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Palmyra

Palmyra (/pælˈmrə/ pal-MY-rə; Palmyrene: 𐡶𐡣𐡬𐡥𐡴‎ (), romanized: Tadmor; Arabic: تَدْمُر, romanizedTadmur) is an ancient city in the eastern part of the Levant, now in the center of modern Syria. Archaeological finds date back to the Neolithic period, and documents first mention the city in the early second millennium BC. Palmyra changed hands on a number of occasions between different empires before becoming a subject of the Roman Empire in the first century AD.

Palmyra
  • 𐡶𐡣𐡬𐡥𐡴
  • تَدْمُر
The ruins of Palmyra in 2010
Shown within Syria
Palmyra (Eastern Mediterranean)
Palmyra (West and Central Asia)
Alternative nameTadmor
LocationTadmur, Homs Governorate, Syria
RegionSyrian Desert
Coordinates34°33′05″N 38°16′05″E / 34.55139°N 38.26806°E / 34.55139; 38.26806
TypeSettlement
Part ofPalmyrene Empire
Area80 ha (200 acres)
History
Founded3rd millennium BC
Abandoned1932 (1932)
PeriodsMiddle Bronze Age to Modern
CulturesAramaic, Arabic, Greco-Roman
Site notes
ConditionRuined
OwnershipPublic
ManagementSyrian Ministry of Culture
Public accessYes
Official nameSite of Palmyra
TypeCultural
Criteriai, ii, iv
Designated1980 (4th Session)
Reference no.23
RegionArab states
Endangered2013 (2013)–present

The city grew wealthy from trade caravans; the Palmyrenes became renowned as merchants who established colonies along the Silk Road and operated throughout the Roman Empire. Palmyra's wealth enabled the construction of monumental projects, such as the Great Colonnade, the Temple of Bel, and the distinctive tower tombs. Ethnically, the Palmyrenes combined elements of Amorites, Arameans, and Arabs. The city's social structure was structured around kinship and clans, and its inhabitants spoke Palmyrene Aramaic, a variety of Western Middle Aramaic, while using Koine Greek for commercial and diplomatic purposes. The Hellenistic period of West Asia influenced the culture of Palmyra, which produced distinctive art and architecture that combined different Mediterranean traditions. The city's inhabitants worshiped local Semitic, Mesopotamian, and Arab deities.

By the third century, Palmyra had become a prosperous regional center. It reached the apex of its power in the 260s, when the Palmyrene King Odaenathus defeated the Sasanian emperor Shapur I. The king was succeeded by queen regent Zenobia, who rebelled against Rome and established the Palmyrene Empire. In 273, Roman emperor Aurelian destroyed the city, which was later restored by Diocletian at a reduced size. The Palmyrenes converted to Christianity during the fourth century and to Islam in the centuries following the conquest by the 7th-century Rashidun Caliphate, after which the Palmyrene and Greek languages were replaced by Arabic.

Before AD 273, Palmyra enjoyed autonomy and was attached to the Roman province of Syria, having its political organization influenced by the Greek city-state model during the first two centuries AD. The city became a Roman colonia during the third century, leading to the incorporation of Roman governing institutions, before becoming a monarchy in 260. Following its destruction in 273, Palmyra became a minor center under the Byzantines and later empires. Its destruction by the Timurids in 1400 reduced it to a small village. Under French Mandatory rule in 1932, the inhabitants were moved into the new village of Tadmur, and the ancient site became available for excavations. During the Syrian civil war in 2015, the Islamic State (IS) destroyed large parts of the ancient city, which was recaptured by the Syrian Army on 2 March 2017.

Etymology edit

Records of the name "Tadmor" date from the early second millennium BC;[1] eighteenth century BC tablets from Mari written in cuneiform record the name as "Ta-ad-mi-ir", while Assyrian inscriptions of the eleventh century BC record it as "Ta-ad-mar".[2] Aramaic Palmyrene inscriptions themselves showed two variants of the name; TDMR (i.e., Tadmar) and TDMWR (i.e., Tadmor).[3][4] The etymology of the name is unclear; the standard interpretation, supported by Albert Schultens, connects it to the Semitic word for "date palm", tamar (תמר‎),[note 1][7][8] thus referring to the palm trees that surrounded the city.[8]

The Greek name Παλμύρα (Latinized Palmyra) was first recorded by Pliny the Elder in the 1st century AD.[9] It was used throughout the Greco-Roman world.[7] It is generally believed that "Palmyra" derives from "Tadmor" and linguists have presented two possibilities; one view holds that Palmyra was an alteration of Tadmor.[7] According to the suggestion by Schultens, "Palmyra" could have arisen as a corruption of "Tadmor", via an unattested form "Talmura", changed to "Palmura" by the influence of the Latin word palma (date "palm"),[1] in reference to the city's palm trees, then the name reached its final form "Palmyra".[10] The second view, supported by some philologists, such as Jean Starcky, holds that Palmyra is a translation of "Tadmor" (assuming that it meant palm), which had derived from the Greek word for palm, "palame".[1][8]

An alternative suggestion connects the name to the Syriac tedmurtā (ܬܕܡܘܪܬܐ) "miracle", hence tedmurtā "object of wonder", from the root dmr "to wonder"; this possibility was mentioned favourably by Franz Altheim and Ruth Altheim-Stiehl (1973), but rejected by Jean Starcky (1960) and Michael Gawlikowski (1974).[9] Michael Patrick O'Connor (1988) suggested that the names "Palmyra" and "Tadmor" originated in the Hurrian language.[1] As evidence, he cited the inexplicability of alterations to the theorized roots of both names (represented in the addition of -d- to tamar and -ra- to palame).[8] According to this theory, "Tadmor" derives from the Hurrian word tad ("to love") with the addition of the typical Hurrian mid vowel rising (mVr) formant mar.[11] Similarly, according to this theory, "Palmyra" derives from the Hurrian word pal ("to know") using the same mVr formant (mar).[11]

Region and city layout edit

 
The northern Palmyrene mountain belt
 
Palmyra's landmarks

The city of Palmyra lies 215 km (134 mi) northeast of the Syrian capital, Damascus;[12] along with an expanded hinterland of several settlements, farms and forts, the city forms part of the region known as the Palmyrene.[13] The city is located in an oasis surrounded by palms (of which twenty varieties have been reported).[8][14] Two mountain ranges overlook the city: the northern Palmyrene mountain belt from the north and the southern Palmyrene mountains from the southwest.[15] In the south and the east Palmyra is exposed to the Syrian Desert.[15] A small wadi, al-Qubur, crosses the area, flowing from the western hills past the city before disappearing in the eastern gardens of the oasis.[16] South of the wadi is a spring, Efqa.[17] Pliny the Elder described the town in the 70s AD as famous for its desert location, for the richness of its soil,[18] and for the springs surrounding it, which made agriculture and herding possible.[note 2][18]

Layout edit

Palmyra began as a small Neolithic settlement near the Efqa spring on the southern bank of Wadi al-Qubur.[20] The much later Hellenistic settlement of Palmyra was also located near the Efqa spring on the southern bank of Wadi al-Qubur.[20] It had its residences expanding to the wadi's northern bank during the first century.[16] Although the city's walls at the time of Zenobia originally enclosed an extensive area on both banks of the wadi,[16] the walls rebuilt during Aurelian's reign surrounded only the northern-bank section.[21][16] Most of the city's monumental projects were built on the wadi's northern bank,[22] among them is the Temple of Bel, on a tell which was the site of an earlier temple (known as the Hellenistic temple).[23] However, excavation supports the theory that the tell was originally located on the southern bank, and the wadi was diverted south of the tell to incorporate the temple into Palmyra's late first and early second century urban organization on the north bank.[24]

Also north of the wadi was the Great Colonnade, Palmyra's 1.1-kilometre-long (0.68 mi) main street,[25] which extended from the Temple of Bel in the east,[26] to the Funerary Temple no.86 in the city's western part.[27][28] It had a monumental arch in its eastern section,[29] and a tetrapylon stands in the center.[30] The Baths of Diocletian were on the left side of the colonnade.[31] Nearby were residences,[32] the Temple of Baalshamin,[33] and the Byzantine churches, which include "Basilica IV", Palmyra's largest church.[34] The church is dated to the Justinian age,[35] its columns are estimated to be 7 metres (23 ft) high, and its base measured 27.5 by 47.5 metres (90 by 156 ft).[34]

The Temple of Nabu and the Roman theater were built on the colonnade's southern side.[36] Behind the theater were a small senate building and the large agora, with the remains of a triclinium (banquet room) and the Tariff Court.[37] A cross street at the western end of the colonnade leads to the Camp of Diocletian,[25][38] built by Sosianus Hierocles (the Roman governor of Syria in the reign of Diocletian).[39] Nearby are the Temple of Al-lāt and the Damascus Gate.[40]

People, language, and society edit

At its height during the reign of Zenobia, Palmyra had more than 200,000 residents.[note 3][42] The earliest known inhabitants were the Amorites in the early second millennium BC,[43] and by the end of the millennium, Arameans were mentioned as inhabiting the area.[44][45] Arabs arrived in the city in the late first millennium BC.[46] Zabdibel, who aided the Seleucids in the battle of Raphia (217 BC), was mentioned as the commander of "the Arabs and neighbouring tribes to the number of ten thousands";[47] Zabdibel and his men were not actually identified as Palmyrenes in the texts, but the name "Zabdibel" is a Palmyrene name leading to the conclusion that he hailed from Palmyra.[48] The Arab newcomers were assimilated by the earlier inhabitants, used Palmyrene as a mother tongue,[49] and formed a significant segment of the aristocracy.[50]

The classical city also had a Jewish community; inscriptions in Palmyrene from the Beit She'arim necropolis in Lower Galilee confirm the burial of Palmyrene Jews.[51]

During the Roman period, occasionally and rarely, members of the Palmyrene families took Greek names while ethnic Greeks were few; the majority of people with Greek names, who did not belong to one of the city's families, were freed slaves.[52] The Palmyrenes seem to have disliked the Greeks, considered them foreigners, and restricted their settlement in the city.[52] During the Umayyad Caliphate, Palmyra was mainly inhabited by the Banu Kalb.[53] Benjamin of Tudela recorded the existence of 2000 Jews in the city during the twelfth century.[54] Palmyra declined after its destruction by Timur in 1400,[55] and was a village of 6,000 inhabitants at the beginning of the 20th century.[56]

Ethnicity of classical Palmyra edit

Palmyra's population was a mixture of the different peoples inhabiting the city,[57][58] which is seen in Aramaic, Arabic and Amorite names of Palmyrene clans,[note 4][59] but the ethnicity of Palmyra is a matter of debate.[60]

Some scholars, such as Andrew M. Smith II, consider ethnicity a concept related to modern nationalism, and prefer not to describe the Palmyrenes with ethnic designations they themselves did not know, concluding that there is a lack of evidence regarding what ethnicity the Palmyrenes perceived themselves.[61] On the other hand, many scholars, such as Eivind Seland, contend that a distinctive Palmyrene ethnicity is apparent in the available contemporary evidence.[62] The second century work De Munitionibus Castrorum mentioned the Palmyrenes as a natio, the Latin equivalent of the Greek ἔθνος (éthnos).[63] Seland noted the epigraphic evidence left by the Palmyrenes outside the city.[62]

The inscriptions reveal the existence of a real diaspora satisfying the three criteria set by the sociologist Rogers Brubaker.[note 5][64] Palmyrene diaspora members always made clear their Palmyrene origin and used the Palmyrene language, and maintained their distinct religion even when the host society's religion was close to that of Palmyra. Seland concluded that in the case of Palmyra, the people perceived themselves different from their neighbours and a real Palmyrene ethnicity existed.[65] Aside from the existence of a Palmyrene ethnicity, Aramean or Arab are the two main ethnic designations debated by historians;[60] Javier Teixidor stated, "Palmyra was an Aramaean city and it is a mistake to consider it as an Arab town", while Yasamin Zahran criticized this statement and argued that the inhabitants considered themselves Arabs.[66] In practice, according to several scholars such as Udo Hartmann and Michael Sommer, the citizenry of Palmyra were mainly the result of Arab and Aramaean tribes merging into a unity with a corresponding consciousness; they thought and acted as Palmyrenes.[67][68]

Language edit

 
Alphabetic inscription in Palmyrene alphabet

Until the late third century, Palmyrenes spoke Palmyrene Aramaic and used the Palmyrene alphabet.[69][70] The use of Latin was minimal, but Greek was used by wealthier members of society for commercial and diplomatic purposes,[71] and it became the dominant language during the Byzantine era.[72] There are several theories explaining the disappearance of the Palmyrene language shortly after the campaigns of Aurelian. The linguist Jean Cantineau assumed that Aurelian suppressed all aspects of Palmyrene culture, including the language, but the last Palmyrene inscription dates to 279/280, after the death of the Roman emperor in 275, thus refuting such a theory.[73] Many scholars ascribe the disappearance of the language to a change in society resulting from the reorganization of the Eastern Roman frontier following the fall of Zenobia.[73] The archaeologist Karol Juchniewicz ascribed it to a change in the ethnic composition of the city, resulting from the influx of people who did not speak Aramaic, probably a Roman legion.[21] Hartmann suggested that it was a Palmyrene initiative by nobles allied to Rome attempting to express their loyalty to the emperor; Hartmann noted that Palmyrene disappeared in the written form, and that this does not mean its extinction as spoken language.[74] After the Arab conquest, Greek was replaced by Arabic,[72] from which, although the city was surrounded by Bedouins, a Palmyrene dialect evolved.[56]

Social organization edit

 
Palmyrene funerary portrait representing Aqmat, a Palmyrene aristocrat

Classical Palmyra was a tribal community, but due to the lack of sources, an understanding of the nature of Palmyrene tribal structure is not possible.[75] Thirty clans have been documented;[76] five of which were identified as tribes (Phylai Koinē Greek: Φυλαί, pl. of Phyle Φυλή) comprising several sub-clans.[note 6][77] By the time of Nero, Palmyra had four tribes, each residing in an area of the city bearing its name.[78] Three of the tribes were the Komare, Mattabol and Ma'zin; the fourth tribe is uncertain, but was probably the Mita.[78][79] In time, the four tribes became highly civic and tribal lines blurred;[note 7][78] by the second century clan identity lost its importance, and it disappeared during the third century.[note 8][78] Even the four tribes ceased to be important by the third century as only one inscription mentions a tribe after the year 212; instead, aristocrats played the decisive role in the city's social organization.[81]

Women seem to have been active in Palmyra's social and public life. They commissioned inscriptions, buildings or tombs, and in certain cases, held administrative offices. Offerings to gods in the names of women are documented.[82]

The last Palmyrene inscription of 279/280 refers to the honouring of a citizen by the Maththabolians,[73] which indicates that the tribal system still carried weight after the fall of Zenobia.[83] A noticeable change is the lack of development of aristocratic residences, and no important public buildings were constructed by locals, indicating that the elite diminished following the campaign of Aurelian. The social change and the reduction of the aristocratic elite is hard to explain. It could be a result of the aristocracy suffering many casualties in the war against Rome, or fleeing to the countryside.

