Hotels in Latakia Syria -Latakia Syria Hotels - فنادق اللاذقية في سوريا

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DISCOUNT UP TO 70%                                                                                    اللغة العربية    version Française

 

Hotels 5*

Afamia Rotana Hotel 5* Ideally located at the crossroad of the Near East, Afamia Rotana Resort is on a peninsula, 2 km from the Latakia city centre, the property has an exceptional beach front, which makes it an ideal destination for leisure and business travellers alike.The resort is within easy distance of Syria's historical sites including Ugarit Canaaite , seaport, Crusaders forts and castles and ancient Roman vestiges.....From $ per room  (more details and special rates)

 

Cote d'Azur de Cham 5* The largest area resort on the Mediterranean has 600 meters of private sandy beach; a perfect place for swimming. Indoor and outdoor restaurant, lobby bar, snack bar on the beach, BBQ evenings at the residence. Additional Features: All rooms equipped with kitchenettes. Full service supermarket, shopping gallery. Tennis courts, mini-golf, swimming pool, water sports.3,000 beds divided in 1600 rooms.10 kilometers from city center.......From 45 euros  per room.....(more details and special rates)

 

Le Meridien Lattakia 5*The celebrated Greek writer, Strabo, author of the astonishing Geographica, described Lattakia as a land of rolling hills and lush vineyards. The name of Lattakia has evolved over the centuries from the original Laodicea, mother of the Emperor Seleucus. Perched on the edge of the sun-warmed Mediterranean Sea is Le Méridien Lattakia, an architecturally unique hotel offering 258 spacious and comfortable guest rooms. ........From 120$ per room....(more details and special rates)

 

 

 

 

Hotels 4*

 

Mountain Breeze Resort Hotel 4*..............(more details and special rates)

 

Riviera Hotel 4* Central cooling and heating, T.V that receives satellite stations, mini bar. The Nights Restaurant (an Oriental restaurant), Night Club, Guitar Bar, Wedding Hall, A meeting and symposium Hall equipped with the most modern acoustic sets, 24-hour service, Businessmen services. ........From 105$ per room....(more details and special rates)

 

Al Samman Hotel 4* Al Samman Hotel is located at the heart of Lattakia’s commercial & corporate center, it is very close to major touristic and commercial attractions. Visitors can select between one of the 126 rooms. A variety of luxurious suits, with different areas & layouts to match all visitor’s needs & tastes, non - smoking rooms are available...........From 85$ per room........(more details and special rates)

 

 

LaLiche Hotel 4* The hotel is located at a distance of 3 kilometers from the center of the city. The short distance is of great benefit to the business travelers. Lodging here the guests also close to thoroughly understand the tradition and culture of the city. It allows easy access to the different tourist attractions. The hotel is at a distance of 25 kilometers from the nearest airport and 2 kilometers from the nearest station. The bus stop is at a 1 minute walking distance from the bus stop while the nearest fair site is at a distance of 1 kilometer from the hotel.........From 90$ per room.......(more details and special rates)
 
Anmar Hotel 4*..............(more details and special rates)

 

Namar Hotel 4* This four star hotel is an excellent accommodation to stay in a enjoy kessab from its room's balcony; it is a thrifty but elegant hotel. Rooms here are luxurious and the hotel has great affiliated restaurants and amenities. The cuisines here are another attraction for its ‘tasteful' guests.From $ per room  (more details and special rates)

 

 

Hotels 3*

 

Cazino Hotel 3* The Syndicate Hotel (formerly Al Cazino in Latakia in Syria is located in the central part of the city. Guests can easily arrive at the hotel from the harbor. The harbor receives many passengers' ships from important cities of the world and is within easy distance from the hotel. ......From 70$ per room......(more details and special rates)

Palace Hotel 3* Shahin Tower Hotel: Consists of 21 floors, Just in front of the sea Side, With 156 Rooms and suites. Rooms have balcony with beautiful view of the sea and Arwad island......From 80$ per room.....(more details and special rates)

 

Gondola Hotel 3*.............(more details and special rates)  
 

Hotels 2*

 

Salladin Castle Hotel 2* Salah Eddin castle history goes to 1300 BC; the Phoenician period. Byzantines occupied the castle in 975 and built defense locations. Crusaders occupied the castle in 1100 and built defense towers. Salah Eddin Al Ayoubi in 1188 and built a mosque, bathroom and a school........From 55$ per room........ (more details and special rates)

 

 
 

Suites in Lattakia Syria

 

Al Sakhra Residence Apartment.............(more details and special rates)

 

 

 

 

 

 

Two thousand years ago, Laodicea was described by Strabo (xvi.2.9 et seq.) as admirably built, with an excellent harbor, surrounded by a rich country specially fruitful in vines, the wine of which furnished its chief supply to Alexandria. The vineyards were planted on the sides of gently-sloping hills, which were cultivated almost to their summits, and extended far to the east, nearly to Apamea.

