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Harran

Harran, historically known as Carrhae (Greek: Kάρραι, romanizedKárrhai), is a rural town and district of the Şanlıurfa Province in southeastern Turkey, approximately 40 kilometres (25 miles) southeast of Urfa and 20 kilometers from the border crossing with Syria at Akçakale.

Harran
View of a portion of the old town with the Harran Castle in the background
Harran
Location of Harran in Turkey
Harran
Harran (Asia)
Harran
Harran (Near East)
Coordinates: 36°52′15″N 39°01′30″E / 36.87083°N 39.02500°E / 36.87083; 39.02500Coordinates: 36°52′15″N 39°01′30″E / 36.87083°N 39.02500°E / 36.87083; 39.02500
Country Turkey
RegionSoutheastern Anatolia
ProvinceŞanlıurfa
Foundedc. 2500–2000 BC
Government
 • MayorMahmut Özyavuz (MHP)
 • KaymakamCihat Koç
Area
 • District1,053.78 km2 (406.87 sq mi)
Elevation
360 m (1,180 ft)
Population
 (2017)[2]
 • Urban
9,653
 • District
84,554
 • District density80/km2 (210/sq mi)
DemonymHarranian
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+3 (EEST)
Postal code
63xxx
Area code+(90)414
Websitewww.harran.bel.tr

Harran was founded at some point between the 25th and 20th centuries BC, possibly as a merchant colony by Sumerian traders from Ur. Over the course of its early history, Harran rapidly grew into a major Mesopotamian cultural, commercial and religious center. It was made a religiously and politically influential city through its association with the moon-god Sin; many prominent Mesopotamian rulers consulted with and renovated the moon-temple of Ekhulkhul in Harran. Harran came under Assyrian rule under Adad-nirari I (r. 1305–1274 BC) and became a provincial capital often second in importance only to the Assyrian capital of Assur itself. During the collapse of the Assyrian Empire, Harran briefly served as the final capital of the Neo-Assyrian Empire 612–609 BC.

The city continued to be prominent after the fall of Assyria and experienced varying degrees of foreign cultural influence during its time under the Neo-Babylonian (609–539 BC), Achaemenid (539–330 BC), Macedonian (330–312 BC) and Seleucid (312–132 BC) empires. During classical antiquity Harran was often contested between the Roman and Parthian (later Sasanian) empires. In 53 BC Harran was the site of the Battle of Carrhae, one of the worst military defeats in Roman history. The Harranian moon cult of Sin proved to be enduring and lasted long into the Middle Ages, known to have existed as late as the 11th century AD. Harran was captured by the Rashidun Caliphate in 640 and remained an important city in the Islamic period. It flourished as a center of science and learning and was the site of both the first Islamic university (the Harran University)[3][a] and the oldest mosque in Anatolia[b] (the Harran Grand Mosque [tr]).[5] Harran twice served as a capital city in the Middle Ages, first briefly under the Umayyad Caliphate 744–750 and later under the Numayrid Emirate 990–1081.

The city was conquered by the Mongol Empire in 1260 but was largely destroyed and left abandoned in 1271. Although Harran was kept as a military outpost under some later regimes, it has over the last five centuries mainly been used as a temporary settlement by local nomadic societies. Harran retransitioned into a semi-permanent village settlement in the 1840s but has only recently grown into a permanent town through advancements in local irrigation and agriculture. Harran was a Turkish district until 1946, after when it was downgraded to a sub-district of the Akçakale district. It regained its status as a district in 1987.[6] Today, it is a major local tourist spot. The town is particularly famous for its unique beehive houses, which are reminiscent of buildings that were already present at Harran in ancient Mesopotamian times.

Toponomy

The name Harran is recorded for the city from the earliest documents mentioning it and has remained in continuous use and largely unchanged since ancient times.[7] Harran is mentioned in early cuneiform records of the Sumerians and Hittites as 𒌷𒊮𒆜 (URU.ŠÀ.KASKAL), sometimes shortened to 𒆜 (KASKAL),[8] transliterated as Ḫarrānu(m).[9][10] Ḫarrānu literally means "journey", "caravan" or "crossroad".[3] It is often interpreted as "caravan path"[10] or "intersection of routes and travel".[7] Harran is rendered as ܚܳܪܳܢ (hrn) in Aramaic,[11] حَرَّان (Ḥarrân) in Arabic,[12] حران (Harrān) in Ottoman Turkish,[13] and Harran in modern Turkish.[14]

The ancient Assyrians called the city Huzirina.[15] Ḫarrānu was Hellenised to Kárrhai (Kάρραι)[16] in the Hellenistic period.[17] The Romans later Latinised the Greek name into Carrhae.[17][18] Due to the prominence of both Harran and Carrhae in historical literary sources, some scholars use the compound name "Carrhae-Harran" for the ancient city.[19] Under the Byzantine Empire, the city continued to be called Carrhae (Kάρραι) but was also sometimes referred to as Hellenopolis (Eλληνóπoλις),[16] "city of the [pagan] Greeks", in reference to the strong pagan traditions there.[3][9]

History

Historical affiliations
List

Ancient Near East (2500–539 BC)

Early history

 
Harran and other major cities of ancient Syria

Harran is situated at an important geographical crossroad, both between the Euphrates and Tigris rivers and at the border between the ancient Mesopotamian and Anatolian cultures. The earliest known settlements in the region surrounding Harran date to 10000–8000 BC and settlements in its close vicinity are known to have existed by 6000 BC.[10] The region initially shifted between the control of the Sumerians and Hittites before being occupied by ancient Semitic-speaking people around 2750 BC.[18] The earliest written records concerning Harran suggest that the city itself was founded c. 2500[7]–2000 BC[3][20] as a merchant outpost by traders from the Sumerian city of Ur.[3][20]

Harran was from early on associated with the Mesopotamian moon-god Nanna (later known as Sin)[3] and soon became regarded as a sacred city of the moon.[9][21] The Ekhulkhul ("Temple of Rejoicing"),[22] Harran's great moon temple, was already present in the city by c. 2000 BC.[23] Sin was a major deity in Ur, which also housed his main temple,[24] but Harran's devotion to the moon can perhaps also be explained by its geography and climate. According to Donald Frew, the sun was a natural enemy in the hot and desolate landscape surrounding Harran whereas the night (and thus the moon) were more comforting.[3] The sun-god Shamash is however also thought to have had a temple in Harran. Another prominent deity in the city was Sin's son Nusku, the god of light.[25]

Although next to nothing is known of the architecture and layout of Harran prior to the Middle Ages,[26] the city is believed to have been designed according to a vaguely moon-shaped plan[9] since Medieval sources allude to this. What kind of moon shape is meant by the sources is not clear.[27]

The religious authorities of Harran, speaking on behalf of Sin, were considered suitable guarantors and signatories in political treaties. Already c. 2000 BC, a peace treaty was sealed in the Ekhulkhul between Mari and the Bene-iamina, an Amorite tribe. Further treaties signed that invoke Sin of Harran include a 14th-century BC treaty between Šuppiluliuma I of the Hittites and Shattiwaza of Mitanni, and an 8th-century BC treaty between the Assyrian king Ashur-nirari V and Mati'ilu of Arpad.[23]

Harran grew into a major Mesopotamian cultural, commercial and religious center.[7] In addition to its religious importance, Harran was also important due to its strategic placement on an intersection of trade routes.[28] Because Harran had an abundance of goods that passed through its region, it often became a target for raids.[29] In the 19th century BC, the lands surrounding Harran were occupied by confederations of semi-nomadic tribes.[20] In the following century the Amorite king Shamshi-Adad I (r. 1808–1776 BC) is recorded to have launched an expedition to conquer the region around Harran and secure the trade routes there from hostile forces.[29] After the fall of Shamsi-Adad's kingdom in the early 18th century BC, Harran was an independent city-state for a time; archives from Mari from the time of Zimri-Lim (r. 1775–1761) record that Harran in his time was ruled by a king named Asdi-Takim.[30] Harran was later incorporated into the Mitanni kingdom in the 16th century BC.[30]

Assyria and Babylonia

 
The Harran Stela, discovered at Harran in 1956, depicting the Neo-Babylonian king Nabonidus (r. 556–539 BC)

Harran was conquered from Mitanni by the Assyrian king Adad-nirari I (r. 1305–1274 BC).[3][31] The city would not be firmly incorporated into Middle Assyrian Empire until the 1100s BC,[32] before which it was often occupied by Arameans.[25] Under Assyria, Harran grew into a fortified provincial capital second in importance only to the capital of Assur itself. In the 10th century, Harran was one of the few cities, along with Assur, to be exempt from needing to pay tribute to the Assyrian king[33] and in the 9th and 8th centuries BC, Harran was made the seat of the turtanu, the Assyrian commander-in-chief.[31]

Since Harran was the sacred city of the moon-god, many Mesopotamian kings travelled there to receive the blessing and confirmation of their rule from the city's religious officials and in turn renovated and expanded Harran and its temples.[3] The Ekhulkhul was renovated twice in the Neo-Assyrian period, by the kings Shalmaneser III (r. 859–824 BC) and Ashurbanipal (r. 669–631 BC).[21] Prophecies made by prophets and oracles of the moon cult of Harran were held in high regard; in the 670s BC the Harranians correctly prophesied that Esarhaddon (r. 681–669 BC) would conquer Egypt and Sasi, a usurper proclaimed king by an oracle from Harran, managed to rally widespread support in the empire before he was defeated. The reign of Esarhaddon in particular marked the rise of the Ekhulkhul into one of the most prominent religious sanctuaries in the ancient Near East, a position it would retain for centuries.[34]

The Assyrian Empire was defeated in the late 7th century BC by the newly established Neo-Babylonian Empire and the Medes. The Assyrian capital Nineveh fell in 612 BC but the remnants of the Assyrian army, led by the crown prince Ashur-uballit II, rallied at Harran.[35] Harran is therefore typically regarded as the short-lived final capital of ancient Assyria.[15][36] Ashur-uballit underwent a coronation ceremony at Harran, being invested with rulership by Sin.[35] After a long siege lasting from the winter of 610 BC to early 609 BC, Harran was captured by the Babylonians and Medes, ending the Assyrian Empire.[37] The Ekhulkhul was destroyed by the Medes at this time[38] and was neglected for many years[39] but was eventually restored by the Neo-Babylonian king Nabonidus (r. 556–539 BC),[21] who was from Harran.[40] The city itself was also significantly revitalised in Nabonidus's reign.[41]

Antiquity (539 BC–640)

 
Anatolia in the 1st century AD, including Osroene and Harran ("Karrhai")

After the fall of the Neo-Babylonian Empire in 539 BC, Harran was successively under the control of the Achaemenid (539–330 BC), Macedonian (330–312 BC) and Seleucid (312–132 BC) empires.[3][17] Under the Seleucids, Harran largely functioned as a military colony[17] and from the time of the Macedonian conquest onwards, many Greeks settled in Harran. Under the centuries of Hellenic control, Harran gradually underwent some Hellenization of its culture.[42][c] After the collapse of the Seleucid Empire, Harran became part of the Kingdom of Osroene in 132 BC,[17] ruled by the Nabatean Arab Abgarid dynasty[43] and most frequently a vassal state of the Parthian Empire.[17] Abgarid rule may have encouraged the local moon cult; the moon was important in both the ancient Bedouin and Nabatean Arab religions.[39]

From the first century BC until the end of antiquity, Harran was typically located near or on the border of the Roman (later Byzantine) and Parthian (later Sasanian) empires. Harran frequently changed hands between the two empires but was in practice often more or less independent.[3] In 53 BC, the city was the site of the Battle of Carrhae between the Romans and Parthians, in which the Parthian general Surena defeated and killed the Roman triumvir Marcus Licinius Crassus,[18] one of the worst military defeats in Roman history.[3] Osroene (and thus also Harran) first came under Roman control as a result of the wars of Lucius Verus and Avidius Cassius in 162–166 AD. Harran gained colonial status under Emperor Septimius Severus in 195.[17] Sources from Roman times describe Harran as a fortified garrison town.[17][44] In 217, the Roman emperor Caracalla was murdered in Harran while visiting the temple of Sin.[17][44] Harran, along with the nearby cities of Nisibis and Hatra, were captured by the Sasanian king Ardashir I in 238–240 but was swiftly retaken by Emperor Gordian III.[45] Later in 296, Harran was also the site of a battle where the future emperor Galerius suffered a crushing defeat against the Sasanian king Narseh.[46] In the writings of Ammianus Marcellinus (359), it is noted that the walls of Harran were in poor condition. This issue was not rectified until repairs conducted in the reign of Justinian I (r. 527–565).[47]

