South Lebanon is the part most visitors skip. Big mistake. This private day trip from Beirut takes you through three completely different destinations — each one older, stranger, and more interesting than the last — covering about 5,000 years of Lebanese history in eight hours without making it feel like a history lesson.
Sidon: a Crusader sea castle, the world's only soap museum, a medieval souk that is still very much open for business, and a Silk Road caravanserai that once hosted European merchants. Tyre: a UNESCO World Heritage Site where the Al-Bass Archaeological Complex reveals one of the most complete Roman urban landscapes in the Mediterranean — hippodrome, colonnaded street, triumphal arch, ancient necropolis. Maghdouché: a hilltop village where the Virgin Mary is believed to have waited while Jesus preached in Sidon, revered by both Christians and Muslims, with views over the southern Lebanese coast that are worth the drive alone.
We pickup Travelers from any hotel or Airbnb in Beirut
9:00 AM — Departure from Beirut Your driver picks you up from your Beirut hotel and heads south along the Mediterranean coastal highway toward Sidon — 45 minutes and 5,000 years away.
Sidon Sea Castle — Crusader fortress on the water Start at Sidon's most iconic landmark — a 13th-century Crusader fortress built on a small island just off the coast, connected to the shore by a narrow stone causeway with the Mediterranean on both sides. Walk through vaulted halls that once housed Crusader knights, hear the story of the Mamluk siege that eventually took it down, and look out from the ramparts over a harbour that Phoenician merchants were using 3,000 years before the Crusaders arrived. One of the most dramatic castle settings in Lebanon and a genuinely great opener.
Sidon Old Souk — the real thing Spend a proper hour in one of Lebanon's most authentically preserved traditional markets — stone-vaulted alleyways where spice merchants, goldsmiths, fabric traders, and soap makers have been doing business for centuries. Unlike the renovated souks of Beirut, Sidon's old market is the real, functioning, unchanged thing — exactly the kind of place backpackers and independent travelers come to Lebanon to find and rarely get to because nobody puts it on the itinerary. Your driver knows the best lanes to take.
Soap Museum — the only one in the world Sidon has been making olive oil soap for over a thousand years and this museum — the only one of its kind anywhere in the world — tells the whole story. Housed in a beautifully restored khan in the old city, it traces the craft from olive grove to finished bar, with exhibits on the traditional pressing, cooking, and cutting methods that made Sidonian soap famous across the Mediterranean world. Weird, fascinating, and completely worth 30 minutes.
Khan el Franj — the Silk Road caravanserai A quick stop at the grand 17th-century caravanserai built by Emir Fakhreddine II for the European merchants who traded here along the Silk Road — wide arcaded courtyards, vaulted galleries, carved stone facades. One of the finest Ottoman buildings in Lebanon and a fitting final image of Sidon before heading south to Tyre.
Al-Bass Archaeological Complex — Roman Tyre Arrive in Tyre and walk into one of the most complete Roman archaeological landscapes in the Mediterranean world. The Al-Bass complex opens with a monumental triumphal arch still standing after two thousand years, leading to a colonnaded street flanked by sarcophagi from the ancient necropolis. At the far end: the Tyre Hippodrome — one of the largest ever built in the Roman world, seating 20,000 spectators for chariot races on a 480-metre track. Walk the full length of it today, past original starting gates and turning posts, and try to imagine the noise. It is one of the most immersive Roman experiences in the Middle East and most people visiting Lebanon have no idea it is here.
Lunch in Tyre — optional Fresh mezze and seafood at a local Tyre restaurant, steps from the Mediterranean with the ancient city as your backdrop. Optional — but Tyre is a great place to eat and you will be hungry by this point.
Our Lady of Mantara — the place where she waited End the day at Maghdouché — a hilltop village where Christian tradition holds that the Virgin Mary waited in a cave while Jesus preached in Sidon below. Mantara means "the one who waits" in Arabic — and the cave sanctuary here has drawn pilgrims for centuries, revered by both Christians and Muslims across Lebanon and the wider region. The Basilica of Our Lady of Mantara stands above the ancient cave, and the panoramic views from the hilltop over the southern Lebanese coast and the mountains of the interior are genuinely beautiful. A quiet, unexpected, and genuinely moving end to a day that started at a Crusader sea castle and covered five thousand years of Lebanese history along the way.
Return to Beirut — approx. 5:30–6:30 PM North along the coastal highway back to Beirut with drop-off at your hotel — completing a day through the Phoenician, Crusader, Roman, and sacred south of Lebanon that most visitors never get to see.
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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