Lebanon Dahr el Khane

Discover travel destinations of travelers writing a travel journal on FindPenguins.
Travelers at this place
  • What were the Romans really doing?

    October 5, 2023 in Lebanon ⋅ ☀️ 24 °C

    The Romans occupied Israel in the 1st century BCE and established the province of Judaea. This was part of their broader expansionist policies. The Romans sought to consolidate power and control trade routes, and the conquest of Judaea was a crucial step in achieving these goals.! Yes, time to wash your hands dear Romans! #historyRead more

  • Day 133

    Anjar

    December 15, 2019 in Lebanon ⋅ ☁️ 10 °C

    On commence à prendre l'habitude de s'enfiler des gros sandwichs aux falafels au petit dej ! Tellement bon🤣 Passage au saraf, salutations au Dr Habib et c'est parti pour Anjar, un village tout paumé. Les vestiges d'une cité omeyyade s'y nichent au milieu des sapins et des vignes. L'endroit est désert et silencieux.

    Ensuite on tente de grimper en haut d'une colline pour voir un mini temple et profiter de la vue, mais on tombe sur une caserne militaire alors on lâche l'affaire.

    Un petit mot sur la conduite libanaise, "mélange de créativité et d'égoïsme extrêmes" : si tu penses que doubler à gauche manque de piment, qu'utiliser les feux de croisement c'est surfait, que griller les feux c'est rigolo ou encore qu'une marche arrière sur une voie d'insertion sur l'autoroute est dans tes cordes, les routes libanaises sont faites pour toi 😵
    Read more

  • Day 129

    Notre-Dame de Harissa

    December 11, 2019 in Lebanon ⋅ ☁️ 17 °C

    Notre mission touche à sa fin ! Pour marquer le coup nous nous rendons au village de Harissa, où se trouve un site de pèlerinage dédié à Ia vierge. 

    Mais pourquoi cette histoire de Harissa en fait?  

    Avant notre départ, Thomas nous a lancé ce défi : faire goûter la Harissa à quelqu'un dans chaque pays traversé. Ça nous a semblé assez absurde pour être une super bonne idée. Ok, la soirée était déjà bien avancée...

    Mais qu'est-ce qu'on y gagne? 

    Le prix : un ananas en or qui tient les glaçons au frais. Alors là... On voit pas trop l'utilité, c'est kitsch à mort, bref : on était convaincus 👉🍍
    Read more

  • Day 13

    Basilica of St. Paul

    December 3, 2021 in Lebanon ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

    This is a Melkite Greek Catholic Church located near the Shrine of Our Lady of Lebanon (see Harissa post). It only dates to the late 20th century, but is very clearly done in the Byzantine architectural style. Of particular interest here is that the mosaics seek to gather in all of the various form of the eastern church. There are Greek, Maronite, and Slavic saints portrayed in the mosaics, and they claim to have the very 1st mosaic of St. John Paul.
    The 1st picture is of the building, showing the architectural style. The 2nd and 3rd pictures are of the main doors. These carvings are scenes from the life of St. Paul.
    The 4th picture is the nave. If you look closely, you'll see saints from many traditions among the mosaics. The 5th picture is a small side chapel, and the last picture is the interior of the dome.
    Read more

  • Day 13

    Harissa

    December 3, 2021 in Lebanon ⋅ ⛅ 16 °C

    This is the pilgrimage site of the shrine dedicated to Our Lady of Lebanon. The shrine is an 8.5 meter tall statue of the Immaculate Conception which is atop a large pedestal that has a small chapel inside (no photography allowed). That is the 1st picture. Also, in the background of the 1st picture is the Maronite cathedral. The 2nd picture also shows the shrine, but this time includes a few of the cedars of Lebanon that are planted around the site.
    The 3rd picture is of the newest of several chapels here. The others were either closed for renovations, as was the cathedral or were celebrating a mass at the time.
    The 4th picture is the outdoor site for lighting candles. While I have seen outdoor places like this, the architecture here is unique.
    There is a part of the site with cedars and benches. In the 5th picture, this statue is sitting among the cedars.
    People also come here for the view. The 6th picture gives you a sense of this by looking to the south towards Beirut which is in the haze in the distance.
    Read more

