Tunis, Tunisia
Tunisia · Middle East & Africa

맞춤 여행 Tunis

Carthage ruins, Medina UNESCO, and the Sahara at reach.

샘플 일정 보기
1인 1,600부터·추천 시즌: March–May, September–November·★★★★★ 500명 이상 여행객 매칭
사진: Mahmoud Yahyaoui Pexels 제공

맞춤 여행 안내 — Tunis?

Tunis is best experienced across four areas: the Medina with Zitouna Mosque and souqs (7 a.m. for empty lanes), Carthage (Antonine Baths and Byrsa Hill museum), Sidi Bou Saïd (7 a.m. by TGM train for blue lanes), and Bardo National Museum (mosaic collection second only to Rome). Add Dougga and El Jem for a 7-day extension. Fly into Tunis-Carthage Airport (TUN).

Tunis is the capital of Tunisia and gateway to the most complete Punic, Roman, Byzantine, and Aghlabid Islamic heritage in North Africa. The Medina of Tunis (UNESCO World Heritage, established 698 CE by the Arab general Hassan ibn al-Numan on the ruins of the Aghlabid city) is the largest traditional Arab city centre in North Africa — 700 listed historical monuments, 150 mosques, and the Zitouna (Olive Tree) Mosque (732 CE, the oldest mosque in North Africa still in active use) at the souq centre. The medina's lanes funnel from the grand rue de la Kasbah into 15 specialised souqs — the traditional guild-based market system where saddlers, perfumers, cloth merchants, and goldsmiths each occupy a dedicated section as they have since the Hafsid dynasty (1229–1574 CE).

Carthage — 15 km northeast of Tunis, accessible by the TGM train — was the capital of the Punic Empire (814 BCE–146 BCE) and the city whose rivalry with Rome defined the ancient Mediterranean. The third Punic War ended with the complete destruction of Carthage by Scipio Aemilianus in 146 BCE; the Romans then rebuilt the city on the same site (their Carthage became the third-largest city in the Roman Empire). The archaeological sites of Roman Carthage spread across the suburb of Carthage: the Antonine Baths (2nd century CE, the third largest Roman baths in the world), the Carthage National Museum (on Byrsa Hill, where the Punic tophet — the child sacrifice burial site that has become the subject of modern scholarly debate — was located), and the Roman theatre.

Sidi Bou Saïd — the blue-and-white village 3 km north of Carthage on the coastal cliff — is the most photographed site in Tunisia: a hillside of blue-painted window grilles and white-domed houses above the Gulf of Tunis, established as an artists' colony in the 1920s when the painter Paul Klee and the composer Baron Erlanger settled here. The Baron d'Erlanger's Ennejma Ezzahra palace (1912–1922, now the Centre des Musiques Arabes et Méditerranéennes, opens 9 a.m.) is the finest example of Andalusian-Moorish domestic architecture in Tunisia. Arrive at Sidi Bou Saïd by TGM train at 7 a.m. before the tour groups for the blue lanes in morning light.

최적 방문 시기 — Tunis?

추천 월은 March–May, September–November. 월별 계획 메모를 확인하세요.

Jan
비수기 — 최고의 가용성과 가성비.
Feb
비수기; 조용하고 보통 더 저렴함.
Mar
추천
준성수기; 날씨가 좋아짐.
Apr
준성수기; 이상적인 날씨 시작.
May
추천
고준성수기; 일찍 예약 권장.
Jun
성수기; 훌륭한 날씨, 높은 가격.
Jul
성수기; 붐비지만 활기참.
Aug
성수기; 유럽 대부분의 휴가 시즌.
Sep
추천
고준성수기; 저희가 가장 좋아하는 달.
Oct
준성수기; 아름다운 빛과 적은 인파.
Nov
추천
저준성수기; 조용하고 분위기 있음.
Dec
비수기 (크리스마스와 새해 제외).