 
Harran depicted on the Arch of Septimius Severus in Rome

From the time of the Christianization of Mesopotamia and Syria until long into the Middle Ages, Harran developed a rivalry with the nearby city of Edessa due to the cities having polarised attitudes concerning Christianity. Whereas Edessa adopted the new religion very early, Harran remained a pagan stronghold for centuries[39] and became the largest center of pagan cults in eastern Syria.[19] Harran was still overwhelmingly pagan in the 4th century, to the degree that the bishop appointed to Harran in 361 refused to reside in the city and instead lived in Edessa.[39] Despite its paganism, Harran was a site of interest to Christians since the city is mentioned in the Book of Genesis as the town where Abraham and his family stopped on their way from Ur of the Chaldees to Canaan.[32]

The last pagan Roman emperor, Julian (r. 361–363) intentionally avoided the Christian Edessa[19][39] and instead stopped at Harran in 363 to consult the oracles of the moon temple on his upcoming Persian campaign.[48] Although it is known that Sin was still worshipped at Harran in this time[42] Julian is curiously stated to have consulted the female moon deity Luna.[44] The oracles warned the emperor of impending disaster but Julian proceeded anyway and was killed in the war. Harran was the only city in the Roman Empire to declare citywide mourning after Julian's death.[3] Later sources indicate that the deities worshipped by the pagans of Harran in late antiquity included Sin, Bat-Nikkal (consort of Sin; a different name from his ancient consort Ningal),[42] the "lord with his dogs" (identified as a localised version of the god Nergal), Tar'atha (identified with the Syrian goddess Atargatis), Gadlat (an Arbian goddess), and perhaps Shamash.[39] Though Sin had in the past been the only major deity in Harran, he was by this point only the most important of several different ancient gods.[32]

The pagans of Harran became an issue in the increasingly Christianised late Roman Empire. As late as the early 5th century, the theologian Theodoret wrote that Harran was "a barbarous place, full of the thorns of paganism".[39] At the Second Council of Ephesus (449), the Bishop of Harran, Stephen, was accused of accepting bribes from pagans to let them practice their rituals in peace.[19] Harran was briefly captured by the Sasanian king Khosrow I in 549, who exempted the city from paying the tribute he demanded from Edessa on account of Harran not being Christian like his enemies but rather a stronghold of the "old religion".[39] The endurance of paganism at Harran in the Christian late Roman Empire is likely only explainable through the pagans there offering regular bribes to church officials and civil administrators in the region.[19] In 590, Emperor Maurice (r. 582–602) ordered the Bishop of Harran, Stephen, to persecute the pagans of Harran. Many who refused to convert to Christianity, including the governor Acindynus, were executed.[48] By this time, the Christians and pagans of Harran lived in separate quarters of the city.[47]

Middle Ages (640–1271)

Harran under the caliphates

 
Harran was briefly the capital of the Umayyad Caliphate 744–750

Maurice's persecution of the pagans of Harran had little effect on the strength of the pagan community and Harran remained a largely pagan city.[49] When the armies of the Rashidun Caliphate, led by the general Iyad ibn Ghanm, besieged Harran in the winter of 639–640 it was the pagans of the city who negotiated its peaceful surrender.[48] Ghanm is recorded to have given the pagans of Harran a new moon temple after the capture of the city.[50] Harran under Islamic rule became one of the most important settlements in the Diyar Mudar district.[9] In 657, Caliph Ali asked the Harranians to aid him against Mu'awiya I, the first Umayyad caliph, but the Harranians instead sided with Mu'awiya at the Battle of Siffin in the same year. In response, it is said that Ali enacted a brutal massacre in Harran, exterminating most of the inhabitants.[48]

Under the Umayyad Caliphate (661–750), Harran was renovated[9] and prospered once more.[48] In 717, Caliph Umar II founded the first Muslim university at Harran, bringing many scholars from other cities in the caliphate (including Alexandria) and installing them in Harran.[3] Harran was made the capital of the Umayyad Caliphate under its last caliph, Marwan II, from 744 to 750.[7][51] The reason for Marwan moving his court to Harran is not known,[52] but might be either to better monitor the troublesome eastern provinces of the caliphate[9] or due to the anti-Christian sentiment of the city's pagan population,[53] who had never been disloyal to the Umayyads.[52] The move of the capital to Harran caused some outrage; the Banu Kalb tribe saw it as an abandonment of Syria and under Yazid ibn Khalid al-Qasri besieged the former capital of Damascus before being suppressed.[54] Harran did not continue to function as a capital under the succeeding Abbasid Caliphate, though the city enjoyed some special privileges. When Al-Mansur (r. 754–775) ordered the destruction of the walls of all cities in northern Mesopotamia, Harran was a notable exception.[53]

 
Ruins of the medieval Harran University

The Harran University[a] underwent its golden age in the 8th century, particularly under the Abbasid caliph Harun al-Rashid (r. 786–809).[7][d] Many prominent scholars of this time were educated at the university in subjects such as mathematics, philosophy, medicine and astrology. The university was also an important site for translations of documents from Syriac and Greek into Arabic[7] and Harran flourished as a center of science and learning. Al-Rashid furthermore supplied Harran with a new water supply, constructing a canal from the Balikh River.[9] At some point, Neoplatonism was introduced to Harranian intellectuals, though the precise timing is not clear. It might have been brought to Harran by the scholar Thābit ibn Qurra in the late 9th century, who could have learnt Neoplatonism in Baghdad. Alternatively, Neoplatonism might have been brought to Harran as early as the 6th century by Neoplatonists such as Simplicius of Cilicia, who fled persecution in the Byzantine Empire.[55]

The local Harranian religion continued to develop as a blend of ancient Mesopotamian religion and Neoplatonism[47] and Harran remained notorious for its strong pagan traditions long into the Islamic period.[9] The city retained a highly heterogenous population that practiced many different religions. Some adopted syncretistic faiths tolerable by the Muslims, others continued to honor the old deities of ancient Mesopotamia and Syria, and some primarily worshipped the stars and planets.[56][e] The Harranian pagans considered themselves the heirs of ancient star-worshipping civilizations such as Babylonia, Greece, India, Persia and Egypt.[57] In addition to pagans, Harran was also home to Muslims, Christians, Jews, Samaritans, Zoroastrians, Manicheans, and other groups.[58]

In 830, Harun al-Rashid's son Al-Ma'mun (r. 813–833) arrived at Harran with an army on his way to raid in the Byzantine Empire[32] and intended to destroy the city due to its large pagan population. Al-Ma'mun asked the populace if they were Muslims, Christians or Jews ("people of the book" protected under Islamic law). Unable to claim that they were, the people of Harran instead claimed that they were "Sabians", a mysterious religious group also protected according to the Quran but who no one at the time knew who they were.[3] Upon being inquired who their prophet was, the Harranians claimed that their prophet was the legendary Hellenistic figure Hermes Trismegistus.[59] There were many Islamic writers who saw through the claims of Harranians and still considered them to be pagans and not Sabians, and thus lacking any special right to toleration or protection.[60] In 933, the Harranian pagans were ordered through a decree to convert to Islam, but a visitor to the city in the following year found that there were still pagan religious leaders operating a remaining public temple. Toleration of the pagans at Harran appears to have been renewed in the late 10th century.[61]

Late Middle Ages

 
Harran served as the capital of the Numayrid Emirate (990–1081)

The power of the Abbasid Caliphate and its vassals in the region around Harran (the Hamdanid dynasty) declined at the end of the 10th century. A new local Arab dynasty emerged during this time, the Numayrid dynasty, who ruled a small realm with Harran as its capital from 990 to 1081.[52] The toleration of paganism at Harran was at last revoked for the final time under the Numayrids in the 11th century and the last moon temples were closed and destroyed. The precise date when this happened and the events surrounding it are unknown, perhaps coinciding with the city falling under the control of the Fatimid Caliphate[61] in 1038 through the submission of the Numayrid ruler Shabīb ibn Waththāb in 1038,[62] or with a failed rebellion in 1083.[61] In 1059,[52] the Harran Castle, presumably constructed in Byzantine times,[16] was rebuilt and strengthened by the Numayrid ruler Manīʿ ibn Shabīb.[52] By the 1180s, Harran was fully devoted to Islam with little to no traces of its former moon cult.[61][f]

In the late 11th and early 12th century, political control in northern Mesopotamia and Syria was fragmented. Harran was an important city to the various local Muslim rulers as a counterweight to the nearby crusader states. Numayrid control of Harran came to an end in 1081 when the city was captured by the Uqaylid dynasty. It was then under the control of various Turkish princes; first Jikirmish of Mosul (1102–1106), then the Artuqids of Mardin (1106–1127) and then the Zengid dynasty, which captured Harran under Imad al-Din Zengi in 1127.[63]

In the 12th century, Harran at times fell under the influence of the County of Edessa, a short-lived crusader state. There is no record of the crusaders ever conquering Harran but the Harran Castle preserves remnants of a Christian chapel with distinct crusader architecture, perhaps suggesting a peaceful crusader presence. The growth of Edessa under Christian rule contributed to the decline of Harran. Edessa is higher up the water table than Harran and as more wells were constructed in Edessa, those in Harran gradually dried up.[3] Harran was in the 12th century still renowned for its ancient origins; a now lost work by Hammad al-Harrani made the claim that Harran had been the first city founded after the great flood.[64]

 
Harran as it looked before its abandonment in the 13th century

Despite the threat of water scarcity, Harran continued to be an important town under the rule of the Ayyubid Sultanate, which followed the Zengids.[65] Saladin (r. 1174–1193) at some point enlarged Harran's Grand Mosque [tr][9] and thereafter granted Harran to his brother Al-Adil I (later sultan 1200–1218). Al-Adil later gave Harran to his son Al-Kamil (later sultan 1218–1238). Harran was then under the rule of Al-Kamil's brother Al-Ashraf Musa 1202–1228/1229, after whose death the city steadily declined in importance.[g] Harran was captured by Khwarazmians in 1237, driven from their homeland following the fall of the Khwarazmian Empire, but the castle was retained and fortified by the Ayyubid ruler As-Salih Ayyub though he soon had to give it up to broker a deal with the Khwarazmians for military aid against Badr al-Din Lu'lu' of Mosul. Harran was later regained from the Khwarazmians by the Ayyubids in 1240 by An-Nasir Yusuf of Aleppo.[66]

Harran was captured by the Mongol Empire under Hulagu Khan in 1259[66] or 1260[9][65] through the peaceful surrender of its governor.[66] The Harran Castle, as was traditional placed under a different governor, continued to resist for some time until one of the towers were breached.[66] Under the Mongols, Harran continued to flourish for a few years as a major urban center.[18] Mongol control of Harran was immediately contested by the Sultanate of Rum[18] and the Mamluk Sultanate.[65] The Mongols decided to abandon Harran in 1271,[3][67] deporting the population to the nearby cities of Mardin[67] and Mosul.[65] Accounts differ concerning the reason for the abandonment and the state in which the city was left. One account states that the city had been damaged in a battle against the Turks in the year prior, motivating the abandonment,[18] whereas another states that the Mongols themselves caused the damage during the abandonment.[65] The Mongols are also variously stated to either have simply walled up the gates but otherwise left what remained intact[3] or to have pillaged the city for building materials before burning down the remnants.[65] One major reason for the abandonment was likely the decreasing water supply. It was impossible to sustain the population size of Harran with its water storage systems in disrepair and its wells no longer producing enough water.[68] Another possible reason for the abandonment was the difficulty to retain and defend Harran and the little strategic value offered by the city in return.[66]

Later history (1271–present)

