Damascus

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Introducing Damascus

Legend has it that on a journey from Mecca, the Prophet Mohammed cast his gaze from the mountainside onto Damascus but refused to enter the city because he wanted to enter paradise only once – when he died. In a place that vies for the title of the world’s oldest continually inhabited city, this is but one of thousands of stories.

With its position as the first stop for travellers from the east, and with the Barada River flowing down freely from the mountains where the Prophet stood, Damascus has always been a coveted capital. The machinations of those wishing to claim the city as their own is as fascinating as the wealth of architecture and culture they left behind, with Damascus collecting the calling cards of myriad civilisations. There is hardly a city in the world that has packed so much history into such a small space as the Old City. Thankfully, the Old City is still the Damascus that sustains the romantic notion of the Orient, filled with bazaars and blind alleys, minarets, mosques and fountain courtyards, street-cart vendors and coffeehouses.

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Discussing life, the universe and olives at a Damascus souq.
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Discussing life, the universe and olives at a Damascus souq.

Lonely Planet photographer
  • Andrew Burke
  • Lonely Planet photographer
  • Essential oils for sale in Hamidiye Souq.
  • Young Damascus school girls in uniform.
  • Green almonds stall.
  • Portrait of a Syrian man.
  • Man smoking sheesha water pipe, Jabri House courtyard restaurant.
  • Salah Muslim prayer, Umayyad Mosque.
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