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Bucharest - Tel Aviv

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(departures from Bucharest)
Amsterdam
Alitalia - 149 €
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(departures from Bucharest)
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Flight tickets Bucharest - Tel Aviv

The airline's offers for flight tickets with arrival at Tel Aviv are shown in the table below:

Prices and flight conditions Bucharest - Tel Aviv:
Company Tariff* Emision Minim Stay Maxim Stay Book
EL AL Israel Airlines 206 € --- 6 days 14 days
Tarom 210 € --- Saturday on destination 14 days
Alitalia 240 € --- --- 14 days
Tarom 290 € --- Saturday on destination 1 month

Your booking will be guaranteed by phone, by an operator who will communicate the availability, the usability of rates and the afferent airport tax.

* The flight tickets fares are airport tax free and they are available for "Economical class" return, in compliance with the available stock. For one-way flight tickets, please fill the one way request form.

You can pay online only after you receive the final confirmation from us.

* The flight ticket prices vary in terms of availability, the reason why the final price can be slightly changed.

Tel Aviv - Usefull links

Tel Aviv - General description
Flight tickets Bucharest - Tel Aviv

Tel Aviv (Hebrew: תֵּל־אָבִיב; Arabic: تَلْ أَبِيبْ-يَافَا‎ Tal Abib) is the second largest city in Israel and is located on the coast of the Mediterranean Sea. It is also the main part of the largest and most populous metropolitan area in Israel, Gush Dan (Dan Bloc).
Tel Aviv's jurisdiction is 50,553 dunams (50.6 km² or 19.5 mi²). The population density is 7,445 people per km². According to the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), as of May 2006, the city's population stood at 379,000, growing at an annual rate of one percent. 96.1% percent of residents are Jewish, while 3.0% are Arab Muslims and 0.9% are Arab Christians. According to some estimates, about 50,000 unregistered foreign workers live in Tel Aviv. According to a 2006 estimate, the metropolitan area of Tel Aviv is the city with the largest Jewish population in the world, with 3 million Jews (New York City's metropolitan area, in second place with 1.4 million Jews according to a 2002 study, is the largest Jewish population center in the Diaspora)
Despite the fact that the seat of government and parliament are located in Jerusalem, all countries maintaining diplomatic relations with Israel save for El Salvador maintain their embassies in Tel Aviv or other coastal cities.
The larger metropolitan area comprises a number of separate municipalities with around 3 million people living in the 14 km sprawl along the Mediterranean coast. Bat Yam, Holon, Ramat Gan, Giv'atayim, Bnei Brak, Petah Tikva, Rishon LeZion and Qiryat Ono are the other cities in the area known as Gush Dan.
The name Tel Aviv in Hebrew means "Hill (tel) of Spring (aviv)", which also coincides with Arabic name of that area (used before 1948) تل الربيع (tal al-rabeý) which literally means "Hill of Spring" (However the term ربيع, rabeý is used by some of the locals to denote grass and flowers that flourish in the Spring time). The Hebrew title was given by Nahum Sokolow to his Hebrew translation of Theodor Herzl's book Altneuland (German: "The Old New Land").
There is an account that Sokolow came up with the Hebrew title "Tel Aviv" to allude to the destruction of the ancient Jewish state and its hoped-for restoration: aviv = "spring" to symbolize renewal; and tel to symbolize the destruction of the ancient state, following not the usual Hebrew meaning of the word "tel" but its use in archaeology, meaning "mound of accumulated ruins". Sokolov took the name from the Book of Ezekiel, 3:15 : "Then I came to them of the captivity at Tel Aviv, that lived by the river Chebar, and to where they lived; and I sat there overwhelmed among them seven days." (The spelling in the King James Version of the Bible is Telabib). The Aviv referred to is possibly an indirect reference to a Mesopotamian god or goddess believed to bring forth the season of spring.
Jaffa is Yafo in Hebrew, which may well be derived from yafah/yofi (beautiful) or may simply come from the name of its founder, Japhet, son of Noah. However, the earliest mentioning of the name of the city is "Japo"; It was found on an ancient Egyptian tax register clay tablet found at "Tel Amarna", therefore the ethymological relation to "yofi" or "Yefet" seems rather unlikely.
Flight tickets Bucharest - Tel Aviv

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