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Amrit

Amrit (Arabic: عمريت), the classical Marathus (Greek: Μάραθος, Marathos), was a Phoenician port located near present-day Tartus in Syria. Founded in the third millennium BC, Marat (Phoenician: 𐤌𐤓𐤕, MRT)[1] was the northernmost important city of ancient Phoenicia and a rival of nearby Arwad. During the 2nd century BC, Amrit was defeated and its site largely abandoned, leaving its ruins well preserved and without extensive remodeling by later generations.[2][3]

Amrit
عمريت
The Temple of Amrit
Shown within Syria
Alternative nameAmrith, Marathus, Marathos
Location6 km (3.7 mi) from Tartus, Syria
RegionPhoenicia
Coordinates34°50′20″N 35°54′26″E / 34.8388°N 35.9071°E / 34.8388; 35.9071
TypeSettlement
History
FoundedThird millennium BC
Abandonedc. 148 BC
PeriodsPhoenician (Persian, Hellenistic)
Site notes
Excavation dates1954
ArchaeologistsMaurice Dunand
ConditionRuins
ManagementDirectorate-General of Antiquities and Museums
Public accessYes

History

The city lies on the Mediterranean coast around 6 km (3.7 mi) south of modern-day Tartus. Two rivers cross the city: Nahr Amrit, near the main temple, and Nahr al-Kuble near the secondary temple, a fact that might be linked to the importance of water in the religious traditions in Amrit.[2] The city was probably founded by the Arvadites,[4] and served as their continental base.[5] It grew to be one of the wealthiest towns in the dominion of Arwad. The city surrendered, along with Arwad, to Alexander the Great in 333 BC.[6] During Seleucid times the town, known as Marathus, was probably larger and more prosperous than Arwad.[7] In 219 BC Amrit gained independence from Arwad, and was later sacked by forces from the latter city in 148 BC.[4]

Excavation

Excavations of the site principally began in 1860 by Ernest Renan. Excavations were again carried out in 1954 by French archaeologist Maurice Dunand.[5] Ceramic ware finds at Amrit indicated the site had been inhabited as early as the third millennium BC.[2] Middle and Late Bronze Age "silo tombs" were also excavated, with contents ranging from weapons to original human remains. Excavations at the necropolis south of the town yielded several tomb structures. The funeral art found in some tombs with pyramidal-or cube-shaped towers, is considered some of "the most notable grave-monuments of the Phoenician world."[5] Excavations also uncovered the town's ancient harbor, and a U-shaped stadium that dates back to the 4th and 3rd centuries BC and measures around 230 m (750 ft) in length.[5]

Temples

One of the most important excavations at Amrit was the Phoenician temple, commonly referred to the "ma'abed," dedicated to the god Melqart of Tyre and Eshmun. The colonnaded temple, excavated between 1955 and 1957, consists of a large court cut out of rock measuring 47 × 49 m (154 × 161 ft) and over 3 m (9.8 ft) deep, surrounded by a covered portico. In the center of the court a well-preserved cube-shaped cella stands.[5] The open-air courtyard was filled with the waters of a local, traditionally sacred spring, a unique feature of this site. The temple—which was dated to the late 4th century BC, a period following the Persian expansion into Syria—shows major Achaemenid influence in its layout and decoration. According to Dutch archaeologist, Peter Akkermans, the temple is the "best-preserved monumental structure from the Phoenician homeland."[8]

A second temple, described by visitors to the site in 1743 and 1860 and thought to have disappeared,[5] was later discovered by the Syrian archaeological mission near the Nahr al-Kuble spring.[2]

