“Besides being the cradle of many and varied civilization, Syria is also a land of an assortment of landscapes. An hour’s drive will take you from fields of wheat and cotton to vineyard and olive trees, to pomegranate and palm-tree oases, to daisy and oleander meadows. On the sea –shore to the north. You can watch the Mediterranean’s white waves, while in the golden desert you will see a deluge of wild flowers in spring.
As a result, this wealth of historical sites and landscapes offer the visitors a wide variety of tourism: Eco-tourism, rural tourism, religious tourism, cultural tourism, desert tourism, camping tourism...etc. All this has attracted many regional international associations of professionals (doctors, jurists, pharmacists, dentists, architect...etc.) to hold their conventions in Syria which provides the best facilities for such activities and offers at the same time the conventioneers an opportunity to enjoy the pleasure of touring the country”
(Parrot, former director of the Louvre Museum in Paris).
As a result, this wealth of historical sites and landscapes offer the visitors a wide variety of tourism: Eco-tourism, rural tourism, religious tourism, cultural tourism, desert tourism, camping tourism...etc. All this has attracted many regional international associations of professionals (doctors, jurists, pharmacists, dentists, architect...etc.) to hold their conventions in Syria which provides the best facilities for such activities and offers at the same time the conventioneers an opportunity to enjoy the pleasure of touring the country”
(Parrot, former director of the Louvre Museum in Paris).
History is Alive:
Syria, The History talks
When you enter an old souk (bazaar) in Syria, you will realize that history is something alive and tangible, something you can see, touch and smell. In Damascus, if you walk down the Street called Straight (Midhat Pasha), you might feel that you were walking alongside Saul of Tarsus, suddenly transformed into St Paul on seeing the light of faith, the light on "the road to Damascus"The glass- blower at their brick furnaces, might remind you of their predecessors, who first invented colored glass 3,000 years ago. In the thirteenth century, two Italian brothers came to Syria to learn the skill of glass-blowing, which they took back to Venice, and started fashioning "Venetian" glass.
A journey through a Syrian town is a journey into both the past and the present at the same time. You might happen on a Roman arch, built centuries before Christ, under which you might find a shop selling the latest electronic gadgets. Or you may pass on Ottoman caravansary, bustling under its evocative Arabesque designs with present-day commercial activity.
Damascus, the world's oldest inhabited city, contains Greek ruins built over Aramean temples, and minarets rising over Crusader remains. The Omayyad mosque, a great edifice of Islamic civilization, became a prototype of Islamic architecture, from Spain to Samarcand.
In Aleppo, a grand fortress rises before you, on the very mount where, in the year 2,000 BC, Abraham is said to have milked his cow, giving the site of the city its name, Halab (in Arabic "to milk"). The long, winding stone bazaar of Aleppo is one of the most beautiful in the East, replete with locally-famous colored silk scarves, perfumes, and soaps still made to ancient recipes.
On the northern coast, your imagination can wander back unhindered by the modern ships you see- to those early sailors who set forth from this very shore, taking their colored glass, their cloth of gold, their carved wood, and their alphabet to the far-flung regions of the known world.
The villages of Syria, whether they nestle in mountain valleys, or cluster along the coast, or border a great desert, are unique in their traditions and in the native costumes of their inhabitants. Maaloula, a village not far from Damascus where the houses are carved out of the mountain stone, still speaks Aramaic, the language of Jesus Christ.
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Syria Is often described as the largest small country in the world because of its wealth of ancient civilizations. Modern man is indebted to this land for much of his thought and learning. Therefore it is properly said that every cultured man belongs to two nations -his own and Syria.
A journey through a Syrian town is a journey into both the past and the present at the same time. You might happen on a Roman arch, built centuries before Christ, under which you might find a shop selling the latest electronic gadgets. Or you may pass on Ottoman caravansary, bustling under its evocative Arabesque designs with present-day commercial activity.
Damascus, the world's oldest inhabited city, contains Greek ruins built over Aramean temples, and minarets rising over Crusader remains. The Omayyad mosque, a great edifice of Islamic civilization, became a prototype of Islamic architecture, from Spain to Samarcand.
In Aleppo, a grand fortress rises before you, on the very mount where, in the year 2,000 BC, Abraham is said to have milked his cow, giving the site of the city its name, Halab (in Arabic "to milk"). The long, winding stone bazaar of Aleppo is one of the most beautiful in the East, replete with locally-famous colored silk scarves, perfumes, and soaps still made to ancient recipes.
On the northern coast, your imagination can wander back unhindered by the modern ships you see- to those early sailors who set forth from this very shore, taking their colored glass, their cloth of gold, their carved wood, and their alphabet to the far-flung regions of the known world.
The villages of Syria, whether they nestle in mountain valleys, or cluster along the coast, or border a great desert, are unique in their traditions and in the native costumes of their inhabitants. Maaloula, a village not far from Damascus where the houses are carved out of the mountain stone, still speaks Aramaic, the language of Jesus Christ.
___________
Syria Is often described as the largest small country in the world because of its wealth of ancient civilizations. Modern man is indebted to this land for much of his thought and learning. Therefore it is properly said that every cultured man belongs to two nations -his own and Syria.
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