Three remarkable things built in the Chouf Mountains — by an emperor, by a dreamer, and by a dynasty. This private full-day tour from Beirut tells all three stories, and the most unforgettable of them is not the one you expect.
Beiteddine Palace was built by Emir Bashir II — one of the most powerful rulers in Lebanese history — over three decades of meticulous craftsmanship, its grand courtyards and Byzantine mosaic museum standing as a monument to imperial ambition. Moussa Castle was built by one man alone — a Lebanese schoolboy who was mocked by his teacher and spent the next sixty years proving him wrong, quarrying stone and constructing a full medieval castle by hand, filling it with hundreds of life-size wax figures that tell Lebanon's story in the most personal way imaginable. And Deir el Qamar — Lebanon's first capital — is a honey-stone village where a mosque, a church, and centuries of quiet coexistence share the same cobblestone square.
we pick up travelers from Hotel, Airbnb or Residence in Beirut
9:00 AM — Departure from Beirut Your professional guide and driver collect you from your Beirut hotel and head southeast into the Chouf Mountains — pine-forested ridges climbing above the coastal plain as you wind upward toward Beiteddine, arriving before the crowds.
Walk through the most magnificent palace in the Chouf Mountains — built by Emir Bashir II between 1788 and 1840 as both a seat of power and a statement of Lebanese cultural ambition. Three grand interconnected courtyards unfold before you, decorated with hand-cut geometric tilework, carved cedar-wood ceilings, and painted reception halls that once hosted Ottoman officials, European diplomats, and the emirs of Lebanon's mountain communities. Beneath the palace, an underground museum preserves Lebanon's finest collection of Byzantine mosaics — floor panels of extraordinary beauty and detail recovered from across the country. The palace today serves as the summer residence of the Lebanese President. Your guide brings Emir Bashir's complex and fascinating story fully to life — his alliances, his exiles, and the legacy he left carved in stone on this Chouf mountainside.
Just minutes from Beiteddine stands the most extraordinary and most human attraction in all of Lebanon — a full-scale medieval castle built entirely by one man over sixty years. The story begins in the 1940s when a young Lebanese schoolboy named Moussa Maamari wrote a love letter to a girl in his class. His teacher read it aloud and mocked him — telling the class that a boy like Moussa would never amount to anything, let alone live in a castle. Moussa spent the next six decades proving him wrong — quarrying stone, mixing mortar, and building his castle by hand while filling it with hundreds of life-size wax figures depicting Lebanese history, Druze traditions, and Ottoman-era battles. The result is unlike anything else in Lebanon — part medieval fortress, part living museum, part testament to what one determined human being can build. Your guide tells the full story in a way that stays with every visitor long after they leave.
A short drive brings you to Deir el Qamar — meaning "Monastery of the Moon" — one of the most enchanting and best-preserved villages in Lebanon, the country's first capital under the Ma'an dynasty in the 16th and 17th centuries. The central square is framed by honey-stone mansions, a grand Druze palace, and public buildings that speak to the village's former political importance. After the imperial grandeur of Beiteddine and the personal drama of Moussa Castle, Deir el Qamar offers something quieter and equally moving — a village that has simply endured, its mosque and church standing together in the same square for centuries, its stone streets unchanged.
Visit the 17th-century mosque built by Fakhreddine II — the visionary Druze emir considered one of the founding fathers of modern Lebanon — before climbing to the hilltop Maronite church with sweeping views over the Chouf valleys below. Two places of worship, metres apart, telling the story of Lebanese coexistence in stone and silence.
Lunch in Deir el Qamar — optional Settle into one of Deir el Qamar's traditional mountain restaurants for a long, unhurried Lebanese lunch — stone-vaulted dining rooms and shaded terraces serving generous mezze spreads, grilled meats, and fresh mountain bread with Chouf valley views. After a day this rich in story, the meal feels like a natural conclusion.
Return to Beirut — approx. 5:30–6:00 PM Your guide and driver bring you back to Beirut along the mountain road with drop-off at your hotel — completing a day of three very different stories, all told in stone, in the Chouf Mountains of Lebanon.
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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