Stadium

 
The Pre-Olympic Phoenician Stadium north of Amrit

About 200 m (660 ft) northeast of the main temples of ancient Marathos and 180 m (590 ft) north of the Amrit Tell are the remains of a rock-carved Phoenician stadium. It is separated from the other two archaeological sites by the Nahr al-Amrit and a site called by the locals al-Meqla '(the quarry').[9] The Stadium of Amrit was first described in 1745 by Richard Pococke in Part 2 of his book, A Description of the East, and Some Other Countries, as the site where an ancient Circus was held.[10][11] Ernest Renan examined it in 1860 and discussed it in his book Mission de Phénicie, making the conclusion that the complex was not Roman in its entirety and that the stadium was undoubtedly Phoenician.[12] The stadium is about 225 to 230 meters long and 30 to 40 meters wide,[13] it has similar dimensions to the stadium of Olympia in Greece (213 × 31/32 meters). Seven rows of seats have been partially preserved.[14] The stadium was open to the west and had two entrances on the east side between seats. In addition, there was a tunnel to the interior. The stadium is located approximately at a right angle to the main temple of Amrit, the Maabed. The temples to the north and west have open sides or which the stadium forms a common intersection. It is believed that the Amrit stadium was the location for sacred competitions where anointing and funeral games took place.[14] Labib Boutros, former director of athletics at the American University of Beirut has conducted recent studies of the stadium and suggested that its construction may date back as far as 1500 BC, saying that the Amrit stadium was "devoted to sports in Phoenicia several centuries before the Olympic Games".[15]

Necropolis

 
Burial towers at Amrit called "al Maghazil" or The Spindles

The Necropolis in the south of Amrit consists of underground burial chambers and two distinguishing burial towers called by the locals "al Maghazil" or The Spindles that stand up to 7.5 m (25 ft) high. The larger tower is composed of a square stone base with a slightly upward tapering cylindrical block with a base diameter of 3.7 m (12 ft), rising to a pyramid as a top termination, which is badly damaged. The second is approximately 12 meters southeast and is not quite 7 m (23 ft) tall. At its base are three cylindrical parts whose diameters decrease and terminate in a dome. At the lower cylinder, to the corners of the square base plates, four lions decorate the building, which may not have been completed.[16] Excavations of the burial chambers east of the towers has uncovered finds dated back as far as the 5th century BC.[17] Plain limestone and clay sarcophagus were found arranged in cassette-like formation within the chambers.[18] Other tombs are located south of the Nahr al-Qubli, the "al-Burǧ Bazzāq" or Worm tower, a phenomenal structure that was originally 19.50 meters high and the Hypogeum "Ḥaǧar al-Ḥublā" with three burial chambers, which were still used in Roman times.[19]

Conservation

Amrit was included on the 2004 and 2006 World Monuments Fund watch lists of endangered archaeological sites. The Fund called attention to the site's rapid deterioration due to vandalism and encroaching development. In 2006 a three-day workshop was organized with participation from the UNESCO, Directorate-General of Antiquities and Museums of Syria and local administrators responsible for the sites of Amrit, Tartus and Arwad.[20]

