Islamic Hotels and Travel Guide
Islamic Hotels and Travel Guide
February 18, 2010 at 11:12 pm · Filed under Dubai Travel Guide, Hotels in Mu?la, Islamic Hotels in Turkey, Norway Travel Guide
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Alternative holiday this year, new entrants to the sector has been serving Elizan Hotels in Fethiye. In fact, Elizan Hotel, Hotel Olive Garden began its activities last year, the new name. I guess the change of name was also changed according to the operator.
Elizan Hotel ‘in the slogan “Prices alternative”. Summer term in April, the prices will be at reasonable prices from the hotel at the moment rezerzayon can do.
The meaning of the new name of the hotel really nice, “Athan sound in the sky.” Read the rest of this entry »
February 7, 2010 at 10:38 pm · Filed under Turkey Travel Guide
Holiday and tourism industry serving in alternative institutions, between 4-7 February 2010 to meet in Istanbul. Alternatively, the tourism industry on behalf of the first in this organization has 2 basic purposes. First Umrah Organizations, second, the promotion of alternative Islamic holiday hotel.
Visiting the Holy Umrah
Realization is a first …
Born in a place …
Eyüp Sultan Mosque right at the … Read the rest of this entry »
January 26, 2010 at 11:15 pm · Filed under Hotels in Bal?kesir, Islamic Hotels in Turkey
Alternative holidays for hotels tuna Liva Hotel, with its unique coastline, unique corner of the Marmara sea, natural beauty and green circles in the middle of paradise on earth with a claim to be a venue for an unforgettable vacation.
2 hours away from Istanbul in the Quarry in the village of Balikesir in Erdek district is serving. An alternative more in terms of Alternative Hotel Balikesir city. Read the rest of this entry »
December 6, 2009 at 1:42 am · Filed under Turkey Travel Guide
On the eve of World War II Frenchman Francois Balsan, in his own words a “buyer of wool for a very important textile firm,” set out from ?stanbul for the eastern provinces of Turkey.
Balsan was very fortunate to receive permission from the Turkish Government to visit the eastern borderlands of Turkey in that period, as he had been told in an initial enquiry to the Turkish Consulate in Paris that “regarding the visit … to the Van district, I hasten to inform you that … the districts detailed in your letter are incorporated in a prohibited area.” Republican Turkey was naturally suspicious of representatives of imperialist France who, following the defeat of the Ottoman Turks in World War I, had sought to incorporate parts of southeastern Anatolia into their overseas possessions. What’s more, the eastern provinces had been rocked by a series of rebellions by the region’s dominant ethnic group, the Kurds. The last and most serious, in the mountainous Alevi Kurdish district of Dersim (modern Tunceli), had only just been quelled. Read the rest of this entry »
September 8, 2009 at 9:02 am · Filed under China Travel Guide
SHANGHAI–We first land in Beijing, the capital of China, before flying to Shanghai aboard a two-hour flight from the capital. As soon as we set foot in this city, we immediately realize that we are in a world city.
This city is a clear indicator of China’s development. Giant skyscrapers are ordinary in Shanghai. In a district that is so large it could engulf several Manhattans, giant buildings have been built and are still being constructed. Trade and commerce have resulted in incredible wealth for this city. As you wander the streets of Shanghai, you frequently come across luxury houses and cars. There are giant housing complexes, each of which is more populated than some cities around the world. For instance, one building complex comprises some 250 buildings, each of them with some 30 floors. They say that about 40,000 people live in this complex. There are even larger complexes housing about 100,000 people each. Given their immense population, the Chinese naturally have to tinker with the idea of building complexes of buildings. Read the rest of this entry »
July 13, 2009 at 10:21 pm · Filed under Turkey Travel Guide
Topkap? Saray? and Dolmabahçe Saray? may be the best known of ?stanbul’s imperial palaces, but they’re also the ones where you can expect the longest queues and steepest admission charges.
Fortunately, the 19th-century Ottoman sultans also adorned the city with a number of secondary palaces and hunting lodges, including the beautiful Beylerbeyi Saray? and the Küçüksu Kasr? on the Asian side of the Bosporus. Most of their hideaways were, however, on the European side, where the most important was Y?ld?z Saray? (palace), a surprisingly little-visited complex just inland from the Ç?ra?an Palace Kempinski Hotel in Be?ikta?. Read the rest of this entry »
July 12, 2009 at 12:16 am · Filed under Turkey Travel Guide
Turkey is a country where people who want to spend their vacation can find different facilities and attractions. There are many holiday options in Turkey, which has hosted many civilizations throughout centuries. Mediterranean Region, on the south of Turkey, is the locomotive of sea, sand and sun tourism.
Turkey is a country where people who want to spend their vacation can find different facilities and attractions. There are many holiday options in Turkey, which has hosted many civilizations throughout centuries. Mediterranean Region, on the south of Turkey, is the locomotive of sea, sand and sun tourism. Read the rest of this entry »
May 28, 2009 at 10:52 pm · Filed under Turkey Travel Guide
“Summer had cooked the sea into a warm blue soup. The hot beach pebbles scorched the soles of my feet, and the withered pines along the sand dunes were rustling with a maddening uproar of cicada.
I looked up to where a patch of snow was twinkling on a Taurus peak and decided I could stand the sea no longer. Up in the mountains … were brisk air and cold nights, grass and snow-fed runnels, and the thrill of journeying from one high saddle to the other.” Read the rest of this entry »
May 28, 2009 at 10:49 pm · Filed under Turkey Travel Guide
As we enjoy the last few days of spring, the days where one can enjoy nature along with mild weather are numbered.
It’s never very difficult to find spots throughout Turkey where you feet can really get re-acquainted with the earth and where your lungs can load up on oxygen. Everyday, interest in the environment and sensitivity about how we should treat the land increases here. Some of the most important signs of this are the projects that are aimed at protecting the environment. About a year ago, the Ministry of Environment and Forestry started up the “One Nature Park for Every Province” project, and now this particular project is beginning to show its first fruits. Almost 10 different forests and state-held lands have been declared nature parks. One of the last plots of forested land to fall into the official nature park category was the Kap?cam Nature Park, which opened at the end of last year in Kahramanmara?. But what conditions does a “nature park” need to meet in Turkey in order to be able to earn that title? Professor Dr. Mustafa Kemal Yal?nk?l?ç, general manager of the nature protection and national parks department of the Ministry of Environment and Forestry notes the importance of the blend of water, plants and animals that constitute these geographies. Read the rest of this entry »
May 16, 2009 at 3:19 pm · Filed under Turkey Travel Guide
People who board ferries to travel from ?stanbul to Bursa run into an old ?stanbul veteran on the Güzelyal? shores — the veteran Turan Emeksiz ferryboat.
Looking at the smoke rising from its chimney stacks, this ferryboat appears ready to carry people to various destinations. But in fact, this veteran ferry is anchored on the shoreline and now serves as a hotel-restaurant, the Turan Emeksiz Hotel. Read the rest of this entry »
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