 
19th-century photograph of Harran

Harran was regained from the Mongols by the Mamluk Sultanate later in the 1270s.[65] The Mamluks repaired the castle at some point, most likely in the 1330s or 1340s,[69] and it became the seat of a local military governor,[65] but there was otherwise little effort spent on trying to revive the city.[9] By this point Harran was no longer on any of the major trade routes.[69] A small village-sized settlement sprung up at the site, probably in the immediate vicinity of the castle.[65] The space within Harran's city walls gradually filled up with dirt and sand through natural means. Over the centuries, few structures remained above the soil; the castle survived owing to its position on a hill and its continued usage. The remnants of the mosque were also kept clear due to its religious and historical significance.[3]

Under the Ottoman Empire, which captured the region in the early 16th century, Harran was the capital of a nahiyah (a local administrative unit composed of a group of villages).[65] The demolished Harran University was repaired under the Ottoman sultan Selim I (r. 1512–1520) though it again declined in importance after his reign.[7] The Ottomans continued to use the castle, and also built a new smaller mosque in the southern part of the city, but Harran gradually declined over the course of Ottoman rule and was eventually entirely abandoned as a permanent settlement.[65]

 
Part of the old town of Harran in 2001

Harran has over the last five hundred years mainly been used as a temporary settlement by local nomadic societies.[7] One of the major semi-nomadic tribes that have continuously lived in and around Harran since the Middle Ages and still today are the Nmēr,[h] descendants of the medieval Numayrid lords of the city.[70] By the 1840s, Harran had once more become a semi-permanent village settlement, although the inhabitants spent the summer months encamped outside the village to avoid vermin in their houses.[65] By the middle of the 20th century, Harran comprised about a hundred houses, inhabited by semi-settled nomadic Arabs, most of whom still did not stay at the site for the duration of the entire year. The city's ancient water systems had long fallen into disrepair and Harran in the 20th century had only a single source of drinking water, Jacob's Well, about 1.6 kilometres (0.99 miles) west of its walls. Although six wells were still operational within the ancient walls they only produced brackish water and were thus only useful for providing water to animals. The water at Harran had perhaps been contaminated from seeping saltpeter from its ancient ruins.[71]

Since the middle of the 20th century, Harran has re-transitioned into a permanently inhabited settlement due to local advancements in irrigation and agriculture.[7] Particularly important in this development was the Turkish Southeastern Anatolia Project, launched in the 1970s, which through irrigation efforts transformed the formerly dry desert plains surrounding Harran into productive agricultural fields.[72] Harran received its own plan for future development in 1992.[73] The ruins of the ancient city were placed on the Tentative list of World Heritage Sites in Turkey in 2000.[74] Accelerated economic and demographic growth in Harran is expected to in the future once more transform Harran into an important local center.[72] Economic issues caused by the Syrian civil war across the nearby Syrian border has recently caused many Harranian families to migrate elsewhere for work, such as to the cities Urfa (ancient Edessa), Adıyaman and Gaziantep.[75]

Town

Monuments and ruins

Harran Castle

 
Partially reconstructed ruins of the Harran Castle

The Harran Castle is a large brick fortress of unknown date, though ancient Greek inscriptions found at one of its gates suggest that it was founded at some point during Byzantine rule (4th–7th centuries).[16] It is also possible that it was built under Muslim rule in the 9th century.[76] If it was not built in the 9th century, it is likely to at least have been expanded in the early Islamic period. Before its fall into ruin, the castle was a three-story structure. It was probably initially a palace but was converted into a more castle-like militaristic building in the 11–13th centuries when the region surrounding Harran experienced considerable political turmoil. The castle has recently been partially excavated and reconstructed with the support of the Turkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism.[16]

Great Mosque

 
Harran Grand Mosque

Harran was the site of the oldest mosque built in Anatolia, known as the Grand Mosque or Paradise Mosque.[5] The mosque was built by the Umayyad caliph Marwan II in 744–750, at the time the city was his capital.[52][5] The masonry of the mosque indicates that it was restored several times throughout its history. Measuring 104 by 107 metres (341 ft × 351 ft) at its height, the mosque has fallen into ruin over the centuries and little of it remains standing today. Remaining portions include the eastern wall, the mihrab, a fountain, and the 33.3-metre (109-foot) tall minaret.[5]

Another important historical monument in Harran is its ancient burial mound, spread over a large area and partially surviving intact at the center of the city's archaeological site. The burial mound preserves inscriptions and architectural elements from several different cultures and appears to have been in continuous use from the 3rd century BC to the 13th century AD.[16] The burial mound may be older than Harran itself since ceramic dated to c. 5000 BC has been found at the site.[77]

The precise location of the ancient great Ekhulkhul temple is unknown[78] and no certain archaeological evidence of it has yet been found.[15] It is likely that one of the major medieval buildings of Harran displaced the Elkhulkhul and were constructed on top of it, either the Harran Castle or the Grand Mosque.[52] Writings from the Islamic period contradictingly claim that the castle[79] or the mosque[80] were the converted moon temple.[80] The castle being on the site of the ancient temple is further supported by its higher elevation[52] whereas the mosque is further supported by the finds of Babylonian inscriptions and four stelae of Nabonidus among its ruins.[81] These inscriptions and stelae directly mention the Elkhulkhul. Additionally, the remains of an ancient altar with moon iconography have also been recovered from the ruins of the mosque.[82] As a result, the mosque enjoys more scholarly support as the most likely site of the ancient temple.[82][83][84][85]

City walls

 
Ruins of the Rakka Gate, one of Harran's ancient gates

The old town of Harran is still largely surrounded by Harran's ancient city walls.[86] Though they are in generally poor condition,[77] some stretches are well-preserved in good condition[86][77] and give an idea of how the settlement once looked.[77] The exact date of the current walls and which of the many cultures that have inhabited Harran constructed them is not known. The walls were most likely constructed under either Roman or Byzantine rule. Inscriptions in both Greek and Syriac have been discovered during excavations of parts of the walls.[5]

The walls of Harran resemble those of the nearby Edessa, though are slightly smaller.[77] They are vaguely elliptical in layout,[5] normally around 3 metres (9.8 feet) thick[77] and approximately 4.5 kilometres (2.8 miles) long and 5 metres (16 feet) high.[86] Before they fell into ruin, the walls had 187 bastions and 6–8 gates,[80] most of which are in ruined condition today.[5] Only one of the medieval gates of Harran, the Aleppo Gate, remain standing today. The walls were once surrounded by a great moat filled with water.[80]

Beehive houses

 
Harranian beehive houses

Harran mainly attracts attention today due to the distinctive vernacular architecture of the houses in its old town, known as beehive houses[10] (kümbets).[87] This building type is not seen elsewhere in Turkey and is rare in the rest of the world. Houses similar to the modern beehive houses have long been present in Harran; the earliest known buildings from Harran appear to have been circular[10] and Assyrian reliefs from the 7th century BC depict domed buildings architecturally similar to the present beehive houses.[88] They have not been consistently present on the site, instead being built, ruined, forgotten and rebuilt multiple times throughout Harran's history.[86][88] Beehive houses were recorded at Harran by the 12th-century explorer Ibn Jubayr but not by the 17th-century explorer Evliya Çelebi.[88]

The majority of the present beehive houses in Harran date to the early twentieth century and none have been standing for longer than since the mid-19th century. The architecture of the beehive houses has subtly changed since the twentieth century; photographs from that time show the houses erected on the grounds like tents whereas the present conical domes are built on larger cubical bases.[88]

Since wood is rare in the region around Harran owing to its climate, locals have traditionally built houses from materials they could easily gather such as stone, brick and mud.[86] The modern beehive houses were constructed by locals who learnt how to build them by examining excavated ancient buildings and used bricks gathered from the ruins as building material. The beehive houses were compatible with the nomadic lifestyle of the locals since they can be built and dismantled rapidly, like a tent, but also efficiently resist both heat and cold.[88] Because of the weak materials used for plastering the beehive houses require repair every 1–3 years. Their walls are usually 50–60 centimetres thick and their domes are about 20–30 centimetres thick. The domes have an opening at the top which provides natural air circulation and ventilation. This feature, combined with the thick walls, provide relatively good indoor conditions throughout the year, even in the extreme summer heat.[86][89]

 
The Harran Culture House

As of a count conducted in 2002, Harran had 2760 beehive houses[86] though the number in the old town has since declined to a few dozen.[75] Some of the beehive houses remained inhabited until the 1980s[90] but they are today mainly used as store houses and barns[91] and have been under conservation[86] since 1979.[80] One of the oldest extant buildings in Harran is a beehive complex that today serves as the Harran Culture House (Harran Kültür Evi), a local museum and restaurant.[92][93] The Culture House building was originally built c. 1800 but fell into ruins at some point and was rebuilt for tourism purposes[80][93] in 1999.[80] The museum showcases artefacts as well as traditional jewelry and clothes from the region surrounding Harran.[87]

Modern buildings

 
Village near Harran

Since prohibitions relating to conservation of historical monuments has hindered locals from gathering building materials from the ancient ruins since the 1950s, newer houses constructed in Harran are mostly concrete structures[86] with no architectural relation to the beehive houses.[91] Concrete houses have been built both alongside beehive houses[86] and outside the ancient city walls.[91] The majority of the population of Harran today live in a more newly constructed village about 2 kilometres (1.2 miles) from the old city center.[90]

Geography and climate

Harran is located in the Southeastern Anatolia Region of Turkey,[94] approximately 40 kilometres (25 miles) southeast of Urfa.[9] Harran is situated 360 metres (1,180 feet) above sea level, which is the lowest point in the surrounding lowland region.[95]

Harran has a hot and dry climate.[7][86] The precipitation rate is rarely more than 40 centimetres.[7] During the summer, Harran experiences significant temperature differences between the days and nights.[96]

Demographics

Historical population
Year Urban District Total
1990[97] 2,267 27,325 29,592
2000[97] 8,784 47,474 56,258
2009[97] 5,995 56,994 62,989
2012[98] 7,375 65,564 72,939
2017[2] 9,653 74,901 84,554

In its most prosperous periods in ancient and medieval history Harran was probably home to around 10,000–20,000 residents.[68]

As a result of Harran's retransition into a permanent settlement over the course of the late 20th century and early 21st century, the city and surrounding district has experienced a rapid population increase. Despite this, Harran retains predominantly rural characteristics.[97] As of 2017, central Harran had a population of 9,653 and the total population of the surrounding district was 84,554.[2] The Harran district ranks 857th among 872 districts in Turkey, and last among the districts of the Şanlıurfa Province, by socioeconomic development.[97] As of 2009, Harran has a low unemployment rate (2.73%; 753rd among all districts), a low literacy rate (55.16%; 865th among all districts) and a high population increase rate (64.23%; 7th among all districts).[97] Harran's possibilities for development are subject to several limiting factors, including the amount of productive land and the relatively limited area reserved for urban development.[73]

In his seyahatnâme from the 17th century, Evliya Çelebi mentioned that the vicinity of Harran was inhabited by Bedouins of Qays and Mawali tribes.[99] The local culture is predominantly Arabic in terms of lifestyle, clothing and food.[75] Harran has close social, cultural, commercial and urban relations with Urfa, the capital of the Şanlıurfa Province.[97] Vast majority of the district is composed of tribal Arabs.[100]

 
A man from Harran

Language

According to the census conducted by Turkey in 1927, 88.0% of the population spoke Arabic as their mother tongue; 6.8% Kurdish, and 5.2% Turkish.[101] Today, the majority of the population of Harran speaks Turkish; approximately 19% speak Arabic and 10% Kurdish.[7]

Tourism

The ancient ruins at Harran function like an open-air museum[75] and the town is a popular local tourist attraction,[80] often visited as a day trip from Urfa.[93] Popular attractions include the Harran Culture House[93] and the ruins of the castle and mosque.[75] Prior to 2015, Harran had around two million visitors a year, according to a local tour guide. The Syrian civil war has reduced this to almost zero.[75]

Politics

Mayors of Harran
# Mayor Term Party
1 İbrahim Özyavuz 1994–2009 AK Party; MHP
2 Mehmet Özyavuz 2009–2019 AK Party
3 Mahmut Özyavuz 2019–present MHP

