Tunisia is often seen as a destination for many beaches where adventurers along the beach and many great sightseeing attractions can do. It is North Africa wrapped in a bite-sized parcel with a vast sub-Saharan desert submarine, a huge ancient ruin, and an exotic city, a huge open-air market. Tunisia is the Roman granary zone and the cultural wealth left by the Romans is enough for them to visit. But the history of the Arab Empire also gave the country some of the most beautiful examples of Islamic architecture in this area.
If you extend your head with the minaret of Kairouan and play Gladiator with El Djem, let's enjoy the beauty of the original sky desert toward the Sahara desert. A beach on the Mediterranean coastline surrounded by palm trees, a soft wave strikes.
The magnificent Roman amphitheater El Djem Walls color modern town surroundings. This well preserved Roman ruins is one of the main tourist attractions in Tunisia and is one of the world's best amphitheater buildings reminiscent of the former North African place that Roman occupied once It is one. You can still walk in the corridor under the arena just like a gladiator. Alternatively, please go up to the top seat layer, sit on the stage and imagine the fighting done below.
Tourist attractions in Tunisia include Tunisia, international cities, ancient ruins of Carthage, Muslims and Elba in the Jewish quarter, and coastal resorts on the outskirts of Monastir. According to the New York Times, Tunisia is famous for its golden beaches, sunny days, and affordable luxury. Tunisia plans to construct two nuclear power plants by 2019. Two nuclear power plants are expected to produce 900-1000 megawatts. France will be an important partner in Tunisia's nuclear power plans and will make an agreement with other partners to provide training and technology. As of 2015, Tunisia abandoned these plans. Instead, Tunisia is considering other options to diversify the energy mix, such as renewable energy, coal, shale gas, liquefied natural gas, establishing submarine power interconnection with Italy.
Tunisia is often seen as a destination for many beaches where adventurers along the beach and many great sightseeing attractions can do. It is North Africa wrapped in a bite-sized parcel with a vast sub-Saharan desert submarine, a huge ancient ruin, and an exotic city, a huge open-air market. Tunisia is the Roman granary zone and the cultural wealth left by the Romans is enough for them to visit. But the history of the Arab Empire also gave the country some of the most beautiful examples of Islamic architecture in this area.
Sales staff in the outdoor market in Tunisia received a generous gift. Most of them are multilingual and try to lock potential customers by guessing his or her nationality. The official language of Tunisia is Arabic, but I have heard English, German, Russian, Czech, and several other languages I do not know. But usually it is French, Tunisia is the former colony of the Republic, the relationship is still close. Therefore, Tunisia is an attractive and very popular tourist destination due to the hot and dry climate and the one mile of Mediterranean sand estate. And as other Tunisian salesmen scream, "Viens! C'est pas cher!"