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At the time of the Ottoman conquest of Egypt, all Seven Wonders of the Ancient World were located within Ottoman territory, although of course, all had fallen to ruin aside from the Pyramids by that time (and the Hanging Gardens possibly never existed).

This brings to mind an interesting question--if we assume a 19th/20th century Ottoman Empire wank (including Egypt still remaining part of it in some form), with the decline of the empire completely reversed (maybe Selim III reforms the Ottoman Empire instead of being murdered for trying to?) and the empire soon making huge money off of its oil reserves, would the Turks ever use this fact to their advantage? European archaeology in the 19th century onward brought to light incredible (re)discoveries in Anatolia, Egypt, and the Fertile Crescent, and even now, the buildings of Ancient Egypt are a major source of tourism to modern Egypt.

What I would imagine is the Ottoman Empire uses its rich heritage and targets the areas around the Seven Wonders for redevelopment. This would include scholars and archaeologists and architects being commissioned to reconstruct the six destroyed wonders as authentically as possible (modern technology can be used to cut corners when it isn't apparent in the final process). Possibly, even the Great Pyramid would be rebuilt to how it looked during the Old Kingdom, including the golden capstone on it. Given the issue of the apparent non-existence of the Hanging Gardens, they could either be actually constructed at Babylon (near to the ruins of Babylon in modern Hillah), or at Nineveh where the Hanging Gardens are sometimes theorised to have actually been located, a suburb of Mosul since Islamic times.

What would happen if the Ottomans did this, assuming this would at earliest start in the late 19th century? I'd assume there'd be non-Turkish architects and classicists involved who'd support the idea. And in the 20th century, oil money would mean the Ottoman Empire could definitely afford to spend money on ideas like that. What is the chance of the projects be successful and well-received in the long-term? I could imagine even if the Ottomans and the people they hire do a poor job, many of the wonders would still be major tourist attractions.

Assuming the Greeks still successfully revolt, you still have the Statue of Zeus in Greek territory. But I could imagine if the Ottomans are rebuilding Ancient Greek heritage like the Temple of Artemis, the Greeks might want to compete on nationalistic grounds (we can assume an Ottoman wank means Greece isn't expanding past its initial borders). Maybe they'd also do the same concept with other famous buildings, like rebuilding the Parthenon, perhaps competing with the Parthenon replica in Nashville, Tennessee built 1897 (although the copy of the Athena statue wasn't built until a century later).

If this project were undertaken, I imagine the most visited would be the Pyramids, the Great Lighthouse, and the Colossus, given their very impressive nature. The other four would be a bit less in terms of their attraction potential, although as great works of architecture with great historic importance they'd still draw a lot of visitors.
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