Gobustan tour is a full-day trip and covers the major museums and historical places of the Baku city and Absheron area. It mainly covers the Gobustan rocks, Mud Volcanoes, Fire Temple, Burning Hill, and other historical places located on the route. During this full-day Gobustan tour, you will be amazed at Azerbaijan’s history, natural resources, and have a Lada car experience.
Gobustan tour starts after picking up the guests from the hotel. Our first destination will be Gobustan and whenever we reach to Gobustan area, we will change our transport ( because the road leading to Mud Volcanoes is in bad condition, so only specific cars especially Russian cars can get there) and lead to the Mud Volcanoes.
Home to nearly a third of the world’s mud volcano, Azerbaijan features a messy, bubbling, and sometimes explosive landscape. Mud volcanoes are closely associated with hydrocarbon and petrochemical stores underground, hence the gas trying to escape to the surface. A few of these gas leaks are constantly on fire, shooting small perpetual flames into the air and some believe that these perpetual flames are strongly connected to the appearance of the Zoroastrian religion in Azerbaijan some 2,000 years ago.
Every 20 years or so, one of these mud/gas volcanoes will ignite deep below the surface and create a massive explosion. While generally not dangerous to people, as they are far outside of most city centers, it is believed that six shepherds and over 2,000 sheep were killed by a mud volcano in Bozdagh, Azerbaijan.
After coming back from Mud Volcanoes we get back to our car and go first to the Gobustan museum to start our Gobustan tour and after spending some time there we lead to the Gobustan Rock Art (open-air museum).
Gobustan State Reserve located west of the settlement of Gobustan, about 40 miles southwest of the center of Baku was established in 1966 when the region was declared as a national historic landmark of Azerbaijan in an attempt to preserve the ancient carvings, mud volcanoes, and gas-stones in the region.
Gobustan State Reserve is very rich in archeological monuments, the reserve has more than 6,000 rock carvings, which depict primitive people, animals, battle-pieces, ritual dances, bullfights, boats with armed oarsmen, warriors with lances in their hands, camel caravans, pictures of sun and stars, on the average dating back to 5,000-20,000 years.
At the end of the Gobustan tour, we head back to the city and explore other places which include our itinerary.
On the way back from the Gobustan area we will pass through the Bibi-Heybat Mosque, where we will stop for a while.
The Bibi-Heybat is a historical mosque in Baku, Azerbaijan. The existing structure, built in the 1990s, is a recreation of the mosque with the same name built in the 13th century by Shirvanshah Farrukhzad II Ibn Ahsitan II, which was completely destroyed by the Bolsheviks in 1936. Today the Bibi-Heybat Mosque is the spiritual center for the Muslims of the region and one of the major monuments of Islamic architecture in Azerbaijan.
For the first time in history, the industrial production of oil started in Baku. This event was known in Azerbaijan but documentary evidence has been found recently in the archives. As a result, the world’s first oil well of 21m deep and drilled in 1846 in the village of Bibiheybat near Baku was found and restored, which became an open-air museum.
The Baku Ateshgah (from Persian: آتشگاه, Atashgāh, Azerbaijani: Atəşgah), often called the “Fire Temple of Baku” is a castle-like religious temple in Surakhani town, a suburb in Baku, Azerbaijan.
Based on Persian inscriptions, the temple was used as a Hindu, Sikh, and Zoroastrian place of worship. “Atash” (آتش) is the Persian word for fire. The pentagonal complex, which has a courtyard surrounded by cells for monks and a tetrapillar-altar in the middle, was built during the 17th and 18th centuries. It was abandoned in the late 19th century, probably due to the dwindling of the Indian population in the area.
Yanar Dag (Azerbaijani: Yanar Dağ, meaning “burning mountain”) is a natural gas fire that blazes continuously on a hillside on the Absheron Peninsula on the Caspian Sea near Baku. Unlike mud volcanoes, the Yanar Dag flame burns fairly steadily, as it involves a steady seep of gas from the subsurface. It is claimed that the Yanar Dag flame was only noted when accidentally lit by a shepherd in the 1950s.
The last destination of the Gobustan tour will be the spectacular work of Zaha Hadid which is built in 2012 and covers a 57,500 m2 area. Some facts about the building:
Price Per Person | Pax 1 | Pax 2 | Pax 3 | Pax 4 | Pax 5-6 |
Standard package* | $135 | $69 | $51 | $55 | $47 |
Premium package** | $169 | $99 | $79 | $81 | $71 |
*For 7 & more enquire for a special rate
-Children under 6 years will be allowed Free Of Charge.
-Children between 6 – 12 years old; pay 50% of the tour price per person.
-Children 13 or older are considered adults and pay the normal price.
Standard Package Inclusions*: English Speaking Driver/Comfortable car with a/c / Pick up and Drop off.
Premium Package Inclusions**: English Speaking Driver/Comfortable car with a/c / Pick up and Drop off / Lunch / Entrance fee to the museums (Gobustan museum, Fire Temple & Burning Hill).
From $47.00
From $47.00
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