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Tourist attractions in Syunik Province

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Tatev monastery
9th-century Armenian Apostolic monastery in Syunik Province in southeastern Armenia
Wings of Tatev
cableway between Halidzor and the Tatev monastery in Armenia
Zorats Karer
Carahunge (, also romanized as Karahunj and Qarahunj), also known as Zorats Karer (), Dik-Dik Karer (), Tsits Karer () and Karenish (), is a prehistoric archaeological site near the town of Sisian in the Syunik Province of Armenia. It is also often referred to among international tourists as the "Armenian Stonehenge".
Shikahogh State Preserve
protected area
Shaki Waterfall
waterfall in Armenia
Tatevi Anapat
17th-century Armenian monastery
Arevik National Park
national park in Armenia
Halidzor Fortress
fortress in Syunik Province of Armenia
Baghaberd
Baghaberd (; also '''David Bek's Castle''') is a 4th to 12th century Armenian fortress located along a ridge overlooking the Voghji River, northwest of the city of Kapan in the Syunik Province of Armenia. Baghaberd is at an elevation of .
Vorotnavank
Vorotnavank () is a monastic complex located along a ridge overlooking the Vorotan gorge, between the villages of Vaghatin and Vorotan, about 14 km east of Sisian in the Syunik Province of Armenia. The complex is surrounded by a high stone wall for defense against foreign invasions and once housed workshops, stores, a seminary, resort, cemetery and an alms-house. A pillar stood in the yard of the monastery symbolizing that there were monks entering into religious service and kings inaugurated at this location. Hovhan Vorotnetsi (1315-1398), an Armenian medieval philosopher and theologian as we
Lake Arpi National Park
National park in Armenia
Vorotnaberd
Vorotnaberd (; also '''Davit Bek's Castle''') is an important fortress along a ridge overlooking the Vorotan gorge, between the villages of Vaghatin and Vorotan in the Syunik Province of Armenia. Vorotnaberd is above sea level.
Bgheno-Noravank
Bgheno-Noravank () is an 11th-century Armenian monastery in the province of Syunik in Armenia, 3km to the East of Bardzravan village, to the left of the road to Shurnukh, on a triangular promontory surrounded by wooded gorges. It now consists of a small church dating to 1062, located on a little wooded promontory, and ornately decorated with borders and biblical reliefs. The ruins of this church were rediscovered in the 1920s by Axel Bakunts, a well-known prose writer, during one of his wanderings as an agronomist.
Meghri Fortress
Armenian fortress