photo: Creative Commons / דוד שי
Herzliya Ensemble
photo: Creative Commons / Adiel lo
Marina Herzeliya.
photo: Creative Commons / Ynhockey
Herzliya beach
photo: Creative Commons / Ori~
Herzliya Pituah Skyline (Hebrew: הרצליה פיתוח) is an affluent suburb west of Herzliya, Israel home to about 10,000 largely affluent people, located on the Mediterranean Sea coast
photo: Creative Commons / Gridge
Neve Amirim neighborhood, Herzliya
photo: GFDL / David Shay
Israel flag and Herzliya flag
photo: AP / Ariel Schalit
Canada´s Minister of Foreign Affairs Peter MacKay
photo: AP / Ariel Schalit
Leader of Israel's right-wing Yisrael Beiteinu Party Avigdor Lieberman gestures as he speaks at the Herzliya Conference in Herzliya, Israel, near Tel Aviv in this picture taken Monday, Feb. 2, 2009. The hottest slogan in this Israeli election campaign has supporters cheering and critics cringing: "Without loyalty, there is no citizenship."The ominous motto is plastered nationwide across buses and billboards. Above it looms the dour, bearded face of its mastermind _ Avigdor Lieberman _ Israel's m
photo: AP /Ariel Schalit, Pool
Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert speaks at the Herzliya conference in the coastal city of Herzliya, near Tel Aviv, Israel, Wednesday. Jan, 24. 2007. Olmert on Wednesday called on embattled President Moshe Katsav to resign after the attorney general ann
photo: AP /Ariel Schalit
Israeli Defense Minister Amir Peretz speaks at the 7th Herzliya conference in the coastal city of Herzliya, near Tel Aviv, Israel, Monday, Jan. 22, 2007. Israeli Prime Minister Ehud Olmert and Peretz are scheduled to meet later Monday to approve the cand
photo: AP / Moti Milrod
Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak, right, shakes hands with Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad during the annual conference on security in Herzliya, north of Tel Aviv, Tuesday, Feb. 2, 2010.
photo: Creative Commons
A sukkah in Herzliya requires that eating of all meals and sleeping should be conducted in the sukkah. However, Jews are not expected to remain in the sukkah if they would be very uncomfortable there
photo: Creative Commons / Bukvoed
Appolonia Beach - Part of a national park containing archaeological findings from the Phoenician village of Arshuf dating to the 6th or 5th century BCE.
photo: AP / Ariel Schalit
Israel's Defense Minister Ehud Barak speaks the annual Herzliya Conference on security near Tel Aviv, Israel, Monday, Jan. 21, 2008. Israel must increase pressure on Gaza to stop rocket attacks, Barak said Monday, hours after he approved a one-time easing of a blockade that led to a blackout in Gaza City.
photo: Creative Commons / David Shay
Herzliya City Hall.
photo: Creative Commons / Yehudit Garinkol
Ramat HaSharon
photo: AP / Lefteris Pitarakis
Israeli opposition Likud party leader Ariel Sharon
photo: Creative Commons / חן כדורי
Charles Clore Park Tel Aviv is located around 32°5′N 34°48′E / 32.083°N 34.8°E / 32.083; 34.8 on the Israeli Mediterranean coastal plain, the historic land bridge between Europe, Asia and Africa.
photo: Creative Commons / Yoav Dothan
Breeding adult near Herzliya, Israel
photo: Creative Commons
A view of Tel Aviv
photo: Creative Commons / Mshaolian
Alpha Epsilon Pi Fraternity House at Purdue University.
photo: GFDL / Magnus Manske
Ra'anana (Hebrew: רַעֲנָנָה) (lit. "Fresh") is a city with a population of 73,100 in the southern Sharon Plain of the Central District of Israel. Ra'anana is bordered by Kfar Sava on the east and Herzliya on the southwest. It has been named the city with the highest quality of life in Israel and the safest city in the Middle East.[1]
photo: Creative Commons / Sambach
Tel Aviv Stock Exchange. Forty percent of national employment in finance and 25 percent of national employment in business services is in the city.[44] Since Tel Aviv was built on sand dunes, farming was not profitable and maritime commerce was centered in Haifa and Ashdod.
photo: Creative Commons / Rf
Ramat HaSharon (Hebrew: רָמַת הַשָּׁרוֹן, lit. Height of the Sharon) is a city located on Israel's central coastal strip in the south of the Sharon region, bordering Tel Aviv to the south and Herzliya and Kibbutz Glil Yam to the north. It is part of the Tel Aviv District, within Gush Dan metropolitan area. The city has a population of 37,500,[1] and less than 50% of its municipal area is built up, as it is bordered by two large installations limiting the growth of the city: a large fuel and gas