주요 체험 — Tunis

현지 파트너가 엄선한 여행 경험들. 모든 맞춤 여행에 이 중 일부 — 또는 더 좋은 것이 포함됩니다.

Carthage ancient ruins with archaeologist — Tunis
체험 1
Carthage ancient ruins with archaeologist
Walk through the Tunis Medina at 7 a.m. as the felt-cap craftsmen of the Souq des Chéchias arrive to open their workshops — the wooden forms being pulled from the shelves, the red felt being steamed and shaped, the same process that has produced the traditional Tunisian chéchia in these same workshops for 400 years.
Sidi Bou Said village walk — Tunis
체험 2
Sidi Bou Said village walk
Stand in the Bardo Museum in front of the Ulysses and the Sirens mosaic — the only ancient image of Odysseus tied to the mast, his sailors' ears stopped with wax, the Sirens' winged female forms surrounding the ship — a 2nd-century CE floor panel from a wealthy Roman villa in the province that was then the intellectual centre of the Roman Empire.
Bardo Museum Roman mosaics — Tunis
체험 3
Bardo Museum Roman mosaics
Arrive at Sidi Bou Saïd by TGM train at 7 a.m. and walk up the blue-painted lane before any café has opened — the Gulf of Tunis visible between white walls at the top, the blue window grilles and bougainvillea catching the morning light, the village empty and the air smelling of jasmine from the flower sellers who will arrive at 8 a.m.
Medina souks walking tour — Tunis
체험 4
Medina souks walking tour
Walk through Dougga's Roman theatre at 8 a.m. — 3,500 seats on the hillside above the Capitoline Temple, the olive terraces of the Medjerda Valley visible in every direction, the site empty of other visitors, the stage floor the same stones that a 2nd-century CE audience walked on for performances of Plautus and Terence in the Roman province of Africa.
Djerba island extension — Tunis
체험 5
Djerba island extension
Descend into the underground corridors of the El Jem Amphitheatre and imagine the 35,000-capacity crowd above — the ramps where lions and gladiators waited below the sand floor, the darkness, the smell of stone — in the third-largest Roman amphitheatre in the world, rising from flat Tunisian farmland without any other ancient context around it.
Sahara salt lake Chott El Jerid — Tunis
체험 6
Sahara salt lake Chott El Jerid
Eat couscous on Friday afternoon in the Medina of Tunis — the post-mosque meal, lamb with chickpeas and harissa broth ladled over semolina, in a room where three generations of the same family are at their separate tables, the couscous arriving in a clay pot and the silence of focused eating that Tunisian food culture understands as respect.

샘플 일정

두 가지 출발점 — 실제 일정은 완전 맞춤형입니다. 여기서 구성합니다.