According to historian Emanuele Intagliata, the change can be ascribed to the Roman reorganization following Zenobia's fall, as Palmyra ceased to be a rich caravan city and became a frontier fortress, leading the inhabitants to focus on satisfying the needs of a garrison instead of providing the empire with luxurious oriental items. Such a change in functions would have made the city less attractive for an aristocratic elite.[84] Palmyra benefited from Umayyad rule, since its role as a frontier city ended and the East-West trade route was restored, leading to the re-emergence of a merchant class. Palmyra's loyalty to the Umayyads led to an aggressive military retaliation from their successors, the Abbasid Caliphate, and the city diminished in size, losing its merchant class.[85]

Following its destruction by Timur, Palmyra maintained the life of a small settlement until its relocation in 1932.[86]

Culture edit

The scarce artifacts found in the city dating to the Bronze Age reveal that, culturally, Palmyra was most affiliated with western Syria.[87] Classical Palmyra had a distinctive culture,[88] based on a local Semitic tradition,[89] and influenced by Greece and Rome.[note 9][91] To appear better integrated into the Roman Empire, some Palmyrenes adopted Greco-Roman names, either alone or in addition to a second native name.[92] The extent of Greek influence on Palmyra's culture is debated.[93] Scholars interpreted the Palmyrenes' Greek practices differently; many see those characters as a superficial layer over a local essence.[94] Palmyra's senate was an example; although Palmyrene texts written in Greek described it as a "boule" (a Greek institution), the senate was a gathering of non-elected tribal elders (a Near-Eastern assembly tradition).[95] Others view Palmyra's culture as a fusion of local and Greco-Roman traditions.[96]

 
Palmyrene loculi (burial chambers) reassembled in the İstanbul Archaeological Museum
 
Palmyrene mummy

The culture of Persia influenced Palmyrene military tactics, dress and court ceremonies.[97] Palmyra had no large libraries or publishing facilities, and it lacked an intellectual movement characteristic of other Eastern cities such as Edessa or Antioch.[98] Although Zenobia opened her court to academics, the only notable scholar documented was Cassius Longinus.[98]

Palmyra had a large agora.[note 10] However, unlike the Greek Agoras (public gathering places shared with public buildings), Palmyra's agora resembled an Eastern caravanserai more than a hub of public life.[100][101] The Palmyrenes buried their dead in elaborate family mausoleums,[102] most with interior walls forming rows of burial chambers (loculi) in which the dead, lying at full length, were placed.[103][104] A relief of the person interred formed part of the wall's decoration, acting as a headstone.[104] Sarcophagi appeared in the late second century and were used in some of the tombs.[105] Many burial monuments contained mummies embalmed in a method similar to that used in Ancient Egypt.[106][107]

Art and architecture edit

 
Interior of the Tower of Elahbel, in 2010

Although Palmyrene art was related to that of Greece, it had a distinctive style unique to the middle-Euphrates region.[108] Palmyrene art is well represented by the bust reliefs which seal the openings of its burial chambers.[108] The reliefs emphasized clothing, jewelry and a frontal representation of the person depicted,[108][109] characteristics which can be seen as a forerunner of Byzantine art.[108] According to Michael Rostovtzeff, Palmyra's art was influenced by Parthian art.[110] However, the origin of frontality that characterized Palmyrene and Parthian arts is a controversial issue; while Parthian origin has been suggested (by Daniel Schlumberger),[111] Michael Avi-Yonah contends that it was a local Syrian tradition that influenced Parthian art.[112] Little painting, and none of the bronze statues of prominent citizens (which stood on brackets on the main columns of the Great Colonnade), have survived.[113] A damaged frieze and other sculptures from the Temple of Bel, many removed to museums in Syria and abroad, suggest the city's public monumental sculpture.[113]

Many surviving funerary busts reached Western museums during the 19th century.[114] Palmyra provided the most convenient Eastern examples bolstering an art-history controversy at the turn of the 20th century: to what extent Eastern influence on Roman art replaced idealized classicism with frontal, hieratic and simplified figures (as believed by Josef Strzygowski and others).[113][115] This transition is seen as a response to cultural changes in the Western Roman Empire, rather than artistic influence from the East.[113] Palmyrene bust reliefs, unlike Roman sculptures, are rudimentary portraits; although many reflect high quality individuality, the majority vary little across figures of similar age and gender.[113]

Like its art, Palmyra's architecture was influenced by the Greco-Roman style, while preserving local elements (best seen in the Temple of Bel).[note 11][116][119] Enclosed by a massive wall flanked with traditional Roman columns,[119][120] Bel's sanctuary plan was primarily Semitic.[119] Similar to the Second Temple, the sanctuary consisted of a large courtyard with the deity's main shrine off-center against its entrance (a plan preserving elements of the temples of Ebla and Ugarit).[119][121]

Site edit

Cemeteries edit

 
Valley of Tombs in 2010
 
The senate
 
Baths of Diocletian
 
The statue of Al-lāt (equated with Athena) found in its temple (destroyed in 2015)
 
The Funerary Temple no.86
 
Diocletian's walls

West of the ancient walls, the Palmyrenes built a number of large-scale funerary monuments which now form the Valley of Tombs,[122] a one-kilometre-long (0.62 mi) necropolis.[123] The more than 50 monuments were primarily tower-shaped and up to four stories high.[124] Towers were replaced by funerary temples in the first half of the second century AD, as the most recent tower is dated to AD 128.[27] The city had other cemeteries in the north, southwest and southeast, where the tombs are primarily hypogea (underground).[125][126]

Notable structures edit

Public buildings edit

  • The senate building is largely ruined.[37] It is a small building that consists of a peristyle courtyard and a chamber that has an apse at one end and rows of seats around it.[76]
  • Much of the Baths of Diocletian are ruined and do not survive above the level of the foundations.[127] The complex's entrance is marked by four massive Egyptian granite columns each 1.3 metres (4 ft 3 in) in diameter, 12.5 metres (41 ft) high and weigh 20 tonnes.[37] Inside, the outline of a bathing pool surrounded by a colonnade of Corinthian columns is still visible in addition to an octagonal room that served as a dressing room containing a drain in its center.[37] Sossianus Hierocles, a governor under Emperor Diocletian, claimed to have built the baths, but the building was probably erected in the late second century and Sossianus Hierocles renovated it.[note 12][129]
  • The Agora of Palmyra is part of a complex that also includes the tariff court and the triclinium, built in the second half of the first century AD.[130] The agora is a massive 71-by-84-metre (233 by 276 ft) structure with 11 entrances.[37] Inside the agora, 200 columnar bases that used to hold statues of prominent citizens were found.[37] The inscriptions on the bases allowed an understanding of the order by which the statues were grouped; the eastern side was reserved for senators, the northern side for Palmyrene officials, the western side for soldiers and the southern side for caravan chiefs.[37]
  • The Tariff Court is a large rectangular enclosure south of the agora and sharing its northern wall with it.[131] Originally, the entrance of the court was a massive vestibule in its southwestern wall.[131] However, the entrance was blocked by the construction of a defensive wall and the court was entered through three doors from the Agora.[131] The court gained its name by containing a 5-metre (16 ft) stone slab that had the Palmyrene tax law inscribed on it.[132][133]
  • The Triclinium of the Agora is at the northwestern corner of the Agora and can host up to 40 people.[134][135] It is a small 12-by-15-metre (39 by 49 ft) hall decorated with Greek key motifs that run in a continuous line halfway up the wall.[136] The building was probably used by the rulers of the city;[134] the French general director of antiquities in Syria, Henri Seyrig, proposed that it was a small temple before being turned into a triclinium or banqueting hall.[135]

Temples edit

  • The Temple of Bel was dedicated in AD 32;[137] it consisted of a large precinct lined by porticos; it had a rectangular shape and was oriented north-south.[138] The exterior wall was 205-metre (673 ft) long with a propylaea,[139] and the cella stood on a podium in the middle of the enclosure.[140]
  • The Temple of Baalshamin dates to the late 2nd century BC in its earliest phases;[141] its altar was built in AD 115,[121] and it was substantially rebuilt in AD 131.[142] It consisted of a central cella and two colonnaded courtyards north and south of the central structure.[143] A vestibule consisting of six columns preceded the cella which had its side walls decorated with pilasters in Corinthian order.[144]
  • The Temple of Nabu is largely ruined.[145] The temple was Eastern in its plan; the outer enclosure's propylaea led to a 20-by-9-metre (66 by 30 ft) podium through a portico of which the bases of the columns survives.[143] The peristyle cella opened onto an outdoor altar.[143]
  • The Temple of Al-Lat is largely ruined with only a podium, a few columns and the door frame remaining.[38] Inside the compound, a giant lion relief (Lion of Al-lāt) was excavated and in its original form, was a relief protruding from the temple compound's wall.[144][146]
  • The ruined Temple of Baal-hamon was located on the top of Jabal al-Muntar hill which oversees the spring of Efqa.[147] Constructed in AD 89, it consisted of a cella and a vestibule with two columns.[147] The temple had a defensive tower attached to it;[148] a mosaic depicting the sanctuary was excavated and it revealed that both the cella and the vestibule were decorated with merlons.[148]

Other buildings edit

  • The Great Colonnade was Palmyra's 1.1-kilometre-long (0.68 mi) main street; most of the columns date to the second century AD and each is 9.50 metres (31.2 ft) high.[25]
  • The Funerary Temple no. 86 (also known as the House Tomb) is located at the western end of the Great Colonnade.[27][149] It was built in the third century AD and has a portico of six columns and vine patterns carvings.[59][150] Inside the chamber, steps leads down to a vault crypt.[150] The shrine might have been connected to the royal family as it is the only tomb inside the city's walls.[59]
  • The Tetrapylon was erected during the renovations of Diocletian at the end of the third century.[86] It is a square platform and each corner contains a grouping of four columns.[36] Each column group supports a 150-ton cornice and contains a pedestal in its center that originally carried a statue.[36] Out of sixteen columns, only one is original while the rest are from reconstruction work by the Syrian Directorate-General of Antiquities in 1963, using concrete.[150] The original columns were brought from Egypt and carved out of pink granite.[36]
  • The Walls of Palmyra started in the first century as a protective wall containing gaps where the surrounding mountains formed natural barriers; it encompassed the residential areas, the gardens and the oasis.[21] After 273, Aurelian erected the rampart known as the wall of Diocletian;[21] it enclosed about 80 hectares, a much smaller area than the original pre-273 city.[151][152]

Destruction by IS edit

 
Bel's temple entrance arch remains after the destruction of the cella

According to eyewitnesses, on 23 May 2015 Islamic State militants destroyed the Lion of Al-lāt and other statues; this came days after the militants had gathered the citizens and promised not to destroy the city's monuments.[153] IS destroyed the Temple of Baalshamin on 23 August 2015.[154] On 30 August 2015, IS destroyed the cella of the Temple of Bel.[155] On 31 August 2015, the United Nations confirmed the temple was destroyed;[156] the temple's exterior walls and entrance arch remain.[155][157]

It became known on 4 September 2015 that IS had destroyed three of the best preserved tower tombs including the Tower of Elahbel.[158] On 5 October 2015, news media reported that IS was destroying buildings with no religious meaning, including the monumental arch.[159] On 20 January 2017, news emerged that the militants had destroyed the tetrapylon and part of the theater.[160] Following the March 2017 capture of Palmyra by the Syrian Army, Maamoun Abdulkarim, director of antiquities and museums at the Syrian Ministry of Culture, stated that the damage to ancient monuments may be lesser than earlier believed and preliminary pictures showed almost no further damage than what was already known.[161] Antiquities official Wael Hafyan stated that the Tetrapylon was badly damaged while the damage to the facade of the Roman theatre was less serious.[162]

Restoration edit

 
Digital reconstruction of the Temple of Bel (New Palmyra project)

In response to the destruction, on 21 October 2015, Creative Commons started the New Palmyra project, an online repository of three-dimensional models representing the city's monuments; the models were generated from images gathered, and released into the public domain, by the Syrian internet advocate Bassel Khartabil between 2005 and 2012.[163][164] Minor restorations took place; two Palmyrene funerary busts, damaged and defaced by IS, were sent off to Rome where they were restored and sent back to Syria.[165] The restoration of the Lion of Al-lāt took two months and the statue was displayed on 1 October 2017; it will remain in the National Museum of Damascus.[166]

Regarding the restoration, the discoverer of Ebla, Paolo Matthiae, stated that: "The archaeological site of Palmyra is a vast field of ruins and only 20–30% of it is seriously damaged. Unfortunately these included important parts, such as the Temple of Bel, while the Arch of Triumph can be rebuilt." He added: "In any case, by using both traditional methods and advanced technologies, it might be possible to restore 98% of the site".[167]

In February 2022, following acts of restoration and rehabilitation the Afqa spring site was reopened.[168] In October 2022, the Syrian Directorate-General of Antiquities and Museums and the Institute for the History of Material Culture of Russian Academy of Sciences signed an agreement to start the second and third phase of the project for restoring Arch of Triumph.[169]

History edit

 
Efqa Spring, which dried up in 1994 [170]

The area had paleolithic settlements.[171] In the Efqa Spring site, a Neolithic settlement existed,[172] with stone tools dated to 7500 BC.[173] Archaeological sounding in the tell beneath the Temple of Bel uncovered a mud-brick structure built around 2500 BC, followed by structures built during the Middle Bronze Age and Iron Age.[174]

Early period edit

The city entered the historical record during the Bronze Age around 2000 BC, when Puzur-Ishtar the Tadmorean (Palmyrene) agreed to a contract at an Assyrian trading colony in Kultepe.[173] It was mentioned next in the Mari tablets as a stop for trade caravans and nomadic tribes, such as the Suteans,[57] and was conquered along with its region by Yahdun-Lim of Mari.[175] King Shamshi-Adad I of Assyria passed through the area on his way to the Mediterranean at the beginning of the 18th century BC;[176] by then, Palmyra was the easternmost point of the kingdom of Qatna,[177] and it was attacked by the Suteans who paralyzed the traffic along the trade routes.[178] Palmyra was mentioned in a 13th-century BC tablet discovered at Emar, which recorded the names of two "Tadmorean" witnesses.[57] At the beginning of the 11th century BC, King Tiglath-Pileser I of Assyria recorded his defeat of the "Arameans" of "Tadmar";[57] according to the king, Palmyra was part of the land of Amurru.[179] The city became the eastern border of Aram-Damascus which was conquered by the Neo-Assyrian Empire in 732 BC.[180]

The Hebrew Bible (Second Book of Chronicles 8:4) records a city by the name "Tadmor" as a desert city built (or fortified) by King Solomon of Israel;[181] Flavius Josephus mentions the Greek name "Palmyra", attributing its founding to Solomon in Book VIII of his Antiquities of the Jews.[142] Later Arabic traditions attribute the city's founding to Solomon's Jinn.[182] The association of Palmyra with Solomon is a conflation of "Tadmor" and a city built by Solomon in Judea and known as "Tamar" in the Books of Kings (1 Kings 9:18).[141] The biblical description of "Tadmor" and its buildings does not fit archaeological findings in Palmyra, which was a small settlement during Solomon's reign in the 10th century BC.[141] The Elephantine Jews, a diaspora community established between 650-550 BC in Egypt, might have come from Palmyra.[183] Papyrus Amherst 63 indicates that the ancestors of the Elephantine Jews were Samarians. The historian Karel van der Toorn suggested that these ancestors took refuge in Judea after the destruction of their kingdom by Sargon II of Assyria in 721 BC, then had to leave Judea after Sennacherib devastated the land in 701 BC and headed to Palmyra. This scenario can explain the usage of Aramaic by the Elephantine Jews, and Papyrus Amherst 63, while not mentioning Palmyra, refers to a "fortress of palms" that is located near a spring on a trade route in the fringes of the desert, making Palmyra a plausible candidate.[184]

Hellenistic and Roman periods edit

 
The inscription mentioning king Epiphanes

During the Hellenistic period under the Seleucids (between 312 and 64 BC), Palmyra became a prosperous settlement owing allegiance to the Seleucid king.[141][185] Evidence for Palmyra's urbanisation in the Hellenistic period is rare; an important piece is the Laghman II inscription found in Laghman, modern Afghanistan, and commissioned by the Indian emperor Ashoka c. 250 BC. The reading is contested, but according to semitologist André Dupont-Sommer, the inscription records the distance to "Tdmr" (Palmyra).[note 13][187] In 217 BC, a Palmyrene force led by Zabdibel joined the army of King Antiochus III in the Battle of Raphia which ended in a Seleucid defeat by Ptolemaic Egypt.[46] In the middle of the Hellenistic era, Palmyra, formerly south of the al-Qubur wadi, began to expand beyond its northern bank.[24] By the late second century BC, the tower tombs in the Palmyrene Valley of Tombs and the city temples (most notably, the temples of Baalshamin, Al-lāt and the Hellenistic temple) began to be built.[23][46][141] A fragmentary inscription in Greek from the Temple of Bel's foundations mentions a king titled Epiphanes, a title used by the Seleucid kings.[note 14][193]

