Tyre Travel Guide
Edit This The best resource for sights, hotels, restaurants, bars, what to do and seeTyre (Sour) was built
in ancient times on a small rocky island near the coast. In the 10th century
B.C. King Hiram of Tyre constructed two ports and a temple on the mainland
sector of the city. This was the era when the famous industries of Phoenician
glass and purple dye were developed. Behind the walls of the old city the Tyrians successfully defied Nebuchadnezzar for 13 years. Alexander the
Great also laid siege to it for 7 months, finally
overwhelming the island city by constructing a great causeway from the shore to the island.
Over the centuries, however, the causeway was silted up, turning Tyre into
an isthmus. In biblical times it was in Qana (Cana) near Tyre that Jesus
turned water into wine at the wedding feast. In 1980, modern Tyre's impressive
Roman and Phoenician remains prompted UNESCO to make the town one of its
world heritage sites. Despite its location in the deep south 79 km from
Beirut, where conflict often occurred during the war, Tyre has become a
prosperous town notable for its many high-rise buildings. At the same time
the inner city has retained its industrious maritime character and its
old-style houses.
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