  • Day 10

    Caves of Ksara

    November 30, 2021 in Lebanon ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

    This is one of the oldest wineries in Lebanon. It is built around ancient caves that date to Roman times. The natural caves have been extended by hand. Now the cave system extends for more than 2 kilometers.
    The 1st picture is 3 of the wines we tasted. There are many more varieties. The 2nd picture is the front of the building, and the 3rd is their main lobby.
    The 4th and 5th pictures are in the caves. Lots of barrels, mostly of red wines. Their whites spend much less time, if any, on the oak .
    Read more

  • Day 10

    Zahle

    November 30, 2021 in Lebanon ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

    Zahle is the capital of Bekaa, the valley region between Syria and the coast. It's most famous site is the tower of Mary the Mother of Jesus in the 1st picture. She looks over the city as a protector. In one hand she holds grapes; in the other wheat. Both are symbols for the Bekaa valley which is a rich agricultural region.
    The 2nd picture is a street scene along the Berdawni River that runs through town. This is a busy summer promenade. So you can tell it's well off season as most shops are closed for the winter. The 3rd picture is of a small chapel at the foot the the Mary Tower. I particularly like the glass wall overlooking the valley.
    The last 2 pictures are both taken from the top of the Mary Tower. The 4th looks over Zahle in the same direction that the statue faces, and the 5th takes a longer look over the Bekaa valley.
    Read more

  • Day 10

    Ain Jar

    November 30, 2021 in Lebanon ⋅ ☁️ 24 °C

    Ancient Ain Jar (modern Anjar) is the only Umayyad city in Lebanon. It was founded in the early 8th century but lasted only about 50 years until the founder died and his heirs fought over the city, destroying it. It remained abandoned and buried until the early 20th century when Armenian refugees escaping the genocide settled here. They found the ruins when they started digging foundations for homes.
    Ain Jar means water source of flowing water and was named for the abundant water here. The Umayyads settled here for the water and proximity to Damascus, their home. (It's less than 7 km to the Syrian border.)
    As they had little if any knowledge of planning, engineering or construction, they hired Romans and Byzantines to build their city. Hence they have very Roman city: entirely on a grid with walls, defensive towers etc.
    The 1st picture looks along the Cardo Maximus or main street. There would have been a colonnade on both side with shops on the ground floor and residences above. I'm told there were 285 shops here. If you look closely, you can see openings along the center of the street. This is the 8th century drainage system that still works
    The 2nd picture is the grand palace we're the city was administered and the founder like bed. The 3rd picture is a niche in the Palace courtyard where a guard would stand. You can just make out the carvings of palm trees and camels, the symbols of the Umayyads. The 4th picture looks over the ruins of their mosque. The 5th picture is of the lesser palace or harem. And the last picture is over a Roman style bath house.
    Read more

  • Day 8

    Beit El Dine

    November 28, 2021 in Lebanon ⋅ ⛅ 19 °C

    This palace was started near the end of the 18th century and was built on a place of a Druze hermitage called Beiteddine (House of Faith). It is a place of spectacular beauty and opulence, and legend had it that the architect's hands were cut off to keep it that way. Today, it's the Lebanese President's summer residence.
    The 1st picture is the outer courtyard where there were rooms upstairs in the building to the right for visiting dignataries to stay. Downstairs was a stable for their horses. Today the stable is the museum space in the 2nd picture. The surfaces have been finished as a museum, but I still find the architecture interesting.
    The 3rd picture is the middle courtyard. The building straight ahead is the main public building where the emir or whoever was in charge over the years had meetings.
    The 4th picture is one of the meeting rooms showing the inlaid woodwork that is found throughout all the rooms we were able to visit.
    The 5th picture is said to be the main sitter my room of the wife of the emir. They could sit here and keep track of what was happening in the courtyard without being visible to anyone outside.
    The last picture fascinates me. There was a complete bath house included with hot, cold and temperate rooms, etc, found in most hammans. This is the ceiling is the hot room. The folks who lived here were not Muslim. So when they built this room during the Ottoman period, they were able to include this forbidden symbol in the design, with the powers that be none the wiser.
    The inner courtyard remains closed as private.
    Read more

Join us:

FindPenguins for iOSFindPenguins for Android