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Brief History of
Syria

Syria (Arabic Suriyah), officially Al
Jumhuriyah al Arabiyah al Suriyah (Syrian Arab Republic), republic in
southwestern Asia, bounded on the north by Turkey, on the east by Iraq, on
the south by Jordan and Palastine, and on the west by Lebanon and the
Mediterranean Sea. Syria has an area of about 185,050 sq. km (about 71,498
sq. mi.). The capital and largest city is Damascus, also spelled
Dimashq.

Syria-Often called the Cradle of Civilization and the Gateway
to History, Syria has a lot to offer history and the development of
civilized man. On the other hand Syria's natural boundaries did nothing
for the security of the land… its strategic location also made it
vulnerable and many conquerors and attackers were able to conquer Syria.
It has been a great crossroad for trade between the Mediterranean and the
East; it exported the Alphabet to the West, and has been linked to
Religion from the beginning, from the Semitic Deities to the monotheistic
faiths.
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Damascus

Damascus, the capital of Syria, is the
oldest continuously inhabited city in the world. While all the world is
now entering the third millennium, Damascus is entering its
sixth.
Damascus is an exceptional example of the
timelessness and universality of a great city. A modern capital whose
voice - discreet but assured, moderate but yet not lacking in feeling - is
having a decisive effect in the Arab World and in the Mediterranean area
today, Damascus is said to be "the oldest continuously inhabited city in
the world". Damascus is mentioned in the earliest historic texts -
Egyptian records of the 19th century BC, and the archives of Mari, dating
from the 25th century BC Further back, history gives way to legend and
speaks of "Dimachq ach-Sham", the "town of Shem", son of Noah. Legend too,
gives way to poetry, in which it is said that when Christ returns to Earth
to do battle with the Anti-Christ, he will make his way down by the
highest minaret of the Umayyad Mosque.
Damascus, capital of Syria, is a
distinguished city which charms the visitor with its old quarters and its
modern aspect. Here the old and the new are side by side ; archaeological
remains hundred of years old and ultra-modern Europeans style buildings.
Damascus was formerly a fortified city, mention of which is found in
Egyptian texts of the eighteenth dynasty and even in Assyrian tablets, as
well as in Genesis. Besides being the administrative and political capital
of Syria, Damascus is the economic capital of Syria, where banks and other
leading commercial and industrial companies have their head offices. In
addition, the city is an important university, artistic and tourist
center. Damascus owes everything to the river Barada. Descending like a
torrent from the Anti-Lebanon range, this narrow river, joined by a
hundred smaller streams, cascades down the gorges of Ain Al-Fijeh. Then it
meanders for a while beside the Beirut road, giving pleasure to the
patrons of restaurants and cafes along its lush green banks, before losing
itself in myriad branches, canals and ditches. These gardens, fields and
orchards, the oasis from which Damascus gets much of its food.

Damascus offers you with the following
attractive places to visit and see:- The Old City within the famous
ancient walls. The Holy Shrine of Sayida Zeinab. The magnificent Umayaad
Mosque. Saladin's Memorial and the Museum of Epigraph. The Azem Palace and
the Popular Arts. The Chapel of Annanias. Al-Takieh Al-Suleimaniya, an
Ottoman transplant. The Artisans Bazaars. The Covered Bazaars
(Al-Hamidieh). The street called Straight. The national Museum of
Damascus. The Historical and Army Museum.
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Alepoo
Of all the towns of Syria it is Aleppo that
leaves the profoundest impression upon the visitor. Aleppo was a key town
on the trade routes for thousands of years (the silk route among others)
and still uses, for local and regional trade, a considerable proportion of
the facilities that were developed in the time of the caravans: khans,
courtyards as warehouses with workshops around them : kilometers of narrow
covered streets where traders and craftsmen congregate according to their
various callings and specialties.

A visit to the covered Souks "12 kms"
enables the tourist to see something of the town's everyday life and at
the same time see monuments which are often no longer used (the madrases
and bimarstans for example) but whose design and decoration is extremely
interesting. Aleppo is mentioned in Hittite documents dating from the
second millennium BC, when it was the center of a prosperous kingdom
called "Yamhad". Aleppo thus has a very long history and has been the
scene of many events and activities.The Citadel dominating Aleppo is a
masterpiece of Arab military architecture. It stands on an archaeological
tell containing vestiges of a very early period, but from the Arab period
onwards the hill of Aleppo was more than just a fortress; it was the
residence of princes and the seat of government. The entrance to the
Citadel is still intact, and is of impressive strength and majesty. A
visitor to Syria who misses touring Aleppo can hardly be called a real
visitor.
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Latakia