History
Temple of Bacchus in Latakia.The site, on the peninsula, has been occupied for a long time. The Phoenicians had a city here named Ramitha, and to the Greeks it was known as Leukê Aktê 'white coast'. It was re-founded and named Laodicea by Seleucus I Nicator, after his mother. It was one of the four cities of the Syrian tetrapolis. It was furnished with an aqueduct by Herod the Great (Joseph. Bel. Jud. i. 21. § 11), a large fragment of which is still to be seen. Strabo mentions that Dolabella, when he fled to Laodicea before Cassius, distressed it greatly, and that, being besieged there until his death, he destroyed many parts of the city with him (43 CE). (Dict. of Biog. Vol. I. p. 1059.)

An arch from the time of Septimius Severus has survived. There seems to have been a sizable Jewish population at Laodicea in the first century (Joseph. Ant. xiv. 10 § 20). The heretic Apollinarius was bishop of Laodicea in the 4th century. The city minted coins from an early date.

It was devastated by earthquakes in 494 and 555, and captured by the Arabs of the Muslim caliphate in 638. It was taken by the Byzantine Empire in 969 and then by the Seljuks in 1084. In 1097, it was captured by Crusaders and made part of the Principality of Antioch. The Byzantines held it again from 1098 and 1100 and then Saladin took it in 1188. It was captured by the Crusader County of Tripoli in 1260 and by Qalawun in 1287. From the 16th century to World War I, it was part of the Ottoman Empire.

A group of resting Alawite musicians from Latakia, 1920's.In the Ottoman period, the region of Latakia became predominantly Alawi. The city itself, however, contained significant numbers of Sunni and Christian inhabitants. The landlords in the countryside tended to be Sunni while the peasants were mostly Alawi. Like the Druzes who also had a special status before the end of WWI, the Alawis had a strained relationship with the Ottoman overlords. In fact, they were not even given the status of millet, although they enjoyed relative autonomy (Rabinovich, 694).

After the government of King Faisal was removed from power, the French governed the region of Latakia as a separate entity and granted it autonomy as the Alawite State (État des Alaouites).

French colonial flag of the Sanjak of Latakia.Between September 22, 1930 and 1936, Latakia was the capital of the Sanjak of Latakia, a nominally autonomous state ruled by France under a League of Nations mandate, the French Mandate of Syria. The state extended along the coast and into the mountains inland. As it did for Alaouites earlier, between 1931 and 1933 France overprinted postage stamps of Syria with "LATTAQUIE", and the Arabic version of the name underneath.

The Franco-Syrian treaty of 1936 called for the incorporation of the Alawi and Druze states into Syria. Although the French Parlement never ratified the treaty, it was implemented until 1939 when the French High-Commissioner suspended the treaty and reinstated the autonomy of the Alawi and Druze regions. After the 1943 elections, the two areas were integrated into the state of Syria.

In 1973 during the Yom Kippur War, the naval Battle of Latakia between Israel and Syria, just offshore, was the first to be fought using missiles and ECM (electronic countermeasures).

Economy
Latakia is now the principal port of Syria; it is located on a good harbor, with an extensive agricultural hinterland. Exports include bitumen and asphalt, cereals, cotton, fruits, eggs, vegetable oil, pottery, and tobacco. Cotton ginning, vegetable-oil processing, tanning, and sponge fishing are local industries. The University of Latakia was founded in 1971 and renamed Tishreen University (University of October) in 1976, to commemorate their victory in the October War of 1973. The city is linked by road to Aleppo, Homs, Tripoli, and Beirut. All but a few classical buildings have been destroyed, often by earthquakes; those remaining include a Roman triumphal arch and Corinthian columns known as the colonnade of Bacchus.

Main sights

Latakia Tetraporticus, built by Septimius Severus in 183.
Burjeslam, a well known beach just north of Latakia. Named after a village nearby.
Latakia Sports CityThe modern city still exhibits faint traces of its former importance, notwithstanding the frequent earthquakes with which it has been visited. The marina is built upon foundations of ancient columns, and there are in the town, an old gateway and other antiquities, as also sarcophagi and sepulchral caves in the neighborhood. This gateway is a remarkable triumphal arch, at the southeast corner of the town, almost entire: it is built with four entrances, like the Forum Jani at Rome. It is conjectured that this arch was built in honour of Lucius Verus, or of Septimius Severus. (Description of the East, vol. ii. p. 197.) Fragments of Greek and Latin inscriptions, are dispersed all over the ruins, but entirely defaced.

Notable points of interest in the nearby include the massive Saladin's Castle and the ruins of Ugarit, where some of the earliest alphabetic writings have been found. There are also several popular beaches.

 

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