Tripoli (Tarablus):
About 85 km from Beirut,
Tripoli is the admistrative capital of the
North and the second largest city of Lebanon.
It was founded by the Phoenicians in 800 B.C.
and was named Athar. But as traders from
Arwad, Sidon and Tyre settled
and lived in three totally separated districts, it
became known as Tripoli or "the three
cities".
The city flourished under the Arabs
and many of its principal monuments go back to Islamic
times, such as the famous Bourj as-Sibaa, a tower
built by the Mamluks in the 15th century. There are
also many beautiful mosques, madrassahs, khans, souks
and bazzars. Towering above the Abu Аli River stands
the fortress of St. Gilles (Sinjil), built by Raymond
de St. Gilles on Mount Pelerin in the early 12th
century, and which was since remade and enlarged by
the Mamluks and Turks. Tripoli's
Cultural Site: Tripoli Festival

Designed & compiled by
Eng. Аli КHADRA
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