Gallipoli Day Tour From Istanbul

Gallipoli Day Tour from Istanbul to Gallipoli Battlefields everyday departure, flat price and local guide guaranteed.

Gallipoli Day Tour From Istanbul


For find your adress quickly; we are working with professional offsiders. 

Your local professional tourist guides are waiting for you in Eceabat. Our Tourist Guides hold the Turkish state’s certificate qualifying their as a guide for all sites in Turkey, but they concentrates on introducing visitors to the history of the Gallipoli Battlefields, and the ancient cities of Troy and Assos.

Lutars Travel organises Gallipoli Day Tour from Istanbul without cancellation everyday.

Gallipoli Day Tour from Istanbul is a tour package, including all servies.

Lutars Travel gives you all the services with a professional team which is very experienced and legal.

Lutars Travel works with local tour guides which are experienced over ten years.

Gallipoli Day Tour From Istanbul


Tour Start Informations;
Meeting Points:

  • 06.00 – 06.30 Taksim – Besiktas

  • 06.30 – 07.00 Sultanahmet – Sirkeci

  • 06.30 – 07.00 Beyazit – Laleli

  • 07.15 Atatürk Airport



  • Our guests will participate in the Anatolian side can use the Marmaray rail line. We'll pick you up from the Sirkeci station.


* Also we can pick you up from your hotels , please take a seat and wait for pick up at the lobby of  your hotel.

- At app. 07.30 depart from Istanbul to Gallipoli

Istanbul - Gallipoli Road Map

 

Gallipoli Day Tour from Istanbul Map

  
The duration of the drive takes about 5,5- 06,00 hours. In the morning between 08.00 – 08.30 we’re going to have a stop for breakfast.

- 12.00 – 12.30 Arrive Eceabat;  The Town Center of Gallipoli Peninsula Historical National Park

* During the travel you’ll watch same documentaries about Gallipoli, which we have prepared for you since 1998.

Lunch in Eceabat; Soup, Chicken or Meatball, Rise, Salat, Fruits or Dessert, Water and Bread

Gallipoli Day Tour From Istanbul Visits


Beach Cemetery: Beach Cemetery was used from the day of the landing at Anzac, almost until the evacuation. There are 391 Commonwealth servicemen of the First World War buried or commemorated in the cemetery. Special memorials commemorate 11 casualties believed to be buried among them. 22 of the burials are unidentified. John Simpson’s Grave in Beach Cemetery ( he carried wounded ANZAC’s during the campaign )

Anzac Cove (First ANZAC landing place): Anzac Cove (Turkish: Anzak Koyu) is a small cove on the Gallipoli peninsula in Turkey. It became famous as the site of World War I landing of the ANZACs (Australian and New Zealand Army Corps) on 25 April 1915. The cove is 600 metres (2,000 ft) long, bounded by the headlands of Arıburnu to the north and Little Arıburnu, known as Hell Spit, to the south. Following the landing at Anzac Cove, the beach became the main base for the Australian and New Zealand troops for the eight months of the Gallipoli campaign.

Ari Burnu and Ariburnu Cemetery: Ari Burnu Cemetery lies between cliff under the plateau and beach and it is almost 1000 m northwest of Lone Pine. It was begun during the campaign and was used throughout the occupation. Today there are 253 commonwealth serviceman of the World War I buried and some commemorated in Ari Burnu Cemetery. 211 of casualties are identified. This cemetery covers an area of 1824 sq meters.

Anzac Commemorative Site on North Beach ( they stayed here until the end of the war ): The Anzac Commemorative site, 300 metres north of Ari Burnu at North Beach, has ten large pictorial panels with text in English and Turkish that tell the story of Gallipoli. To relieve the pressure on the traditional Dawn Service site at Ari Burnu War Cemetery caused by increasing numbers of visitors, the Australian and New Zealand Governments, with the cooperation of the Government of the Republic of Turkey built the Anzac Commemorative Site at North Beach.

Respect to Mehmetcik Statue (The story told for Lord Casey on his remebrance): The monument is a sculpture of a Turkish soldier carrying an Australian officer. The sculpture is based on an event in the Dardanelles Campaign of the World War 1 in which a Turkish soldier, after raising a white flag, carried a wounded Australian officer to Australian lines and returned to his lines before resuming the clash. There is also an inscription of a statement made by Lord Richard Casey then a lieutenant and the staff captain with the 3rd Brigade in the Australian army, during a visit to Turkey about his respect to Turkish army.

