Caesarea

Caesarea (Hebrew: Qeysarya, קיסריה) is a national park on the Mediterranean coast of Israel, in the northern part of the Sharon region. The park encompasses a vast archaeological site that showcases the remains of the Roman Imperial city of Caesarea Maritima. Herod, the king of Judea, reconstructed and developed the city from 13-25 BC, making it a hub of commerce, culture, and government. He named the city in honor of Augustus Caesar. The site is 50 km north of Tel Aviv and several kilometers north of Hadera.

During the Roman period, Caesarea served as the capital of the holy land until the late Byzantine era, playing a crucial role in the region's history. Nowadays, the park offers the visitors a glimpse into the city's grandeur and its significant role in the past.

The nearby picturesque Mediterranean coast also has some of the most beautiful beaches in Israel, attracting tourists from far and wide.

Adjacent to the national park, there is a small and affluent town called Caesarea, which had a population of approximately 5,300 residents in 2019.

Understand
Caesarea became known in the first century BCE, when Herod the Great built one of the largest ports in the eastern Mediterranean on the spot. The city continued to flourish through the Byzantine era. For most of the Muslim period it was a notable city, and the Crusaders built impressive city walls which still stand. However, by the Ottoman period Caesarea was either uninhabited or home only to a small village.

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Baron Edmond James de Rothschild purchased much of the land around Caesarea. With the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948, the Rothschild family gifted these holdings to the Caesarea Foundation. Caesarea is therefore the only locality in Israel which is managed by a private organization (the Caesarea Development Corporation), rather than a municipal governmental organization. Today Caesarea is considered one of the most upscale residential developments in Israel. The current Baron de Rothschild still maintains a home in Caesarea, as do many other wealthy and influential individuals and foreign residents. It is also home to Israel’s only 18-hole golf course, a luxury hotel, a vacation village, miles of sandy beaches, and a series of attractive restaurants, galleries and boutiques huddled around the Mediterranean cove.

And, of course, visitors marvel at its extraordinary archeological attractions, not least of which is the Roman theatre, where concerts, entertainment extravaganzas and the annual International Opera Festival are held.

Get in
Hitchhiking to or Caesarea is possible and rather easy.

By car
Caesarea National Park is on the coastal road, near the city of Caesarea and Kibbutz Sdot Yam and west of Or Akiva. Take the coastal road or the old Tel Aviv-Haifa highway number 2 to the interchange near the Orot Rabin power station. An alternate route is to drive to the park via Or Akiva.

By bus
The simplest and fastest way is to take an intercity bus to on the Route 2 motorway. From Tel Aviv (or intermediate points), take bus 910, running about hourly. From Haifa, take bus 910 or 947 from the Carmel Beach CBS. When you get off the bus, walk 20 minutes west (towards the sea) along the road, and you will be at the Caesarea ruins. There is a pleasant bike/foot path for this walk, separate from the road.

If this is too much walking (which it might be on a hot summer day), then you can take one of the buses that stop right at the ruins - routes 9, 76, or 80 from Binyamina (7 km), Hadera, and Pardes Hana respectively. (You can also catch the 9 and 80 at Or Akiva interchange.) Beware that these routes are very slow, as they make a circuit through all the neighborhoods of Caesarea before reaching the ruins. They are also infrequent - each route runs no more than 10 times a day.

Get around
The main ruins form a single national park which is easy to walk around (though lacking in shade, so bring a hat).

The other sites are far enough apart that a vehicle can be useful, particularly on a hot day. But walking between them is also a reasonable option. Even the distance between Caesarea and Jisr az-Zarqa, if you stay there, can be managed on foot - 5 km along the beach.

Do

 * Surfing is possible here - ask at Juha's Guesthouse.

Buy
Some small shops can be found in Jisr az-Zarqa and a supermarket right next to Juha's Guesthouse.

Eat
The Caesarea National Park holiday area has several restaurants that cater for the visiting folks.

In Jisr az-Zarqa inexpensive falafel (₪8) and shawarma can be found.

Drink
Juha's Guesthouse has got beer in the fridge for its guests, even though the town is pretty much alcohol free due to being Muslim.

Go next

 * Haifa – The second-holiest city in the Bahai faith, including its great garden down the northern slope of the city.
 * Nazareth – The largest Arab city in Israel and best known as the home of Joseph and Mary.
 * Jezreel Valley – Famous for Tel Megiddo (Armageddon) National Park and Mount Gilboa overlooking it. Reachable by bus via Olga Junction (e.g. bus 947, then 825).
 * Druze Villages in the Carmel Range: 30min by service taxi (monit sherut) or longer by bus, line number 37א, to the closer village of Isifya or the more distant village of Daliyat el-Carmel. The tourist-oriented bazaar has inexpensive shops and you can top off the visit in one of the excellent Mid-Eastern restaurants.
 * Tel Aviv – A big and the most cosmopolitan city in Israel, well known for its club culture.