Anjar | Baalbek | Batroun | Beiteddine | Byblos | Deir el Qualaa & Zubaida Aqueduct | Echmoun | Enfe & Balamand | Qadisha Valley | Roman Temples of the Bekaa Valley | Sidon | Tripoli | Tyr
Site Seeing > Historical Sites > Sidon
Saida (Sidon), on the coast 45 kilometers south of Beirut, is one of the famous names in ancient history. Of all of Lebanon's cities, this is the most mysterious, for its past has been tragically scattered and plundered. In the 19th century, treasure hunters and amateur archaeologists made off with many of its most beautiful and important objects, some of which can now be seen in foreign museums.
In this century too, ancient objects from Saida (Sidon) (Sidoon is the Phoenician name) have turned up on the world's antiquities markets. Other traces of its history lie beneath the concrete of modern constructions, perhaps buried forever. The challenge for today's visitor to
Saida (Sidon) is to recapture a sense of this city's ancient glory from the intriguing elements that still survive.
The largest city in south Lebanon, Saida (Sidon) is a busy commercial center with the pleasant, conservative atmosphere of a small town. Since Persian times Saida (Sidon) was known as the city of gardens, and even today it is surrounded by citrus and banana plantations.






