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Nearby is Bait Na'aman (Nu'man), a four-towered fort of Imam Bil'arab bin Sultan of the 17th century, renovated in 1991. [2] Barka Fort is a known tourist attraction. Barka Souq, near the beach is an economically important area. There are two major resorts in Barka, the Al-Sawadi resort and the Al-Nahda resort.
In August 2021, Bait Al Oud offered music classes at the arts centre. [4] The excavations during the building of the Al Qattara Arts centre uncovered a five metre long sequence of archaeological layers,from the last Islamic period to the Iron Age,3000 years ago.
The National Museum of the Sultanate of Oman is a museum located in Oman.It was developed as a result of a ten-year collaboration between the Ministry of Heritage and Culture, the Royal Estate Affairs of Oman, Jasper Jacob Associates (J.J.A.), and Arts Architecture International Ltd (A.A.I.), and opened to the public in 2016.
The Arabic Oud House was created in 1999 in Cairo by Iraqi oud player and composer Naseer Shamma. [1] Shamma, who graduated from the Baghdad Academy of Music, is a UNESCO Artist for Peace [2] and has been distinguished by other organizations like the International Red Crescent and Red Cross Societies as goodwill ambassador.
Bait Al Falaj Airport was the first airport in Oman, fitted with limited equipment and facilities to serve as a civilian airport. It had a Communication Centre, a Customs Office, asphalt parking for aircraft and a maintenance shed. With these modest facilities, the airport was able to play a small part in the advancement of civil aviation in Oman.
Bahla Fort (Arabic: قلعة بهلاء, romanized: Qalʿat Bahlāʿ) is one of four historic fortresses situated at the foot of the Jebel Akhdar highlands in Oman and was the country's first UNESCO-listed fort added in 1987.
Birkat Al-Mawz. Birkat Al-Mawz is a village in the Ad Dakhiliyah Region of Oman. It is located at the entrance of Wadi al-Muaydin on the southern rim of Jebel Akhdar and home to a restored fort called Bait al Redidah. A road and a walking route through Wadi al-Muaydin up to the Saiq Plateau start from here.
Bait Al Zubair is a museum, located on Al Saidiya Street, Old Muscat, Oman. [1] The museum has an extensive collection of ancient weapons, including khanjar, household equipments, and costumes (most of which derive from the owner's private collection). Outside the museum is a full-scale Omani village and souk. [2]