Old Church. I have Reason also to believe, that the other Part of the second
Ward stood without the
Palace, from the Situation of the
Churches and
Bagnio’s, which the second
Ward encloses. For
Zonaras and other Historians assert, that the Church, which formerly went by the Name of the
Great Church, was afterwards call’d the Church of St.
Sophia, which every body knows stood without the Enclosure of the Palace. I have reason to conjecture also, that the Palace of
Maximinus formerly stood within the Verge of the Court, from the following Inscription made in its Commendation by
Cyrus, once a
Consul and Nobleman of
Rome.