7일 클래식

  1. 1
    일차 1: Arrival & Medina Evening
    Fly into Tunis-Carthage Airport (TUN, 8 km from centre — taxi 20 minutes, TND 15). Check into a riad or hotel in the Medina or the French colonial Ville Nouvelle. Evening walk: enter the Medina through Bab Bhar (the 13th-century Sea Gate, the main eastern entrance) at dusk. The main avenue through the medina from Bab Bhar to the Zitouna Mosque is 400 metres through the Souq de la Montre and the Souq des Étoffes — the textile market with the most elaborate Andalusian-Moorish archways in the medina. The Zitouna Mosque exterior (the Great Mosque, 732 CE) is visible from the souq; non-Muslims cannot enter but can photograph the courtyard through the entrance arch. Dinner at a traditional medina restaurant: harissa-spiced couscous with lamb merguez.
  2. 2
    일차 2: Medina Souqs & Bardo Museum
    Early morning in the Medina — arrive at Bab Bhar at 7 a.m. for the lanes before the day traders set up. The Souq des Chéchias (traditional red felt caps, shaped on wooden forms by craftsmen whose workshops date to the 17th century), the Souq el-Attarine (perfume market, argan oil and rose water), the Médersa Slimaniya (1754 CE, Hafsid-era madrasa, now open as a cultural centre). Afternoon: Bardo National Museum (15 minutes by metro from centre, opens 9:30 a.m., TND 11): the finest collection of Roman mosaics in the world — the Virgil mosaic (2nd century CE, the poet between the muses Clio and Melpomene), the Neptune mosaic (3rd century CE, 7 metres wide), and the Ulysses and the Sirens mosaic (the only ancient image of Odysseus bound to the mast, his sailors with ears plugged).
  3. 3
    일차 3: Sidi Bou Saïd at 7 a.m.
    Take the TGM (Tunis–La Marsa commuter train) from Tunis Marine station — 30 minutes, TND 1.5 to Sidi Bou Saïd station. Arrive at 7 a.m. (the village is empty of tour groups until 9:30 a.m.). Walk up the main lane (Rue Habib Thameur) to the Café des Nattes at the top (the most photographed café in Tunisia, on the lane above the tiled Sidi Bou Saïd mosque). The Baron d'Erlanger's Ennejma Ezzahra palace (opens 9 a.m., TND 5): the 1912–1922 Moorish-Andalusian palace with restored ceilings, mashrabiya screens, and the maqam music archive of Tunisian classical music. Afternoon: continue 3 km by TGM to Carthage for the afternoon light on the Antonine Baths.
  4. 4
    일차 4: Carthage — Antonine Baths & Byrsa Hill
    The Carthage archaeological sites spread across several TGM stops; the Antonine Baths (Dermech stop) are the largest Roman bath complex in Africa — the 2nd century CE baths reach 30 metres above the sea cliff, with columns that give a sense of the original 3-storey height. The Carthage National Museum (Byrsa Hill, adjacent to the French cathedral) holds Punic artefacts: the tophet stelae, Punic terracotta masks, and objects from the pre-146 BCE destruction. The Punic ports (circular military harbour and rectangular commercial harbour) are visible from the shore road — the only remaining physical evidence of Carthage's maritime power. The Roman theatre (2nd century CE) is used for the Carthage International Festival (July–August, performances nightly).
  5. 5
    일차 5: Dougga — Best-Preserved Roman City in Africa
    Drive 100 km west to Dougga (1.5 hours) — the best-preserved Roman city in North Africa, with a Capitoline Temple (2nd century CE), a Theatre (3,500 seats, intact), public latrines (the most photographed Roman toilet in Tunisia, 12 seats in a semicircle), and the only surviving Numidian mausoleum (the Libyco-Punic Mausoleum, 3rd century BCE, 21 metres high). Dougga is on a hilltop with a landscape view of olive terraces — the setting is as impressive as the ruins. The site opens at 8 a.m. and receives relatively few visitors compared to its significance. Return to Tunis via Testour (an Andalusian-founded town from the 17th-century Muslim expulsion from Spain, the largest Moorish minaret in Tunisia).
  6. 6
    일차 6: El Jem Amphitheatre
    Drive 200 km south to El Jem (2.5 hours by train from Tunis, or hire car). The El Jem Amphitheatre (237 CE, the third-largest Roman amphitheatre in the world at 149 x 124 metres, capacity 35,000) is the best-preserved large Roman amphitheatre outside Rome — more complete than the Colosseum in terms of its exterior arcade. The town of El Jem is a working Tunisian town, not a tourist resort; the amphitheatre rises from flat farmland with no development around it. The subterranean corridors (where gladiators and animals were held) are accessible. Adjacent El Jem museum (the town's Bardo satellite, Tunisian mosaic collection, opens 8 a.m.). Return by train to Tunis by evening.
  7. 7
    일차 7: La Marsa Beach & Departure
    TGM to La Marsa (end of the line, 40 minutes) — the beach suburb with the longest white sand beach closest to Tunis. La Marsa Corniche is the weekend gathering place of Tunis residents; the fish restaurants along the coast road open for lunch from noon (fresh dorade royale — sea bream — grilled with capers and preserved lemon). The central Corniche beach is free; the private beach clubs charge TND 10–15 for a sun lounger. Return TGM to Tunis, TUN airport for departure. The Tunis duty-free has the best selection of Tunisian olive oil to bring home (Chetoui variety from the north, cold-pressed in October).