In 64 BC, the Roman Republic conquered the Seleucid kingdom, and the Roman general Pompey established the province of Syria.[46] Palmyra was left independent,[46] trading with Rome and Parthia but belonging to neither.[194] The earliest known inscription in Palmyrene is dated to around 44 BC;[49] Palmyra was still a minor sheikhdom, offering water to caravans which occasionally took the desert route on which it was located.[195] However, according to Appian, Palmyra was wealthy enough for Mark Antony to send a force to conquer it in 41 BC.[194] The Palmyrenes evacuated to Parthian lands beyond the eastern bank of the Euphrates,[194] which they prepared to defend.[49]

Autonomous Palmyrene region edit

 
Cella of the Temple of Bel (destroyed in 2015)
 
Temple of Baal-Shamin (destroyed in 2015)
 
Palmyra's theater (damaged in 2017)
 
The monumental arch in the eastern section of Palmyra's colonnade (destroyed in 2015)

Palmyra became part of the Roman Empire when it was conquered and paid tribute early in the reign of Tiberius, around 14 AD.[note 15][46][197] The Romans included Palmyra in the province of Syria,[196] and defined the region's boundaries.[198] Pliny the Elder asserted that both the Palmyrene and Emesene regions were contiguous;[199] a marker at the Palmyrene's southwestern border was found in 1936 by Daniel Schlumberger at Qasr al-Hayr al-Gharbi, dating from the reign of Hadrian or one of his successors, which marked the boundary between the two regions.[note 16][201][202] This boundary probably ran northwards to Khirbet al-Bilaas on Jabal al-Bilas where another marker, laid by the Roman governor Silanus, has been found, 75 kilometres (47 mi) northwest of Palmyra, probably marking a boundary with the territory of Epiphania.[203][198] Meanwhile, Palmyra's eastern border extended to the Euphrates valley.[202] This region included numerous villages subordinate to the center,[204] including large settlements such as al-Qaryatayn.[205] The Roman imperial period brought great prosperity to the city, which enjoyed a privileged status under the empire—retaining much of its internal autonomy,[46] being ruled by a council,[206] and incorporating many Greek city-state (polis) institutions into its government.[note 17][207]

The earliest Palmyrene text attesting a Roman presence in the city dates to 18 AD, when the Roman general Germanicus tried to develop a friendly relationship with Parthia; he sent the Palmyrene Alexandros to Mesene, a Parthian vassal kingdom.[note 18][210] This was followed by the arrival of the Roman legion Legio X Fretensis the following year.[note 19][211] Roman authority was minimal during the first century AD, although tax collectors were resident,[212] and a road connecting Palmyra and Sura was built in AD 75.[note 20][213] The Romans used Palmyrene soldiers,[214] but (unlike typical Roman cities) no local magistrates or prefects are recorded in the city.[213] Palmyra saw intensive construction during the first century, including the city's first walled fortifications,[215] and the Temple of Bel (completed and dedicated in 32 AD).[137] During the first century Palmyra developed from a minor desert caravan station into a leading trading center,[note 21][195] with Palmyrene merchants establishing colonies in surrounding trade centers.[210]

Palmyrene trade reached its acme during the second century,[217] aided by two factors; the first was a trade route built by Palmyrenes,[18] and protected by garrisons at major locations, including a garrison in Dura-Europos manned in 117 AD.[218] The second was the Roman conquest of the Nabataean capital Petra in 106,[46] shifting control over southern trade routes of the Arabian Peninsula from the Nabataeans to Palmyra.[note 22][46] In 129 Palmyra was visited by Hadrian, who named it "Hadriane Palmyra" and made it a free city.[220][221] Hadrian promoted Hellenism throughout the empire,[222] and Palmyra's urban expansion was modeled on that of Greece.[222] This led to new projects, including the theatre, the colonnade and the Temple of Nabu.[222] Roman garrisons are first attested in Palmyra in 167, when the cavalry Ala I Thracum Herculiana was moved to the city.[note 23][225] By the end of the second century, urban development diminished after the city's building projects peaked.[226]

In the 190s, Palmyra was assigned to the province of Phoenice, newly created by the Severan dynasty.[227] Toward the end of the second century, Palmyra began a steady transition from a traditional Greek city-state to a monarchy due to the increasing militarization of the city and the deteriorating economic situation;[228] the Severan ascension to the imperial throne in Rome played a major role in Palmyra's transition:[226]

Palmyrene kingdom edit

The rise of the Sasanian Empire in Persia considerably damaged Palmyrene trade.[232] The Sasanians disbanded Palmyrene colonies in their lands,[232] and began a war against the Roman Empire.[233] In an inscription dated to 252 Odaenathus appears bearing the title of exarchos (lord) of Palmyra.[234] The weakness of the Roman Empire and the constant Persian danger were probably the reasons behind the Palmyrene council's decision to elect a lord for the city in order for him to lead a strengthened army.[235] Odaenathus approached Shapur I of Persia to request him to guarantee Palmyrene interests in Persia, but was rebuffed.[236] In 260 the Emperor Valerian fought Shapur at the Battle of Edessa, but was defeated and captured.[236] One of Valerian's officers, Macrianus Major, his sons Quietus and Macrianus, and the prefect Balista rebelled against Valerian's son Gallienus, usurping imperial power in Syria.[237]

Persian wars edit
 
A clay tessera bearing a possible depiction of Odaenathus wearing a diadem

Odaenathus formed an army of Palmyrenes and Syrian peasants against Shapur.[note 24][236] According to the Augustan History, Odaenathus declared himself king prior to the battle.[239] The Palmyrene leader won a decisive victory near the banks of the Euphrates later in 260 forcing the Persians to retreat.[240] In 261 Odaenathus marched against the remaining usurpers in Syria, defeating and killing Quietus and Balista.[241] As a reward, he received the title Imperator Totius Orientis ("Governor of the East") from Gallienus,[242] and ruled Syria, Mesopotamia, Arabia and Anatolia's eastern regions as the imperial representative.[243][244] Palmyra itself remained officially part of the empire but Palmyrene inscriptions started to describe it as a "metrocolonia", indicating that the city's status was higher than normal Roman colonias.[245] In practice, Palmyra shifted from a provincial city to a de facto allied kingdom.[246]

In 262 Odaenathus launched a new campaign against Shapur,[247] reclaiming the rest of Roman Mesopotamia (most importantly, the cities of Nisibis and Carrhae), sacking the Jewish city of Nehardea,[note 25][248][249] and besieging the Persian capital Ctesiphon.[250][251] Following his victory, the Palmyrene monarch assumed the title King of Kings.[note 26][254] Later, Odaenathus crowned his son Hairan I as co-King of Kings near Antioch in 263.[255] Although he did not take the Persian capital, Odaenathus drove the Persians out of all Roman lands conquered since the beginning of Shapur's wars in 252.[256] In a second campaign that took place in 266, the Palmyrene king reached Ctesiphon again; however, he had to leave the siege and move north, accompanied by Hairan I, to repel Gothic attacks on Asia Minor.[257] The king and his son were assassinated during their return in 267;[258] according to the Augustan History and Joannes Zonaras, Odaenathus was killed by a cousin (Zonaras says nephew) named in the History as Maeonius.[259] The Augustan History also says that Maeonius was proclaimed emperor for a brief period before being killed by the soldiers.[259][260][261] However, no inscriptions or other evidence exist for Maeonius' reign.[262]

 
Zenobia as Augusta, on the obverse of an Antoninianus.

Odaenathus was succeeded by his son; the ten-year-old Vaballathus.[263] Zenobia, the mother of the new king, was the de facto ruler and Vaballathus remained in her shadow while she consolidated her power.[263] Gallienus dispatched his prefect Heraclian to command military operations against the Persians, but he was marginalized by Zenobia and returned to the West.[256] The queen was careful not to provoke Rome, claiming for herself and her son the titles held by her husband while guaranteeing the safety of the borders with Persia and pacifying the Tanukhids in Hauran.[263] To protect the borders with Persia, Zenobia fortified different settlements on the Euphrates including the citadels of Halabiye and Zalabiye.[264] Circumstantial evidence exist for confrontations with the Sasanians; probably in 269 Vaballathus took the title Persicus Maximus ("The great victor in Persia") and the title might be linked with an unrecorded battle against a Persian army trying to regain control of Northern Mesopotamia.[265][266]

Palmyrene empire edit
 
The Palmyrene empire in AD 271

Zenobia began her military career in the spring of 270, during the reign of Claudius Gothicus.[267] Under the pretext of attacking the Tanukhids, she conquered Roman Arabia.[267] This was followed in October by an invasion of Egypt,[268][269] ending with a Palmyrene victory and Zenobia's proclamation as queen of Egypt.[270] Palmyra invaded Anatolia the following year, reaching Ankara and the pinnacle of its expansion.[271] The conquests were made behind a mask of subordination to Rome.[272] Zenobia issued coins in the name of Claudius' successor Aurelian, with Vaballathus depicted as king;[note 27][272] since Aurelian was occupied with repelling insurgencies in Europe, he tolerated the Palmyrene coinage and encroachments.[273][274] In late 271, Vaballathus and his mother assumed the titles of Augustus (emperor) and Augusta.[note 28][272]

The following year, Aurelian crossed the Bosphorus and advanced quickly through Anatolia.[278] According to one account, Roman general Marcus Aurelius Probus regained Egypt from Palmyra;[note 29][279] Aurelian entered Issus and headed to Antioch, where he defeated Zenobia in the Battle of Immae.[280] Zenobia was defeated again at the Battle of Emesa, taking refuge in Homs before quickly returning to her capital.[281] When the Romans besieged Palmyra, Zenobia refused their order to surrender in person to the emperor.[271] She escaped east to ask the Persians for help, but was captured by the Romans; the city capitulated soon afterwards.[282][283]

Later Roman and Byzantine periods edit

 
Diocletian's camp

Aurelian spared the city and stationed a garrison of 600 archers, led by Sandarion, as a peacekeeping force.[284] In 273 Palmyra rebelled under the leadership of Septimius Apsaios,[277] declaring Antiochus (a relative of Zenobia) as Augustus.[285] Aurelian marched against Palmyra, razing it to the ground and seizing the most valuable monuments to decorate his Temple of Sol.[282][286] Palmyrene buildings were smashed, residents massacred and the Temple of Bel pillaged.[282]

Palmyra was significantly reduced and it largely disappeared from historical records of that period.[287] After its sacking, Aurelian repaired the Temple of Bel, and the Legio I Illyricorum was stationed in the city.[151] Shortly before 303 the Camp of Diocletian, a castrum in the western part of the city, was built.[151] The 4-hectare (9.9-acre) camp was a base for the Legio I Illyricorum,[151] which guarded the trade routes around the city.[287] Though some of the city would not be rebuilt, Palmyra would become a major stronghold and fortress in the East. Thanks in part to this, in the following years Palmyra began to regain importance, becoming a Christian city in the decades following its destruction by Aurelian.[288] In late 527, Justinian I further strengthened the city, ordering the restoration of Palmyra's churches and public buildings to protect the empire against raids by Lakhmid king Al-Mundhir III ibn al-Nu'man.[289]

Arab caliphates edit

Palmyra was conquered by the Rashidun Caliphate after its 634 capture by the Muslim general Khalid ibn al-Walid, who took the city on his way to Damascus; an 18-day march by his army through the Syrian Desert from Mesopotamia.[290] By then Palmyra was limited to the Diocletian camp.[86] After the conquest, the city became part of Homs Province.[291]

Umayyad and early Abbasid periods edit

Palmyra prospered as part of the Umayyad Caliphate, and its population grew.[292] It was a key stop on the East-West trade route, with a large souq (market), built by the Umayyads,[292][293] who also commissioned part of the Temple of Bel as a mosque.[293] During this period, Palmyra was a stronghold of the Banu Kalb tribe,[53] which began to take abode in and around the city after the conquest.[294] After being defeated by Marwan II during a civil war in the caliphate, Umayyad contender Sulayman ibn Hisham fled to the Banu Kalb in Palmyra, but eventually pledged allegiance to Marwan in 744; Palmyra continued to oppose Marwan until the surrender of the Banu Kalb chief al-Asbagh ibn Dhu'ala in 745.[295] That year, Marwan ordered the city's walls demolished.[86][296]

In 750 a revolt, led by Majza'a ibn al-Kawthar and Umayyad pretender Abu Muhammad al-Sufyani, against the new Abbasid Caliphate swept across Syria;[297] the tribes in Palmyra supported the rebels.[298] After his defeat Abu Muhammad took refuge in the city, which withstood an Abbasid assault long enough to allow him to escape.[298]

Decentralization edit

 
Fortifications at the Temple of Bel

Abbasid power dwindled during the 10th century, when the empire disintegrated and was divided among a number of vassals.[299] Most of the new rulers acknowledged the caliph as their nominal sovereign, a situation which continued until the Mongol destruction of the Abbasid Caliphate in 1258.[300]

The population of the city started to decrease in the ninth century and the process continued in the tenth century.[301] In 955 Sayf al-Dawla, the Hamdanid prince of Aleppo, defeated the nomads near the city,[302] and built a kasbah (fortress) in response to campaigns by the Byzantine emperors Nikephoros II Phokas and John I Tzimiskes.[303] With the advent of Fatimid rule in the late 10th century, Palmyra remained a stronghold of the Kalb and taxes on the oasis' crops was a major source of the tribe's income. Toward the end of the century, the Kalb around Palmyra migrated from the area.[304] Earthquakes devastated Palmyra in 1068 and 1089.[86][305] In the 1070s Syria was conquered by the Seljuk Empire,[306] and in 1082, the district of Homs came under the control of the Arab lord Khalaf ibn Mula'ib.[307] The latter was a brigand and was removed and imprisoned in 1090 by the Seljuq sultan Malik-Shah I.[307][308] Khalaf's lands were given to Malik-Shah's brother, Tutush I,[308] who gained his independence after his brother's 1092 death and established a cadet branch of the Seljuk dynasty in Syria.[309]

 
Fakhr-al-Din al-Maani Castle

By the twelfth century, the population moved into the courtyard of the Temple of Bel which was fortified;[301] Palmyra was then ruled by Toghtekin, the Burid atabeg of Damascus, who appointed his nephew governor.[310] Toghtekin's nephew was killed by rebels, and the atabeg retook the city in 1126.[310] Palmyra was given to Toghtekin's grandson, Shihab-ud-din Mahmud,[310] who was replaced by governor Yusuf ibn Firuz when Shihab-ud-din Mahmud returned to Damascus after his father Taj al-Muluk Buri succeeded Toghtekin.[311] The Burids transformed the Temple of Bel into a citadel in 1132, fortifying the city,[312][313] and transferring it to the Bin Qaraja family three years later in exchange for Homs.[313]

During the mid-twelfth century, Palmyra was ruled by the Zengid king Nur ad-Din Mahmud.[314] It became part of the district of Homs,[315] which was given as a fiefdom to the Ayyubid general Shirkuh in 1168 and confiscated after his death in 1169.[316] Homs region was conquered by the Ayyubid sultanate in 1174;[317] the following year, Saladin gave Homs (including Palmyra) to his cousin Nasir al-Din Muhammad as a fiefdom.[318] After Saladin's death, the Ayyubid realm was divided and Palmyra was given to Nasir al-Din Muhammad's son Al-Mujahid Shirkuh II (who built the castle of Palmyra known as Fakhr-al-Din al-Maani Castle around 1230).[319][320] Five years earlier, Syrian geographer Yaqut al-Hamawi described Palmyra's residents as living in "a castle surrounded by a stone wall".[321]

Mamluk period edit

Palmyra was used as a refuge by Shirkuh II's grandson, al-Ashraf Musa, who allied himself with the Mongol king Hulagu Khan and fled after the Mongol defeat in the 1260 Battle of Ain Jalut against the Mamluks.[322] Al-Ashraf Musa asked the Mamluk sultan Qutuz for pardon and was accepted as a vassal.[322] Al-Ashraf Musa died in 1263 without an heir, bringing the Homs district under direct Mamluk rule.[323]

Al Fadl principality edit

 
Palmyra's gardens

The Al Fadl clan (a branch of the Tayy tribe) were loyal to the Mamluks, and in 1281, Prince Issa bin Muhanna of the Al Fadl was appointed lord of Palmyra by sultan Qalawun.[324] Issa was succeeded in 1284 by his son Muhanna bin Issa who was imprisoned by sultan al-Ashraf Khalil in 1293, and restored two years later by sultan al-Adil Kitbugha.[325] Muhanna declared his loyalty to Öljaitü of the Ilkhanate in 1312 and was dismissed and replaced with his brother Fadl by sultan an-Nasir Muhammad.[325] Although Muhanna was forgiven by an-Nasir and restored in 1317, he and his tribe were expelled in 1320 for his continued relations with the Ilkhanate,[326] and he was replaced by tribal chief Muhammad ibn Abi Bakr.[327]

Muhanna was forgiven and restored by an-Nasir in 1330; he remained loyal to the sultan until his death in 1335, when he was succeeded by his son.[327] Contemporary historian Ibn Fadlallah al-Omari described the city as having "vast gardens, flourishing trades and bizarre monuments".[328] The Al Fadl clan protected the trade routes and villages from Bedouin raids,[329] raiding other cities and fighting among themselves.[330] The Mamluks intervened militarily several times, dismissing, imprisoning or expelling its leaders.[330] In 1400 Palmyra was attacked by Timur; the Fadl prince Nu'air escaped the battle and later fought Jakam, the sultan of Aleppo.[331] Nu'air was captured, taken to Aleppo and executed in 1406; this, according to Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani, ended the Al Fadl clan's power.[331][324]

Ottoman era edit

 
Gerard Hofsted van Essen's painting of the ruins, following his participation in the 1691 Levant Company expedition, the first Western expedition to the site. This is the earliest Western depiction of Palmyra. A group stands in the center foreground around a large stone, on which the date 1693 is shown. The gold text at the top explains the 1743 donation of the picture as part of the Papenbroek Collection. Scroll left and right to view the full panorama.

