Aanjar
Baalbeck
Batroun
Beiteddine
Byblos
Deir el Qalaa & the Aqueduct of Zubaida
Echmoun
Enfe & the Abbey of Balamand
Qadisha Valley
Roman Temples of the Bekaa Valley
Sidon
Tripoli
History
Virtual Tour
Photo Gallery
Historical Timeline
Download (Brochure,Map)
Tyre

Archaeological
Promenade
Home Page

History
Virtual Tour
Photo Gallery
Historical Timeline
Download PDF (Brochure,Map)

Tripoli (Trablous), 85 kilometers north of Beirut, has a special character of its own. Thanks to its historical wealth, relaxed lifestyle, and thriving business climate, this is a city where modern and medieval blend easily into a lively and hospitable metropolis. Known as the capital of the North, Tripoli is Lebanon’s second largest city.

Forty-five buildings in the city, many dating from the 14th century, have been registered as historical sites. Twelve mosques from Mamluke and Ottoman times have survived, along with an equal number of madrassas, or theological schools. Secular buildings include the hammam, or bathing-house, which followed the classical pattern of Roman-Byzantine baths, and the khan, or caravansary. The souks, together with the khans, form an agglomeration of various trades where tailors, jewelers, perfumes, tanners, and soap makers work in surroundings that have changed very little over the last 500 years.

 



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