Studies were undertaken to optimize tissue culture conditions for micropropagation of Aleppo pine (Pinus halepensis Mill.) from mature embryos and various explants of the embryo. Over 90% of the embryo explants gave rise to adventitious buds within 4 wk. Intact embryos were the most suitable explants for shoot bud induction. Both isolated cotyledons and hypocotyls produced adventitious buds, but these developed slowly and failed to elongate. N6-Benzyladenine (BA) alone at 5.0µM was the most effective cytokinin when added to gelled to gelled von Arnold and Eriksson’s (AE) medium containing 3% sucrose. Adventitious bud development was achieved on hormone-free AE medium, and shoot elongation was optimum on three quarter-strength Bornman’s MCM medium, with 0.1% conifer-derived activated charcoal. Shoots were multiplied on three-quarter strength MCM medium, containing 5µM BA. To induce adventitious roots on the elongated shoots, pulse treatment with 1 mM IBA for 6 h, followed by the transfer of the shoots to sterile peat:vermiculite (1:1) mixture, was beneficial. After acclimatization for 3 to 4 wk under mist, almost all the rooted shoots could be transplanted successfully to the greenhouse, where the plants exhibited normal growth habit. Histologic studies on the ontogeny of adventitious shoot formation from mature embryo explants revealed temporal structural changes in different parts of the explant. Induction of mitotic divisions on the shoot-forming medium resulted in the formation of meristemoids in the epidermal and subepidermal layers of the explant, located initially at both the tips of the cotyledons and the axils of adjacent cotyledons. Shoot buds arising in the axils of adjacent cotyledons were due to new cell division and not to any preexisting meristem.