While most of Syria came under Ottoman rule in 1516, Palmyra (Tadmur) does not appear to have been incorporated into the Empire before the conquest of Iraq in 1534-1535. It first appears as the centre of an administrative district (sanjak) around 1560.[332][note 30][333] The region was important to the Ottomans above all for its salt deposits. In 1568, the governor of the sancak restored the medieval citadel.[334] After 1568 the Ottomans appointed the Lebanese emir Ali bin Musa Harfush as governor of Palmyra's sanjak,[335] dismissing him in 1584 for insubordination.[336] In 1630 Palmyra came under the tax authority of another Lebanese emir, Fakhr-al-Din II,[337] who renovated Shirkuh II's castle (which became known as Fakhr-al-Din al-Maani Castle).[320][338] The prince fell from grace with the Ottomans in 1633 and lost control of the village,[337] which remained a separate sanjak until it was absorbed by Zor Sanjak in 1857.[339] The Ottoman governor of Syria, Mehmed Rashid Pasha, established a garrison in the village to control the Bedouin in 1867.[340][341]

20th century edit

 
The village, within the Temple of Bel, during the early 20th century

In 1918, as World War I was ending, the Royal Air Force built an airfield for two planes,[note 31][342] and in November the Ottomans retreated from Zor Sanjak without a fight.[note 32][343] The Syrian Emirate's army entered Deir ez-Zor on 4 December, and Zor Sanjak became part of Syria.[344] In 1919, as the British and French argued over the borders of the planned mandates,[342] the British permanent military representative to the Supreme War Council Henry Wilson suggested adding Palmyra to the British mandate.[342] However, the British general Edmund Allenby persuaded his government to abandon this plan.[342] Syria (including Palmyra) became part of the French Mandate after Syria's defeat in the Battle of Maysalun on 24 July 1920.[345]

With Palmyra gaining importance in the French efforts to pacify the Syrian Desert, a base was constructed in the village near the Temple of Bel in 1921.[346] In 1929, Henri Seyrig, began excavating the ruins and convinced the villagers to move to a new, French-built village next to the site.[347] The relocation was completed in 1932;[348] ancient Palmyra was ready for excavation as its villagers settled into the new village of Tadmur.[349][347] During World War II, the Mandate came under the authority of Vichy France,[350] who gave permission to Nazi Germany to use the airfield at Palmyra;[351] forces of Free France, backed by British forces, invaded Syria in June 1941,[350] and on 3 July 1941, the British took control over the city in the aftermath of a battle.[352]

Syrian civil war edit

Destructions in Palmyra
 
 
Sculpture in the Palmyra Museum, before and after the conflict.

As a result of the Syrian civil war, Palmyra experienced widespread looting and damage by combatants.[353] In 2013, the façade of the Temple of Bel sustained a large hole from mortar fire, and colonnade columns have been damaged by shrapnel.[353] According to Maamoun Abdulkarim, the Syrian Army positioned its troops in some archaeological-site areas,[353] while Syrian opposition fighters positioned themselves in gardens around the city.[353]

On 13 May 2015, ISIL launched an attack on the modern town of Tadmur, sparking fears that the iconoclastic group would destroy the adjacent ancient site of Palmyra.[354] On 21 May, some artifacts were transported from the Palmyra museum to Damascus for safekeeping; a number of Greco-Roman busts, jewelry, and other objects looted from the museum have been found on the international market.[355] ISIL forces entered Palmyra the same day.[356] Local residents reported that the Syrian Air Force bombed the site on 13 June, damaging the northern wall close to the Temple of Baalshamin.[357] During ISIL's occupation of the site, Palmyra's theatre was used as a place of public executions of their opponents and captives; videos were released by ISIL showing the killing of Syrian prisoners in front of crowds at the theatre.[358][359] On 18 August, Palmyra's retired antiquities chief Khaled al-Asaad was beheaded by ISIL after being tortured for a month to extract information about the city and its treasures; al-Asaad refused to give any information to his captors.[360]

Syrian government forces supported by Russian airstrikes recaptured Palmyra on 27 March 2016 after intense fighting against ISIL fighters.[361] According to initial reports, the damage to the archaeological site was less extensive than anticipated, with numerous structures still standing.[362] Following the recapture of the city, Russian de-mining teams began clearing mines planted by ISIL prior to their retreat.[363] Following heavy fighting, ISIL briefly reoccupied the city on 11 December 2016,[364] prompting an offensive by the Syrian Army which retook the city on 2 March 2017.[365]

Government edit

 
Inscription in Greek and Aramaic honoring the strategos Zabdilas, whose Roman name was Julius Aurelius Zenobius, dated 242-243 AD.[366]

From the beginning of its history to the first century AD Palmyra was a petty sheikhdom,[367] and by the first century BC a Palmyrene identity began to develop.[368] During the first half of the first century AD, Palmyra incorporated some of the institutions of a Greek city (polis);[207] the notion of an existing citizenship first appears in an inscription, dated to AD 10, mentioning the "people of Palmyra".[369] In AD 74, an inscription mentions the city's boule (senate).[207] The tribal role in Palmyra is debated; during the first century, four treasurers representing the four tribes seems to have partially controlled the administration but their role became ceremonial by the second century and power rested in the hands of the council.[370]

The Palmyrene council consisted of about six hundred members of the local elite (such as the elders or heads of wealthy families or clans),[note 33][206] representing the city's four-quarters.[79] The council, headed by a president,[371] managed civic responsibilities;[206] it supervised public works (including the construction of public buildings), approved expenditures, collected taxes,[206] and appointed two archons (lords) each year.[371][372] Palmyra's military was led by strategoi (generals) appointed by the council.[373][374] Roman provincial authority set and approved Palmyra's tariff structure,[375] but the provincial interference in local government was kept minimal as the empire sought to ensure the continuous success of Palmyrene trade most beneficial to Rome.[376] An imposition of direct provincial administration would have jeopardized Palmyra's ability to conduct its trading activities in the East, especially in Parthia.[376]

With the elevation of Palmyra to a colonia around 213–216, the city ceased being subject to Roman provincial governors and taxes.[377] Palmyra incorporated Roman institutions into its system while keeping many of its former ones.[378] The council remained, and the strategos designated one of two annually-elected magistrates.[378] This duumviri implemented the new colonial constitution,[378] replacing the archons.[372] Palmyra's political scene changed with the rise of Odaenathus and his family; an inscription dated to 251 describes Odaenathus' son Hairan I as "Ras" (lord) of Palmyra (exarch in the Greek section of the inscription) and another inscription dated to 252 describes Odaenathus with the same title.[note 34][234] Odaenathus was probably elected by the council as exarch,[235] which was an unusual title in the Roman empire and was not part of the traditional Palmyrene governance institutions.[234][379] Whether Odaenathus' title indicated a military or a priestly position is unknown,[380] but the military role is more likely.[381] By 257 Odaenathus was known as a consularis, possibly the legatus of the province of Phoenice.[380] In 258 Odaenathus began extending his political influence, taking advantage of regional instability caused by Sasanian aggression;[380] this culminated in the Battle of Edessa,[236] Odaenathus' royal elevation and mobilization of troops, which made Palmyra a kingdom.[236]

The monarchy continued most civic institutions,[380][382] but the duumviri and the council were no longer attested after 264; Odaenathus appointed a governor for the city.[383] In the absence of the monarch, the city was administered by a viceroy.[384] Although governors of the eastern Roman provinces under Odaenathus' control were still appointed by Rome, the king had overall authority.[385] During Zenobia's rebellion, governors were appointed by the queen.[386] Not all Palmyrenes accepted the dominion of the royal family; a senator, Septimius Haddudan, appears in a later Palmyrene inscription as aiding Aurelian's armies during the 273 rebellion.[387][388] After the Roman destruction of the city, Palmyra was ruled directly by Rome,[389] and then by a succession of other rulers, including the Burids and Ayyubids,[310][318] and subordinate Bedouin chiefs—primarily the Fadl family, who governed for the Mamluks.[390]

Military edit

 
Relief in the Temple of Bel depicting Palmyrene war gods
 
Palmyrene horseman, in a hunting scene.

Due to its military character and efficiency in battle, Palmyra was described by Irfan Shahîd as the "Sparta among the cities of the Orient, Arab and other, and even its gods were represented dressed in military uniforms."[391] Palmyra's army protected the city and its economy, helping extend Palmyrene authority beyond the city walls and protecting the countryside's desert trade routes.[392] The city had a substantial military;[202] Zabdibel commanded a force of 10,000 in the third century BC,[46] and Zenobia led an army of 70,000 in the Battle of Emesa.[393] Soldiers were recruited from the city and its territories, spanning several thousand square kilometers from the outskirts of Homs to the Euphrates valley.[202] Non-Palmyrene soldiers were also recruited; a Nabatean cavalryman is recorded in 132 as serving in a Palmyrene unit stationed at Anah.[18] Palmyra's recruiting system is unknown; the city might have selected and equipped the troops and the strategoi led, trained and disciplined them.[394]

The strategoi were appointed by the council with the approval of Rome.[374] The royal army in the mid 3rd century AD was under the leadership of the monarch aided by generals,[395][396] and was modeled on the Sasanians in arms and tactics.[97] The Palmyrenes were noted archers.[397] They used infantry while a heavily armored cavalry (clibanarii) constituted the main attacking force.[note 35][399][400] Palmyra's infantry was armed with swords, lances and small round shields;[214] the clibanarii were fully armored (including their horses), and used heavy spears (kontos) 3.65 metres (12.0 ft) long without shields.[400][401]

Relations with Rome edit

Citing the Palmyrenes' combat skills in large, sparsely populated areas, the Romans formed a Palmyrene auxilia to serve in the Imperial Roman army.[214] Vespasian reportedly had 8,000 Palmyrene archers in Judea,[214] and Trajan established the first Palmyrene Auxilia in 116 (a camel cavalry unit, Ala I Ulpia dromedariorum Palmyrenorum).[214][402][403] Palmyrene units were deployed throughout the Roman Empire,[note 36] serving in Dacia late in Hadrian's reign,[405] and at El Kantara in Numidia and Moesia under Antoninus Pius.[405][406] During the late second century Rome formed the Cohors XX Palmyrenorum, which was stationed in Dura-Europos.[407]

Religion edit

 
Baalshamin (center), Aglibol (left) and Malakbel (right)

Palmyra's gods were primarily part of the northwestern Semitic pantheon, with the addition of gods from the Mesopotamian and Arab pantheons.[408] The city's chief pre-Hellenistic deity was called Bol,[409] an abbreviation of Baal (a northwestern Semitic honorific).[410] The Babylonian cult of Bel-Marduk influenced the Palmyrene religion and by 217 BC the chief deity's name was changed to Bel.[409] This did not indicate the replacing of the northwestern Semitic Bol with a Mesopotamian deity, but was a mere change in the name.[410]

Second in importance, after the supreme deity,[411] were over sixty ancestral gods of the Palmyrene clans.[411][412] Palmyra had unique deities,[413] such as the god of justice and Efqa's guardian Yarhibol,[414][415] the sun god Malakbel,[416] and the moon god Aglibol.[416] Palmyrenes worshiped regional deities, including the greater Levantine gods Astarte, Baal-hamon, Baalshamin and Atargatis;[413] the Babylonian gods Nabu and Nergal,[413] and the Arab Azizos, Arsu, Šams and Al-lāt.[413][414]

The deities worshiped in the countryside were depicted as camel or horse riders and bore Arab names.[349] The nature of those deities is uncertain as only names are known, most importantly Abgal.[417] The Palmyrene pantheon included ginnaye (some were given the designation "Gad"),[418] a group of lesser deities popular in the countryside,[419] who were similar to the Arab jinn and the Roman genius.[420] Ginnaye were believed to have the appearance and behavior of humans, similar to Arab jinn.[420] Unlike jinn, however, the ginnaye could not possess or injure humans.[420] Their role was similar to the Roman genius: tutelary deities who guarded individuals and their caravans, cattle and villages.[411][420]

Although the Palmyrenes worshiped their deities as individuals, some were associated with other gods.[421] Bel had Astarte-Belti as his consort, and formed a triple deity with Aglibol and Yarhibol (who became a sun god in his association with Bel).[414][422] Malakbel was part of many associations,[421] pairing with Gad Taimi and Aglibol,[423][423] and forming a triple deity with Baalshamin and Aglibol.[424] Palmyra hosted an Akitu (spring festival) each Nisan.[425] Each of the city's four-quarters had a sanctuary for a deity considered ancestral to the resident tribe; Malakbel and Aglibol's sanctuary was in the Komare quarter.[426] The Baalshamin sanctuary was in the Ma'zin quarter, the Arsu sanctuary in the Mattabol quarter,[426] and the Atargatis sanctuary in the fourth tribe's quarter.[note 37][424]

 
An Altar found in Trastevere dedicated to Malakbel bearing the epithet Sol Sanctissimus

The priests of Palmyra were selected from the city's leading families,[427] and are recognized in busts through their headdresses which have the shape of a polos adorned with laurel wreath or other tree made of bronze among other elements.[428] The high priest of Bel's temple was the highest religious authority and headed the clergy of priests who were organized into collegia each headed by a higher priest.[429] The personnel of Efqa spring's sanctuary dedicated to Yarhibol belonged to a special class of priests as they were oracles.[429] Palmyra's paganism was replaced with Christianity as the religion spread across the Roman Empire, and a bishop was reported in the city by 325.[288] Although most temples became churches, the Temple of Al-lāt was destroyed in 385 at the order of Maternus Cynegius (the eastern praetorian prefect).[288] After the Muslim conquest in 634 Islam gradually replaced Christianity, and the last known bishop of Palmyra was consecrated after 818.[430]

Malakbel and the Roman Sol Invictus edit

In 274, following his victory over Palmyra, Aurelian dedicated a large temple of Sol Invictus in Rome;[431] most scholars consider Aurelian's Sol Invictus to be of Syrian origin,[432] either a continuation of emperor Elagabalus cult of Sol Invictus Elagabalus, or Malakbel of Palmyra.[433] The Palmyrene deity was commonly identified with the Roman god Sol and he had a temple dedicated for him on the right bank of the Tiber since the second century.[434] Also, he bore the epithet Invictus and was known with the name Sol "Sanctissimus", the latter was an epithet Aurelian bore on an inscription from Capena.[434]

