After a brisk walk, with only a scarf to protect me from the blazing sun, I stood in the shade of a towering mountain, home to a mausoleum that had been left untouched for 2,000 years before we found it. Its sandy colours flare high in the harsh summer sun, and the carvings come to life against the rocky boulders and shrubbery of the desert, spread as far as the eye can see. Mountains large and small rise out of the flat landscape, as the sand begins to fill my eyes. Hegra, an ancient city that pokes out of a desert just north of AlUla in Saudi Arabia, takes travellers on a journey to a civilisation that once thrived, before it was lost in the sands of time.
Heritage
How AlUla, A 2,000-Year-Old-City In Saudi Arabia, Took My Breath Away
The necropolis of Hegra, in the desert town of AlUla, is Saudi's first UNESCO World Heritage Site

Hegra was once a thriving city under Nabataean rule
Photo: Visit Saudi
Hegra was once a thriving city under Nabataean rule
Photo: Visit Saudi

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