Lone Pine Australian Cemetery – Memorial (Australian Commemorative Site): There are now 1,167 Commonwealth servicemen of the First World War buried or commemorated in this cemetery. 504 of the burials are unidentified. Special memorials commemorate 183 soldiers (all but one of them Australian, most of whom died in August), who were known or believed to have been buried in Lone Pine Cemetery, or in the cemeteries at Brown's Dip.Within the cemetery stands the LONE PINE MEMORIAL It commemorates more than 4,900 Australian and New Zealand servicemen who died in the Anzac area - the New Zealanders prior to the fighting in August 1915 - whose graves are not known.

Johnston’s Jolly Cemetery: Johnston's Jolly Cemetery is a Commonwealth War Graves Commission cemetery containing the remains of some of the Allied troops who died during the Battle of Gallipoli. There are now 181 Commonwealth servicemen buried or commemorated in this cemetery. 144 of the burials are unidentified and there are special memorials to 36 Australian casualties believed to be buried among them, almost all of whom were killed in the capture of Lone Pine in August 1915.

Turkish 57th Infantry Regiment Memorial: The 57th Infantry Regiment Memorial is a Turkish war memorial commemorating the men of the Turkish 57th Infantry Regiment who died during the Battle of Gallipoli. The Turkish 57th Infantry Regiment was the first defending unit to go into action following the Landing at Anzac Cove on 25 April 1915. On the first day, the 19 Division commander, Staff Lieutenant-Colonel Mustafa Kemal famously ordered the regiment, "I am not ordering you to attack. I am ordering you to die. "

View to Shrapnel Valley and Anzac Cliffs( Everyone was afraid to walk )

The Nek Cemetery: The Nek Cemetery is a small Commonwealth War Graves Commission cemetery located near Suvla Bay on the Gallipoli Peninsula in Turkey. The cemetery was constructed following the Armistice in 1919 on the site of the Battle of the Nek, at which time the ground was still covered with the remains of Australian 8th and 10th Light Horse troopers killed in the battle four years previously. It is likely that they form the majority of the unknown graves in the cemetery. The cemetery has the graves of only five identified soldiers and special memorials to another five known to be buried there.

Walker’s Ridge Cemetery: It was constructed on a spur which was named by the occupying troops after the headquarters of the New Zealand Infantry Brigade, under the command of Brigadier-General Harold Walker, which was located there. The cemetery was formed during the occupation in 1915 and is divided into two plots 20 metres apart and originally separated by a trench.

Walk to Chunuk Bair  from Hill 261 in the restored ANZAC and Turkish trenches

Chunuk Bair Main New Zealand Memorial ( New Zealand Commemorative Site ): The CHUNUK BAIR (NEW ZEALAND) MEMORIAL is one of four memorials erected to commemorate New Zealand soldiers who died on the Gallipoli peninsula and whose graves are not known. This memorial relates to the Battle of Sari Bair and in other operations in this sector. It bears more than 850 names.

Chunuk Bair Cemetery: CHUNUK BAIR CEMETERY was made after the Armistice on the site where the Turks had buried some of those Commonwealth soldiers who were killed on 6-8 August. It contains 632 Commonwealth burials, only ten of which are identified.

View to Anafartalar PlainSuvla Bay and Salt Lake

Mustafa Kemal Ataturk Memorial

Also some places around the road

- 17.30 – 18.00 End of the tours and Coffee Break
- 18.00 Depart back to Istanbul
- 20.30 Have a stop for Dinner
- 23.00 Drop of to your hotels in Istanbul
Gallipoli Day Tour From Istanbul Price

Adults Price PP: - 80 €
Children 0-5 years:
Free with Parents
Children 6-12 years: - 40 €


Discounts: Students -10 € , Veterans -10€
Gallipoli Day Tour From Istanbul Includes

This package includes:
All Transportation in A/C ‘NO – SMOKING’ coach
Professional English speaking guiding ( Local Guide )
Restaurant lunch in Eceabat
Gallipoli Tour and Entrance fees

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 Gallipoli Day Tour From Istanbul

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