The position of the Palmyrene deity as Aurelian's Sol Invictus is inferred from a passage by Zosimus reading: "and the magnificent temple of the sun he (i.e. Aurelian) embellished with votive gifts from Palmyra, setting up statues of Helios and Bel".[435] Three deities from Palmyra exemplified solar features: Malakbel, Yarhibol and Šams, hence the identification of the Palmyrene Helios appearing in Zosimus' work with Malakbel.[435] Some scholars criticize the notion of Malakbel's identification with Sol Invictus; according to Gaston Halsberghe, the cult of Malakbel was too local for it to become an imperial Roman god and Aurelian's restoration of Bel's temple and sacrifices dedicated to Malakbel were a sign of his attachment to the sun god in general and his respect to the many ways in which the deity was worshiped.[436] Richard Stoneman suggested another approach in which Aurelian simply borrowed the imagery of Malakbel to enhance his own solar deity.[437] The relation between Malakbel and Sol Invictus can not be confirmed and will probably remain unresolved.[434]

Economy edit

 
Palmyra's Agora; the two front entrances lead to the interior, the city's marketplace

Palmyra's economy before and at the beginning of the Roman period was based on agriculture, pastoralism, and trade;[18] the city served as a rest station for the caravans which sporadically crossed the desert.[195] By the end of the first century BC, the city had a mixed economy based on agriculture, pastoralism, taxation,[438][439] and, most importantly, the caravan trade.[440] Taxation was an important source of revenue for the Palmyrene government.[439] Caravaneers paid taxes in the building known as the Tariff Court,[76] where a tax law dating to AD 137 was exhibited.[133][441] The law regulated the tariffs paid by the merchants for goods sold at the internal market or exported from the city.[note 38][76][443]

The classicist Andrew M. Smith II suggested that most land in Palmyra was owned by the city, which collected grazing taxes.[438] The oasis had about 1,000 hectares (2,500 acres) of irrigable land,[444] which surrounded the city.[445] The Palmyrenes constructed an extensive irrigation system in the northern mountains that consisted of reservoirs and channels to capture and store the occasional rainfall.[446] The most notable irrigation work is Harbaqa Dam which was constructed in the late first century AD;[note 39][447] it is located 48 km (30 mi) southwest of the city and can collect 140,000 cubic metres (4,900,000 cu ft) of water.[448] Terebinth trees in the hinterland were an important source of charcoal, resin and oil; although evidence is lacking, it is possible that olive trees were also planted, and dairy products were produced in the villages;[204] it is also apparent that barley was cultivated.[449] However, agriculture could not support the population and food was imported.[445]

After Palmyra's destruction in 273, it became a market for villagers and nomads from the surrounding area.[450] The city regained some of its prosperity during the Umayyad era, indicated by the discovery of a large Umayyad souq in the colonnaded street.[451] Palmyra was a minor trading center until its destruction in 1400;[452] according to Sharaf ad-Din Ali Yazdi, Timur's men took 200,000 sheep,[453] and the city was reduced into a settlement on the desert border whose inhabitants herded and cultivated small plots for vegetables and corn.[454]

Commerce edit

 
Palmyra caravan. Palmyra Archaeological Museum
 
The Silk Road

If the Laghman II inscription in Afghanistan is referring to Palmyra, then the city's role in Central Asian overland trade was prominent as early as the third century BC.[189] During the first centuries AD, Palmyra's main trade route ran east to the Euphrates where it connected at the city of Hīt.[455] The route then ran south along the river toward the port of Charax Spasinu on the Persian Gulf, where Palmyrene ships traveled back and forth to India.[456] Goods were imported from India, China and Transoxiana,[457] and exported west to Emesa (or Antioch) then the Mediterranean ports,[458] from which they were distributed throughout the Roman Empire.[456] In addition to the usual route some Palmyrene merchants used the Red Sea,[457] probably as a result of the Roman–Parthian Wars.[459] Goods were carried overland from the seaports to a Nile port, and then taken to the Egyptian Mediterranean ports for export.[459] Inscriptions attesting a Palmyrene presence in Egypt date to the reign of Hadrian.[460]

Since Palmyra was not on the main trading route (which followed the Euphrates),[18] the Palmyrenes secured the desert route passing their city.[18] They connected it to the Euphrates valley, providing water and shelter.[18] The Palmyrene route connected the Silk Road with the Mediterranean,[461] and was used almost exclusively by the city's merchants,[18] who maintained a presence in many cities, including Dura-Europos in 33 BC,[216] Babylon by AD 19, Seleucia by AD 24,[210] Dendera, Coptos,[462] Bahrain, the Indus River Delta, Merv and Rome.[463]

The caravan trade depended on patrons and merchants.[464] Patrons owned the land on which the caravan animals were raised, providing animals and guards for the merchants.[464] The lands were located in the numerous villages of the Palmyrene countryside.[349] Although merchants used the patrons to conduct business, their roles often overlapped and a patron would sometimes lead a caravan.[464] Commerce made Palmyra and its merchants among the wealthiest in the region.[440] Some caravans were financed by a single merchant,[76] such as Male' Agrippa (who financed Hadrian's visit in 129 and the 139 rebuilding of the Temple of Bel).[220] The primary income-generating trade good was silk, which was exported from the East to the West.[465] Other exported goods included jade, muslin, spices, ebony, ivory and precious stones.[463] For its domestic market Palmyra imported a variety of goods including slaves, prostitutes, olive oil, dyed goods, myrrh and perfume.[442][463]

Research and excavations edit

 
The Colonnade
 
The Tetrapylon (destroyed in 2017)

Palmyra's first scholarly description appeared in a 1696 book by Abednego Seller.[466] In 1751, an expedition led by Robert Wood and James Dawkins studied Palmyra's architecture.[467] French artist and architect Louis-François Cassas conducted an extensive survey of the city's monuments in 1785, publishing over a hundred drawings of Palmyra's civic buildings and tombs.[466] Palmrya was photographed for the first time in 1864 by Louis Vignes.[466] In 1882, the Palmyra Tariff, an inscribed stone slab from AD 137 in Greek and Palmyrene detailing import and export taxation, was discovered by prince Semyon Semyonovich Abamelik-Lazarev in the Tariff Court.[468] It has been described by the historian John F. Matthews as "one of the most important single items of evidence for the economic life of any part of the Roman Empire".[469] In 1901, the slab was gifted by the Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II to the Russian Tsar and is now in the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg.[470]

 
Excavations at Palmyra, 1962, Polish archaeologist Kazimierz Michałowski

Palmyra's first excavations were conducted in 1902 by Otto Puchstein and in 1917 by Theodor Wiegand.[348] In 1929, French general director of antiquities of Syria and Lebanon Henri Seyrig began large-scale excavation of the site;[348] interrupted by World War II, it resumed soon after the war's end.[348] Seyrig started with the Temple of Bel in 1929 and between 1939 and 1940 he excavated the Agora.[349] Daniel Schlumberger conducted excavations in the Palmyrene northwest countryside in 1934 and 1935 where he studied different local sanctuaries in the Palmyrene villages.[349] From 1954 to 1956, a Swiss expedition organized by UNESCO excavated the Temple of Baalshamin.[348] Since 1958, the site has been excavated by the Syrian Directorate-General of Antiquities,[347] and Polish expeditions of the Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology University of Warsaw,[471] led by many archaeologists including Kazimierz Michałowski (until 1980) and Michael Gawlikowski (until 2009).[348][472] The stratigraphic sounding beneath the Temple of Bel was conducted in 1967 by Robert du Mesnil du Buisson,[87] who also discovered the Temple of Baal-hamon in the 1970s.[147] In 1980, the historic site including the necropolis outside the walls was declared a World Heritage Site by the UNESCO.[473]

The Polish expedition concentrated its work on the Camp of Diocletian while the Syrian Directorate-General of Antiquities excavated the Temple of Nabu.[349] Most of the hypogea were excavated jointly by the Polish expedition and the Syrian Directorate,[474] while the area of Efqa was excavated by Jean Starcky and Jafar al-Hassani.[32] The Palmyrene irrigation system was discovered in 2008 by Jørgen Christian Meyer who researched the Palmyrene countryside through ground inspections and satellite images.[475] Most of Palmyra still remains unexplored especially the residential quarters in the north and south while the necropolis has been thoroughly excavated by the Directorate and the Polish expedition.[32] Excavation expeditions left Palmyra in 2011 due to the Syrian Civil War.[476]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The Semitic word T.M.R is the common root for the words that designate palm dates in Arabic, Hebrew, Ge'ez and other Semitic languages.[5]
    Schultens argued that in the Bible (1 Kings 9:18), the name is written "Tamor" in the text and "Tadmor" in the margin.[6] Schultens considered "Tamor" to be the original name and derived from "Tamar".[7] However, the inclusion of a -d- in "Tamar" cannot be explained.[8]
  2. ^ Pliny mentioned that Palmyra was independent, but by AD 70, Palmyra was part of the Roman empire; modern scholars dismiss Pliny's account of Palmyra's political situation, considering it to rely on older accounts dating to the period of Octavian, when Palmyra was independent.[19]
  3. ^ Estimates vary from as low as 30,000 to 200,000; the latter number is doubted considering the environment of Palmyra and its hinterland which makes it difficult to provide the population with the necessary foodstuff.[41]
  4. ^ E.g for Aramaic: Gaddibol and Yedi'bel.[59]
    E.g for Arab: Bene Ma'zin.[59]
    E.g for Amorite: Zmr' and Kohen-Nadu.[59]
  5. ^ These criteria are: dispersion in a wide geographical range; orientation towards a homeland through the usage of own language and reference to a distinct origin and pantheon; the usage of own language and origin to preserve a distinct identity amongst host societies.[64]
  6. ^ The Phylai are the Bene Mita, Komare, Mattabol, Ma'zin and Claudia.[77]
  7. ^ In general, a civic tribe (Phyle) is a collection of people chosen from the collective population and ascribed a deity as a tribal ancestor, then assigned a territory for them to reside in. The Phylai were united by their citizenship instead of origin.[80]
  8. ^ The clans might have gathered under the name of the four tribes causing them to disappear.[78]
  9. ^ E.g. by the second century AD, Palmyrene goddess Al-lāt was portrayed in the style of the Greek goddess Athena, and named Athena-Al-lāt. However, this assimilation of Al-lāt to Athena did not extend beyond iconography.[90]
  10. ^ In the Hellenistic tradition, the agora was the center of athletic, artistic, spiritual and political life of the city.[99]
  11. ^ There are hints of Greek training; the names of three Greeks who worked on the construction of the Temple of Bel are known through inscriptions, including a probably Greek architect named Alexandras (Αλεξάνδρας).[116][117] However, some Palmyrenes adopted Greco-Roman names and native citizens with the name Alexander are attested in the city.[118]
  12. ^ The historian Rudolf Fellmann suggested that this building was the royal palace.[128]
  13. ^ According to the reading of Dupont-Sommer, Palmyra is separated by two hundreds "bows" from Laghman; In the inscription, the word used to indicate bow is "QŠTN", and Dupont-Sommer asserted that it is an Aramaic word denoting a unit to measure a distance of 15 to 20 kilometres.[186] Franz Altheim and Ruth Altheim-Stiehl read three hundred instead of two hundred bows; they equated it with the Vedic unit of measurement yojona, c. 12 kilometres, which would result in a number close to the actual 3800 kilometres distance between Laghman and Palmyra.[187] The linguist Helmut Humbach criticized the reading of Dupont-Sommer and considered his claims regarding the distance to have no validation.[188] In the Aramaic alphabet, the letters "r" and "d" share an identical character;[189] Jean de Menasce read the city's name "Trmd" and identified it with Termez on the Oxus river.[190] The linguist Franz Rosenthal also contested the reading of Dupont-Sommer and considered that the inscription refers to an estate called "Trmn".[191] Historian Bratindra Nath Mukherjee rejected the readings of both Dupont-Sommer and de Menasce; he contested the large value attributed to "bow", considering it a small unit. The historian also rejected the reading of Tdmr and Trmd as referring to a city; in the view of Mukherjee, the name, whether Tdmr or Trmd refers to the rock on which the inscription was carved itself.[190]
  14. ^ The inscription is in bad shape but the letters' form, especially the four-branched sigma, indicate that it is one of the earliest inscriptions from Palmyra, dating to the beginning of the first century AD or the former first century BC. Seyrig concluded that it is futile to identify the king as the title Epiphanes was borne by many Seleucid kings, the last of them, Antiochus XII, died in 82 BC. Even then, according to Seyrig, the date is too high for the form of the letters. Seyrig suggested a king of Commagene or, more likely, a Parthian king.[192]
  15. ^ The attribution of Palmyra annexation to Tiberius was supported by Seyrig and became the most influential. However, other dates have been suggested ranging from as early as Pompey's era to as late as Vespasian's reign.[196]
  16. ^ Inscription reproduced:[200]
           Fin[es]
           inteṛ
    Hadriano[s]
    Palmyrenos
               et
    [He]ṃesenos
  17. ^ The exact year for when Palmyra first made use of some Greek institutions is not known; the evidence that specifically identify Palmyra as a polis is not extensive, and the earliest known reference is an inscription dated to AD 51, written in Palmyrene and Greek, mentioning the "City of the Palmyrenes" in its Greek section.[207]
  18. ^ Despite his Greek name, Alexandros was probably a native Palmyrene.[208]
    There is no evidence that Germanicus visited Palmyra.[209]
  19. ^ The legion was part of Germanicus' eastern campaign and was not stationed in the city as a garrison.[211]
  20. ^ Commissioned by Traianus.[213]
  21. ^ The transformation already began in the first century BC.[216]
  22. ^ Although Palmyra benefiting from the annexation of Petra is a mainstream view, Palmyra's trade was mostly with the East, while Petra's trade counted on southern Arabia. In addition to the fact that Palmyra and Petra traded in different articles, hence the annexation of Petra might have not had a real effect on Palmyra's trade.[219]
  23. ^ The Ala I Thracum Herculiana was a milliaria.[223] Generally, a milliaria consisted of a thousand horsemen.[224]
  24. ^ No evidence exist for Roman units serving in the ranks of Odaenathus; whether Roman soldiers fought under Odaenathus or not is a matter of speculation.[238]
  25. ^ The Mesopotamian Jewish population was regarded by the Palmyrenes as loyal to the Persians.[248]
  26. ^ The first decisive evidence for the use of this title for Odaenathus is an inscription dated to 271, posthumously describing Odaenathus as "King of Kings".[236][252] Known inscriptions dating to his reign address him as king. However, Odaenathus' son Hairan I, is directly attested as "King of Kings" during his lifetime. Hairan I was proclaimed by his father as co-ruler and was assassinated during the same assassination incident that took the life of Odaenathus and it is unlikely that Odaenathus was simply a king while his son held the King of Kings title.[253]
  27. ^ Claudius died in August 270, shortly before Zenobia's invasion of Egypt.[268]
  28. ^ Scholarly opinion is divided as to whether this was a declaration of independence or a usurpation of the Roman throne.[275][276][277]
  29. ^ All other accounts indicate that a military action was not necessary, as it seems that Zenobia withdrew her forces in order to defend Syria.[279]
  30. ^ Named in Ottoman system "Salyane Sanjak", which is a Sanjak that had an annual allowance from the government, in contrast to the Khas Sanjaks, which yielded a land revenue.[333]
  31. ^ The British did not occupy the area and the local Bedouins agreed to protect the field.[342]
  32. ^ Neither the British, French or Arab armies attacked the Sanjak.[343]
  33. ^ The number of 600 is hypothetical.[206]
  34. ^ Hairan I was described as "Ras" in 251 indicating that Odaenathus was promoted at that time as well.[234]
  35. ^ The Palmyrene army that invaded Egypt was mainly composed of clibanarii supported by archers.[398]
  36. ^ A Palmyrene monument was discovered near Newcastle in England; it was set by a Palmyrene named Baratas, who was either a soldier or a camp follower.[404]
  37. ^ The fourth tribe's name is not certain but most likely the Mita.[424]
  38. ^ Richard Stoneman proposes that the law regulated taxes imposed on goods destined for the internal market and did not cover the transit trade.[442]
  39. ^ The dating of the dam's construction was questioned by the archaeologist Denis Genequand who compared it to several Umayyad dams and suggested a date corresponding to the Umayyad period.[41]

