| Batu Caves | |
The Batu Caves are situated thirteen kilometers (seven miles) north of Malaysia's capital city Kuala Lumpur. They are the sacred place for the Hindus in Malaysia, consisting of three main caves and a number of smaller ones. View category |
| Bukit Tinggi | |
Bukit Tinggi is just over an hour's drive from Kuala Lumpur City centre and lies some 2,500 feet above sea level. Colmar Tropicale, located in Bukit Tinggi, Pahang, is a replica of a collection of buildings from a north-eastern village in France dating back to the 16th Century. View category |
| Cameron Highlands | |
Cameron Highlands is a highland region located about 20 km east of Ipoh and about 150km north of Kuala Lumpur in Pahang, Malaysia. At 5000 ft (1,500 m) above sea level it is the highest area on the mainland. View category |
| Ipoh | |
Ipoh, sometimes referred to as the City of Millionaires, is the capital of the state of Perak. Historically, "Ipoh" referred to the Old Town and New Town divided by the Kinta River at its heart, from which the city grew. View category |
| Kuantan | |
Kuantan is the state capital of Pahang, the largest state in Peninsular Malaysia. Attractions in Kuantan include the State Mosque (Masjid Negeri). View category |
| Kellie's Castle | |
| Kellie's Castle, about 30km south of Ipoh, begun in the late 19th Century by a Scottish rubber tycoon, William Kellie Smith. It was designed in a Moorish style, but unfortuntely he died before it was completed and the castle fell into ruins. View category |
| Langkawi | |
| Langkawi is an archipelago of 99 islands in the Andaman Sea, 30 km off the mainland coast of northwestern Malaysia. The islands are a part of Malaysia's Kedah state, but are adjacent to the Thai border. By far the largest of the islands is the eponymous Pulau Langkawi. View category |
| Malacca | |
| Malacca (or Melaka) is famed as the place where the history of Malaysia began. It was founded in 1396 by the exiled price from Sumatra Parameswara. In 1511, it fell into the hands of the Portuguese, and then the Dutch in 1641. In 1795, the Dutch gave control of Malacca to the British to prevent it from falling into the hands of the French. View category |
| Pulau Perhentian | |
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| Pulau Tioman | |
| Tioman is the largest and most impressive island at the east coast of Malaysia. Dense Jungle, which is a habitat for many kinds of flora and fauna, separates the popular west coast from the secluded beach on the east side of the island. View category |
| Kuala Selangor | |
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