It has always been a dream to return here,” said Abu Hamza, one of the few visitors to Palmyra since last month’s downfall of ...
Khaldoun Al Raba, 32, has fond memories of his days guiding tourists around the ancient ruins of Palmyra, deep in the Syrian ...
Replicas of an arch in the 2,000-year-old Temple of Bel, among the last remaining parts of an ancient Palmyra, Syria, structure demolished by the Islamic State [Daesh], will be erected in London ...
The histories of the Temple of Bel, the shrine of Mar Elian and the ancient statue the Lion of al-Lat, all destroyed by so called Islamic state in and around Palmyra. Show more In May 2015 ...
Islamic State militants in Syria have severely damaged a 2,000-year-old temple considered one of the greatest sites of the ancient world. Photo: UNESCO.
IS militants say they have blown up a historical temple in Syria's ancient Roman city of Palmyra A file image shows the Baal Shamin temple in the UNESCO listed site of Palmyra in Syria (AFP ...
Bathed in the glow of the winter sun, the colonnades of ancient Palmyra are perhaps Syria’s most precious sight. Yet the days when awestruck tourists would clamber through the ruins of Queen Zenobia’s ...
The 2,000-year-old Temple of Bel in Palmyra was blown up by IS militants Credit: AFP As for the centre of Damascus and the Temple of Jupiter (a first-century Roman wonder, itself a reworking of an ...