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14 Days The World's Homeland Tour Package

Duration: 14 Days / 13 Nights
Priced From: $3,051 (All pricing reflects per-person Land Only expenses)
Dates: Feb - Apr, Oct, Nov





Syria offers not only antiquity that is important to Islam, such as the Great Ommaya Mosque, but also antiquity that is important to Christianity and elements of Geek Mythology. Walk through the Christian quarter of Damascus, an area that played an pivotal role in Biblical times, and listen to some of the residents speak the ancient language of Aramaic; the language of Jesus Christ. Stare up at the massive remains of the Roman Temple of Jupiter and grasp the expansive history of the numerous civilisations that have passed through these parts. The Azem Palace of the Ottoman governor of the 18th and 19th centuries still stands in all its glory. The evidence of many ancient civilisations is still apparent as we travel along the Euphrates. We won't be spend all of our time emerged in the past; we will see the busy markets where local tribes converge to sell food and livestock. Coming to face-to-face with the vibrancy of the Syrian people gives us a better understanding of the civilisation that currently lives in that large and once-mysterious area.


Tour Itinerary
 
Day 1   Arrive in Damascus
 
Today we arrive in Damascus, Syria, and transfer to our hotel. Damascus is one of the world's oldest continuously inhabited cities, and reports run back at least 3,500 years. Many claim that Damascus is THE oldest continuously inhabited city in the world. While modern Damascus is a standard Middle Eastern city, it was famous for centuries, and often referred to as the "Pearl of the East". Overnight in Damascus. Dinner if required. 
 
Day 2   Damascus: Great Ommayad Mosque & Azem Palace
 
Today we walk within the old city, surrounded by an ancient wall which originally had seven gates named in Roman times after the stars that made up the constellation of the Seven Sisters. We see the remains of the massive Roman Temple of Jupiter, walk through the absorbing Hamadieh Market, and visit the Great Ommayad Mosque, one of the first great mosques of the Muslim world built in AD 718 by the Caliph el-Walid. After a visit to Saladin's tomb, we continue to a visit of the lovely Azem Palace, seat of the Ottoman governor during the 18th and 19th centuries. In its airy courts, we can imagine the Ottoman ruler savouring a warm Damascene evening, looking up at the three minarets of the great mosque illuminated by a full summer moon. The Azem Palace is today an ethnographic museum displaying the costumes of the different classes of Syrian society in the different parts of this varied country. You will have some free time later in the afternoon for shopping or exploring on your own. Overnight in Damascus. Breakfast and dinner. 
   
Day 3   Damascus: National Museum & Christian Quarter
 
This morning we visit the immense National Museum with its monumental gateway transported from an Umayyad (Ommayad) fortress in the Syrian Desert. The collections in the museum span a period of over 9,000 years and include the brightly-painted frescoes from one of the oldest synagogues in the world. At the Takiyyeh as-Sulaymaniyyeh we see a beautiful Turkish mosque built in 1554. Next to the mosque is a Sixteenth Century Ottoman caravanserai which has been converted into a handicraft centre where you can see traditional Syrian handicrafts being made and sold. In the afternoon we will enter the Christian quarter to walk along the Street Called Straight (mentioned in the Bible). Near the great gate, Bab as-Sharqi, we visit the Chapel of Ananias where St Paul hid after his conversion to Christianity. This afternoon is free for you to explore old Damascus. This evening we finish our day by driving up to Mount Kassioun for a view over all Damascus Overnight in Damascus. Breakfast and dinner. 
  
Day 4   Damascus - Hama - Orontes Valley - Homs
 
Travelling northward today, we arrive at Maloula where we visit one of the oldest churches in the world, the Church of Saint Sergis. Here we can see how a Christian altar table has been adapted from a pagan sacrificial stone, and perhaps hear the priest recite some of the liturgy in Aramaic, the language of Jesus Christ, spoken in only three places on earth. Aramaic was, at one time, the lingua franca of western Arabia and is related to modern Arabic and Hebrew. The people of Maloula--most of whom are Syrian Christians--still speak Aramaic among themselves, though it is a dying language. Maloula is also the spot where a young woman, Tekla, who had rejected pagan practice and embraced Christianity during the Roman era, found a miraculous escape from her Roman pursuers. Arriving in Hama, we view a unique and lovely example of ancient engineering: the great Noria water wheels, first constructed in Roman times. The wheels still turn and groan under the power of the Orontes River, delivering water to the fields around the town. In Hama we visit the 18th century inn that now houses the local museum. North of Hama, in the heart of the Orontes Valley, we visit the impressive second century BC ruins of the Roman city of Apamea. This huge site was once a city of one-half million inhabitants which was visited by Mark Anthony and Cleopatra. The focus of the site is the long double row of fluted columns rising from the surrounding fields. The museum near the site contains several beautiful and extensive mosaics. Above the Roman site stands the Thirteenth Century Arab castle of Qala'at al-Mudiq. Overnight in Homs. Breakfast and dinner. 
  
