The most complete private Beirut experience available — eleven city landmarks plus the National Museum of Beirut, with a professional guide throughout. This is the guided upgrade on the panoramic city tour — same essential landmarks, but with expert interpretation at every stop and a full hour at Lebanon's most important archaeological museum, where 7,000 years of Lebanese history are laid out in a single extraordinary building.
Your guide connects the city's living landmarks — Pigeon Rocks, the Corniche, Martyrs' Square, the mosque and cathedral side by side, the Roman baths, the deliberately preserved Civil War facade of the Holiday Inn — to the archaeological collection inside the National Museum, where Phoenician sarcophagi, Roman mosaics, Bronze Age gold, and mediaeval artefacts give the city's street-level stories their full historical depth. Beirut in five hours, with a guide who makes every stop matter.
Pickup is available from any Hotel, Airbnb or Residence in Beirut.
9:00 AM — Departure from Beirut hotel Your guide meets the group at your hotel. The tour starts immediately — Pigeon Rocks is five minutes away.
Pigeon Rocks & Zaitunay Bay The limestone sea stacks of Raouche — Beirut's most photographed natural landmark — then along the seafront to Zaitunay Bay marina. Your guide frames the city's geography and sets the historical context for everything that follows.
Corniche el Manara — the city's common ground The Mediterranean promenade where Beirutis of every background come to walk. Your guide explains why this seafront has functioned as the city's democratic public space for generations — and what that means in a city as politically and religiously complex as Beirut.
Martyrs' Square — three revolutions in one public space Ottoman executions of 1916. The Cedar Revolution of 2005 that ended Syrian occupation. The 2019 uprising. Your guide explains all three events, their causes, and their consequences — turning Lebanon's most historically charged public square into a coherent political narrative rather than a list of dates.
Place de l'Étoile, Beirut Souks & Roman Baths The French Mandate star-shaped square with its clock tower and Lebanese Parliament. The Beirut Souks — glass floors revealing Phoenician, Hellenistic, and Roman remains beneath a post-war shopping district. The Roman baths from the 3rd century AD sitting in the open air of rebuilt downtown. Your guide connects the archaeological layers to the living city above them.
Mohammad Al-Amin Mosque, Al-Omari Mosque & Saint George Cathedral The grand Blue Mosque completed in 2008. Al-Omari — Byzantine church to Crusader chapel to Ayyubid mosque to Mamluk expansion, each era still visible in the stonework. Saint George Cathedral — metres away from the Blue Mosque, centuries of coexistence in a single square. Your guide reads the architectural and religious history of all three buildings in a single coherent narrative about what Beirut has always been.
Holiday Inn — what Beirut chose to remember The Civil War facade deliberately preserved in the middle of rebuilt downtown Beirut — bullet holes, shell damage, and the scars of fifteen years of conflict kept intact by choice. Your guide explains what happened here during the war and why Lebanon decided to leave it standing rather than tear it down. The most powerful five minutes in Beirut.
National Museum of Beirut — 7,000 years in one building The highlight of the guided version and the stop that transforms a panoramic city tour into a genuinely deep historical experience. The National Museum of Beirut holds the most significant archaeological collection in Lebanon — Phoenician anthropoid sarcophagi carved in the 5th century BC, Roman-era mosaics of extraordinary quality, Bronze Age gold jewellery, Neolithic tools, and mediaeval artefacts — all drawn from the same Lebanese soil your guide has been interpreting throughout the morning. Your guide leads the visit, connecting the museum's collection directly to the sites you have already seen — the Phoenician foundations beneath the Beirut Souks, the Roman baths in downtown, the Crusader-era Al-Omari Mosque — giving the entire day a historical coherence that a self-guided visit cannot replicate. One of the most undervisited and most rewarding museums in the Middle East.
Return to hotel — approx. 2:00 PM Drop-off at your Beirut hotel — eleven city landmarks and 7,000 years of Lebanese history interpreted by a professional guide in a single private morning. Afternoon completely free.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
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