References edit

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palmyra, this, article, about, ancient, city, modern, city, also, known, tadmur, modern, other, uses, disambiguation, palmyrene, 𐡶𐡣𐡬𐡥𐡴, romanized, tadmor, arabic, romanized, tadmur, ancient, city, eastern, part, levant, center, modern, syria, archaeological, f. This article is about the ancient city of Palmyra For the modern city also known as Tadmur see Palmyra modern For other uses see Palmyra disambiguation Palmyra p ae l ˈ m aɪ r e pal MY re Palmyrene 𐡶𐡣𐡬𐡥𐡴 romanized Tadmor Arabic ت د م ر romanized Tadmur is an ancient city in the eastern part of the Levant now in the center of modern Syria Archaeological finds date back to the Neolithic period and documents first mention the city in the early second millennium BC Palmyra changed hands on a number of occasions between different empires before becoming a subject of the Roman Empire in the first century AD Palmyra𐡶𐡣𐡬𐡥𐡴 ت د م رThe ruins of Palmyra in 2010Shown within SyriaShow map of SyriaPalmyra Eastern Mediterranean Show map of Eastern MediterraneanPalmyra West and Central Asia Show map of West and Central AsiaAlternative nameTadmorLocationTadmur Homs Governorate SyriaRegionSyrian DesertCoordinates34 33 05 N 38 16 05 E 34 55139 N 38 26806 E 34 55139 38 26806TypeSettlementPart ofPalmyrene EmpireArea80 ha 200 acres HistoryFounded3rd millennium BCAbandoned1932 1932 PeriodsMiddle Bronze Age to ModernCulturesAramaic Arabic Greco RomanSite notesConditionRuinedOwnershipPublicManagementSyrian Ministry of CulturePublic accessYesUNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameSite of PalmyraTypeCulturalCriteriai ii ivDesignated1980 4th Session Reference no 23RegionArab statesEndangered2013 2013 presentThe city grew wealthy from trade caravans the Palmyrenes became renowned as merchants who established colonies along the Silk Road and operated throughout the Roman Empire Palmyra s wealth enabled the construction of monumental projects such as the Great Colonnade the Temple of Bel and the distinctive tower tombs Ethnically the Palmyrenes combined elements of Amorites Arameans and Arabs The city s social structure was structured around kinship and clans and its inhabitants spoke Palmyrene Aramaic a variety of Western Middle Aramaic while using Koine Greek for commercial and diplomatic purposes The Hellenistic period of West Asia influenced the culture of Palmyra which produced distinctive art and architecture that combined different Mediterranean traditions The city s inhabitants worshiped local Semitic Mesopotamian and Arab deities By the third century Palmyra had become a prosperous regional center It reached the apex of its power in the 260s when the Palmyrene King Odaenathus defeated the Sasanian emperor Shapur I The king was succeeded by queen regent Zenobia who rebelled against Rome and established the Palmyrene Empire In 273 Roman emperor Aurelian destroyed the city which was later restored by Diocletian at a reduced size The Palmyrenes converted to Christianity during the fourth century and to Islam in the centuries following the conquest by the 7th century Rashidun Caliphate after which the Palmyrene and Greek languages were replaced by Arabic Before AD 273 Palmyra enjoyed autonomy and was attached to the Roman province of Syria having its political organization influenced by the Greek city state model during the first two centuries AD The city became a Roman colonia during the third century leading to the incorporation of Roman governing institutions before becoming a monarchy in 260 Following its destruction in 273 Palmyra became a minor center under the Byzantines and later empires Its destruction by the Timurids in 1400 reduced it to a small village Under French Mandatory rule in 1932 the inhabitants were moved into the new village of Tadmur and the ancient site became available for excavations During the Syrian civil war in 2015 the Islamic State IS destroyed large parts of the ancient city which was recaptured by the Syrian Army on 2 March 2017 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Region and city layout 2 1 Layout 3 People language and society 3 1 Ethnicity of classical Palmyra 3 2 Language 3 3 Social organization 4 Culture 4 1 Art and architecture 5 Site 5 1 Cemeteries 5 2 Notable structures 5 2 1 Public buildings 5 2 2 Temples 5 2 3 Other buildings 5 3 Destruction by IS 5 3 1 Restoration 6 History 6 1 Early period 6 2 Hellenistic and Roman periods 6 2 1 Autonomous Palmyrene region 6 2 2 Palmyrene kingdom 6 2 2 1 Persian wars 6 2 2 2 Palmyrene empire 6 2 3 Later Roman and Byzantine periods 6 3 Arab caliphates 6 3 1 Umayyad and early Abbasid periods 6 3 2 Decentralization 6 4 Mamluk period 6 4 1 Al Fadl principality 6 5 Ottoman era 6 6 20th century 6 7 Syrian civil war 7 Government 7 1 Military 7 1 1 Relations with Rome 8 Religion 8 1 Malakbel and the Roman Sol Invictus 9 Economy 9 1 Commerce 10 Research and excavations 11 See also 12 Notes 13 References 13 1 Citations 13 2 Sources 14 External linksEtymology editRecords of the name Tadmor date from the early second millennium BC 1 eighteenth century BC tablets from Mari written in cuneiform record the name as Ta ad mi ir while Assyrian inscriptions of the eleventh century BC record it as Ta ad mar 2 Aramaic Palmyrene inscriptions themselves showed two variants of the name TDMR i e Tadmar and TDMWR i e Tadmor 3 4 The etymology of the name is unclear the standard interpretation supported by Albert Schultens connects it to the Semitic word for date palm tamar תמר note 1 7 8 thus referring to the palm trees that surrounded the city 8 The Greek name Palmyra Latinized Palmyra was first recorded by Pliny the Elder in the 1st century AD 9 It was used throughout the Greco Roman world 7 It is generally believed that Palmyra derives from Tadmor and linguists have presented two possibilities one view holds that Palmyra was an alteration of Tadmor 7 According to the suggestion by Schultens Palmyra could have arisen as a corruption of Tadmor via an unattested form Talmura changed to Palmura by the influence of the Latin word palma date palm 1 in reference to the city s palm trees then the name reached its final form Palmyra 10 The second view supported by some philologists such as Jean Starcky holds that Palmyra is a translation of Tadmor assuming that it meant palm which had derived from the Greek word for palm palame 1 8 An alternative suggestion connects the name to the Syriac tedmurta ܬܕܡܘܪܬܐ miracle hence tedmurta object of wonder from the root dmr to wonder this possibility was mentioned favourably by Franz Altheim and Ruth Altheim Stiehl 1973 but rejected by Jean Starcky 1960 and Michael Gawlikowski 1974 9 Michael Patrick O Connor 1988 suggested that the names Palmyra and Tadmor originated in the Hurrian language 1 As evidence he cited the inexplicability of alterations to the theorized roots of both names represented in the addition of d to tamar and ra to palame 8 According to this theory Tadmor derives from the Hurrian word tad to love with the addition of the typical Hurrian mid vowel rising mVr formant mar 11 Similarly according to this theory Palmyra derives from the Hurrian word pal to know using the same mVr formant mar 11 Region and city layout editSee also Valley of the Tombs nbsp The northern Palmyrene mountain belt nbsp Palmyra s landmarks The city of Palmyra lies 215 km 134 mi northeast of the Syrian capital Damascus 12 along with an expanded hinterland of several settlements farms and forts the city forms part of the region known as the Palmyrene 13 The city is located in an oasis surrounded by palms of which twenty varieties have been reported 8 14 Two mountain ranges overlook the city the northern Palmyrene mountain belt from the north and the southern Palmyrene mountains from the southwest 15 In the south and the east Palmyra is exposed to the Syrian Desert 15 A small wadi al Qubur crosses the area flowing from the western hills past the city before disappearing in the eastern gardens of the oasis 16 South of the wadi is a spring Efqa 17 Pliny the Elder described the town in the 70s AD as famous for its desert location for the richness of its soil 18 and for the springs surrounding it which made agriculture and herding possible note 2 18 Layout edit Palmyra began as a small Neolithic settlement near the Efqa spring on the southern bank of Wadi al Qubur 20 The much later Hellenistic settlement of Palmyra was also located near the Efqa spring on the southern bank of Wadi al Qubur 20 It had its residences expanding to the wadi s northern bank during the first century 16 Although the city s walls at the time of Zenobia originally enclosed an extensive area on both banks of the wadi 16 the walls rebuilt during Aurelian s reign surrounded only the northern bank section 21 16 Most of the city s monumental projects were built on the wadi s northern bank 22 among them is the Temple of Bel on a tell which was the site of an earlier temple known as the Hellenistic temple 23 However excavation supports the theory that the tell was originally located on the southern bank and the wadi was diverted south of the tell to incorporate the temple into Palmyra s late first and early second century urban organization on the north bank 24 Also north of the wadi was the Great Colonnade Palmyra s 1 1 kilometre long 0 68 mi main street 25 which extended from the Temple of Bel in the east 26 to the Funerary Temple no 86 in the city s western part 27 28 It had a monumental arch in its eastern section 29 and a tetrapylon stands in the center 30 The Baths of Diocletian were on the left side of the colonnade 31 Nearby were residences 32 the Temple of Baalshamin 33 and the Byzantine churches which include Basilica IV Palmyra s largest church 34 The church is dated to the Justinian age 35 its columns are estimated to be 7 metres 23 ft high and its base measured 27 5 by 47 5 metres 90 by 156 ft 34 The Temple of Nabu and the Roman theater were built on the colonnade s southern side 36 Behind the theater were a small senate building and the large agora with the remains of a triclinium banquet room and the Tariff Court 37 A cross street at the western end of the colonnade leads to the Camp of Diocletian 25 38 built by Sosianus Hierocles the Roman governor of Syria in the reign of Diocletian 39 Nearby are the Temple of Al lat and the Damascus Gate 40 People language and society editFurther information Palmyrene Aramaic and Palmyrene alphabet At its height during the reign of Zenobia Palmyra had more than 200 000 residents note 3 42 The earliest known inhabitants were the Amorites in the early second millennium BC 43 and by the end of the millennium Arameans were mentioned as inhabiting the area 44 45 Arabs arrived in the city in the late first millennium BC 46 Zabdibel who aided the Seleucids in the battle of Raphia 217 BC was mentioned as the commander of the Arabs and neighbouring tribes to the number of ten thousands 47 Zabdibel and his men were not actually identified as Palmyrenes in the texts but the name Zabdibel is a Palmyrene name leading to the conclusion that he hailed from Palmyra 48 The Arab newcomers were assimilated by the earlier inhabitants used Palmyrene as a mother tongue 49 and formed a significant segment of the aristocracy 50 The classical city also had a Jewish community inscriptions in Palmyrene from the Beit She arim necropolis in Lower Galilee confirm the burial of Palmyrene Jews 51 During the Roman period occasionally and rarely members of the Palmyrene families took Greek names while ethnic Greeks were few the majority of people with Greek names who did not belong to one of the city s families were freed slaves 52 The Palmyrenes seem to have disliked the Greeks considered them foreigners and restricted their settlement in the city 52 During the Umayyad Caliphate Palmyra was mainly inhabited by the Banu Kalb 53 Benjamin of Tudela recorded the existence of 2000 Jews in the city during the twelfth century 54 Palmyra declined after its destruction by Timur in 1400 55 and was a village of 6 000 inhabitants at the beginning of the 20th century 56 Ethnicity of classical Palmyra edit Palmyra s population was a mixture of the different peoples inhabiting the city 57 58 which is seen in Aramaic Arabic and Amorite names of Palmyrene clans note 4 59 but the ethnicity of Palmyra is a matter of debate 60 Some scholars such as Andrew M Smith II consider ethnicity a concept related to modern nationalism and prefer not to describe the Palmyrenes with ethnic designations they themselves did not know concluding that there is a lack of evidence regarding what ethnicity the Palmyrenes perceived themselves 61 On the other hand many scholars such as Eivind Seland contend that a distinctive Palmyrene ethnicity is apparent in the available contemporary evidence 62 The second century work De Munitionibus Castrorum mentioned the Palmyrenes as a natio the Latin equivalent of the Greek ἔ8nos ethnos 63 Seland noted the epigraphic evidence left by the Palmyrenes outside the city 62 The inscriptions reveal the existence of a real diaspora satisfying the three criteria set by the sociologist Rogers Brubaker note 5 64 Palmyrene diaspora members always made clear their Palmyrene origin and used the Palmyrene language and maintained their distinct religion even when the host society s religion was close to that of Palmyra Seland concluded that in the case of Palmyra the people perceived themselves different from their neighbours and a real Palmyrene ethnicity existed 65 Aside from the existence of a Palmyrene ethnicity Aramean or Arab are the two main ethnic designations debated by historians 60 Javier Teixidor stated Palmyra was an Aramaean city and it is a mistake to consider it as an Arab town while Yasamin Zahran criticized this statement and argued that the inhabitants considered themselves Arabs 66 In practice according to several scholars such as Udo Hartmann and Michael Sommer the citizenry of Palmyra were mainly the result of Arab and Aramaean tribes merging into a unity with a corresponding consciousness they thought and acted as Palmyrenes 67 68 Language edit nbsp Alphabetic inscription in Palmyrene alphabetUntil the late third century Palmyrenes spoke Palmyrene Aramaic and used the Palmyrene alphabet 69 70 The use of Latin was minimal but Greek was used by wealthier members of society for commercial and diplomatic purposes 71 and it became the dominant language during the Byzantine era 72 There are several theories explaining the disappearance of the Palmyrene language shortly after the campaigns of Aurelian The linguist Jean Cantineau assumed that Aurelian suppressed all aspects of Palmyrene culture including the language but the last Palmyrene inscription dates to 279 280 after the death of the Roman emperor in 275 thus refuting such a theory 73 Many scholars ascribe the disappearance of the language to a change in society resulting from the reorganization of the Eastern Roman frontier following the fall of Zenobia 73 The archaeologist Karol Juchniewicz ascribed it to a change in the ethnic composition of the city resulting from the influx of people who did not speak Aramaic probably a Roman legion 21 Hartmann suggested that it was a Palmyrene initiative by nobles allied to Rome attempting to express their loyalty to the emperor Hartmann noted that Palmyrene disappeared in the written form and that this does not mean its extinction as spoken language 74 After the Arab conquest Greek was replaced by Arabic 72 from which although the city was surrounded by Bedouins a Palmyrene dialect evolved 56 Social organization edit nbsp Palmyrene funerary portrait representing Aqmat a Palmyrene aristocratClassical Palmyra was a tribal community but due to the lack of sources an understanding of the nature of Palmyrene tribal structure is not possible 75 Thirty clans have been documented 76 five of which were identified as tribes Phylai Koine Greek Fylai pl of Phyle Fylh comprising several sub clans note 6 77 By the time of Nero Palmyra had four tribes each residing in an area of the city bearing its name 78 Three of the tribes were the Komare Mattabol and Ma zin the fourth tribe is uncertain but was probably the Mita 78 79 In time the four tribes became highly civic and tribal lines blurred note 7 78 by the second century clan identity lost its importance and it disappeared during the third century note 8 78 Even the four tribes ceased to be important by the third century as only one inscription mentions a tribe after the year 212 instead aristocrats played the decisive role in the city s social organization 81 Women seem to have been active in Palmyra s social and public life They commissioned inscriptions buildings or tombs and in certain cases held administrative offices Offerings to gods in the names of women are documented 82 The last Palmyrene inscription of 279 280 refers to the honouring of a citizen by the Maththabolians 73 which indicates that the tribal system still carried weight after the fall of Zenobia 83 A noticeable change is the lack of development of aristocratic residences and no important public buildings were constructed by locals indicating that the elite diminished following the campaign of Aurelian The social change and the reduction of the aristocratic elite is hard to explain It could be a result of the aristocracy suffering many casualties in the war against Rome or fleeing to the countryside According to historian Emanuele Intagliata the change can be ascribed to the Roman reorganization following Zenobia s fall as Palmyra ceased to be a rich caravan city and became a frontier fortress leading the inhabitants to focus on satisfying the needs of a garrison instead of providing the empire with luxurious oriental items Such a change in functions would have