1. Jerusalem Old City Tour
It&rsquos a city as old as human civilisation, and has the scars to show for it. Many historic figures have changed human history from their lives spent here, but you are here just for a day, right Well, I was, and had to rush through more than two millennia of history in a few hours. Today the old town is divided into various quarters&mdashMuslim, Christian, Armenian and Jewish. While exploring each is like unlocking treasure chests, rushing through the city results merely in whetting your appetite. Most tourists do the bare minimum, entering via the impressive Zion Gate and traversing through each quarter. Once, much of the Jewish order of life was codified and set in stone here, traces of which are visible in the rather orthodox Jewish quarter, where you might come across children being instructed in the Torah. The Armenian quarter is rather more artsy, and could tempt you with souvenirs. The Christian quarter is noted for the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, which many Christians, cutting across sects, regard as their holiest place. The largest, though, is the Muslim quarter, full of colourful markets and little lanes, often steeply stepped. If you choose, you could follow the route Jesus is said to have taken on way to his cruxifiction, though of course the city has changed unrecognisably from the 1 st century CE. History, especially of religion and war, is intermingled in every nook and cranny, and if you&rsquore interested, a one-day visit will be deeply unsatisfying. Plan accordingly.