Hotels in Mountains, Lebanon

NEW STEPS Travel & Tourism, Beirut, Lebanon

Licensed by the Ministry of Tourism

Phone: + 961 4 713 467
                            Phone: + 961 4 716 649                             Phone: + 961 4 716 467

E-mail: reservation@beirut-hotels-reservations.com

 

Book now, pay on check out 

For phone booking or last minute booking, please call:

00961 4 713 467 or  00961 4 716 467 or 00961 4 716 649

You can reserve rooms in any of the Hotels below,
just click on the hotel for full listings with description and pictures and then send us an e-mail with details of your booking.

DISCOUNT UP TO 70%                                                                                       النسخة العربية      version française

 

MOUNTAINS HOTELS

 

 

BRUMANA HOTELS

 

 

BHAMDOUN HOTELS

 

 

ALEY HOTELS

 

 

HAMMANA HOTELS

 

 

FAQRA HOTELS

 

 

FARAYA HOTELS

 

 

CEDARS HOTELS

 

 

BCHARRE HOTELS

 

 

CHOUF HOTELS

 

 

BZOMMAR HOTELS

 

 

BEKFAYA HOTELS

 

 

DHOUR CHOUEIR HOTELS

 

 

MOUNT LEBANON

Mount Lebanon, as a geographic designation, is the Lebanese mountain range, known as the Western Mountain Range of Lebanon. It extends across the whole country along about 160 km (99 mi), parallel to the Mediterranean coast with the highest peak, Qurnat as Sawda', at 3,088 m (10,130 ft). Lebanon has historically been defined by these mountains, which provided protection for the local population. In Lebanon the changes in scenery are not connected to geographical distances, but to altitudes. The mountains were known for their oak and pine forests. Also, in the high slopes of Mount Lebanon are the last remaining groves of the famous Cedars of Lebanon (Cedrus libani). The Phoenicians used the forests from Mount Lebanon to build their ship fleet and to trade with their Levantine neighbors. However, the Phoenicians and successor rulers replanted  Mount Lebanon is mentioned in the Old Testament several times. King Hiram I of Tyre sent engineers with Cedar wood which was abundant in Mount Lebanon, to build the Jewish Temple of Jerusalem. Since then the Cedar species known scientifically as Cedrus Libani is often associated with Mount Lebanon. The Phoenicians used cedar to build ships in which they sailed the Mediterranean, thus they were the first to establish villages in Mount Lebanon to would live from cutting down Cedars and sending them to the coast.

After the 5th century, Christian monks who were followers of a hermit named Maroun, arrived from the Orontes valley in Northern Syria and began preaching their religion to the Pagan Phoenician inhabiting the northernmost parts of the mountain range. In the late 8th century a group known as the Maradites (also Jarajima) settled in North Lebanon following the order of the Byzantine Emperor, their mission was to raid Islamic territories in Syria. They merged with the local population refusing to leave after the emperor struck a deal with the Muslim Caliph of Damascus, thus they became part of the Maronite society. And in 1291 AD after the fall of Acre, the last crusader outpost in the Levant, the remnants of the European settlers who succeeded in escaping capture by the Mamelukes settled in the Northern part of Lebanon, becoming part of the Maronite society.

 In the 9th century, tribes from the northern areas of the Arabian Peninsula, known as the Tanukhiyoun, began settling in the southern areas of the mountain range and in the 11th century these tribes became Druze and ruled the areas of Mount Lebanon stretching from Metn in the north to Jezzine in the south, this entire area became known as the ‘Jabal ad-Duruz’. In the early 1600s, Emir Fakhreddine the 2nd ascended the throne in the Druze part of the mountains known as the Chouf. In an effort to unify Mount Lebanon, Emir Fakhreddine opened the door to Christian and in particular Maronite settlement of the Chouf and Metn

Throughout the 1700s and into the 1800s more and more Maronites settled in the Druze regions of the Mount. Seeing their numbers increasing the Maronites began to demand a larger share of the authority. The Druze viewed these Maronite settlements as a threat to their existence in Mount Lebanon and in a series of clashes in the 1840s and 1860s a mini civil war erupted in the area resulting in the death of thousands of Druze and Christians. The Druze won militarily but not politically because European powers (mainly France and Britain) intervened on behalf of the Maronites and divided Mount Lebanon into two areas; Druze and Maronite. Seeing their authority decline in Mount Lebanon, few Lebanese Druzes began migrating to the new Jabal ad-Duruz in southern Syria. In 1861 the "Mount Lebanon" autonomous district was established within the Ottoman system, under an international guarantee.

AIRPORT PICK UP

We provide transportation airport-hotel-airport by private deluxe car.

 

Hotels in Beirut

Hotels in Jounieh

Hotels in Mountain

Hotels in Beqaa

Hotels in North Lebanon

Hotels in South Lebanon

Furnished Apartments in Beirut

Restaurants

Nightlife

Touristic Sites

Meet & Assist

Home