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Ghadames is one of Libya's highligts. As a matter of fact,
it is a highlight of the whole of Sahara, often called "the
jewel of Sahara", and was in 1999 added to the UNESCO World
Heritage List, as one of 5 places in Libya.
Ghadames is a tranquil old city, with covered streets that
are both dark and quite cool even during summer. And of
course, the colour chosen, is white. Ghadames represents
popular engineering, and is the result of a complex
knowledge on how to deal with extreme temperatures. The
arrangement of the houses is far from casual. Every angle,
every wall, every opening in the roofs over the alleyways,
are parts of the same organism.

Even if Ghadames still stands, the people were moved out of
it from 1984 until 1986, into the modern settlement nearby.
Only one family refused to abandon their quarters. But
locals return to their old homes when summer becomes
unbearable.
The settlement at Ghadames goes back at least 5000 years.
Before that time, Sahara was greener, allowing different
settlement patterns. The first historical information we
have is from 19 BCE when the Romans occupied it, and named
it Cydamus. The present old town is probably 800 years old;
town centre had then moved around the oasis a few times.
From the 18th century until 1874 was Ghadames an independent
state, thriving from trans-Saharan trade.
For a long time, trade lines across the Sahara, including
the transportation of slaves, was the life line of Ghadames.
Today the 10,000 people living here make a living out of
agriculture, but tourism has become a new and important
source of income.
The Ghadames festival is staged through three days every
September, bringing back life to the old town on the second
day of the festival. People put on traditional dresses, and
weddings are held as well as rites of passage for young men
passing to adulthood.
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