made the city less attractive for an aristocratic elite 84 Palmyra benefited from Umayyad rule since its role as a frontier city ended and the East West trade route was restored leading to the re emergence of a merchant class Palmyra s loyalty to the Umayyads led to an aggressive military retaliation from their successors the Abbasid Caliphate and the city diminished in size losing its merchant class 85 Following its destruction by Timur Palmyra maintained the life of a small settlement until its relocation in 1932 86 Culture editThe scarce artifacts found in the city dating to the Bronze Age reveal that culturally Palmyra was most affiliated with western Syria 87 Classical Palmyra had a distinctive culture 88 based on a local Semitic tradition 89 and influenced by Greece and Rome note 9 91 To appear better integrated into the Roman Empire some Palmyrenes adopted Greco Roman names either alone or in addition to a second native name 92 The extent of Greek influence on Palmyra s culture is debated 93 Scholars interpreted the Palmyrenes Greek practices differently many see those characters as a superficial layer over a local essence 94 Palmyra s senate was an example although Palmyrene texts written in Greek described it as a boule a Greek institution the senate was a gathering of non elected tribal elders a Near Eastern assembly tradition 95 Others view Palmyra s culture as a fusion of local and Greco Roman traditions 96 nbsp Palmyrene loculi burial chambers reassembled in the Istanbul Archaeological Museum nbsp Palmyrene mummy The culture of Persia influenced Palmyrene military tactics dress and court ceremonies 97 Palmyra had no large libraries or publishing facilities and it lacked an intellectual movement characteristic of other Eastern cities such as Edessa or Antioch 98 Although Zenobia opened her court to academics the only notable scholar documented was Cassius Longinus 98 Palmyra had a large agora note 10 However unlike the Greek Agoras public gathering places shared with public buildings Palmyra s agora resembled an Eastern caravanserai more than a hub of public life 100 101 The Palmyrenes buried their dead in elaborate family mausoleums 102 most with interior walls forming rows of burial chambers loculi in which the dead lying at full length were placed 103 104 A relief of the person interred formed part of the wall s decoration acting as a headstone 104 Sarcophagi appeared in the late second century and were used in some of the tombs 105 Many burial monuments contained mummies embalmed in a method similar to that used in Ancient Egypt 106 107 Art and architecture edit Further information Palmyrene funerary reliefs nbsp Interior of the Tower of Elahbel in 2010 Although Palmyrene art was related to that of Greece it had a distinctive style unique to the middle Euphrates region 108 Palmyrene art is well represented by the bust reliefs which seal the openings of its burial chambers 108 The reliefs emphasized clothing jewelry and a frontal representation of the person depicted 108 109 characteristics which can be seen as a forerunner of Byzantine art 108 According to Michael Rostovtzeff Palmyra s art was influenced by Parthian art 110 However the origin of frontality that characterized Palmyrene and Parthian arts is a controversial issue while Parthian origin has been suggested by Daniel Schlumberger 111 Michael Avi Yonah contends that it was a local Syrian tradition that influenced Parthian art 112 Little painting and none of the bronze statues of prominent citizens which stood on brackets on the main columns of the Great Colonnade have survived 113 A damaged frieze and other sculptures from the Temple of Bel many removed to museums in Syria and abroad suggest the city s public monumental sculpture 113 Many surviving funerary busts reached Western museums during the 19th century 114 Palmyra provided the most convenient Eastern examples bolstering an art history controversy at the turn of the 20th century to what extent Eastern influence on Roman art replaced idealized classicism with frontal hieratic and simplified figures as believed by Josef Strzygowski and others 113 115 This transition is seen as a response to cultural changes in the Western Roman Empire rather than artistic influence from the East 113 Palmyrene bust reliefs unlike Roman sculptures are rudimentary portraits although many reflect high quality individuality the majority vary little across figures of similar age and gender 113 Like its art Palmyra s architecture was influenced by the Greco Roman style while preserving local elements best seen in the Temple of Bel note 11 116 119 Enclosed by a massive wall flanked with traditional Roman columns 119 120 Bel s sanctuary plan was primarily Semitic 119 Similar to the Second Temple the sanctuary consisted of a large courtyard with the deity s main shrine off center against its entrance a plan preserving elements of the temples of Ebla and Ugarit 119 121 Site editCemeteries edit nbsp Valley of Tombs in 2010 nbsp The senate nbsp Baths of Diocletian nbsp The statue of Al lat equated with Athena found in its temple destroyed in 2015 nbsp The Funerary Temple no 86 nbsp Diocletian s walls West of the ancient walls the Palmyrenes built a number of large scale funerary monuments which now form the Valley of Tombs 122 a one kilometre long 0 62 mi necropolis 123 The more than 50 monuments were primarily tower shaped and up to four stories high 124 Towers were replaced by funerary temples in the first half of the second century AD as the most recent tower is dated to AD 128 27 The city had other cemeteries in the north southwest and southeast where the tombs are primarily hypogea underground 125 126 Notable structures edit Public buildings edit Further information Camp of Diocletian and Roman Theatre at Palmyra The senate building is largely ruined 37 It is a small building that consists of a peristyle courtyard and a chamber that has an apse at one end and rows of seats around it 76 Much of the Baths of Diocletian are ruined and do not survive above the level of the foundations 127 The complex s entrance is marked by four massive Egyptian granite columns each 1 3 metres 4 ft 3 in in diameter 12 5 metres 41 ft high and weigh 20 tonnes 37 Inside the outline of a bathing pool surrounded by a colonnade of Corinthian columns is still visible in addition to an octagonal room that served as a dressing room containing a drain in its center 37 Sossianus Hierocles a governor under Emperor Diocletian claimed to have built the baths but the building was probably erected in the late second century and Sossianus Hierocles renovated it note 12 129 The Agora of Palmyra is part of a complex that also includes the tariff court and the triclinium built in the second half of the first century AD 130 The agora is a massive 71 by 84 metre 233 by 276 ft structure with 11 entrances 37 Inside the agora 200 columnar bases that used to hold statues of prominent citizens were found 37 The inscriptions on the bases allowed an understanding of the order by which the statues were grouped the eastern side was reserved for senators the northern side for Palmyrene officials the western side for soldiers and the southern side for caravan chiefs 37 The Tariff Court is a large rectangular enclosure south of the agora and sharing its northern wall with it 131 Originally the entrance of the court was a massive vestibule in its southwestern wall 131 However the entrance was blocked by the construction of a defensive wall and the court was entered through three doors from the Agora 131 The court gained its name by containing a 5 metre 16 ft stone slab that had the Palmyrene tax law inscribed on it 132 133 The Triclinium of the Agora is at the northwestern corner of the Agora and can host up to 40 people 134 135 It is a small 12 by 15 metre 39 by 49 ft hall decorated with Greek key motifs that run in a continuous line halfway up the wall 136 The building was probably used by the rulers of the city 134 the French general director of antiquities in Syria Henri Seyrig proposed that it was a small temple before being turned into a triclinium or banqueting hall 135 Temples edit The Temple of Bel was dedicated in AD 32 137 it consisted of a large precinct lined by porticos it had a rectangular shape and was oriented north south 138 The exterior wall was 205 metre 673 ft long with a propylaea 139 and the cella stood on a podium in the middle of the enclosure 140 The Temple of Baalshamin dates to the late 2nd century BC in its earliest phases 141 its altar was built in AD 115 121 and it was substantially rebuilt in AD 131 142 It consisted of a central cella and two colonnaded courtyards north and south of the central structure 143 A vestibule consisting of six columns preceded the cella which had its side walls decorated with pilasters in Corinthian order 144 The Temple of Nabu is largely ruined 145 The temple was Eastern in its plan the outer enclosure s propylaea led to a 20 by 9 metre 66 by 30 ft podium through a portico of which the bases of the columns survives 143 The peristyle cella opened onto an outdoor altar 143 The Temple of Al Lat is largely ruined with only a podium a few columns and the door frame remaining 38 Inside the compound a giant lion relief Lion of Al lat was excavated and in its original form was a relief protruding from the temple compound s wall 144 146 The ruined Temple of Baal hamon was located on the top of Jabal al Muntar hill which oversees the spring of Efqa 147 Constructed in AD 89 it consisted of a cella and a vestibule with two columns 147 The temple had a defensive tower attached to it 148 a mosaic depicting the sanctuary was excavated and it revealed that both the cella and the vestibule were decorated with merlons 148 Other buildings edit The Great Colonnade was Palmyra s 1 1 kilometre long 0 68 mi main street most of the columns date to the second century AD and each is 9 50 metres 31 2 ft high 25 The Funerary Temple no 86 also known as the House Tomb is located at the western end of the Great Colonnade 27 149 It was built in the third century AD and has a portico of six columns and vine patterns carvings 59 150 Inside the chamber steps leads down to a vault crypt 150 The shrine might have been connected to the royal family as it is the only tomb inside the city s walls 59 The Tetrapylon was erected during the renovations of Diocletian at the end of the third century 86 It is a square platform and each corner contains a grouping of four columns 36 Each column group supports a 150 ton cornice and contains a pedestal in its center that originally carried a statue 36 Out of sixteen columns only one is original while the rest are from reconstruction work by the Syrian Directorate General of Antiquities in 1963 using concrete 150 The original columns were brought from Egypt and carved out of pink granite 36 The Walls of Palmyra started in the first century as a protective wall containing gaps where the surrounding mountains formed natural barriers it encompassed the residential areas the gardens and the oasis 21 After 273 Aurelian erected the rampart known as the wall of Diocletian 21 it enclosed about 80 hectares a much smaller area than the original pre 273 city 151 152 Destruction by IS edit See also Destruction of cultural heritage by the Islamic State Palmyra nbsp Bel s temple entrance arch remains after the destruction of the cella According to eyewitnesses on 23 May 2015 Islamic State militants destroyed the Lion of Al lat and other statues this came days after the militants had gathered the citizens and promised not to destroy the city s monuments 153 IS destroyed the Temple of Baalshamin on 23 August 2015 154 On 30 August 2015 IS destroyed the cella of the Temple of Bel 155 On 31 August 2015 the United Nations confirmed the temple was destroyed 156 the temple s exterior walls and entrance arch remain 155 157 It became known on 4 September 2015 that IS had destroyed three of the best preserved tower tombs including the Tower of Elahbel 158 On 5 October 2015 news media reported that IS was destroying buildings with no religious meaning including the monumental arch 159 On 20 January 2017 news emerged that the militants had destroyed the tetrapylon and part of the theater 160 Following the March 2017 capture of Palmyra by the Syrian Army Maamoun Abdulkarim director of antiquities and museums at the Syrian Ministry of Culture stated that the damage to ancient monuments may be lesser than earlier believed and preliminary pictures showed almost no further damage than what was already known 161 Antiquities official Wael Hafyan stated that the Tetrapylon was badly damaged while the damage to the facade of the Roman theatre was less serious 162 Restoration edit nbsp Digital reconstruction of the Temple of Bel New Palmyra project In response to the destruction on 21 October 2015 Creative Commons started the New Palmyra project an online repository of three dimensional models representing the city s monuments the models were generated from images gathered and released into the public domain by the Syrian internet advocate Bassel Khartabil between 2005 and 2012 163 164 Minor restorations took place two Palmyrene funerary busts damaged and defaced by IS were sent off to Rome where they were restored and sent back to Syria 165 The restoration of the Lion of Al lat took two months and the statue was displayed on 1 October 2017 it will remain in the National Museum of Damascus 166 Regarding the restoration the discoverer of Ebla Paolo Matthiae stated that The archaeological site of Palmyra is a vast field of ruins and only 20 30 of it is seriously damaged Unfortunately these included important parts such as the Temple of Bel while the Arch of Triumph can be rebuilt He added In any case by using both traditional methods and advanced technologies it might be possible to restore 98 of the site 167 In February 2022 following acts of restoration and rehabilitation the Afqa spring site was reopened 168 In October 2022 the Syrian Directorate General of Antiquities and Museums and the Institute for the History of Material Culture of Russian Academy of Sciences signed an agreement to start the second and third phase of the project for restoring Arch of Triumph 169 History edit nbsp Efqa Spring which dried up in 1994 170 The area had paleolithic settlements 171 In the Efqa Spring site a Neolithic settlement existed 172 with stone tools dated to 7500 BC 173 Archaeological sounding in the tell beneath the Temple of Bel uncovered a mud brick structure built around 2500 BC followed by structures built during the Middle Bronze Age and Iron Age 174 Early period edit The city entered the historical record during the Bronze Age around 2000 BC when Puzur Ishtar the Tadmorean Palmyrene agreed to a contract at an Assyrian trading colony in Kultepe 173 It was mentioned next in the Mari tablets as a stop for trade caravans and nomadic tribes such as the Suteans 57 and was conquered along with its region by Yahdun Lim of Mari 175 King Shamshi Adad I of Assyria passed through the area on his way to the Mediterranean at the beginning of the 18th century BC 176 by then Palmyra was the easternmost point of the kingdom of Qatna 177 and it was attacked by the Suteans who paralyzed the traffic along the trade routes 178 Palmyra was mentioned in a 13th century BC tablet discovered at Emar which recorded the names of two Tadmorean witnesses 57 At the beginning of the 11th century BC King Tiglath Pileser I of Assyria recorded his defeat of the Arameans of Tadmar 57 according to the king Palmyra was part of the land of Amurru 179 The city became the eastern border of Aram Damascus which was conquered by the Neo Assyrian Empire in 732 BC 180 The Hebrew Bible Second Book of Chronicles 8 4 records a city by the name Tadmor as a desert city built or fortified by King Solomon of Israel 181 Flavius Josephus mentions the Greek name Palmyra attributing its founding to Solomon in Book VIII of his Antiquities of the Jews 142 Later Arabic traditions attribute the city s founding to Solomon s Jinn 182 The association of Palmyra with Solomon is a conflation of Tadmor and a city built by Solomon in Judea and known as Tamar in the Books of Kings 1 Kings 9 18 141 The biblical description of Tadmor and its buildings does not fit archaeological findings in Palmyra which was a small settlement during Solomon s reign in the 10th century BC 141 The Elephantine Jews a diaspora community established between 650 550 BC in Egypt might have come from Palmyra 183 Papyrus Amherst 63 indicates that the ancestors of the Elephantine Jews were Samarians The historian Karel van der Toorn suggested that these ancestors took refuge in Judea after the destruction of their kingdom by Sargon II of Assyria in 721 BC then had to leave Judea after Sennacherib devastated the land in 701 BC and headed to Palmyra This scenario can explain the usage of Aramaic by the Elephantine Jews and Papyrus Amherst 63 while not mentioning Palmyra refers to a fortress of palms that is located near a spring on a trade route in the fringes of the desert making Palmyra a plausible candidate 184 Hellenistic and Roman periods edit nbsp The inscription mentioning king EpiphanesDuring the Hellenistic period under the Seleucids between 312 and 64 BC Palmyra became a prosperous settlement owing allegiance to the Seleucid king 141 185 Evidence for Palmyra s urbanisation in the Hellenistic period is rare an important piece is the Laghman II inscription found in Laghman modern Afghanistan and commissioned by the Indian emperor Ashoka c 250 BC The reading is contested but according to semitologist Andre Dupont Sommer the inscription records the distance to Tdmr Palmyra note 13 187 In 217 BC a Palmyrene force led by Zabdibel joined the army of King Antiochus III in the