14일 심층 코스

  1. 1
    일차 1: Arrival & Medina Evening
    Bab Bhar Sea Gate entry, Zitouna Mosque souq approach, textile souq Andalusian archways, harissa couscous dinner.
  2. 2
    일차 2: Medina Souqs at 7 a.m.
    Souq des Chéchias red felt caps, Souq el-Attarine argan oil, Médersa Slimaniya 1754 CE, medina lanes before 9 a.m. crowd.
  3. 3
    일차 3: Bardo National Museum
    Virgil mosaic 2nd century CE, Neptune mosaic 7 m wide, Ulysses and Sirens (only ancient Odysseus image), world's finest Roman mosaic collection.
  4. 4
    일차 4: Sidi Bou Saïd 7 a.m.
    TGM 30 min, blue-and-white lanes before 9:30 a.m. tour buses, Café des Nattes, Ennejma Ezzahra 1912 Moorish palace.
  5. 5
    일차 5: Carthage Baths & Byrsa Hill
    Antonine Baths 30-metre columns (3rd largest Roman baths in world), Punic Museum tophet stelae, Punic harbour outlines.
  6. 6
    일차 6: Dougga
    Best-preserved Roman city in Africa: Capitoline Temple, 3,500-seat theatre, semicircle latrines, 3rd-century BCE Numidian mausoleum.
  7. 7
    일차 7: El Jem Amphitheatre
    3rd largest Roman amphitheatre in world (35,000 capacity, 237 CE), more complete exterior than Colosseum, underground gladiator corridors.
  8. 8
    일차 8: Kairouan — Holiest City in North Africa
    Drive 150 km south: the Great Mosque of Kairouan (670 CE, the first mosque in the Maghreb, the oldest minaret in the world), the Aghlabid Basins (9th century CE water storage ponds), the Mosque of the Three Doors (866 CE Kufic inscription facades).
  9. 9
    일차 9: Sousse Medina
    100 km south: Ribat fortress (796 CE, the oldest surviving Islamic defensive fortification in the Maghreb), Sousse Archaeological Museum (finest collection of in situ Roman floor mosaics displayed in a former convent).
  10. 10
    일차 10: Sbeitla (Sufetula)
    150 km south: three temples of the Forum of Sufetula (2nd century CE, the Capitoline Triad — Minerva, Jupiter, Juno — in three separate temples fronting the same forum, the only such arrangement in the Roman world).
  11. 11
    일차 11: Medina Deep Dive
    Zitouna mosque courtyard from above (the medina rooftop accessible from the Souq el-Trouk upper floors — the tiled minaret courtyard and the old city grid visible), Palais Kheireddine (19th century Husainid palace, now the Medina Heritage Museum).
  12. 12
    일차 12: Hammam Day
    Traditional hammam in the Medina: Hammam el-Kachachine (one of the oldest functioning hammams in Tunis, men's hours 6 a.m.–1 p.m., women's 1–7 p.m., TND 10 including kessa scrub). The hammam experience: heat room, cool-down room, kessel (scrubbing cloth), savon beldi (olive oil black soap).
  13. 13
    일차 13: La Marsa & Gammarth
    TGM La Marsa beach, Corniche fish restaurants, Gammarth 5 km north (the upmarket suburb with the best sea view restaurants on the Gulf of Tunis).
  14. 14
    일차 14: Final Medina & Departure
    7 a.m. medina walk (empty lanes, the souq stall holders arriving with their stock), last Tunisian makroud (date-paste semolina pastry from the Souq el-Blaghji), TUN airport.

