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This
issue has also been confirmed by the
museum of granite and stony tools
whose documents were lost as it was
transferred to one of the French
museums. Another archaeological site
and a crusade ruin at Batroun is the
castle of Mousaylaha which is
constructed on an isolated massive
rock with steep sides protruding in
the middle of a plain surrounded by
mountains. It is believed that the
castle dates back to the middle
ages. It consists of two floors with
an internal rectangular castle that
can be reached by climbing few
broken stairs. The internal castle
overlies a set of pillars and has a
well dug in its floor connected to
canals carved in the rocks. The
central room has two doors, they
lead to the western section and the
eastern section which has a narrow
sand stone staircase that leads to
the multisectionned upper floor. The
walls of this castle are thick and
infiltrated with several scuttles
used for security of for defense. A
good part of its ceiling and the
observation tower are demolished.
Of
the ruins of Batroun is a small pond
engraved in a beach rock in front of
the phoenician wall. It is named the
Pond of the King's Daughter after a
Phoenician princess
that used to bathe there.
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