Nablus Road (Arabic: شارع نابلس, romanized: Shari' Nablus, Hebrew: דרך שכם, Derekh Shekhem, "Shechem Road") is one of the traditional routes radiating from Jerusalem's walled city. Starting at the Damascus Gate, it is the ancient road north.
Places of interest
edit- American Colony Hotel
- Armenian Ceramics of Jerusalem-The Balian pottery and ceramic tiles shop
- British Council – Jerusalem office
- Garden Tomb - Christian Protestant site
- Jerusalem Prayer Center (formerly, the Jerusalem House)[1]
- National Headquarters of the Israel Police
- Quartet on the Middle East, Office of the Quartet Representative, 54 Nablus Road
- Sa'ad and Sa'eed Mosque
- Sheikh Jarrah neighbourhood
- Shimon HaTzadik neighbourhood
- St. John's Eye Hospital
- St. George's Cathedral, seat of the Anglican (Episcopal) Bishop of Jerusalem
- St. George's College, Anglican education centre
- St. George's School, British Anglican boys' school in East Jerusalem
- St. Stephen's Basilica (Saint-Étienne) at the Dominican St. Stephen's Priory
- École Biblique, French biblical and archaeological research centre at St. Stephen's Priory
- Tombs of the Kings archaeological site
See also
edit- Highway 60 (Israel–Palestine), modern Israeli intercity road connecting, among other places, Jerusalem to Nablus
- Way of the Patriarchs, the main historical north–south route in the area
References
editWikimedia Commons has media related to Nablus Road, Jerusalem.