Gallery

References

Citations

  1. ^ Head & al. (1911), p. 792.
  2. ^ a b c d Al Maqdissi, Michel; Benech, Christophe (2009). "The spatial organization of the Phoenician city of Amrith (Syria)". ArchéoSciences. 33 (suppl.): 209–211.
  3. ^ Beattie, Andrew; Pepper, Timothy (2001). The Rough Guide to Syria. Rough Guides. ISBN 978-1-85828-718-8.
  4. ^ a b Baedeker, Karl (1876). Palestine and Syria, handbook for travellers. p. 536.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Bryce, Trevor (2009). The Routledge Handbook of the People and Places of Ancient Western Asia: The Near East from the Early Bronze Age to the Fall of the Persians Empire. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-15908-6.
  6. ^ Kuhrt, Amelie (2007). The Persian Empire: A Corpus of Sources from the Achaemenid Period. Routledge. p. 439. ISBN 978-1-134-07634-5.
  7. ^ Fattah, Hala Mundhir; Caso, Frank (2009). A brief history of Iraq. Infobase Publishing. p. 42. ISBN 978-0-8160-5767-2.
  8. ^ Akkermans, Peter; Schwartz, Glenn (2003). The archaeology of Syria: from complex hunter-gatherers to early urban societies (c. 16,000-300 BC). Cambridge University Press. p. 391. ISBN 978-0-521-79666-8.
  9. ^ Ernst Honigmann: Marathos (2). In: Wilhelm Kroll (Publisher): Paulys Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft. 14.2, Metzler, Stuttgart, S. 1434, p. 65, 1930.
  10. ^ "Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography (1854), MARATHUS".
  11. ^ Pinkerton, John (1 January 1811). A General Collection of the Best and Most Interesting Voyages and Travels in All Parts of the World: Many of which are Now First Translated Into English ; Digested on a New Plan. Longman, Hurst, Rees, and Orme ... and Cadell and Davies – via Google Books.
  12. ^ Mission de Phénicie. TEXTE / dirigée par M. Ernest Renan,... – via gallica.bnf.fr.
  13. ^ Jacobson, David M.; Kokkinos, Nikos (1 January 2009). Herod and Augustus: Papers Presented at the IJS Conference, 21st-23rd June 2005. BRILL. ISBN 978-9004165465 – via Google Books.
  14. ^ a b Frank Rainer Scheck; Johannes Odenthal (1998). Syrien: Hochkulturen zwischen Mittelmeer und Arabischer Wüste. DuMont Reiseverlag. pp. 226–. ISBN 978-3-7701-3978-1. Retrieved 22 August 2012.
  15. ^ Dr. Boutros Labib., "The Phoenician stadium of Amrit", The Olympic Review, No. 112, February 1977
  16. ^ Frank Rainer Scheck; Johannes Odenthal (1998). Syrien: Hochkulturen zwischen Mittelmeer und Arabischer Wüste. DuMont Reiseverlag. pp. 228–. ISBN 978-3-7701-3978-1. Retrieved 22 August 2012.
  17. ^ Michael Sommer: Die Phönizier. Geschichte und Kultur (= Beck’sche Reihe. Nr. 2444). C. H. Beck, München 2008, ISBN 978-3-406-56244-0, II. Die Levante, p. 23.
  18. ^ Fernando Prados Martínez (2008). Arquitectura Púnica: Los Monumentos Funerarios. CSIC-Dpto. de Publicaciones. pp. 105–. ISBN 978-84-00-08619-0. Retrieved 22 August 2012.
  19. ^ Astrid Nunn: Der figürliche Motivschatz Phöniziens, Syriens und Transjordanienes vom 6. bis zum 4. Jahrhundert v. Chr (= Orbis biblicus et orientalis: Series archaeologica; 18). Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, ISBN 3-525-53899-5, Amrit und Umgebung – B4 (Gräber), p. 204, Göttingen, 2000.
  20. ^ "AMRIT ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE". World Monuments Fund. Retrieved 20 January 2012.

Bibliography

  • Head, Barclay; et al. (1911), "Phoenicia", Historia Numorum (2nd ed.), Oxford: Clarendon Press, pp. 788–801.