Harran was established as a district in 1987 and divided into three neighbourhoods.[97] Harran first participated in the Turkish local elections in 1989, though there were no mayoral candidates at that time. The 1989 election was a close election between three parties; the True Path Party (DYP) received 36.1% of the vote, the ANAP received 35.8% and the Social Democratic Populist Party|SHP received 28.1%.[102]

İbrahim Özyavuz of the AK Party and later the Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) served as Mayor of Harran for three terms from 1994 to 2009, achieving victory in the local elections of 1994, 1999 and 2004.[103] İbrahim Özyavuz was defeated in the local elections of March 2009, beaten by Mehmet Özyavuz of AK Party who achieved 54.2% of the vote.[104] Mehmet Özyavuz retained his position as mayor for a second term winning the local elections of March 2014, receiving 55.5% of the vote.[105]

Since 31 March 2019, the Mayor of Harran is Mahmut Özyavuz of the MHP, who won in the local elections of March 2019 with 54.9% of the vote, defeating the incumbent Mehmet Özyavuz of the AK Party.[106] Mahmut Özyavuz is the son of İbrahim Özyavuz.[107]

Archaeology

 
Photograph of the ancient city walls of Harran by T. E. Lawrence

Although Harran was of great interest to historians due to its association with the ancient moon cult and its abundant appearances in Mesopotamian, Roman and Arab historical writings, the site itself did not receive significant archaeological attention until the 19th century owing to its geographical remoteness. Harran first garnered attention in 1850 when it was visited by some members of Francis Rawdon Chesney's Euphrates Expedition. Harran was also visited by the missionary George Percy Badger in 1852 and by Eduard Sachau in 1879, who sketched some of the ruins. In 1911, Conrad Preusser published a brief but accurate study of the ruins of the Harran Castle and K. A. C. Creswell included a detailed survey of the remains of the Grand Mosque in his 1932 book Early Muslim Architecture Volume I. Harran was also visited and photographed by T. E. Lawrence ("Lawrence of Arabia"). None of these early visitors conducted excavations and instead only observed the ruins and remnants visible on the surface.[108]

Seton Lloyd, William C. Brice and C. J. Gadd led a three-week archaeological expedition at Harran in the summer of 1950.[108] Results from a further archaeological survey conducted by R. Storm Rice were also published in 1952. Lloyd, Brice, Gadd and Rice mainly confined themselves to surveying Harran and clearing rubble.[3] Rice's work did however reveal the extent of the original city walls and their gates.[9] During later digs in 1956 and 1959, Rice also excavated the ruins of the Grand Mosque.[109] The site was later visited by H.J.W. Drijvers (who authored Cults and Beliefs at Edessa) in the 1970s and by Tamara Green (who authored The City of the Moon God) in 1977, but both only observed previously reported discoveries and did not dig for any new material. Excavations at Harran have thus continued to be very limited, partly due to its remote and at times politically tumultuous location and partly due to the difficulty for foreign archaeologists to work in Turkey.[3]

In 2012 and 2013, the Şanlıurfa Museum Directorate, with Mehmet Önal acting as consultant, carried out more extensive excavations at Harran, focusing on the walls, burial mound and castle. The excavations were mainly for restoration purposes on the western part of the city wall and uncovered the walls, towers and bastions. In excavations in the northern part of the castle, a gallery and crenellated corridor were discovered on the west side, with several artefacts of interest.[110] In 2014, following a decision of the Council of Ministers and courtesy of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, further excavation work was conducted, again under the direction of Önal. This round of excavations uncovered a bathhouse,[110] a bazaar,[111] public toilets, a perfumery shop and workshop.[112] In 2016, further excavations were carried out on the city wall, revealing new parts of the wall and leading to the discovery of a broken statue of a woman with a Syriac inscription and a male relief, both used as spolia in the wall. Excavations of the west side of the castle carried out in 2014–2016 uncovered a crenellated corridor belonging to a second defense system adjacent to the wall of the castle and further excavations in 2017–2018 in the southern part of the castle located remnants of a bathhouse.[113]

Notable people

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Not to be confused with the modern Harran University, established in Urfa in 1992.[4]
  2. ^ Depending on the definition used for Anatolia, Harran may or may not be seen as a part of the region.
  3. ^ The deities worshipped at Harran for instance began to at times be referred to by the names of corresponding ancient Greek deities[9] but their ancient Mesopotamian names also continued being used.[42]
  4. ^ Harun al-Rashid is also famous for founding the House of Wisdom in Baghdad, to which scholars from Harran would later be brought.[3]
  5. ^ The medieval Harranian worshippers of astronomical objects continued to use ancient names for the celestial bodies, alternating between Greek, Akkadian and Aramaic names (the moon for instance continued to be known as Sīn).[56]
  6. ^ The Arab geographer Ibn Jubayr visited Harran in the 1180s and noted that he found no memory or trace of the famous moon cult.[61]
  7. ^ As an example, the revenue from Harran declined from three million dirhams under Musa to only two million in 1242, less than fourteen years after the end of his rule.[66]
  8. ^ Nmēr is a dialectal form of Numair.[70]

