Discover the best top things to do in Sousse Governorate, Tunisia including Engaging Cultures Travel Tunisia - Day Tours, Museum Dar Essid, Sousse Archaeological Museum, Hammam Anti Stress, Magiceye 3D Experince, Ribat, Kasbah of Sousse, Grosse Moschee von Sousse, Soula Center, Aqua Palace.
Restaurants in Sousse Governorate
5.0 based on 40 reviews
Several cultural engaging day tours & trips allowing you to explore a traditional Berber village built on a hilltop and eat lunch with a Berber family, discover Tunisia's most recent Roman excavation, visit Sousse's local food market experiencing everyday shopping in the old city, preparing a Tunisian meal in a local home, and day excursions in the Sahara!
4.5 based on 532 reviews
The archaeological museum of Sousse is a must. The building itself is very interesting. The museum is compact and well designed with beautiful mosaics and relics.
4.5 based on 293 reviews
Hammam Anti-Stress is a traditional tunisian hammam with a cosy, clean and original atmosphere. We offer traditional steambath with body-peeling and relaxing wellness treatments for the whole body.
So glad we decided to go get a Hammam. The 4 of us opted for the Gold package which includes 60 min massage. We were 2 couples, so it was nice to have our treatments with each other (no mixing of boys & girls). The whole experience was relaxing and we were made to feel very at home with nothing to worry about. For us girls we had massage & facial first then steam room, followed by scrub, followed by seaweed mud / clay, followed by a wash. The boys had it the opposite way round. Start to finish just over 2 hours. Cost 120 Tunisia which is about £33.00 excellence value.
4.5 based on 82 reviews
Magic eye 3D MUSEUM refers to a traditional technic art of optical illusion ,which turns two-dimensional paintings into three-dimensional images through the use of optical illusions. Paintings on the walls, and ground bring you into the setting of a scene and you become part of the artwork Immerse yourself in different settings at 6 themed zones . All visitors are encouraged to step inside the
Great afternoon with my 12 year old nephew staff were excellent and run you through everything you need to know and the easiest way to use the downloaded app you use.the way these paintings come to life is amazing
4.0 based on 370 reviews
worth a visit 2 dinar to see the local costumes but do not visit if you cannot climb steps I mansged it but it was hard gioing
4.0 based on 351 reviews
Good trip very peaceful and calm Had a look around and prayed , lovely people looking after it . If you are not Muslim you are still welcome to visit at 10 mainly because you get to have an interpreter and good look around and explain the history behind it Ez-Zituna was the second mosque to be built in Ifriqiya and the Maghreb region after the Mosque of Uqba in Kairouan.The exact date of building varies according to source. Ibn Khaldun and El-Bakri wrote that it was built in 116 Hijri (731 C.E.) by Ubayd Allah ibn al-Habhab.A second source states that the Umayyad Hisham ibn Abd al-Malik ordered the building;[5] however, Ahmed In Abu Diyaf and Ibn Abi Dinar attributed the order to Hasan ibn al-Nu'man who led the conquest of Tunis and Carthage.Most scholars agreed that the third possibility is the strongest by evidence as it is unlikely that the city of Tunis remained a long time without a mosque, after its conquest in 79 Hijri.Thus the closest date is 84 Hijri (703 CE), and what El-Habhab did was in fact enlarge the mosque and improve its architecture. It was used as a place of prayer by the Muslim conqueror Hasan ibn al-Nu'man. For almost two centuries (1812 - 2011), the majority of the Grand Imams of the Zitouna mosque were part of the Cherif and Mohsen families, notably including AbdelKebir Cherif, Ahmed Cherif, Mohamed Cherif, Hamda Cherif, Hassan Cherif, Mahmoud Mohsen, Mohamed Mohsen, and Mostafa Mohsen. The Cherif and Mohsen families are part of the aristocracy "Tunisoise" of Tunis Carthage; are descendants of the Islamic prophet, Mohamed; and are a dynasty of religious scholars, sheikhs, imams, and landowners.[1] These families were founded by an ancestor who arrived in Tunis by the XIV-e century. The descendants of Sheikh Mohsen Cherif changed the line from Cherif to Mohsen, creating the Mohsen branch out of the Cherif line.
4.0 based on 335 reviews
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