Latakia, formerly "Laodicea", is a peaceful
residential and resort town. But its beaches of golden sand and its
holiday chalets with its lively port, which along with the neighboring
port of Tartus constitutes Syria's Mediterranean gateway. Latakia is one
of the lungs of Syria. It is the ancient settlement of Ramitha, Leuk Akat
and Mazabdan of the 4th and 3rd millennia BC It was an important
Phoenician city in the 2nd and 1st millennia BC Latakia was later occupied
by the Assyrians and the Babylonians. Alexander, the Great, conquered
Latakia in 333 BC and the great leader Seleucus Nictar rebuilt it and
renamed it Laoicea, in honor of his mother. There are beaches, mountains,
lush countryside, archaeological sites and many relics of the Crusaders,
all within, at most, a few hour's drive
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Tartus
The great period in the history of this
city, as Phoenician port on the mainland, occurred in Byzantine times. The
name became "Tortosa". Crowds of Christians used to come here on
pilgrimage to pray in a chapel which was said to have been dedicated to
the Virgin Mary by Saint Peter, when the Father of the Apostles was in his
way from Jerusalem to Antioch. Muslim, then Byzantine again around the
year 1000, Tortosa was to become one of the main supply ports fore the
Crusades and a military base of considerable importance, held by the
Templars. In 1188, Salah Eddin reconquered the town, but could not capture
the keep, surrounded as it was by a broad ditch, equipped with advanced
engines of war and defended by the best Knights of Order. Tortosa was to
remain in the hands of the Franks until 1291.
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Homs

Homs is famous for its mausoleum containing
the tomb of Khaled Ibn Al-Walid; the great commander of the Muslim armies
who brought Islam to Syria in 636. There are many churches there, small
modest buildings for the most part. One of them claims to possess "the
girdle of the Blessed Virgin". The Church of St. Elian commemorates the
only son of a high Roman Official, governor of Homs (Emesa) at the end of
the 3rd century, who died a martyr for his faith at the hands of his own
father. Homs provided Rome with three emperors, including the famous
Caracalla. It is also famous as the birth-place of Elagablal, the High
Priest of the Temple of Sun. Its Citadel contains Roman and Islamic
fortifications
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Hama

Hama is one of the most attractive towns in
Syria, notable on account of its wooden wheels called "Norias" which draw
water from the Orontes. An old town dating back to Neolithic times, Hama
charms the visitor with its water and orchards and its picturesque old
quarters. A noria is an undershot Vitruvian waterwheel which raises water
from a pool or a well to a channel or a cistern above. It is a very
ancient technique. Its noise - a "cry" almost like the Muezzin's call to
prayer, hatch, plangent and timeless. Hama is filled with historical
sites. The most important one is the Azem Palace, built in 1742 AD, now
housing a museum with rare pieces. The Old Citadel of Hama consists of at
least ten distinct archaeological layers, from the Neolithic period to the
Middle Ages. Other sites in Hama are worth visiting such as Al-Nouri
Mosque and the two "Khans", the Assad Pacha El-Azem and the Rustom Pacha,
with gateways and courtyards built of stone in alternating
colors.
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Idlib

Situated in the Northwest of Syria is the
Governorate of Idlib. This governorate is the link between the coastal
region and the inland steppe, as it was the Syrian gateway to Europe and
the West through Bab Al Hawa, Door of the Wind.
The historical importance of Idlib is quite
important. The area of Idlib holds over 190 man made tells (hills), the
most famous of which is at Tell Mardikh, Ebla. The cuneiform tablets found
at Ebla prove that this area has been settled since the 3rd millennium BC.
Idlib also has an abundance of Dead Cities, some which are well preserved
and others that have been forgotten.
The governorate of Idlib is known for its
Olive and Olive Oil, its wheat, cotton and fruit, in particular cherries.
The main city of the governorate is the city of Idlib, which lies 59 Km
from Aleppo at a height of 500 meters above sea level. The city itself is
also very ancient as the Roman and Pagan cemeteries indicate. The museum
at Idlib is quite interesting and houses many of the artifacts and tablets
excavated at Ebla.
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Raqqa

Originally built by Alexander the Great, who
called the site "Nicephorion", but nothing remained of it or of the
"callinicos" of the Roman. As the Persians several times fought the
Byzantines here, nothing has become down to us of Christian Raqqa. In 722,
the Abbassid Caliph Al-Mansour founded a new city, "Al-Rafika", which
quickly eclipsed ancient Raqqa, but in the 18th century, the Mongols laid
waste the rich city. Raqqa is most famous as the summer resort of the
Caliph Harun Ar-Rashid, of the Thousand and One Nights, who built his
magnificent palace here, still standing today.
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Hasakeh