References

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harran, carrhae, redirects, here, battle, battle, carrhae, other, uses, disambiguation, historically, known, carrhae, greek, kάρραι, romanized, kárrhai, rural, town, district, şanlıurfa, province, southeastern, turkey, approximately, kilometres, miles, southea. Carrhae redirects here For the battle see Battle of Carrhae For other uses see Harran disambiguation Harran historically known as Carrhae Greek Karrai romanized Karrhai is a rural town and district of the Sanliurfa Province in southeastern Turkey approximately 40 kilometres 25 miles southeast of Urfa and 20 kilometers from the border crossing with Syria at Akcakale HarranView of a portion of the old town with the Harran Castle in the backgroundFlagHarranLocation of Harran in TurkeyShow map of TurkeyHarranHarran Asia Show map of AsiaHarranHarran Near East Show map of Near EastCoordinates 36 52 15 N 39 01 30 E 36 87083 N 39 02500 E 36 87083 39 02500 Coordinates 36 52 15 N 39 01 30 E 36 87083 N 39 02500 E 36 87083 39 02500Country TurkeyRegionSoutheastern AnatoliaProvinceSanliurfaFoundedc 2500 2000 BCGovernment MayorMahmut Ozyavuz MHP KaymakamCihat KocArea 1 District1 053 78 km2 406 87 sq mi Elevation360 m 1 180 ft Population 2017 2 Urban9 653 District84 554 District density80 km2 210 sq mi DemonymHarranianTime zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST UTC 3 EEST Postal code63xxxArea code 90 414Websitewww harran bel trHarran was founded at some point between the 25th and 20th centuries BC possibly as a merchant colony by Sumerian traders from Ur Over the course of its early history Harran rapidly grew into a major Mesopotamian cultural commercial and religious center It was made a religiously and politically influential city through its association with the moon god Sin many prominent Mesopotamian rulers consulted with and renovated the moon temple of Ekhulkhul in Harran Harran came under Assyrian rule under Adad nirari I r 1305 1274 BC and became a provincial capital often second in importance only to the Assyrian capital of Assur itself During the collapse of the Assyrian Empire Harran briefly served as the final capital of the Neo Assyrian Empire 612 609 BC The city continued to be prominent after the fall of Assyria and experienced varying degrees of foreign cultural influence during its time under the Neo Babylonian 609 539 BC Achaemenid 539 330 BC Macedonian 330 312 BC and Seleucid 312 132 BC empires During classical antiquity Harran was often contested between the Roman and Parthian later Sasanian empires In 53 BC Harran was the site of the Battle of Carrhae one of the worst military defeats in Roman history The Harranian moon cult of Sin proved to be enduring and lasted long into the Middle Ages known to have existed as late as the 11th century AD Harran was captured by the Rashidun Caliphate in 640 and remained an important city in the Islamic period It flourished as a center of science and learning and was the site of both the first Islamic university the Harran University 3 a and the oldest mosque in Anatolia b the Harran Grand Mosque tr 5 Harran twice served as a capital city in the Middle Ages first briefly under the Umayyad Caliphate 744 750 and later under the Numayrid Emirate 990 1081 The city was conquered by the Mongol Empire in 1260 but was largely destroyed and left abandoned in 1271 Although Harran was kept as a military outpost under some later regimes it has over the last five centuries mainly been used as a temporary settlement by local nomadic societies Harran retransitioned into a semi permanent village settlement in the 1840s but has only recently grown into a permanent town through advancements in local irrigation and agriculture Harran was a Turkish district until 1946 after when it was downgraded to a sub district of the Akcakale district It regained its status as a district in 1987 6 Today it is a major local tourist spot The town is particularly famous for its unique beehive houses which are reminiscent of buildings that were already present at Harran in ancient Mesopotamian times Contents 1 Toponomy 2 History 2 1 Ancient Near East 2500 539 BC 2 1 1 Early history 2 1 2 Assyria and Babylonia 2 2 Antiquity 539 BC 640 2 3 Middle Ages 640 1271 2 3 1 Harran under the caliphates 2 3 2 Late Middle Ages 2 4 Later history 1271 present 3 Town 3 1 Monuments and ruins 3 1 1 Harran Castle 3 1 2 Great Mosque 3 2 City walls 3 3 Beehive houses 3 4 Modern buildings 4 Geography and climate 5 Demographics 5 1 Language 6 Tourism 7 Politics 8 Archaeology 9 Notable people 10 See also 11 Notes 12 References 12 1 Bibliography 12 2 WebToponomy EditThe name Harran is recorded for the city from the earliest documents mentioning it and has remained in continuous use and largely unchanged since ancient times 7 Harran is mentioned in early cuneiform records of the Sumerians and Hittites as 𒌷𒊮𒆜 URU SA KASKAL sometimes shortened to 𒆜 KASKAL 8 transliterated as Ḫarranu m 9 10 Ḫarranu literally means journey caravan or crossroad 3 It is often interpreted as caravan path 10 or intersection of routes and travel 7 Harran is rendered as ܚ ܪ ܢ hrn in Aramaic 11 ح ر ان Ḥarran in Arabic 12 حران Harran in Ottoman Turkish 13 and Harran in modern Turkish 14 The ancient Assyrians called the city Huzirina 15 Ḫarranu was Hellenised to Karrhai Karrai 16 in the Hellenistic period 17 The Romans later Latinised the Greek name into Carrhae 17 18 Due to the prominence of both Harran and Carrhae in historical literary sources some scholars use the compound name Carrhae Harran for the ancient city 19 Under the Byzantine Empire the city continued to be called Carrhae Karrai but was also sometimes referred to as Hellenopolis Ellhnopolis 16 city of the pagan Greeks in reference to the strong pagan traditions there 3 9 History EditHistorical affiliations List Uncertain independent c 2500 2000 1800 BCShamsi Adad s kingdom c 1800 1775 BCIndependent c 1775 1550 BCKingdom of Mitanni c 1550 1300 BCAssyrian Empire c 1300 610 BCBabylonian Empire 610 539 BCAchaemenid Empire 539 330 BCMacedonian Empire 330 312 BCSeleucid Empire 312 132 BCKingdom of Osroene Parthian vassal 132 BC AD 165Roman Empire 1st time 165 240Sasanian Empire 1st time 240 242Roman Empire 2nd time 242 549Sasanian Empire 2nd time 549 562 Roman Byzantine Empire 3rd time 562 640Rashidun Caliphate 640 661Umayyad Caliphate 661 750Abbasid Caliphate 750 890Hamdanid Emirate 890 990Numayrid Emirate 990 1081Uqaylid Emirate 1081 1102Seljuk Empire Jikirmish 1102 1106Artuqid State 1106 1127Zengid Emirate 1127 1182Ayyubid Sultanate 1st time 1182 1237Khwarazmians 1237 1240Ayyubid Sultanate 2nd time 1237 1240Mongol Empire 1260 1271Mamluk Sultanate 1270s 1517Ottoman Empire 1517 1922Republic of Turkiye 1922 present Ancient Near East 2500 539 BC Edit Early history Edit Harran and other major cities of ancient Syria Harran is situated at an important geographical crossroad both between the Euphrates and Tigris rivers and at the border between the ancient Mesopotamian and Anatolian cultures The earliest known settlements in the region surrounding Harran date to 10000 8000 BC and settlements in its close vicinity are known to have existed by 6000 BC 10 The region initially shifted between the control of the Sumerians and Hittites before being occupied by ancient Semitic speaking people around 2750 BC 18 The earliest written records concerning Harran suggest that the city itself was founded c 2500 7 2000 BC 3 20 as a merchant outpost by traders from the Sumerian city of Ur 3 20 Harran was from early on associated with the Mesopotamian moon god Nanna later known as Sin 3 and soon became regarded as a sacred city of the moon 9 21 The Ekhulkhul Temple of Rejoicing 22 Harran s great moon temple was already present in the city by c 2000 BC 23 Sin was a major deity in Ur which also housed his main temple 24 but Harran s devotion to the moon can perhaps also be explained by its geography and climate According to Donald Frew the sun was a natural enemy in the hot and desolate landscape surrounding Harran whereas the night and thus the moon were more comforting 3 The sun god Shamash is however also thought to have had a temple in Harran Another prominent deity in the city was Sin s son Nusku the god of light 25 Although next to nothing is known of the architecture and layout of Harran prior to the Middle Ages 26 the city is believed to have been designed according to a vaguely moon shaped plan 9 since Medieval sources allude to this What kind of moon shape is meant by the sources is not clear 27 The religious authorities of Harran speaking on behalf of Sin were considered suitable guarantors and signatories in political treaties Already c 2000 BC a peace treaty was sealed in the Ekhulkhul between Mari and the Bene iamina an Amorite tribe Further treaties signed that invoke Sin of Harran include a 14th century BC treaty between Suppiluliuma I of the Hittites and Shattiwaza of Mitanni and an 8th century BC treaty between the Assyrian king Ashur nirari V and Mati ilu of Arpad 23 Harran grew into a major Mesopotamian cultural commercial and religious center 7 In addition to its religious importance Harran was also important due to its strategic placement on an intersection of trade routes 28 Because Harran had an abundance of goods that passed through its region it often became a target for raids 29 In the 19th century BC the lands surrounding Harran were occupied by confederations of semi nomadic tribes 20 In the following century the Amorite king Shamshi Adad I r 1808 1776 BC is recorded to have launched an expedition to conquer the region around Harran and secure the trade routes there from hostile forces 29 After the fall of Shamsi Adad s kingdom in the early 18th century BC Harran was an independent city state for a time archives from Mari from the time of Zimri Lim r 1775 1761 record that Harran in his time was ruled by a king named Asdi Takim 30 Harran was later incorporated into the Mitanni kingdom in the 16th century BC 30 Assyria and Babylonia Edit The Harran Stela discovered at Harran in 1956 depicting the Neo Babylonian king Nabonidus r 556 539 BC Harran was conquered from Mitanni by the Assyrian king Adad nirari I r 1305 1274 BC 3 31 The city would not be firmly incorporated into Middle Assyrian Empire until the 1100s BC 32 before which it was often occupied by Arameans 25 Under Assyria Harran grew into a fortified provincial capital second in importance only to the capital of Assur itself In the 10th century Harran was one of the few cities along with Assur to be exempt from needing to pay tribute to the Assyrian king 33 and in the 9th and 8th centuries BC Harran was made the seat of the turtanu the Assyrian commander in chief 31 Since Harran was the sacred city of the moon god many Mesopotamian kings travelled there to receive the blessing and confirmation of their rule from the city s religious officials and in turn renovated and expanded Harran and its temples 3 The Ekhulkhul was renovated twice in the Neo Assyrian period by the kings Shalmaneser III r 859 824 BC and Ashurbanipal r 669 631 BC 21 Prophecies made by prophets and oracles of the moon cult of Harran were held in high regard in the 670s BC the Harranians correctly prophesied that Esarhaddon r 681 669 BC would conquer Egypt and Sasi a usurper proclaimed king by an oracle from Harran managed to rally widespread support in the empire before he was defeated The reign of Esarhaddon in particular marked the rise of the Ekhulkhul into one of the most prominent religious sanctuaries in the ancient Near East a position it would retain for centuries 34 The Assyrian Empire was defeated in the late 7th century BC by the newly established Neo Babylonian Empire and the Medes The Assyrian capital Nineveh fell in 612 BC but the remnants of the Assyrian army led by the crown prince Ashur uballit II rallied at Harran 35 Harran is therefore typically regarded as the short lived final capital of ancient Assyria 15 36 Ashur uballit underwent a coronation ceremony at Harran being invested with rulership by Sin 35 After a long siege lasting from the winter of 610 BC to early 609 BC Harran was captured by the Babylonians and Medes ending the Assyrian Empire 37 The Ekhulkhul was destroyed by the Medes at this time 38 and was neglected for many years 39 but was eventually restored by the Neo Babylonian king Nabonidus r 556 539 BC 21 who was from Harran 40 The city itself was also significantly revitalised in Nabonidus s reign 41 Antiquity 539 BC 640 Edit Anatolia in the 1st century AD including Osroene and Harran Karrhai After the fall of the Neo Babylonian Empire in 539 BC Harran was successively under the control of the Achaemenid 539 330 BC Macedonian 330 312 BC and Seleucid 312 132 BC empires 3 17 Under the Seleucids Harran largely functioned as a military colony 17 and from the time of the Macedonian conquest onwards many Greeks settled in Harran Under the centuries of Hellenic control Harran gradually underwent some Hellenization of its culture 42 c After the collapse of the Seleucid Empire Harran became part of the Kingdom of Osroene in 132 BC 17 ruled by the Nabatean Arab Abgarid dynasty 43 and most frequently a vassal state of the Parthian Empire 17 Abgarid rule may have encouraged the local moon cult the moon was important in both the ancient Bedouin and Nabatean Arab religions 39 From the first century BC until the end of antiquity Harran was typically located near or on the border of the Roman later Byzantine and Parthian later Sasanian empires Harran frequently changed hands between the two empires but was in practice often more or less independent 3 In 53 BC the city was the site of the Battle of Carrhae between the Romans and Parthians in which the Parthian general Surena defeated and killed the Roman triumvir Marcus Licinius Crassus 18 one of the worst military defeats in Roman history 3 Osroene and thus also Harran first came under Roman control as a result of the wars of Lucius Verus and Avidius Cassius in 162 166 AD Harran gained colonial status under Emperor Septimius Severus in 195 17 Sources from Roman times describe Harran as a fortified garrison town 17 44 In 217 the Roman emperor Caracalla was murdered in Harran while visiting the temple of Sin 17 44 Harran along with the nearby cities of Nisibis and Hatra were captured by the Sasanian king Ardashir I in 238 240 but was swiftly retaken by Emperor Gordian III 45 Later in 296 Harran was also the site of a battle where the future emperor Galerius suffered a crushing defeat against the Sasanian king Narseh 46 In the writings of Ammianus Marcellinus 359 it is noted that the walls of Harran were in poor condition This issue was not rectified until repairs conducted in the reign of Justinian I r 527 565 47 