What to know about Tyre, the Lebanese city where strikes continuepublished at 12:12 BST
Image source, Getty ImagesA view of Tyre from the beach during July 2024, well before the current conflict began
Tyre is one of Lebanon's largest cities and is the largest south of the Litani River - a key demarcation line throughout the current and past conflicts, and the area hardest hit by Israeli attacks.
Israel has struck the city again on Tuesday after issuing an evacuation order for residents.
Located on the Mediterranean coast, Tyre is one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the world, and is recognised by Unesco to contain important archealogical sites, many from the Roman era.
There is little reliable data about its demographics, but Tyre is known to have a large Shia Muslim majority, as well as Sunni and Christian communities.
Three official Unrwa Palestinian refugee camps are located near the city, as well as other unofficial areas with large Palestinian populations.
Hezbollah has an established presence in the city and surrounding areas. Southern Lebanon is the heartland of the country's Shia Muslim community, which is Hezbollah's main support base.
Tyre has at times been a place of refuge as people fled from areas further south during the ongoing conflict. And Tyre has also come under direct aerial attack - with people fleeing for safer areas further north.














