Holidays
to Hammamet give you much more than just a
standout beach scene. Thanks to its energetic medina and star-studded
nightlife, it's been dubbed the Saint-Tropez of North Africa.
Tunisia’s top dog
Hammamet is known as Tunisia’s number-one beach town. It became popular in
the Twenties with European artists and writers, and since then everyone from
Wallis Simpson to Sophia Loren has visited its golden shores. Hammamet’s all
geared up for holidays spent sunning yourself on the sands but, at the same
time, it’s also managed to hold on to that Moorish mystique which made it so
popular in the first place.
The beach
A big part of Hammamet’s appeal is the 10-kilometre-long beach of talc-soft
sand that curls around the Cap-Bon peninsula. Thanks to the calm Mediterranean
Sea, the beach has bona fide family credentials and there are plenty of
watersports centres offering reasonably priced rides.
The medina
Jutting from the coastline is Hammamet’s medina. Inside its Medieval
ramparts is a maze of alleyways, home to the chaotic souks filled with rug
sellers, spice markets, hammams and ornate riads. North Africa’s oldest mosque,
the Great Mosque, is here, as is the Kasbah, where you get widescreen sea views
from the top.
The new town
Outside the medina is the new town, where pedestrianised streets and
boulevards pack in authentic seafood restaurants and lively bars. And if you
want to party late into the night, on the outskirts of town you’ll find some of
the best clubs this side of Ibiza.