Harran depicted on the Arch of Septimius Severus in Rome From the time of the Christianization of Mesopotamia and Syria until long into the Middle Ages Harran developed a rivalry with the nearby city of Edessa due to the cities having polarised attitudes concerning Christianity Whereas Edessa adopted the new religion very early Harran remained a pagan stronghold for centuries 39 and became the largest center of pagan cults in eastern Syria 19 Harran was still overwhelmingly pagan in the 4th century to the degree that the bishop appointed to Harran in 361 refused to reside in the city and instead lived in Edessa 39 Despite its paganism Harran was a site of interest to Christians since the city is mentioned in the Book of Genesis as the town where Abraham and his family stopped on their way from Ur of the Chaldees to Canaan 32 The last pagan Roman emperor Julian r 361 363 intentionally avoided the Christian Edessa 19 39 and instead stopped at Harran in 363 to consult the oracles of the moon temple on his upcoming Persian campaign 48 Although it is known that Sin was still worshipped at Harran in this time 42 Julian is curiously stated to have consulted the female moon deity Luna 44 The oracles warned the emperor of impending disaster but Julian proceeded anyway and was killed in the war Harran was the only city in the Roman Empire to declare citywide mourning after Julian s death 3 Later sources indicate that the deities worshipped by the pagans of Harran in late antiquity included Sin Bat Nikkal consort of Sin a different name from his ancient consort Ningal 42 the lord with his dogs identified as a localised version of the god Nergal Tar atha identified with the Syrian goddess Atargatis Gadlat an Arbian goddess and perhaps Shamash 39 Though Sin had in the past been the only major deity in Harran he was by this point only the most important of several different ancient gods 32 The pagans of Harran became an issue in the increasingly Christianised late Roman Empire As late as the early 5th century the theologian Theodoret wrote that Harran was a barbarous place full of the thorns of paganism 39 At the Second Council of Ephesus 449 the Bishop of Harran Stephen was accused of accepting bribes from pagans to let them practice their rituals in peace 19 Harran was briefly captured by the Sasanian king Khosrow I in 549 who exempted the city from paying the tribute he demanded from Edessa on account of Harran not being Christian like his enemies but rather a stronghold of the old religion 39 The endurance of paganism at Harran in the Christian late Roman Empire is likely only explainable through the pagans there offering regular bribes to church officials and civil administrators in the region 19 In 590 Emperor Maurice r 582 602 ordered the Bishop of Harran Stephen to persecute the pagans of Harran Many who refused to convert to Christianity including the governor Acindynus were executed 48 By this time the Christians and pagans of Harran lived in separate quarters of the city 47 Middle Ages 640 1271 Edit Harran under the caliphates Edit Harran was briefly the capital of the Umayyad Caliphate 744 750 Maurice s persecution of the pagans of Harran had little effect on the strength of the pagan community and Harran remained a largely pagan city 49 When the armies of the Rashidun Caliphate led by the general Iyad ibn Ghanm besieged Harran in the winter of 639 640 it was the pagans of the city who negotiated its peaceful surrender 48 Ghanm is recorded to have given the pagans of Harran a new moon temple after the capture of the city 50 Harran under Islamic rule became one of the most important settlements in the Diyar Mudar district 9 In 657 Caliph Ali asked the Harranians to aid him against Mu awiya I the first Umayyad caliph but the Harranians instead sided with Mu awiya at the Battle of Siffin in the same year In response it is said that Ali enacted a brutal massacre in Harran exterminating most of the inhabitants 48 Under the Umayyad Caliphate 661 750 Harran was renovated 9 and prospered once more 48 In 717 Caliph Umar II founded the first Muslim university at Harran bringing many scholars from other cities in the caliphate including Alexandria and installing them in Harran 3 Harran was made the capital of the Umayyad Caliphate under its last caliph Marwan II from 744 to 750 7 51 The reason for Marwan moving his court to Harran is not known 52 but might be either to better monitor the troublesome eastern provinces of the caliphate 9 or due to the anti Christian sentiment of the city s pagan population 53 who had never been disloyal to the Umayyads 52 The move of the capital to Harran caused some outrage the Banu Kalb tribe saw it as an abandonment of Syria and under Yazid ibn Khalid al Qasri besieged the former capital of Damascus before being suppressed 54 Harran did not continue to function as a capital under the succeeding Abbasid Caliphate though the city enjoyed some special privileges When Al Mansur r 754 775 ordered the destruction of the walls of all cities in northern Mesopotamia Harran was a notable exception 53 Ruins of the medieval Harran University The Harran University a underwent its golden age in the 8th century particularly under the Abbasid caliph Harun al Rashid r 786 809 7 d Many prominent scholars of this time were educated at the university in subjects such as mathematics philosophy medicine and astrology The university was also an important site for translations of documents from Syriac and Greek into Arabic 7 and Harran flourished as a center of science and learning Al Rashid furthermore supplied Harran with a new water supply constructing a canal from the Balikh River 9 At some point Neoplatonism was introduced to Harranian intellectuals though the precise timing is not clear It might have been brought to Harran by the scholar Thabit ibn Qurra in the late 9th century who could have learnt Neoplatonism in Baghdad Alternatively Neoplatonism might have been brought to Harran as early as the 6th century by Neoplatonists such as Simplicius of Cilicia who fled persecution in the Byzantine Empire 55 The local Harranian religion continued to develop as a blend of ancient Mesopotamian religion and Neoplatonism 47 and Harran remained notorious for its strong pagan traditions long into the Islamic period 9 The city retained a highly heterogenous population that practiced many different religions Some adopted syncretistic faiths tolerable by the Muslims others continued to honor the old deities of ancient Mesopotamia and Syria and some primarily worshipped the stars and planets 56 e The Harranian pagans considered themselves the heirs of ancient star worshipping civilizations such as Babylonia Greece India Persia and Egypt 57 In addition to pagans Harran was also home to Muslims Christians Jews Samaritans Zoroastrians Manicheans and other groups 58 In 830 Harun al Rashid s son Al Ma mun r 813 833 arrived at Harran with an army on his way to raid in the Byzantine Empire 32 and intended to destroy the city due to its large pagan population Al Ma mun asked the populace if they were Muslims Christians or Jews people of the book protected under Islamic law Unable to claim that they were the people of Harran instead claimed that they were Sabians a mysterious religious group also protected according to the Quran but who no one at the time knew who they were 3 Upon being inquired who their prophet was the Harranians claimed that their prophet was the legendary Hellenistic figure Hermes Trismegistus 59 There were many Islamic writers who saw through the claims of Harranians and still considered them to be pagans and not Sabians and thus lacking any special right to toleration or protection 60 In 933 the Harranian pagans were ordered through a decree to convert to Islam but a visitor to the city in the following year found that there were still pagan religious leaders operating a remaining public temple Toleration of the pagans at Harran appears to have been renewed in the late 10th century 61 Late Middle Ages Edit Harran served as the capital of the Numayrid Emirate 990 1081 The power of the Abbasid Caliphate and its vassals in the region around Harran the Hamdanid dynasty declined at the end of the 10th century A new local Arab dynasty emerged during this time the Numayrid dynasty who ruled a small realm with Harran as its capital from 990 to 1081 52 The toleration of paganism at Harran was at last revoked for the final time under the Numayrids in the 11th century and the last moon temples were closed and destroyed The precise date when this happened and the events surrounding it are unknown perhaps coinciding with the city falling under the control of the Fatimid Caliphate 61 in 1038 through the submission of the Numayrid ruler Shabib ibn Waththab in 1038 62 or with a failed rebellion in 1083 61 In 1059 52 the Harran Castle presumably constructed in Byzantine times 16 was rebuilt and strengthened by the Numayrid ruler Maniʿ ibn Shabib 52 By the 1180s Harran was fully devoted to Islam with little to no traces of its former moon cult 61 f In the late 11th and early 12th century political control in northern Mesopotamia and Syria was fragmented Harran was an important city to the various local Muslim rulers as a counterweight to the nearby crusader states Numayrid control of Harran came to an end in 1081 when the city was captured by the Uqaylid dynasty It was then under the control of various Turkish princes first Jikirmish of Mosul 1102 1106 then the Artuqids of Mardin 1106 1127 and then the Zengid dynasty which captured Harran under Imad al Din Zengi in 1127 63 In the 12th century Harran at times fell under the influence of the County of Edessa a short lived crusader state There is no record of the crusaders ever conquering Harran but the Harran Castle preserves remnants of a Christian chapel with distinct crusader architecture perhaps suggesting a peaceful crusader presence The growth of Edessa under Christian rule contributed to the decline of Harran Edessa is higher up the water table than Harran and as more wells were constructed in Edessa those in Harran gradually dried up 3 Harran was in the 12th century still renowned for its ancient origins a now lost work by Hammad al Harrani made the claim that Harran had been the first city founded after the great flood 64 Harran as it looked before its abandonment in the 13th centuryDespite the threat of water scarcity Harran continued to be an important town under the rule of the Ayyubid Sultanate which followed the Zengids 65 Saladin r 1174 1193 at some point enlarged Harran s Grand Mosque tr 9 and thereafter granted Harran to his brother Al Adil I later sultan 1200 1218 Al Adil later gave Harran to his son Al Kamil later sultan 1218 1238 Harran was then under the rule of Al Kamil s brother Al Ashraf Musa 1202 1228 1229 after whose death the city steadily declined in importance g Harran was captured by Khwarazmians in 1237 driven from their homeland following the fall of the Khwarazmian Empire but the castle was retained and fortified by the Ayyubid ruler As Salih Ayyub though he soon had to give it up to broker a deal with the Khwarazmians for military aid against Badr al Din Lu lu of Mosul Harran was later regained from the Khwarazmians by the Ayyubids in 1240 by An Nasir Yusuf of Aleppo 66 Harran was captured by the Mongol Empire under Hulagu Khan in 1259 66 or 1260 9 65 through the peaceful surrender of its governor 66 The Harran Castle as was traditional placed under a different governor continued to resist for some time until one of the towers were breached 66 Under the Mongols Harran continued to flourish for a few years as a major urban center 18 Mongol control of Harran was immediately contested by the Sultanate of Rum 18 and the Mamluk Sultanate 65 The Mongols decided to abandon Harran in 1271 3 67 deporting the population to the nearby cities of Mardin 67 and Mosul 65 Accounts differ concerning the reason for the abandonment and the state in which the city was left One account states that the city had been damaged in a battle against the Turks in the year prior motivating the abandonment 18 whereas another states that the Mongols themselves caused the damage during the abandonment 65 The Mongols are also variously stated to either have simply walled up the gates but otherwise left what remained intact 3 or to have pillaged the city for building materials before burning down the remnants 65 One major reason for the abandonment was likely the decreasing water supply It was impossible to sustain the population size of Harran with its water storage systems in disrepair and its wells no longer producing enough water 68 Another possible reason for the abandonment was the difficulty to retain and defend Harran and the little strategic value offered by the city in return 66 Later history 1271 present Edit 19th century photograph of Harran Harran was regained from the Mongols by the Mamluk Sultanate later in the 1270s 65 The Mamluks repaired the castle at some point most likely in the 1330s or 1340s 69 and it became the seat of a local military governor 65 but there was otherwise little effort spent on trying to revive the city 9 By this point Harran was no longer on any of the major trade routes 69 A small village sized settlement sprung up at the site probably in the immediate vicinity of the castle 65 The space within Harran s city walls gradually filled up with dirt and sand through natural means Over the centuries few structures remained above the soil the castle survived owing to its position on a hill and its continued usage The remnants of the mosque were also kept clear due to its religious and historical significance 3 Under the Ottoman Empire which captured the region in the early 16th century Harran was the capital of a nahiyah a local administrative unit composed of a group of villages 65 The demolished Harran University was repaired under the Ottoman sultan Selim I r 1512 1520 though it again declined in importance after his reign 7 The Ottomans continued to use the castle and also built a new smaller mosque in the southern part of the city but Harran gradually declined over the course of Ottoman rule and was eventually entirely abandoned as a permanent settlement 65 Part of the old town of Harran in 2001 Harran has over the last five hundred years mainly been used as a temporary settlement by local nomadic societies 7 One of the major semi nomadic tribes that have continuously lived in and around Harran since the Middle Ages and still today are the Nmer h descendants of the medieval Numayrid lords of the city 70 By the 1840s Harran had once more become a semi permanent village settlement although the inhabitants spent the summer months encamped outside the village to avoid vermin in their houses 65 By