Day 5   Homs - Palmyra
 
From Homs we drive eastward into the Syrian Desert to reach Palmyra, the great city of the Palmyrans, one of the greatest archaeological sites in the world. By the time of Christ, the Palmyrans had developed a vast trading empire which extended as far as India. The setting is magnificent, in a fertile depression in the vast flat desert. The heritage of trade is evident in the marvellous statuary depicting prominent merchants draped in Roman style robes and wearing Persian boots and pantaloons. We can walk along the main thoroughfare of the immense antique city, lined with columns bleached by sun and wind. Because this was first and foremost a trading city, the main street is a pathway of sand so that camels carrying their burden to the market square would not slip on the paving stones. We see the Monumental Gateway, market place, amphitheatre and Tetrapylons. Today we may also have the chance to visit a Bedouin village. We visit the magnificent temple of Baal, and learn about the rebellious Queen Zenobia, who flouted Roman suzerainty, declared an independent kingdom and struck coins bearing her own image. The Emperor Aurelian finally conquered her armies and brought her to Rome in golden chains. We also visit the Ethnographic Museum to see displays depicting Bedouin tribal life in this desert area. Overnight in Palmyra. Breakfast and dinner 
  
Day 6   Palmyra: Area Tour
 
Today we have a full day in Palmyra and the desert oasis in which it is situated. We will visit the spectacular Archaeological Museum where we will see a well preserved collection of statuary from the Palmyra site, as well as collections from prehistoric Palmyra. We will visit the necropolis, comprised of multi-storey tombs that were rented out rather than sold. The builders of the tombs themselves become rich through the rent they collected. In the afternoon, you may wish to walk through the oasis with its palm and olive groves and its gardens separated by irrigation canals. In the evening the small town of Tadmor is busy with locals and visitors. Overnight in Palmyra. Breakfast and dinner. 
  
Day 7   Palmyra - Syrian Desert - Dier ez-Zor
 
This morning we travel across the vast expanse of the Syrian Desert to the River Euphrates. This afternoon you may like to explore the town of Deir Ez-Zor and the lively Bedouin market. The town is a meeting place for the local tribes who come in from the surrounding desert to trade sheep, skins, milk, butter, and cheese for goods and fresh produce grown by the farmers along the Euphrates Valley. Each Bedouin tribe from the desert frontier areas has a slightly different style of dress, and the women often tattoo their faces and hands. The Bedouin are referred to locally as "Shawi", from the Arabic verb "to grill", as they are renowned for their boundless hospitality, often going so far as to slaughter one of their prized flock for the benefit of a guest. Those who do not wish to have a free afternoon in Dier ez-Zor may join our bus excursion south of the Euphrates to the 5,000 year-old Mesopotamian city of Mari. Here we discover a civilisation remarkably advanced and complex that dates back to the Sumerian, Akkadian, Assyrian and Babalonian periods. In Mari we walk through the halls of the great mud palace to the throne room of Semurilim. En route back to Dier ez-Zor, we stop at the vast walled city of Doura Europos, built by Seleucis Niikator, one of the generals of Alexander the Great, as a defensive garrison on the eastern frontier of the empire. Overnight in Deir Ez-Zor. Breakfast and dinner. 
  