Hasakeh is one of the biggest Syrian
Muhafazet in area. It is the most important source of wheat and oil. It is
difficult for researchers to know the oldest history of this Muhafazet
because the excavations have not finished yet and it is believed that the
Khabour valley was within Sourbatu kingdom which extended from Ailaam city
to Toros mountains in the third millennium B.C.
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Deir
Ezzor

This city can be summarized in three words :
a town, a river and a bridge. The town is the only important urban center
in the East of Syria. Its position, far from the capital and from the
nerve-centers of the country, at the entrance to a vast and developing
region, gives it a very considerable local importance and is enhancing its
sense of its identity.
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Palmyra

The ruins of Palmyra are impressive both by
their extent and by their remarkable state of preservation. The ancient
Arabcity is gradually being restored in all its grandeur. The majestic
site of this city, was cited in the 2nd millennium BC, Capppodocian and
Akkadian inscriptions. Some of the discoveries are - the agora, the
theater, the baths, the Temple of Nabo and the great Temple of Bel, one of
the finest monuments in all the East.
The inhabitants of Palmyra had used the
Temple as the center of their village and a whole new settlement had to be
built for them outside the village walls. Palmyra is one of those
exceptional places where art and history have fused to produce a synthesis
that will dazzle succeeding generations. This remarkable site in the
center of the Syrian desert became a necessary stopping-place for caravans
taking the shortest route from the Arabia Gulf to the Mediterranean, as
well as for those taking the Silk Route and crossing the Tigris near
Seleucisin Babylon. "Tadmor" is mentioned on tablets dating from the 19th
century BC From the end of the second millennium Aramean was the language
spoken there, this language persisted until the Byzantine period. At the
end of 267, Zenobia became a monarch of the city. She expanded the city to
be a great kingdom in an open defiance of Rome. In the autumn of 274
Zenobia was taken prisoner to Rome where she was forced to ride in
Aurelian's "Triumph" and Palmyra never recovered her position.
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Suwaida

Suwayda is situated in the tip of Syria
where it is black basalt country. The eruptive rocks that litter the
ground give the landscape a very special appearance : black are the
stones, black the monuments, black also are the sculptures and the
ornaments. Cruder as pieces of art, but how much more strange, are the
statues carved in the hard basalt : a representation of a Pantheon showing
a mingling of Arab (Nabatean), Hellenistic (after the conquest of
Alexander), and Byzantine (the town was the seat of a bishopric in the 5th
century) influences. Dusares rubs shoulder with Athens and Venus; Nabatean
inscriptions are found close to slabs bearing the cross of Christ. An
eagle, wings spread (Nabatean deity), and small but aggressive female
busts take on an extraordinary force when carved in the reddish
rock.
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Daraa

Located 100 km south of Damascus is the city
of Daraa, which is the capital of Daraa governorate, known throughout
history as the Horan region.
The city of Daraa is an ancient city dating
back to the Canaanites. It was mentioned in Egyptian Hieroglyphic tablets
at the time of the Pharoah Thutmos III between 1490 and 1436 BC. It was
known in those days as the city of Atharaa, and was later mentioned in the
Old Testament as Idraai.
The city is now located on the
Damascus-Amman highway and is used as a stopping station for travelers.
Located in the city itself are a few ruins like the caves and ancient
dwellings, the Roman Amphitheater, and the old Oumari mosque which is of
some architectural significance, dating back to the Umayyad and Ayyubid
eras.
As for the outskirts of Daraa, the main
point of interest is the magnificent amphitheater at Bosra.
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Quneitra

The word Quneitra, comes from the word,
Qantara meaning a bridge between the countries of Syria, Lebanon, Jordan,
and Palestine. It is known for its abundance in water and has been settled
by man since the Stone Age. Traces of this have been found at Banat Yacoub
bridge and Tell Akkash. It was later occupied by the Amorites, who
established their state in 2250 BC. They were succeeded by the Arameans,
the Assyrians, Caldeans, and then the Persian and Hellenistic
empires.
In 106 AD the Golan was part of the Arab
state that was established under the Romans. In 636 AD the battle of
Yarmouk took place between the Arabs and the Byzantines who were banished
from Syria. It was occupied in 1967 by the Israelis. In 1973 with the
October war of liberation under the leadership of Mr. President
Hafez Al Assad, Quneitra was taken back into Syrian territory after being
completely destroyed by Israel. . The General Assembly of the United
Nations condemned Israels destruction of this province in its Resolution
No. 3740 dated 29/11/1974, it was also considered a violation of the
Geneva convention.
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