A section of the wall, photographed at night The walls of Acre – aerial view
 

The walls of Acre




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.Old Acre is surrounded by walls in the shape of an irregular pentagon, with three principle wall lines and secondary fortifications (moats, counter walls, external outposts and so forth). One wall has survived virtually intact, while only parts of the others remain. The wall system was built in stages between 1750 and 1840.

The first wall that was built in Acre during the Ottoman Period was built by Dahar El-Omar in the years 1750 – 1751. This wall was built in great haste, in many cases while renovating and repairing the remains of the Crusader wall, but also included new sections. When the work was done the wall encircled the entire city of Acre on both the land side and the sea side. This was a thin wall (approximately one meter thick) whose height ranged from 10 to 13 meters.

The wall included towers and khans, unprotected by a moat or battery. There were two gates in the wall: the Seria Gate in the northwestern part of the city and the Sea Gate (or Damascus Gate) in the southeastern part. The most heavily fortified section was in the northern wall, which was the site of the palace of Dahar (the Acre Fortress), which was surrounded by a 5.5 meter wide moat

The walls of Acre at night



The walls of Acre – a view from the sea







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