The oldest cities in the world

The ancient city of Jericho, located in the West Bank on the shores of the Dead Sea, is widely considered the oldest in the world. First settled by Neolithic hunter-gatherers, by 8000 BCE Tell es-Sultan 

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Jericho, West Bank

Damascus, Syria

The ancient city of Damascus in Syria, a World Heritage Site, is one of the oldest in the world. Evidence of human settlement may date as far back as 10,000 BCE. 

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Human habitation of the modern Iranian city of Rey (Ray, Rayy or Shahr-e Rey) dates back some 8,000 years.  

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Rey, Iran

Susa, in Iran—known as Shushan in the Bible, now occupied by the modern city of Shush—was founded roughly 6,500 years ago. Situated along ancient trade routes 

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Susa, Iran

The ancient Phoenician town of Byblos, in Lebanon, has stood on a cliff of sandstone overlooking the Mediterranean Sea since at least 5000 BCE. 

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Byblos, Lebanon

Evidence of permanent Neolithic human settlements in the Bulgarian city of Plovdiv date to 6000 BCE, and the city is considered one of the oldest in Europe 

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Plovdiv, Bulgaria

Aleppo, Syria is mentioned as a thriving city (Halab) in 4,000-year-old cuneiform tablets, but nearby settlements date to 11,000 BCE. The World Heritage Site served as a commercial hub for major trade routes in the ancient Middle East 

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Aleppo, Syria

The site of the ancient Lebanese city of Sidon, built on a promontory on the shores of the Mediterranean Sea, was inhabited as early as 4000 BCE. 

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Sidon, Lebanon

The present-day city of Kirkuk, at the foot of the Zagros Mountains in Iraq, sits atop a more ancient one: the 5,000-year-old city of Arrapha, in what was then known as Mesopotamia. 

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Kirkuk, Iraq

The area around the modern city of Faiyum in Egypt was settled as early as 5000 BCE. It was once a wetland oasis with abundant wildlife, long favoured by prehistoric hunters and the site of the earliest known agriculture. 

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Faiyum, Egypt

Shards of pottery found in Gaziantep, Turkey, indicate settlement began in 4000 BCE. Initially ruled by the Hittites, the region fell to various empires before being absorbed into the Ottoman Empire in the 16th century.  

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Gaziantep, Turkey

The foundation of the port town of Beirut, Lebanon, stretches back to 3000 BCE. Its name comes from the Canaanite word for wells, a reference to the abundant groundwater that has long sustained the city 

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Beirut, Lebanon

The Afghan city of Balkh is the site of the capital of the ancient Kingdom of Bactria, once a major Zoroastrian centre where Zoroaster (Zarathustra) is said to have first preached his religion. 

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Balkh, Afghanistan

Tyre, on Lebanon’s south coast near the border of Israel, was a major Phoenician seaport credited with developing Tyrian purple, a precious purple pigment derived from local murex shellfish and highly prized by royalty. Settled in 2750 BCE 

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Tyre, Lebanon

The Egyptian city of Luxor occupies a section of the ancient city of Thebes, or Waset, today a World Heritage Site. Thebes was founded around 2100 BCE, although there is evidence of continuous inhabitation on the site going back a dizzying 250,000 years. 

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Luxor, Egypt

First settled in 3000 BCE, the city of Jerusalem, Israel, was founded a thousand years later by King David as the capital of the Kingdom of Israel and Judah. 

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Jerusalem, Israel

Luoyang is considered a birthplace of Chinese civilization, one of the Four Great Ancient Chinese capitals. Founded by the Zhou dynasty more than 3,000 years ago 

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Luoyang, China

The city of Athens, in Greece, is a little more than 3,000 years old, though it has been inhabited since at least 3000 BCE. It is considered to be the birthplace of Western civilization, with enormous contributions to philosophy, politics, architecture, art and literature. 

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Athens, Greece

The city of Larnaca, Cyprus, sits on the ruins of ancient Citium (Kition), founded by the Mycenaeans in 1300 BCE. 

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Larnaca, Cypru

Algeria’s Annaba sits near the ancient Phoenician port of Hippo Regius on a fertile alluvial plain. Settled in 1200 BCE, it is best known as the city where the formidable Christian philosopher St. Augustine of Hippo served as a clergyman, and eventually bishop, until his death in 430 CE. 

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Annaba, Algeria

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