the middle of the 20th century Harran comprised about a hundred houses inhabited by semi settled nomadic Arabs most of whom still did not stay at the site for the duration of the entire year The city s ancient water systems had long fallen into disrepair and Harran in the 20th century had only a single source of drinking water Jacob s Well about 1 6 kilometres 0 99 miles west of its walls Although six wells were still operational within the ancient walls they only produced brackish water and were thus only useful for providing water to animals The water at Harran had perhaps been contaminated from seeping saltpeter from its ancient ruins 71 Since the middle of the 20th century Harran has re transitioned into a permanently inhabited settlement due to local advancements in irrigation and agriculture 7 Particularly important in this development was the Turkish Southeastern Anatolia Project launched in the 1970s which through irrigation efforts transformed the formerly dry desert plains surrounding Harran into productive agricultural fields 72 Harran received its own plan for future development in 1992 73 The ruins of the ancient city were placed on the Tentative list of World Heritage Sites in Turkey in 2000 74 Accelerated economic and demographic growth in Harran is expected to in the future once more transform Harran into an important local center 72 Economic issues caused by the Syrian civil war across the nearby Syrian border has recently caused many Harranian families to migrate elsewhere for work such as to the cities Urfa ancient Edessa Adiyaman and Gaziantep 75 Town EditMonuments and ruins Edit Harran Castle Edit Partially reconstructed ruins of the Harran Castle The Harran Castle is a large brick fortress of unknown date though ancient Greek inscriptions found at one of its gates suggest that it was founded at some point during Byzantine rule 4th 7th centuries 16 It is also possible that it was built under Muslim rule in the 9th century 76 If it was not built in the 9th century it is likely to at least have been expanded in the early Islamic period Before its fall into ruin the castle was a three story structure It was probably initially a palace but was converted into a more castle like militaristic building in the 11 13th centuries when the region surrounding Harran experienced considerable political turmoil The castle has recently been partially excavated and reconstructed with the support of the Turkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism 16 Great Mosque Edit Harran Grand Mosque Harran was the site of the oldest mosque built in Anatolia known as the Grand Mosque or Paradise Mosque 5 The mosque was built by the Umayyad caliph Marwan II in 744 750 at the time the city was his capital 52 5 The masonry of the mosque indicates that it was restored several times throughout its history Measuring 104 by 107 metres 341 ft 351 ft at its height the mosque has fallen into ruin over the centuries and little of it remains standing today Remaining portions include the eastern wall the mihrab a fountain and the 33 3 metre 109 foot tall minaret 5 Another important historical monument in Harran is its ancient burial mound spread over a large area and partially surviving intact at the center of the city s archaeological site The burial mound preserves inscriptions and architectural elements from several different cultures and appears to have been in continuous use from the 3rd century BC to the 13th century AD 16 The burial mound may be older than Harran itself since ceramic dated to c 5000 BC has been found at the site 77 The precise location of the ancient great Ekhulkhul temple is unknown 78 and no certain archaeological evidence of it has yet been found 15 It is likely that one of the major medieval buildings of Harran displaced the Elkhulkhul and were constructed on top of it either the Harran Castle or the Grand Mosque 52 Writings from the Islamic period contradictingly claim that the castle 79 or the mosque 80 were the converted moon temple 80 The castle being on the site of the ancient temple is further supported by its higher elevation 52 whereas the mosque is further supported by the finds of Babylonian inscriptions and four stelae of Nabonidus among its ruins 81 These inscriptions and stelae directly mention the Elkhulkhul Additionally the remains of an ancient altar with moon iconography have also been recovered from the ruins of the mosque 82 As a result the mosque enjoys more scholarly support as the most likely site of the ancient temple 82 83 84 85 City walls Edit Ruins of the Rakka Gate one of Harran s ancient gates The old town of Harran is still largely surrounded by Harran s ancient city walls 86 Though they are in generally poor condition 77 some stretches are well preserved in good condition 86 77 and give an idea of how the settlement once looked 77 The exact date of the current walls and which of the many cultures that have inhabited Harran constructed them is not known The walls were most likely constructed under either Roman or Byzantine rule Inscriptions in both Greek and Syriac have been discovered during excavations of parts of the walls 5 The walls of Harran resemble those of the nearby Edessa though are slightly smaller 77 They are vaguely elliptical in layout 5 normally around 3 metres 9 8 feet thick 77 and approximately 4 5 kilometres 2 8 miles long and 5 metres 16 feet high 86 Before they fell into ruin the walls had 187 bastions and 6 8 gates 80 most of which are in ruined condition today 5 Only one of the medieval gates of Harran the Aleppo Gate remain standing today The walls were once surrounded by a great moat filled with water 80 Beehive houses Edit Harranian beehive houses Harran mainly attracts attention today due to the distinctive vernacular architecture of the houses in its old town known as beehive houses 10 kumbets 87 This building type is not seen elsewhere in Turkey and is rare in the rest of the world Houses similar to the modern beehive houses have long been present in Harran the earliest known buildings from Harran appear to have been circular 10 and Assyrian reliefs from the 7th century BC depict domed buildings architecturally similar to the present beehive houses 88 They have not been consistently present on the site instead being built ruined forgotten and rebuilt multiple times throughout Harran s history 86 88 Beehive houses were recorded at Harran by the 12th century explorer Ibn Jubayr but not by the 17th century explorer Evliya Celebi 88 The majority of the present beehive houses in Harran date to the early twentieth century and none have been standing for longer than since the mid 19th century The architecture of the beehive houses has subtly changed since the twentieth century photographs from that time show the houses erected on the grounds like tents whereas the present conical domes are built on larger cubical bases 88 Since wood is rare in the region around Harran owing to its climate locals have traditionally built houses from materials they could easily gather such as stone brick and mud 86 The modern beehive houses were constructed by locals who learnt how to build them by examining excavated ancient buildings and used bricks gathered from the ruins as building material The beehive houses were compatible with the nomadic lifestyle of the locals since they can be built and dismantled rapidly like a tent but also efficiently resist both heat and cold 88 Because of the weak materials used for plastering the beehive houses require repair every 1 3 years Their walls are usually 50 60 centimetres thick and their domes are about 20 30 centimetres thick The domes have an opening at the top which provides natural air circulation and ventilation This feature combined with the thick walls provide relatively good indoor conditions throughout the year even in the extreme summer heat 86 89 The Harran Culture House As of a count conducted in 2002 Harran had 2760 beehive houses 86 though the number in the old town has since declined to a few dozen 75 Some of the beehive houses remained inhabited until the 1980s 90 but they are today mainly used as store houses and barns 91 and have been under conservation 86 since 1979 80 One of the oldest extant buildings in Harran is a beehive complex that today serves as the Harran Culture House Harran Kultur Evi a local museum and restaurant 92 93 The Culture House building was originally built c 1800 but fell into ruins at some point and was rebuilt for tourism purposes 80 93 in 1999 80 The museum showcases artefacts as well as traditional jewelry and clothes from the region surrounding Harran 87 Modern buildings Edit Village near Harran Since prohibitions relating to conservation of historical monuments has hindered locals from gathering building materials from the ancient ruins since the 1950s newer houses constructed in Harran are mostly concrete structures 86 with no architectural relation to the beehive houses 91 Concrete houses have been built both alongside beehive houses 86 and outside the ancient city walls 91 The majority of the population of Harran today live in a more newly constructed village about 2 kilometres 1 2 miles from the old city center 90 Geography and climate EditHarran is located in the Southeastern Anatolia Region of Turkey 94 approximately 40 kilometres 25 miles southeast of Urfa 9 Harran is situated 360 metres 1 180 feet above sea level which is the lowest point in the surrounding lowland region 95 Harran has a hot and dry climate 7 86 The precipitation rate is rarely more than 40 centimetres 7 During the summer Harran experiences significant temperature differences between the days and nights 96 Demographics EditHistorical population Year Urban District Total1990 97 2 267 27 325 29 5922000 97 8 784 47 474 56 2582009 97 5 995 56 994 62 9892012 98 7 375 65 564 72 9392017 2 9 653 74 901 84 554In its most prosperous periods in ancient and medieval history Harran was probably home to around 10 000 20 000 residents 68 As a result of Harran s retransition into a permanent settlement over the course of the late 20th century and early 21st century the city and surrounding district has experienced a rapid population increase Despite this Harran retains predominantly rural characteristics 97 As of 2017 central Harran had a population of 9 653 and the total population of the surrounding district was 84 554 2 The Harran district ranks 857th among 872 districts in Turkey and last among the districts of the Sanliurfa Province by socioeconomic development 97 As of 2009 Harran has a low unemployment rate 2 73 753rd among all districts a low literacy rate 55 16 865th among all districts and a high population increase rate 64 23 7th among all districts 97 Harran s possibilities for development are subject to several limiting factors including the amount of productive land and the relatively limited area reserved for urban development 73 In his seyahatname from the 17th century Evliya Celebi mentioned that the vicinity of Harran was inhabited by Bedouins of Qays and Mawali tribes 99 The local culture is predominantly Arabic in terms of lifestyle clothing and food 75 Harran has close social cultural commercial and urban relations with Urfa the capital of the Sanliurfa Province 97 Vast majority of the district is composed of tribal Arabs 100 A man from Harran Language Edit According to the census conducted by Turkey in 1927 88 0 of the population spoke Arabic as their mother tongue 6 8 Kurdish and 5 2 Turkish 101 Today the majority of the population of Harran speaks Turkish approximately 19 speak Arabic and 10 Kurdish 7 Tourism EditThe ancient ruins at Harran function like an open air museum 75 and the town is a popular local tourist attraction 80 often visited as a day trip from Urfa 93 Popular attractions include the Harran Culture House 93 and the ruins of the castle and mosque 75 Prior to 2015 Harran had around two million visitors a year according to a local tour guide The Syrian civil war has reduced this to almost zero 75 Politics EditMayors of Harran Mayor Term Party1 Ibrahim Ozyavuz 1994 2009 AK Party MHP2 Mehmet Ozyavuz 2009 2019 AK Party3 Mahmut Ozyavuz 2019 present MHPHarran was established as a district in 1987 and divided into three neighbourhoods 97 Harran first participated in the Turkish local elections in 1989 though there were no mayoral candidates at that time The 1989 election was a close election between three parties the True Path Party DYP received 36 1 of the vote the ANAP received 35 8 and the Social Democratic Populist Party SHP received 28 1 102 Ibrahim Ozyavuz of the AK Party and later the Nationalist Movement Party MHP served as Mayor of Harran for three terms from 1994 to 2009 achieving victory in the local elections of 1994 1999 and 2004 103 Ibrahim Ozyavuz was defeated in the local elections of March 2009 beaten by Mehmet Ozyavuz of AK Party who achieved 54 2 of the vote 104 Mehmet Ozyavuz retained his position as mayor for a second term winning the local elections of March 2014 receiving 55 5 of the vote 105 Since 31 March 2019 the Mayor of Harran is Mahmut Ozyavuz of the MHP who won in the local elections of March 2019 with 54 9 of the vote defeating the incumbent Mehmet Ozyavuz of the AK Party 106 Mahmut Ozyavuz is the son of Ibrahim Ozyavuz 107 Archaeology Edit Photograph of the ancient city walls of Harran by T E Lawrence Although Harran was of great interest to historians due to its association with the ancient moon cult and its abundant appearances in Mesopotamian Roman and Arab historical writings the site itself did not receive significant archaeological attention until the 19th century owing to its geographical remoteness Harran first garnered attention in 1850 when it was visited by some members of Francis Rawdon Chesney s Euphrates Expedition Harran was also visited by the missionary George Percy Badger in 1852 and by Eduard Sachau in 1879 who sketched some of the ruins In 1911 Conrad Preusser published a brief but accurate study of the ruins of the Harran Castle and K A C Creswell included a detailed survey of the remains of the Grand Mosque in his 1932 book Early Muslim Architecture Volume I Harran was also visited and photographed by T E Lawrence Lawrence of Arabia None of these early visitors conducted excavations and instead only observed the ruins and remnants visible on the surface 108 Seton Lloyd William C Brice and C J Gadd led a three week archaeological expedition at Harran in the summer of 1950 108 Results from a further archaeological survey conducted by R Storm Rice were also published in 1952 Lloyd Brice Gadd and Rice mainly confined themselves to surveying Harran and clearing rubble 3 Rice s work did however reveal the extent of the original city walls and their gates 9 During later digs in 