여행 실용 정보

비자
90 days visa-free for most travelers
통화
Tunisian dinar (TND)
언어
Arabic, French
시간대
CET (UTC+1)

자주 묻는 질문

Is Tunisia safe for tourists?+

Tunisia has been a stable tourist destination since the political transition following the 2011 Arab Spring revolution. The resort areas (Tunis, Sousse, Djerba, Hammamet) operate normally and receive approximately 8 million visitors per year. The southern desert region near the Libyan border requires checking government travel advisories. Tunis city itself has a tourist police presence in the Medina and Ville Nouvelle. The main practical concern for visitors is street-level persistence from merchants in the Medina — firm but polite refusals work; guides at the medina entry will direct you into commision-paying shops unless you've arranged an independent licensed guide.

What is the Bardo National Museum and why is it important?+

The Bardo National Museum in a western suburb of Tunis contains the world's largest and finest collection of Roman floor mosaics — the ancient Roman province of Africa Proconsularis (modern Tunisia and eastern Algeria) produced the greatest quantity of surviving Roman mosaic in the world, and the best examples were collected here. The Virgil mosaic (c. 225–235 CE), the Ulysses and the Sirens panel, and the Neptune at his chariot (7 metres wide) are masterworks of ancient art. The museum is housed in a former Husainid palace; the mosaics are displayed in rooms that were originally Ottoman reception halls, creating an unusual architectural context.

What is the best time to visit Tunisia?+

March–May and September–November are ideal: temperatures in Tunis are 18–25°C, the desert interior (Djerba, Douz) is not yet prohibitively hot, and the tourist infrastructure is functional without being overwhelmed. June–August is the peak European holiday season at the coastal resorts but summer in the Tunisian interior (Kairouan, Dougga, Sbeitla) reaches 40°C+ and is exhausting for site visits. December–February is cool in the north (10–15°C in Tunis, occasional rain) but excellent in the desert south, which reaches 25°C in winter.

What is couscous like in Tunisia?+

Tunisian couscous differs from Moroccan in its use of harissa (the chilli-based paste that is Tunisia's defining condiment — a mash of dried red chillies, garlic, olive oil, and caraway) as a base flavour. The grain is larger and cooked more separately; the broth is typically reddish with harissa and tomato. The classic accompaniment is lamb with chickpeas and root vegetables; merguez (spiced lamb sausage) is also common. Couscous in Tunisia is the Friday meal — the post-mosque family lunch — and the best restaurants serve it from noon to 3 p.m. only. The street version (at kiosk restaurants in the Medina, TND 5–8) is adequate; the traditional family-restaurant version is the genuine article.

Can I visit the Zitouna Mosque in Tunis?+

Non-Muslims cannot enter the prayer hall of the Zitouna Mosque (the Great Mosque of Tunis, 732 CE), but the courtyard is accessible to visitors through the door on the south side of the mosque, facing the Souq des Étoffes. The courtyard shows the forest of 184 antique columns (taken from various Roman and Carthaginian sites) supporting the arcades — the visible testimony of 1,300 years of construction. Entry to the courtyard is via a separate non-Muslim entrance (opens 8 a.m., closed Friday, TND 3). The minarets (the oldest, the Hafsid minaret of 1430, is visible from the souq lanes) can be photographed from outside.

함께 검색한 질문

  • Is Tunis worth visiting for history?
  • What is the medina of Tunis like?
  • Is the Bardo Museum worth visiting?
  • How do I get from Tunis to Carthage?
  • What is harissa made from?
  • Is Tunisia safe to visit?
  • What ruins can I see near Tunis?
  • What is Sidi Bou Saïd famous for?

Tunis 여행을 계획할 준비가 되셨나요?

AI 컨시어지와 채팅하세요 — 꿈의 여행을 설명하는 데 2분이면 충분합니다.

Start planning — free