Overview
For people only having a limited time in Eritrea there are several options. We have put together a few packages in which we try to focus on the most essential destinations and activities such as this 5 day itinerary focusing on Asmara, Massawa and Adulis.
First timers always start their trip in Asmara and are blown away by the peaceful, friendly atmosphere, the clean streets, perfectly conserved buildings, amazing Italian architecture, the great food and the best coffee there is. Coming to Africa’s ‘Little Rome’ as it was called by the Italian occupiers back in the day, will make you feel like you’re on a film set. Don’t forget to bring your camera, because you’re going to have tons of photo opportunities!
The main attraction in Asmara is of course the World Heritage listed colonial Italian architecture which can be found all over the city. When the Italians were still around, they got obsessed with constructing buildings and building a little Italy in Africa. The city was well-planned and has palm-lined streets and beautiful examples of modernist, fascist and art deco architecture. The center is full of cafés, bars, shops and old cinemas with plenty of photographic opportunities.
Included/Exclude
- Accommodation for five nights
- Transport to all sites: public, taxi or private car
- Professional local guide: English or Italian
- All activities as described and entrance fees
- Meals and drinks
Tour Plan
On your first day you’ll be awaited at the airport and brought to your hotel. We’ll tell you where you can go for dinner and you can enjoy a free evening.
You will meet up with our local English/Italian speaking guide who will show you around in the city center telling you more about its history and with a strong focus on the architecture and Italian remainders. We’ll also have a stop to have a perfect macchiato and show you our favorite gelato and pizza places! Included in our day is also a visit to the national museum where we’ll inform you all about local culture, history and traditions. In the evening we’ll take you out to our wooden bowling alley to show you how we bowl the Eritrean way!
Today is all about food. Eritrea has great local cuisine with injera, a sort of flatbread made of teffe, being the staple and eaten with meat, sea food or vegan alternatives. Because of the heavy Italian presence during colonial times, we can also find excellent Italian food such as pasta, pizza, desserts and perfect macchiatos and cappuccinos everywhere in town. We hope you’re very hungry today and that you like coffee, because you’re going to eat a lot!
We will start our tour in our favorite coffee bar where we’ll have one of the best macchiatos on the planet. Think we exaggerate? Just try for yourself. We are coffee fanatics who’ve had coffee in the world’s best coffee destinations such as Ethiopia, Tanzania, Uganda, Rwanda, Italy, Colombia and more and nothing beats a nice macchiato from this place, period. After our shot of caffeine we’ll bring you somewhere to show you how injera is made. To make injera the traditional way, is quite time-consuming and labour-intense. We’ll tell you all about the process and you’ll have the chance to take some unique pictures.
After the introduction to injera, we’ll have a nice traditional coffee ceremony with incense and three coffee rounds. We’ll provide a few snacks which are traditionally eaten during the ceremony such as popcorn and local peanuts. Afterwards we’ll head out for a traditional lunch/dinner (depending on the time our tour begins) where you’ll be able to try a whole variety of local specialities. After an excellent meal, we’ll go to visit the tank graveyard where we can find tanks, army vehicles and machinery which were dumped after the independence-war. We’ll also go to the highest point of the city so you can have the perfect view of Asmara and take the perfect pictures.
Today we’ll head out to Massawa, a port city on the Red Sea, with about 38,000 inhabitants and used to be the country’s capital until 1897. It once was one of the most important ports around the Red Sea. The city is located about 2 meters above sea level on two islands (Massawa and Taulud) off the coast and on the mainland. The historic center of Massawa is located on the outermost of these two islands. Massawa is one of the hottest cities on the planet, so it’s important to plan your visit well and avoid the hottest period. It’s best to book between November and April.
Because of the different colonisers the city has known, we find Portuguese, Arab, British, Italian and Turkish remnants in the City of Islands. The city used to be a cultural hub which drew artists and intellectuals and was once the most important city under the Italian rulers who connected Massawa to Asmara by railroad. We still find a lot of Ottoman influences in the city, especially on the architecture as well as several buildings and structures which were developed by their successors, the Egyptians and finally a lot of beautiful Italian houses.
Today we’ll head out early in the morning to discover the sites of Adulis, the ancient port of Zula and the village of Foro.
Adulis is a historic town and archaeological site in the Semenawi Keyih Bahri region of Eritrea, approximately 45 km south of Massawa. It was a port city of the Kingdom of Aksum on the coast of the Red Sea. Adulis was on the trade routes with Greece and the Byzantine Empire. In ancient Egypt, Adulis was probably a place in the mythical Land of Punt. The Periplus of the Erythrean Sea mentions Adulis, and describes the place as a trading place for, among other things, ivory and slaves. In the 2nd and 3rd century AD. the city was frequented by Roman traders.
A work from the 4th century mentions a journey of an Egyptian jurist to India. He is said to have been accompanied on part of his journey by one Moses, Bishop of Adulis. The Byzantine Kosmas Indikopleustes mentioned two inscriptions he had found in Adulis in the 6th century. One inscription told of the war elephants that Ptolemy III Euergetes I had taken from this region. The other inscription – called Monumentum Adulitanum – told of the victories that a king of Aksum, possibly Sembrouthes, had won in Arabia and northern Ethiopia.
Thanks to Adulis, Aksum had control of the Red Sea. The port was built around 525 AD. was used as a base to invade the kingdom of Himyar. In the end, little more was heard of Adulis. Attacks from Aksum on the Arabian coast would continue until 702. Adulis is said to have been occupied by muslims, who thereby put an end to Aksum’s access to the sea. This would isolate Aksum from the Byzantine Empire and other allies. The city is also occasionally mentioned by muslim writers. In any case, it seems that Adulis fell into disrepair from the 7th century onwards.
Adulis was one of the first sites in ancient Aksum to be excavated. A French team conducted an initial survey in 1840, and in 1868 staff of British officer Robert Napier excavated several buildings, including the foundations of a possibly Byzantine church. The first scientific excavations took place in 1906 by a German expedition led by R. Sundström. He uncovered a large building in the north of Adulis that he labeled a palace. Aksum coins were also found. The research results were published in 1913.
The Italian Roberto Paribeni discovered a few other buildings in 1907, including houses. Pots were also found, such as imported amphorae from Aqaba.It then took about 50 years before the next series of excavations took place. In 1961 and 1962, Ethiopia sent an expedition led by Francis Anfray to Adulis. In addition to material indicating a strong link between Adulis and Aksum, a layer indicating a destruction of the city was also found.In the deepest layers, glass artifacts that closely resemble specimens from Egypt’s 18th dynasty have been found. A bottle has also been found that must have come from Abu Mena and must have been taken to Adulis by a pilgrim. Eritrea gained independence from Ethiopia in 1991. Efforts have been made from Eritrea to recover the archaeological finds residing in Ethiopia.
After our tour in Adulis, we’ll head to Zula, a small town on the Red Sea coast and four kilometer away from Adulis. Zula is a port where the Aligede River and the Red Sea connect and close to mangroves. An international team of researchers discovered a paleolithic site with stone and obsidian tools of over 125.000 years old near the Bay of Zula.
Our tour starts early in the morning coming from Massawa. We ask you to bring a packed lunch and enough water. Please bring sunscreen, sunglasses and a hat to protect yourself against the sun.
After breakfast we’ll bring you back to Asmara. End of tour.
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