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Tyre Queen of the seas
Mentiones
often In the Bible, Tyre was probably founded at the start of the
third millennium BC. It was originally made up of two parts: the
coastal city and some small islands.
The city was celebrated in antiquity for the mrchant fleet that
plied Mediterranean, trading in glass, purple dye and cedar wood,
and bringing prosperity to its people.
The glory of Tyre spread far beyond its borders, extending to the
various colonies founded on the shores of the Mediterranean.
But
it soon attracted the envy of the world's great conquerors including
Nabuchadnezzar king of Babylon, who besieged the city for thirteen
years. In 332 BC it was the turn of Alexander the great, who sacked
and burned Tyre after seven months of siege. This he achieved bt
building a causeway linking the land city to the island.
Gradually, over the course of history, the causeway filled with
sand and the city became a peninsula.
Today Tyre holds many traces of its rich past. On what was originally
the island is a Roman city with streets paved in mosaics and bordered
by columned porticos that seem to march directly into the sea. A
short distance away are the remains of an imposing cathedral built
by the Crusaders and in which the kings of Jerusalem were crowned.
In another part of the town extends a huge necropolis with many
impressive sarcophagi dating to the first centuries AD. This exceptional
site continues along a Roman road dominated by a triumphal arch
that gurads the entrance to an immense Roman hippodrome nearly 500
meters long. Because of its invaluable archaeological remains, in
1979 UNESCO made Tyre a World Heritage City.
Visitors
to Tyre are welcome to the Government Resthouse which offers
accommodation, a restaurant and other facilities.
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