Red Mosque & Mamluk Mausoleum

Upper Galilee & Golan


Decorated with inscriptions glorifying the Mamluk Sultan Beybars (1223–77), the Red Mosque (interior closed to the public) was built at the very end of his reign. The mausoleum was constructed in 1372 as the final resting place of a local governor.


Lonely Planet's must-see attractions

Nearby Upper Galilee & Golan attractions

2. Tzfat Gallery of Mystical Art

0.21 MILES

Avraham Loewenthal, who hails from Detroit, is happy to explain the symbolism of his inspirational paintings and prints, whose abstract forms are rooted…

3. House of Love & Prayer

0.28 MILES

Hasidic synagogue that sings its Shabbat prayers in the mellow spiritual tradition of Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach. Those seeking to pray on Shabbat are welcome.

4. General Safed Exhibition

0.29 MILES

Opened in 1952, this group gallery – housed in the desanctified, Ottoman-era Market Mosque – displays, sells and ships works by about 50 painters and…

5. Sheva Chaya Glassblowing Gallery

0.29 MILES

Kabbalistic concepts and women’s themes in Judaism are represented in the art of Denver-born painter and glass-blower Sheva Chaya Shaiman. She sometimes…

6. Safed Craft Pottery

0.31 MILES

UK-born potter Daniel Flatauer works in the English studio pottery tradition, producing tableware, kitchenware and Judaica that is both functional and…

7. Citadel Ruins & Cistern

0.33 MILES

Near the southern tip of Citadel Park, the ruins of one of the citadel's inner walls can be seen along Chativat Yiftach St. From there, a path and stairs…

8. Yehezkel HaMeiri Viewpoint

0.34 MILES

Situated at the very bottom of Ma'alot Olei HaGardom, this platform affords views of the Kabbalists' tombs and Mt Meron.