External links and references

amrit, this, article, about, ancient, city, other, uses, disambiguation, arabic, عمريت, classical, marathus, greek, Μάραθος, marathos, phoenician, port, located, near, present, tartus, syria, founded, third, millennium, marat, phoenician, 𐤌𐤓𐤕, northernmost, im. This article is about the ancient city of Amrit For other uses see Amrit disambiguation Amrit Arabic عمريت the classical Marathus Greek Mara8os Marathos was a Phoenician port located near present day Tartus in Syria Founded in the third millennium BC Marat Phoenician 𐤌𐤓𐤕 MRT 1 was the northernmost important city of ancient Phoenicia and a rival of nearby Arwad During the 2nd century BC Amrit was defeated and its site largely abandoned leaving its ruins well preserved and without extensive remodeling by later generations 2 3 AmritعمريتThe Temple of AmritShown within SyriaAlternative nameAmrith Marathus MarathosLocation6 km 3 7 mi from Tartus SyriaRegionPhoeniciaCoordinates34 50 20 N 35 54 26 E 34 8388 N 35 9071 E 34 8388 35 9071TypeSettlementHistoryFoundedThird millennium BCAbandonedc 148 BCPeriodsPhoenician Persian Hellenistic Site notesExcavation dates1954ArchaeologistsMaurice DunandConditionRuinsManagementDirectorate General of Antiquities and MuseumsPublic accessYes Contents 1 History 2 Excavation 2 1 Temples 2 2 Stadium 2 3 Necropolis 3 Conservation 4 Gallery 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Bibliography 6 External links and referencesHistory EditThe city lies on the Mediterranean coast around 6 km 3 7 mi south of modern day Tartus Two rivers cross the city Nahr Amrit near the main temple and Nahr al Kuble near the secondary temple a fact that might be linked to the importance of water in the religious traditions in Amrit 2 The city was probably founded by the Arvadites 4 and served as their continental base 5 It grew to be one of the wealthiest towns in the dominion of Arwad The city surrendered along with Arwad to Alexander the Great in 333 BC 6 During Seleucid times the town known as Marathus was probably larger and more prosperous than Arwad 7 In 219 BC Amrit gained independence from Arwad and was later sacked by forces from the latter city in 148 BC 4 Excavation EditExcavations of the site principally began in 1860 by Ernest Renan Excavations were again carried out in 1954 by French archaeologist Maurice Dunand 5 Ceramic ware finds at Amrit indicated the site had been inhabited as early as the third millennium BC 2 Middle and Late Bronze Age silo tombs were also excavated with contents ranging from weapons to original human remains Excavations at the necropolis south of the town yielded several tomb structures The funeral art found in some tombs with pyramidal or cube shaped towers is considered some of the most notable grave monuments of the Phoenician world 5 Excavations also uncovered the town s ancient harbor and a U shaped stadium that dates back to the 4th and 3rd centuries BC and measures around 230 m 750 ft in length 5 Temples Edit One of the most important excavations at Amrit was the Phoenician temple commonly referred to the ma abed dedicated to the god Melqart of Tyre and Eshmun The colonnaded temple excavated between 1955 and 1957 consists of a large court cut out of rock measuring 47 49 m 154 161 ft and over 3 m 9 8 ft deep surrounded by a covered portico In the center of the court a well preserved cube shaped cella stands 5 The open air courtyard was filled with the waters of a local traditionally sacred spring a unique feature of this site The temple which was dated to the late 4th century BC a period following the Persian expansion into Syria shows major Achaemenid influence in its layout and decoration According to Dutch archaeologist Peter Akkermans the temple is the best preserved monumental structure from the Phoenician homeland 8 A second temple described by visitors to the site in 1743 and 1860 and thought to have disappeared 5 was later discovered by the Syrian archaeological mission near the Nahr al Kuble spring 2 Stadium Edit The Pre Olympic Phoenician Stadium north of Amrit About 200 m 660 ft northeast of the main temples of ancient Marathos and 180 m 590 ft north of the Amrit Tell are the remains of a rock carved Phoenician stadium It is separated from the other two archaeological sites by the Nahr al Amrit and a site called by the localsal Meqla the quarry 9 The Stadium of Amrit was first described in 1745 by Richard Pococke in Part 2 of his book A Description of the East and Some Other Countries as the site where an ancient Circus was held 10 11 Ernest Renan examined it in 1860 and discussed it in his book Mission de Phenicie making the conclusion that the complex was not Roman in its entirety and that the stadium was undoubtedly Phoenician 12 The stadium is about 225 to 230 meters long and 30 to 40 meters wide 13 it has similar dimensions to the stadium of Olympia in Greece 213 31 32 meters Seven rows of seats have been partially preserved 14 The stadium was open to the west and had two entrances on the east side between seats In addition there was a tunnel to the interior The stadium is located approximately at a right angle to the main temple of Amrit the Maabed The temples to the north and west have open sides or which the stadium forms a common intersection It is believed that the Amrit stadium was the location for sacred competitions where anointing and funeral games took place 14 Labib Boutros former director of athletics at the