20.04.13
Libya is a vast country that contains hundreds of major sites, representing various periods of history. Its landscape is also variable and this makes it highly attractive to those looking for adventure. Besides its long and mostly unpopulated coastline, it has numerous mountains, wadis, gravel plains, volcanic fields and, of course, great sand seas.
On the coast lie some of the biggest and most famous Graeco-Roman remains in the world, notably those in the Pentapolis (the five cities of Cyrene, Taucheira, Euesperides, Ptolemais and Barce) in the eastern part of Libya and the “Tripolis” (the three cities of Leptis Magna, Oea and Sabratha) in the northwest. Many more monuments and classical archaeological remains lie scattered in wadis and plains both in the northeast and the northwest, for example the numerous remains at Girza and Wadi Suf Ajjin.
Islamic remains are also found in parts of Libya – in the north and east as well as in the oases of the south. There are numerous scattered remains in Jebel Nafusa, the desert oases such as Ghadames, Ghat, Zuilah, Awjilah and Murzuk plus others around the main cities of Tripoli, Benghazi and Sebha.
Most of these historic sites suffer from a lack of proper maintenance, a lack of reliable security and a lack of appropriate programmes to raise public awareness as to their existence and to emphasize their importance as key parts of Libya’s cultural heritage. Since they are monumental and mostly lie within populated areas, their deterioration is gradual, except where they were demolished through political or administrative decisions as was the case with the historic towns of Soknah, Murzuk and others which were rebuilt as low-income flats and houses.
But beyond that, probably the most fragile and vulnerable to damage, theft and natural deterioration are those valuable prehistoric remains in the south, south-east and central Libya, and the terrain on which they are located. These include wadis, escarpments and caves that contain thousands of examples of rock art of various types – paintings such as those in Akakus, Awaynat and Wadi Aramat and engravings like those in Messak Sattefet, Wadi Ash-Shati, Al-Hamadah, Al-Haruj Al-Aswad and several other areas in central and southern Libya. Besides these sites, some of which are recognized by UNESCO as World Heritage Sites, there are thousands of scattered remains all over Libya – prehistoric tools, pottery, fire hearts, trapping stones, burial sites and other artifacts. These archaeological remains are even more vulnerable to damage, displacement and loss by being moved or collected by visitors. In most cases these untended artefacts are protected by either being hidden under the sand or being in inaccessible parts of the desert, in sand dunes, remote wadis and difficult terrain.