Day 8   Dier ez-Zor - Ar-Raqqa - Resafa - Aleppo
 
Following the course of the Euphrates, once the lifeline of ancient Mesopotamian civilisations, we observe how the waters have receded greatly in recent years. The river valley today supports large-scale cultivation of wheat, sugar beets and cotton. In the Bedouin town of Ar-Raqqa, we visit the old Abbasid city walls and the Baghdad Gate of the great fortified city that once stood here. Nearby we make an excursion to the ancient walled city of Resafa, known in antiquity as Sergiopolis, after a Roman soldier who, along with his friend Baachus, embraced Christianity and was martyred for his heresy. During the Byzantine period, Resafa became an important place of pilgrimage and the Emperor Justinian had an impressive series of ramparts built against marauding desert Arabs. The city has huge underground cisterns to hold water. Many of the column capitals are carved from gypsum, a crystalline rock that looks like glass. Further up the river we arrive at the Thawra Dam, completed in the early 1970s. It was the first great dam project to harness the mighty waters of the River Euphrates, creating Lake Assad. We arrive in Aleppo in the early evening. Overnight in Aleppo. Breakfast and dinner. 
  
Day 9   Aleppo: City Tour
 
Today we explore the city of Aleppo, beginning with a visit to the Citadel, situated on an eminence at the centre of the city. In the past anyone who took control of the citadel took control of Aleppo, and it's easy to see why. During the time of Saladin, the walled fortress we see today was given its present shape. This afternoon, you may wish to make your own explorations or join your Tour Leader on a tour of the Grand Bazaar. It is often said that if you did not get lost in the market then you have not seen it! You will find for sale Bedouin goat hair tents, felt shepherds' coats lined with sheepskin, Bedouin carpets and headscarves amidst a tumult of activity. The bazaar has a real "Thousand and One Nights" atmosphere with narrow, cobbled streets lined with vendors of every kind. The market is particularly famous its gold and silver items. Overnight in Aleppo. Breakfast and dinner. 
  
Day 10   Aleppo - St Simeon's Monastery - Aleppo
 
From our base in Aleppo, we journey into the countryside to visit the monastery of St Simeon, where the famous anchorite spent 42 years in meditation atop a pillar in the fifth century. Here we visit the basilica which represents one of the most graceful and important examples of early Byzantine architecture. From this spot, we have lovely views over the landscape of northern Syria and into Turkey. We will stop to see a beautifully preserved section of Roman road. In this area there are many Byzantine "Dead Cities" whose populations were devastated by the Black Death brought via the Silk Road in the Middle Ages. Today they stand as empty testaments to the advantages and pit-falls of living from trade. Returning to Aleppo city, we tour the museum with its excellent collection of artifacts from the period of the great Mesopotamian kingdoms, including the water-bearer statue from Mari and some excellent cuneiform tablets from Elba. Overnight in Aleppo. Breakfast and dinner. 
  
Day 11   Aleppo - Saladin's Castle - Safita
 
From Aleppo we cross the coastal mountains, a lovely area famous for its fruit orchards. We take a spectacular mountain road up to the dramatic ruins of Saladin's castle, a crusader fortress situated above a breathtaking pine-covered ravine. Before reaching the Mediterranean coast we visit Ugarit, the Phoenician trading city where the world's oldest known alphabet was discovered. We arrive this evening at Safita, situated on the coast. Overnight in Safita. Breakfast and dinner. 
  
Day 12   Safita - Crak de Chevaliers - Damascus
 
From Safita we make our way to Crak de Chevaliers, situated at a strategic break in the coastal mountain chain. This huge castle stands guard over the valley pass below, controlling the route from the Mediterranean coast through the mountains to Damascus and the interior of the Levant. It was considered by Lawrence of Arabia to be the most perfect castle in the world, a splendid place to gain a sense of how these medieval adventurers lived in their kingdom of Outremar--"the land across the sea." We visit the great hall, kitchens, chapel (later converted to a mosque when Muslim forces won this redoubtable stronghold) and walk along the extensive ramparts. From Crak de Chevaliers we drive to Damascus. Overnight in Damascus. Breakfast and dinner. 
  
Day 13   Damascus: At Leisure
 
Today is free to further explore the covered bazaar, walk the Street Called Straight, and / or re-visit the National Museum. PLEASE NOTE: As of 13 Feb 08, our optional day trip to Lebanon has been suspended due to a deterioration in the current security situation. The excursion will be re-activated once the situation improves and current government warnings against travel are lifted. Overnight in Damascus. Breakfast and dinner. 
  
Day 14   Departure
 
Departure from Damascus. Breakfast. BON VOYAGE!
   

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10/09

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