American University of Beirut has conducted recent studies of the stadium and suggested that its construction may date back as far as 1500 BC saying that the Amrit stadium was devoted to sports in Phoenicia several centuries before the Olympic Games 15 Necropolis Edit Burial towers at Amrit called al Maghazil or The Spindles The Necropolis in the south of Amrit consists of underground burial chambers and two distinguishing burial towers called by the locals al Maghazil or The Spindles that stand up to 7 5 m 25 ft high The larger tower is composed of a square stone base with a slightly upward tapering cylindrical block with a base diameter of 3 7 m 12 ft rising to a pyramid as a top termination which is badly damaged The second is approximately 12 meters southeast and is not quite 7 m 23 ft tall At its base are three cylindrical parts whose diameters decrease and terminate in a dome At the lower cylinder to the corners of the square base plates four lions decorate the building which may not have been completed 16 Excavations of the burial chambers east of the towers has uncovered finds dated back as far as the 5th century BC 17 Plain limestone and clay sarcophagus were found arranged in cassette like formation within the chambers 18 Other tombs are located south of the Nahr al Qubli the al Burǧ Bazzaq or Worm tower a phenomenal structure that was originally 19 50 meters high and the Hypogeum Ḥaǧar al Ḥubla with three burial chambers which were still used in Roman times 19 Conservation EditAmrit was included on the 2004 and 2006 World Monuments Fund watch lists of endangered archaeological sites The Fund called attention to the site s rapid deterioration due to vandalism and encroaching development In 2006 a three day workshop was organized with participation from the UNESCO Directorate General of Antiquities and Museums of Syria and local administrators responsible for the sites of Amrit Tartus and Arwad 20 Gallery Edit Meghazil tomb Amrit in 2006 Phoenician Temple Ma abed cella at the center of the court Amrit in 2006 Phoenician Stadium Amrit in 2006References EditCitations Edit Head amp al 1911 p 792 a b c d Al Maqdissi Michel Benech Christophe 2009 The spatial organization of the Phoenician city of Amrith Syria ArcheoSciences 33 suppl 209 211 Beattie Andrew Pepper Timothy 2001 The Rough Guide to Syria Rough Guides ISBN 978 1 85828 718 8 a b Baedeker Karl 1876 Palestine and Syria handbook for travellers p 536 a b c d e f Bryce Trevor 2009 The Routledge Handbook of the People and Places of Ancient Western Asia The Near East from the Early Bronze Age to the Fall of the Persians Empire Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 15908 6 Kuhrt Amelie 2007 The Persian Empire A Corpus of Sources from the Achaemenid Period Routledge p 439 ISBN 978 1 134 07634 5 Fattah Hala Mundhir Caso Frank 2009 A brief history of Iraq Infobase Publishing p 42 ISBN 978 0 8160 5767 2 Akkermans Peter Schwartz Glenn 2003 The archaeology of Syria from complex hunter gatherers to early urban societies c 16 000 300 BC Cambridge University Press p 391 ISBN 978 0 521 79666 8 Ernst Honigmann Marathos 2 In Wilhelm Kroll Publisher Paulys Realencyclopadie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft 14 2 Metzler Stuttgart S 1434 p 65 1930 Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography 1854 MARATHUS Pinkerton John 1 January 1811 A General Collection of the Best and Most Interesting Voyages and Travels in All Parts of the World Many of which are Now First Translated Into English Digested on a New Plan Longman Hurst Rees and Orme and Cadell and Davies via Google Books Mission de Phenicie TEXTE dirigee par M Ernest Renan via gallica bnf fr Jacobson David M Kokkinos Nikos 1 January 2009 Herod and Augustus Papers Presented at the IJS Conference 21st 23rd June 2005 BRILL ISBN 978 9004165465 via Google Books a b Frank Rainer Scheck Johannes Odenthal 1998 Syrien Hochkulturen zwischen Mittelmeer und Arabischer Wuste DuMont Reiseverlag pp 226 ISBN 978 3 7701 3978 1 Retrieved 22 August 2012 Dr Boutros Labib The Phoenician stadium of Amrit The Olympic Review No 112 February 1977 Frank Rainer Scheck Johannes Odenthal 1998 Syrien Hochkulturen zwischen Mittelmeer und Arabischer Wuste DuMont Reiseverlag pp 228 ISBN 978 3 7701 3978 1 Retrieved 22 August 2012 Michael Sommer Die Phonizier Geschichte und Kultur Beck sche Reihe Nr 2444 C H Beck Munchen 2008 ISBN 978 3 406 56244 0 II Die Levante p 23 Fernando Prados Martinez 2008 Arquitectura Punica Los Monumentos Funerarios CSIC Dpto de Publicaciones pp 105 ISBN 978 84 00 08619 0 Retrieved 22 August 2012 Astrid Nunn Der figurliche Motivschatz Phoniziens Syriens und Transjordanienes vom 6 bis zum 4 Jahrhundert v Chr Orbis biblicus et orientalis Series archaeologica 18 Vandenhoeck amp Ruprecht ISBN 3 525 53899 5 Amrit und Umgebung B4 Graber p 204 Gottingen 2000 AMRIT ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE World Monuments Fund Retrieved 20 January 2012 Bibliography Edit Head Barclay et al 1911 Phoenicia Historia Numorum 2nd ed Oxford Clarendon Press pp 788 801 External links and references Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Amrit The ancient city of Amrit Arabic Pictures of the temple and stadium Photos of Amrit at the American Center of Research Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Amrit amp oldid 1139983311, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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