1956 and 1959 Rice also excavated the ruins of the Grand Mosque 109 The site was later visited by H J W Drijvers who authored Cults and Beliefs at Edessa in the 1970s and by Tamara Green who authored The City of the Moon God in 1977 but both only observed previously reported discoveries and did not dig for any new material Excavations at Harran have thus continued to be very limited partly due to its remote and at times politically tumultuous location and partly due to the difficulty for foreign archaeologists to work in Turkey 3 In 2012 and 2013 the Sanliurfa Museum Directorate with Mehmet Onal acting as consultant carried out more extensive excavations at Harran focusing on the walls burial mound and castle The excavations were mainly for restoration purposes on the western part of the city wall and uncovered the walls towers and bastions In excavations in the northern part of the castle a gallery and crenellated corridor were discovered on the west side with several artefacts of interest 110 In 2014 following a decision of the Council of Ministers and courtesy of the Ministry of Culture and Tourism further excavation work was conducted again under the direction of Onal This round of excavations uncovered a bathhouse 110 a bazaar 111 public toilets a perfumery shop and workshop 112 In 2016 further excavations were carried out on the city wall revealing new parts of the wall and leading to the discovery of a broken statue of a woman with a Syriac inscription and a male relief both used as spolia in the wall Excavations of the west side of the castle carried out in 2014 2016 uncovered a crenellated corridor belonging to a second defense system adjacent to the wall of the castle and further excavations in 2017 2018 in the southern part of the castle located remnants of a bathhouse 113 Notable people EditOracle of Nusku Assyrian prophetess fl 671 670 BC 114 Adad guppi Assyrian priestess c 648 544 BC 115 Nabonidus last Neo Babylonian king r 556 539 BC 40 Jabir ibn Hayyan alchemist and author d 806 816 25 Asad ibn al Furat jurist theologian and general c 759 828 116 Thabit ibn Qurra mathematician astronomer and translator 826 836 901 9 Al Battani mathematician and astronomer c 858 929 117 Sinan ibn al Fatḥ mathematician 10th century 118 Hammad al Harrani scholar poet and traveller 11th 12th century Ibn Hamdan scholar and judge 1206 1295 Ibn Taymiyyah jurist and theologian 1263 1328 119 See also Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Harran Sanliurfa List of cities of the ancient Near East List of ancient settlements in Turkey List of municipalities in Sanliurfa Province History of Mesopotamia History of AnatoliaNotes Edit a b Not to be confused with the modern Harran University established in Urfa in 1992 4 Depending on the definition used for Anatolia Harran may or may not be seen as a part of the region The deities worshipped at Harran for instance began to at times be referred to by the names of corresponding ancient Greek deities 9 but their ancient Mesopotamian names also continued being used 42 Harun al Rashid is also famous for founding the House of Wisdom in Baghdad to which scholars from Harran would later be brought 3 The medieval Harranian worshippers of astronomical objects continued to use ancient names for the celestial bodies alternating between Greek Akkadian and Aramaic names the moon for instance continued to be known as Sin 56 The Arab geographer Ibn Jubayr visited Harran in the 1180s and noted that he found no memory or trace of the famous moon cult 61 As an example the revenue from Harran declined from three million dirhams under Musa to only two million in 1242 less than fourteen years after the end of his rule 66 Nmer is a dialectal form of Numair 70 References Edit Area of regions including lakes km Regional Statistics Database Turkish Statistical Institute 2002 Retrieved 2013 03 05 a b c Nufus Yapisi www harran gov tr Retrieved 2022 08 27 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Frew 1999 harran edu tr a b c d e f g Binici et al 2020 p 1021 Harran sanliurfa gov tr Retrieved 27 September 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Ozdeniz et al 1998 p 478 Gordon 1967 p 77 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Bosworth 2003 pp 13 14 a b c d e Basaran 2011 p 544 Hauser 2012 Rogers 1875 p 298 Leggett 1885 p 33 Potts 2013 p 4 a b c Leick 2009 p 83 a b c d e f Binici et al 2020 p 1020 a b c d e f g h i Gray Sherwin White amp Spek 2015 a b c d e f Binici et al 2020 p 1019 a b c d e Vedeshkin 2018 p 266 a b c Green 1992 p 19 a b c Pingree 2002 p 8 Green 1992 p 21 a b Lloyd Brice amp Gadd 1951 pp 87 88 Healey 2018 p 57 a b c Glasse 2003 p 171 Bienkowski amp Millard 2000 p 140 Rice 1952 p 38 Lloyd Brice amp Gadd 1951 p 80 a b Green 1992 pp 19 20 a b Holloway 1995 p 280 a b Green 1992 p 20 a b c d Sinclair 1990 p 29 Lloyd Brice amp Gadd 1951 p 88 Radner 2003 pp 173 174 a b Radner 2019 pp 135 136 Reade 2011 p 123 Lipschits 2005 p 19 Lambert 1972 p 56 a b c d e f g h Dalley et al 1998 pp 152 153 a b Beaulieu 1989 p 76 Hauser 2017 p 230 sfn error no target CITEREFHauser2017 help a b c d Healey 2018 p 52 Salman 2008 p 103 a b c Lloyd Brice amp Gadd 1951 p 89 Farrokh Maksymiuk amp Gracia 2018 p 15 Maksymiuk 2018 p 88 a b c Lloyd Brice amp Gadd 1951 p 90 a b c d e Pingree 2002 p 17 Vedeshkin 2018 p 267 Rice 1952 p 44 Blankinship 1994 p 51 a b c d e f g h Sinclair 1990 p 31 a b Green 1992 p 95 Gil 1997 p 87 Pingree 2002 p 10 a b Pingree 2002 pp 17 18 Pingree 2002 p 35 Van Bladel 2009 p 66 note 8 Pingree 2002 p 23 Green 1992 p 122 a b c d e Hutton 2006 p 141 Rice 1952 p 78 Sinclair 1990 pp 31 32 Robinson 1996 p 25 a b c d e f g h i j k l Sinclair 1990 p 32 a b c d e f Rice 1952 p 45 a b Pingree 2002 p 34 a b Lloyd Brice amp Gadd 1951 pp 83 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100 113 doi 10 30623 hij 982752 S2CID 245419847 Retrieved 23 July 2022 Umumi Nufus Tahriri Istatistik Umum Mudurlugu 1927 pp 247 248 Retrieved 6 July 2022 secim iha com tr 1989 tbmm gov tr secim iha com tr 2009 yenisafak com 2014 yenisafak com 2019 rhaajans com a b Lloyd Brice amp Gadd 1951 p 77 Sinclair 1990 p 33 a b Onal 2019a pp 325 360 Onal 2019b pp 299 324 Onal 2019c pp 361 418 Onal 2019d pp 637 641 fig 2 pl 2 Esztari amp Ver 2015 pp 31 32 Dalley 2003 p 177 Khalilieh 2006 p 358 Angelo 2014 p 78 Djebbar 2005 p 130 Talhamy 2010 p 178 Bibliography Edit Angelo Joseph A 2014 Encyclopedia of Space and Astronomy Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1 4381 1018 9 Aslan Ahmet 2021 Harran Ulu Firdevs Camii nin Insa Genisleme ve Yikilis Sureci Harran Ilahiyat Dergisi in Turkish 46 55 72 doi 10 30623 hij 1037032 S2CID 245397794 Basaran Tahsin 2011 Thermal Analysis of the Domed Vernacular Houses of Harran Turkey Indoor and Built Environment 20 5 543 554 doi 10 1177 1420326X11411237 hdl 11147 4944 ISSN 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Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 59984 9 Glasse Cyril 2003 The New Encyclopedia of Islam Rowman Altamira ISBN 978 0 7591 0190 6 Gordon Edmund I 1967 The Meaning of the Ideogram dKASKAL KUR Underground Water Course and Its Significance for Bronze Age Historical Geography Journal of Cuneiform Studies 21 70 88 doi 10 2307 1359360 ISSN 0022 0256 JSTOR 1359360 S2CID 163463497 Gray Eric William Sherwin White Susan Mary Spek R J van der 2015 Carrhae Oxford Research Encyclopedia of Classics doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 1389 ISBN 978 0 19 938113 5 Retrieved 2022 08 27 Green Tamara M 1992 The City of the Moon God Religious Traditions of Harran Brill ISBN 9789004301429 Gurney Oliver 1990 Sultantepe and Harran Ancient Anatolia Fifty Years Work by the British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara British Institute of Archaeology at Ankara ISBN 978 0 9954656 9 5 Hauser Stefan R 2012 Carrhae in Bagnall Roger S Brodersen Kai Champion Craige B Erskine Andrew eds The Encyclopedia of Ancient History John Wiley amp Sons Inc doi 10 1002 9781444338386 wbeah14067 ISBN 978 1 4443 3838 6 Healey John F 2018 The Pre Christian Religions of the Syriac Speaking Regions In King Daniel ed The Syriac World Routledge ISBN 978 1 317 48211 6 Holloway Steven W 1995 Harran Cultic Geography in the Neo Assyrian Empire and its Implications for Sennacherib s Letter to Hezekiah in 2 Kings The Pitcher is Broken Memorial Essays for Gosta W Ahlstrom Bloomsbury Publishing ISBN 978 0 567 63671 3 Hutton Ronald 2006 2003 Witches Druids and King Arthur New York Hambledon Continuum ISBN 1 85285 555 X Khalilieh Hassan 2006 Admiralty and Maritime Laws in the Mediterranean Sea ca 800 1050 The Kitab Akriyat al Sufun vis a vis the Nomos Rhodion Nautikos BRILL ISBN 978 90 474 1029 4 Lambert Wilfred G 1972 Nabonidus in Arabia Proceedings of the Seminar for Arabian Studies 2 53 64 JSTOR 41222956 Leggett Eugene 1885 Notes on the Mint towns and Coins of the Mohamedans from the Earliest Period of the Present Time With Map and a Table Showing the Dinars Dirhems and Fulus of the Amawee and Abasee Khaleefehs from the Year 79 to 332 A H Stevens amp Sons Leick Gwendolyn 2009 Historical Dictionary of Mesopotamia Scarecrow Press ISBN 978 0 8108 6324 8 Lipschits Oled 2005 The Fall and Rise of Jerusalem Judah under Babylonian Rule Eisenbrauns ISBN 978 1575060958 Lloyd Seton Brice William Gadd C J 1951 Harran Anatolian Studies 1 77 111 doi 10 2307 3642359 ISSN 2048 0849 JSTOR 3642359 S2CID 240812354 Maksymiuk Katarzyna 2018 Strategic aims of Sapur II during the campaign in northern Mesopotamia 359 360 Historia i Swiat 7 87 97 doi 10 34739 his 2018 07 05 ISSN 2299 2464 S2CID 217236938 Niehr Herbert 2014 The Aramaeans in Ancient Syria BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 22943 3 Onal Mehmet 2019a Carsi Hamami pp 325 360 in Mehmet Onal Suheyla Irem Mutlu and Semih Mutlu eds Harran ve Cevresi Arkeoloji Sanliurfa Elif Matbaasi Onal Mehmet 2019b Dogu Carsisi pp 299 324 in Mehmet Onal Suheyla Irem Mutlu and Semih Mutlu eds Harran ve Cevresi Arkeoloji Sanliurfa Elif Matbaasi Onal Mehmet 2019c Harran da Bulunan Kurevi Konik Kaplar pp 361 418 in Mehmet Onal Suheyla Irem Mutlu and Semih Mutlu eds Harran ve Cevresi Arkeoloji Sanliurfa Elif Matbaasi Onal Mehmet 2019d Harran 2017 Yili Calismalari pp 633 650 in 40 Kazi Sonuclari Toplantisi 2 cilt 07 11 Mayis 2019 Canakkale Ankara T C Kultur ve Turizm Bakanliǧi Kultur Varliklari ve Muzeler Genel Mudurluǧu Onal Mehmet and Alain Desreumaux 2019 The Fragment of a Woman s Statue with Syriac Inscription was Found in Harran Excavation pp 241 249 in Mehmet Onal Suheyla Irem Mutlu and Semih Mutlu eds Harran ve Cevresi Arkeoloji Sanliurfa Elif Matbaasi Ozdeniz M B Bekleyen A Gonul I A Gonul H Sarigul H Ilter T Dalkilic N Yildirim M 1998 Vernacular domed houses of Harran Turkey Habitat International 22 4 477 485 doi 10 1016 S0197 3975 98 00027 7 ISSN 0197 3975 Pingree David 2002 The Ṣabians of Ḥarran and the Classical Tradition International Journal of the Classical Tradition 9 1 8 35 doi 10 1007 BF02901729 ISSN 1073 0508 JSTOR 30224282 S2CID 170507750 Potts D T 2013 Mesopotamian and Persian Migrations The Encyclopedia of Global Human Migration Wiley doi 10 1002 9781444351071 wbeghm364 ISBN 978 1 4443 3489 0 Radner Karen 2003 The Trials of Esarhaddon The Conspiracy of 670 BC ISIMU Revista sobre Oriente Proximo y Egipto en la antiguedad Universidad Autonoma de Madrid 6 165 183 Radner Karen 2019 Last Emperor or Crown Prince Forever Assur uballiṭ II of Assyria according to Archival Sources State Archives of Assyria Studies 28 135 142 Reade Julian 2011 The Evolution of Assyrian Imperial Architecture Political Implications and Uncertainties Mesopotamia XLVI 109 125 ISSN 0076 6615 Rice D S 1952 Medieval Ḥarran Studies on Its Topography and Monuments I Anatolian Studies 2 36 84 doi 10 2307 3642366 ISSN 0066 1546 JSTOR 3642366 S2CID 129270461 Robinson Chase F 1996 Ibn al Azraq His Ta rikh Mayyafariqin and Early Islam Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society 6 1 7 27 doi 10 1017 S1356186300014747 ISSN 1356 1863 JSTOR 25183117 S2CID 162208139 Rogers Edward Thomas 1875 Notice on the Dinars of the Abbasside Dynasty Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 7 262 305 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00016488 S2CID 163155102 Salman Baris 2008 Family Death and Afterlife According to Mosaics of the Abgar Royal Period in the Region of Osroene Journal of Mosaic Research 1 103 115 ISSN 1309 047X Sinclair T A 1990 Eastern Turkey An Architectural amp Archaeological Survey Volume IV Pindar Press ISBN 978 0 907132 52 3 Talhamy Yvette 2010 The Fatwas and the Nusayri Alawis of Syria Middle Eastern Studies 46 2 175 194 doi 10 1080 00263200902940251 ISSN 0026 3206 JSTOR 20720657 S2CID 144709130 Van Bladel Kevin 2009 Hermes and the Ṣabians of Ḥarran The Arabic Hermes From Pagan Sage to Prophet of Science Oxford Oxford University Press pp 64 118 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780195376135 003 0003 ISBN 978 0 19 537613 5 Vedeshkin Mikhail A 2018 Bribe and Punishment To the Question of Persistence of Pagan Cults in Late Antiquity Schole 12 1 259 275 Yigiter Reyhan Genli Yirmibesoglu Funda 2011 Local Agenda 21 and sustainable development The case of Harran Turkey Urbani Izziv 22 1 144 153 doi 10 5379 urbani izziv en 2011 22 01 006 ISSN 0353 6483 JSTOR 24920564 Web Edit 1989 Municipal Election Harran secim iha com tr Retrieved 2022 08 27 2009 Municipal Election Harran secim iha com tr Retrieved 2022 08 27 Babalar Gunu ndeki en anlamli kare RHA Ajans in Turkish Retrieved 2022 08 27 Changoiwala Puja 2019 08 23 Exploring Harran a historic Turkish town close to Syria Business Line Retrieved 2022 08 29 Exploring the Top Attractions of Ancient Harran PlanetWare Retrieved 2022 08 28 Harran T C SANLIURFA VALILIGI Retrieved 2022 08 28 Harran and Sanliurfa UNESCO World Heritage Centre Retrieved 2022 08 28 HISTORY OF UNIVERSITY QUALITY COORDINATION kalite harran edu tr Retrieved 2022 08 28 Population of province district centers and towns villages by districts 2012 Archived 2013 10 22 at the Wayback Machine Address Based Population Registration System ABPRS Database Turkish Statistical Institute Retrieved 2013 02 27 Sanliurfa Harran Election Results 2014 Yeni Safak Elections Yeni Safak in Turkish 9 April 2022 Retrieved 2022 08 27 Sanliurfa Harran Election Results 2019 Yeni Safak Elections Yeni Safak in Turkish 9 April 2022 Retrieved 2022 08 27 TURKIYE BUYUK MILLET MECLISI www tbmm gov tr Retrieved 2022 08 27 Yalav Heckeroth Feride 2017 08 28 Harran The 5000 Year Old Ancient City in Turkey Culture Trip Retrieved 2022 08 28 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Harran amp oldid 1149943815, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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