Éléments | Private Baalbek Temples Day Trip from Beirut | Roman Ruins
Private Baalbek Temples Day Trip from Beirut | Roman Ruins
(1) Avis
Beirut
Informations importantes
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Des sièges pour bébé spécialisés sont disponibles
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Adapté à tous les niveaux de condition physique
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Some places deserve a whole day to themselves. Baalbek is one of them. This focused private day trip from Beirut takes you straight to the greatest Roman temple complex ever built — no extra stops, no filler, just Baalbek done properly — and gets you back to Beirut in six hours. The Temple of Bacchus alone is larger than the Parthenon and almost entirely intact after two thousand years. The Temple of Jupiter stands on stones heavier than anything a modern crane can lift. Before you even reach the temples, the Stone of the Pregnant Woman — a single limestone block weighing 1,000 tonnes still lying in its ancient quarry — sets the scale of what you are about to see. This is one of those places...
Points forts
6 heures
Proposé en Arabe (العربية) & Anglais
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
6 heures
Proposé en Arabe (العربية) & Anglais
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
Ce qui est inclus
Chauffeur anglophone compétent
Stone of the Pregnant Woman quarry stop
Prise en charge et retour à l'hôtel
Hotel pickup and drop-off in Beirut
Véhicule privé climatisé
Full exploration of Baalbek — Jupiter, Bacchus & Venus temples
Lunch in Baalbek (optional — at own expense)
Pourboires (facultatifs)
Private Baalbek Temples Day Trip from Beirut | Roman Ruins
(1) Avis
Beirut
À propos
Some places deserve a whole day to themselves. Baalbek is one of them. This focused private day trip from Beirut takes you straight to the greatest Roman temple complex ever built — no extra stops, no filler, just Baalbek done properly — and gets you back to Beirut in six hours. The Temple of Bacchus alone is larger than the Parthenon and almost entirely intact after two thousand years. The Temple of Jupiter stands on stones heavier than anything a modern crane can lift. Before you even reach the temples, the Stone of the Pregnant Woman — a single limestone block weighing 1,000 tonnes still lying in its ancient quarry — sets the scale of what you are about to see. This is one of those places...
Points forts
6 heures
Proposé en Arabe (العربية) & Anglais
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
6 heures
Proposé en Arabe (العربية) & Anglais
Annulation gratuite
Billet mobile
Ce qui est inclus
Chauffeur anglophone compétent
Stone of the Pregnant Woman quarry stop
Prise en charge et retour à l'hôtel
Hotel pickup and drop-off in Beirut
Véhicule privé climatisé
Full exploration of Baalbek — Jupiter, Bacchus & Venus temples
9:00 AM — Departure from Beirut
Your driver picks you up from your Beirut hotel and heads east on the Damascus highway — climbing through the Lebanese mountains as the Bekaa Valley opens dramatically below on the other side. Baalbek is 90 minutes away and the anticipation builds the whole drive.
0 minute
2
Pierre de la femme enceinte
Stone of the Pregnant Woman — warm up act that stops people cold
Before the temples, stop at the ancient Roman quarry where the Stone of the Pregnant Woman — a single limestone block 21 metres long and weighing an estimated 1,000 tonnes — still lies exactly where it was cut 2,000 years ago. It was never moved. It was never finished. It has just been sitting here ever since. Standing next to it is one of those moments where the scale of Roman engineering becomes genuinely hard to process. And this is just the quarry. The good stuff is five minutes away.
20 minutes
3
Temple of Jupiter
Temple of Jupiter — the biggest Roman temple ever built
Enter the greatest Roman temple complex on earth. The Temple of Jupiter stands on Trilithon stones each weighing over 800 tonnes — the largest dressed stones ever used in construction in human history. Six of its original 54 columns still stand at 22 metres tall, each one so wide a person cannot reach around it. The scale is genuinely hard to absorb and your driver is there to help put it in context — explaining the engineering mystery that still baffles archaeologists: how the Romans moved and raised stones of this size using only ancient technology.
30 minutes
4
Temple de Bacchus
Temple of Bacchus & Temple of Venus — bigger than the Parthenon
Walk to the Temple of Bacchus — the best-preserved Roman temple in the world, larger than the Parthenon in Athens and almost entirely intact after two thousand years. Its towering carved doorway, ornate ceiling coffers, and 42 standing columns make it breathtaking by any standard. The circular Temple of Venus completes a complex that has outlasted every civilisation that built, worshipped, conquered, and camped here across twenty centuries. Walk the full site, take your time, take your photos — and accept that no photo is going to capture this properly. That is fine. That is why you came in person.
30 minutes
5
Baalbek
Lunch in Baalbek — optional
Local Bekaa Valley mezze, grilled meats, and fresh flatbread in a town that has been feeding travellers for two thousand years. Optional — but after 90 minutes at Baalbek you will have worked up an appetite and there is no better place to eat in the Bekaa than right here.
1 heure
6
Beyrouth
Return to Beirut — approx. 3:30–5:00 PM
Back over the Lebanese mountains to Beirut with drop-off at your hotel — Baalbek done properly, afternoon still ahead, nothing left to do but figure out where to have dinner.