Battle of Raphia which ended in a Seleucid defeat by Ptolemaic Egypt 46 In the middle of the Hellenistic era Palmyra formerly south of the al Qubur wadi began to expand beyond its northern bank 24 By the late second century BC the tower tombs in the Palmyrene Valley of Tombs and the city temples most notably the temples of Baalshamin Al lat and the Hellenistic temple began to be built 23 46 141 A fragmentary inscription in Greek from the Temple of Bel s foundations mentions a king titled Epiphanes a title used by the Seleucid kings note 14 193 In 64 BC the Roman Republic conquered the Seleucid kingdom and the Roman general Pompey established the province of Syria 46 Palmyra was left independent 46 trading with Rome and Parthia but belonging to neither 194 The earliest known inscription in Palmyrene is dated to around 44 BC 49 Palmyra was still a minor sheikhdom offering water to caravans which occasionally took the desert route on which it was located 195 However according to Appian Palmyra was wealthy enough for Mark Antony to send a force to conquer it in 41 BC 194 The Palmyrenes evacuated to Parthian lands beyond the eastern bank of the Euphrates 194 which they prepared to defend 49 Autonomous Palmyrene region edit nbsp Cella of the Temple of Bel destroyed in 2015 nbsp Temple of Baal Shamin destroyed in 2015 nbsp Palmyra s theater damaged in 2017 nbsp The monumental arch in the eastern section of Palmyra s colonnade destroyed in 2015 Palmyra became part of the Roman Empire when it was conquered and paid tribute early in the reign of Tiberius around 14 AD note 15 46 197 The Romans included Palmyra in the province of Syria 196 and defined the region s boundaries 198 Pliny the Elder asserted that both the Palmyrene and Emesene regions were contiguous 199 a marker at the Palmyrene s southwestern border was found in 1936 by Daniel Schlumberger at Qasr al Hayr al Gharbi dating from the reign of Hadrian or one of his successors which marked the boundary between the two regions note 16 201 202 This boundary probably ran northwards to Khirbet al Bilaas on Jabal al Bilas where another marker laid by the Roman governor Silanus has been found 75 kilometres 47 mi northwest of Palmyra probably marking a boundary with the territory of Epiphania 203 198 Meanwhile Palmyra s eastern border extended to the Euphrates valley 202 This region included numerous villages subordinate to the center 204 including large settlements such as al Qaryatayn 205 The Roman imperial period brought great prosperity to the city which enjoyed a privileged status under the empire retaining much of its internal autonomy 46 being ruled by a council 206 and incorporating many Greek city state polis institutions into its government note 17 207 The earliest Palmyrene text attesting a Roman presence in the city dates to 18 AD when the Roman general Germanicus tried to develop a friendly relationship with Parthia he sent the Palmyrene Alexandros to Mesene a Parthian vassal kingdom note 18 210 This was followed by the arrival of the Roman legion Legio X Fretensis the following year note 19 211 Roman authority was minimal during the first century AD although tax collectors were resident 212 and a road connecting Palmyra and Sura was built in AD 75 note 20 213 The Romans used Palmyrene soldiers 214 but unlike typical Roman cities no local magistrates or prefects are recorded in the city 213 Palmyra saw intensive construction during the first century including the city s first walled fortifications 215 and the Temple of Bel completed and dedicated in 32 AD 137 During the first century Palmyra developed from a minor desert caravan station into a leading trading center note 21 195 with Palmyrene merchants establishing colonies in surrounding trade centers 210 Palmyrene trade reached its acme during the second century 217 aided by two factors the first was a trade route built by Palmyrenes 18 and protected by garrisons at major locations including a garrison in Dura Europos manned in 117 AD 218 The second was the Roman conquest of the Nabataean capital Petra in 106 46 shifting control over southern trade routes of the Arabian Peninsula from the Nabataeans to Palmyra note 22 46 In 129 Palmyra was visited by Hadrian who named it Hadriane Palmyra and made it a free city 220 221 Hadrian promoted Hellenism throughout the empire 222 and Palmyra s urban expansion was modeled on that of Greece 222 This led to new projects including the theatre the colonnade and the Temple of Nabu 222 Roman garrisons are first attested in Palmyra in 167 when the cavalry Ala I Thracum Herculiana was moved to the city note 23 225 By the end of the second century urban development diminished after the city s building projects peaked 226 In the 190s Palmyra was assigned to the province of Phoenice newly created by the Severan dynasty 227 Toward the end of the second century Palmyra began a steady transition from a traditional Greek city state to a monarchy due to the increasing militarization of the city and the deteriorating economic situation 228 the Severan ascension to the imperial throne in Rome played a major role in Palmyra s transition 226 The Severan led Roman Parthian War from 194 to 217 influenced regional security and affected the city s trade 229 Bandits began attacking caravans by 199 leading Palmyra to strengthen its military presence 229 The new dynasty favored the city 229 stationing the Cohors I Flavia Chalcidenorum garrison there by 206 230 Caracalla made Palmyra a colonia between 213 and 216 replacing many Greek institutions with Roman constitutional ones 228 Severus Alexander emperor from 222 to 235 visited Palmyra in 229 229 231 Palmyrene kingdom edit See also List of Palmyrene monarchs The rise of the Sasanian Empire in Persia considerably damaged Palmyrene trade 232 The Sasanians disbanded Palmyrene colonies in their lands 232 and began a war against the Roman Empire 233 In an inscription dated to 252 Odaenathus appears bearing the title of exarchos lord of Palmyra 234 The weakness of the Roman Empire and the constant Persian danger were probably the reasons behind the Palmyrene council s decision to elect a lord for the city in order for him to lead a strengthened army 235 Odaenathus approached Shapur I of Persia to request him to guarantee Palmyrene interests in Persia but was rebuffed 236 In 260 the Emperor Valerian fought Shapur at the Battle of Edessa but was defeated and captured 236 One of Valerian s officers Macrianus Major his sons Quietus and Macrianus and the prefect Balista rebelled against Valerian s son Gallienus usurping imperial power in Syria 237 Persian wars edit nbsp A clay tessera bearing a possible depiction of Odaenathus wearing a diademOdaenathus formed an army of Palmyrenes and Syrian peasants against Shapur note 24 236 According to the Augustan History Odaenathus declared himself king prior to the battle 239 The Palmyrene leader won a decisive victory near the banks of the Euphrates later in 260 forcing the Persians to retreat 240 In 261 Odaenathus marched against the remaining usurpers in Syria defeating and killing Quietus and Balista 241 As a reward he received the title Imperator Totius Orientis Governor of the East from Gallienus 242 and ruled Syria Mesopotamia Arabia and Anatolia s eastern regions as the imperial representative 243 244 Palmyra itself remained officially part of the empire but Palmyrene inscriptions started to describe it as a metrocolonia indicating that the city s status was higher than normal Roman colonias 245 In practice Palmyra shifted from a provincial city to a de facto allied kingdom 246 In 262 Odaenathus launched a new campaign against Shapur 247 reclaiming the rest of Roman Mesopotamia most importantly the cities of Nisibis and Carrhae sacking the Jewish city of Nehardea note 25 248 249 and besieging the Persian capital Ctesiphon 250 251 Following his victory the Palmyrene monarch assumed the title King of Kings note 26 254 Later Odaenathus crowned his son Hairan I as co King of Kings near Antioch in 263 255 Although he did not take the Persian capital Odaenathus drove the Persians out of all Roman lands conquered since the beginning of Shapur s wars in 252 256 In a second campaign that took place in 266 the Palmyrene king reached Ctesiphon again however he had to leave the siege and move north accompanied by Hairan I to repel Gothic attacks on Asia Minor 257 The king and his son were assassinated during their return in 267 258 according to the Augustan History and Joannes Zonaras Odaenathus was killed by a cousin Zonaras says nephew named in the History as Maeonius 259 The Augustan History also says that Maeonius was proclaimed emperor for a brief period before being killed by the soldiers 259 260 261 However no inscriptions or other evidence exist for Maeonius reign 262 nbsp Zenobia as Augusta on the obverse of an Antoninianus Odaenathus was succeeded by his son the ten year old Vaballathus 263 Zenobia the mother of the new king was the de facto ruler and Vaballathus remained in her shadow while she consolidated her power 263 Gallienus dispatched his prefect Heraclian to command military operations against the Persians but he was marginalized by Zenobia and returned to the West 256 The queen was careful not to provoke Rome claiming for herself and her son the titles held by her husband while guaranteeing the safety of the borders with Persia and pacifying the Tanukhids in Hauran 263 To protect the borders with Persia Zenobia fortified different settlements on the Euphrates including the citadels of Halabiye and Zalabiye 264 Circumstantial evidence exist for confrontations with the Sasanians probably in 269 Vaballathus took the title Persicus Maximus The great victor in Persia and the title might be linked with an unrecorded battle against a Persian army trying to regain control of Northern Mesopotamia 265 266 Palmyrene empire edit Main article Palmyrene Empire nbsp The Palmyrene empire in AD 271Zenobia began her military career in the spring of 270 during the reign of Claudius Gothicus 267 Under the pretext of attacking the Tanukhids she conquered Roman Arabia 267 This was followed in October by an invasion of Egypt 268 269 ending with a Palmyrene victory and Zenobia s proclamation as queen of Egypt 270 Palmyra invaded Anatolia the following year reaching Ankara and the pinnacle of its expansion 271 The conquests were made behind a mask of subordination to Rome 272 Zenobia issued coins in the name of Claudius successor Aurelian with Vaballathus depicted as king note 27 272 since Aurelian was occupied with repelling insurgencies in Europe he tolerated the Palmyrene coinage and encroachments 273 274 In late 271 Vaballathus and his mother assumed the titles of Augustus emperor and Augusta note 28 272 The following year Aurelian crossed the Bosphorus and advanced quickly through Anatolia 278 According to one account Roman general Marcus Aurelius Probus regained Egypt from Palmyra note 29 279 Aurelian entered Issus and headed to Antioch where he defeated Zenobia in the Battle of Immae 280 Zenobia was defeated again at the Battle of Emesa taking refuge in Homs before quickly returning to her capital 281 When the Romans besieged Palmyra Zenobia refused their order to surrender in person to the emperor 271 She escaped east to ask the Persians for help but was captured by the Romans the city capitulated soon afterwards 282 283 Later Roman and Byzantine periods edit nbsp Diocletian s campAurelian spared the city and stationed a garrison of 600 archers led by Sandarion as a peacekeeping force 284 In 273 Palmyra rebelled under the leadership of Septimius Apsaios 277 declaring Antiochus a relative of Zenobia as Augustus 285 Aurelian marched against Palmyra razing it to the ground and seizing the most valuable monuments to decorate his Temple of Sol 282 286 Palmyrene buildings were smashed residents massacred and the Temple of Bel pillaged 282 Palmyra was significantly reduced and it largely disappeared from historical records of that period 287 After its sacking Aurelian repaired the Temple of Bel and the Legio I Illyricorum was stationed in the city 151 Shortly before 303 the Camp of Diocletian a castrum in the western part of the city was built 151 The 4 hectare 9 9 acre camp was a base for the Legio I Illyricorum 151 which guarded the trade routes around the city 287 Though some of the city would not be rebuilt Palmyra would become a major stronghold and fortress in the East Thanks in part to this in the following years Palmyra began to regain importance becoming a Christian city in the decades following its destruction by Aurelian 288 In late 527 Justinian I further strengthened the city ordering the restoration of Palmyra s churches and public buildings to protect the empire against raids by Lakhmid king Al Mundhir III ibn al Nu man 289 Arab caliphates edit Palmyra was conquered by the Rashidun Caliphate after its 634 capture by the Muslim general Khalid ibn al Walid who took the city on his way to Damascus an 18 day march by his army through the Syrian Desert from Mesopotamia 290 By then Palmyra was limited to the Diocletian camp 86 After the conquest the city became part of Homs Province 291 Umayyad and early Abbasid periods edit Palmyra prospered as part of the Umayyad Caliphate and its population grew 292 It was a key stop on the East West trade route with a large souq market built by the Umayyads 292 293 who also commissioned part of the Temple of Bel as a mosque 293 During this period Palmyra was a stronghold of the Banu Kalb tribe 53 which began to take abode in and around the city after the conquest 294 After being defeated by Marwan II during a civil war in the caliphate Umayyad contender Sulayman ibn Hisham fled to the Banu Kalb in Palmyra but eventually pledged allegiance to Marwan in 744 Palmyra continued to oppose Marwan until the surrender of the Banu Kalb chief al Asbagh ibn Dhu ala in 745 295 That year Marwan ordered the city s walls demolished 86 296 In 750 a revolt led by Majza a ibn al Kawthar and Umayyad pretender Abu Muhammad al Sufyani against the new Abbasid Caliphate swept across Syria 297 the tribes in Palmyra supported the rebels 298 After his defeat Abu Muhammad took refuge in the city which withstood an Abbasid assault long enough to allow him to escape 298 Decentralization edit nbsp Fortifications at the Temple of BelAbbasid power dwindled during the 10th century when the empire disintegrated and was divided among a number of vassals 299 Most of the new rulers acknowledged the caliph as their nominal sovereign a situation which continued until the Mongol destruction of the Abbasid Caliphate in 1258 300 The population of the city started to decrease in the ninth century and the process continued in the tenth century 301 In 955 Sayf al Dawla the Hamdanid prince of Aleppo defeated the nomads near the city 302 and built a kasbah fortress in response to campaigns by the Byzantine emperors Nikephoros II Phokas and John I Tzimiskes 303 With the advent of Fatimid rule in the late 10th century Palmyra remained a stronghold of the Kalb and taxes on the oasis crops was a major source of the tribe s income Toward the end of the century the Kalb around Palmyra migrated from the area 304 Earthquakes devastated Palmyra in 1068 and 1089 86 305 In the 1070s Syria was conquered by the Seljuk Empire 306 and in 1082 the district of Homs came under the control of the Arab lord Khalaf ibn Mula ib 307 The latter was a brigand and was removed and imprisoned in 1090 by the Seljuq sultan Malik Shah I 307 308 Khalaf s lands were given to Malik Shah s brother Tutush I 308 who gained his independence after his brother s 1092 death and established a cadet branch of the Seljuk dynasty in Syria 309 nbsp Fakhr al Din al Maani CastleBy the twelfth century the population moved into the courtyard of the Temple of Bel which was fortified 301 Palmyra was then ruled by Toghtekin the Burid atabeg of Damascus who appointed his nephew governor 310 Toghtekin s nephew was killed by rebels and the atabeg retook the city in 1126 310 Palmyra was given to Toghtekin s grandson Shihab ud din Mahmud 310 who was replaced by governor Yusuf ibn Firuz when Shihab ud din Mahmud returned to Damascus after his father Taj al Muluk Buri succeeded Toghtekin 311 The Burids transformed the Temple of Bel into a citadel in 1132 fortifying the city 312 313 and transferring it to the Bin Qaraja family three years later in exchange for Homs 313 During the mid twelfth century Palmyra was ruled by the Zengid king Nur ad Din Mahmud 314 It became part of the district of Homs 315 which was given as a fiefdom to the Ayyubid general Shirkuh in 1168 and confiscated after his death in 1169 316 Homs region was conquered by the Ayyubid sultanate in 1174 317 the following year Saladin gave Homs including Palmyra to his cousin Nasir al Din Muhammad as a fiefdom 318 After Saladin s death the Ayyubid realm was divided and Palmyra was given to Nasir al Din Muhammad s son Al Mujahid Shirkuh II who built the castle of Palmyra known as Fakhr al Din al Maani Castle around 1230 319 320 Five years earlier Syrian geographer Yaqut al Hamawi described Palmyra s residents as living in a castle surrounded by a stone wall 321 Mamluk period edit Palmyra was used as a refuge by Shirkuh II s grandson al Ashraf Musa who allied himself with the Mongol king Hulagu Khan and fled after the Mongol defeat in the 1260 Battle of Ain Jalut against the Mamluks 322 Al Ashraf Musa asked the Mamluk sultan Qutuz for pardon and was accepted as a vassal 322 Al Ashraf Musa died in 1263 without an heir bringing the Homs district under direct Mamluk rule 323 Al Fadl principality edit nbsp Palmyra s gardensThe Al Fadl clan a branch of the Tayy tribe were loyal to the Mamluks and in 1281 Prince Issa bin Muhanna of the Al Fadl was appointed lord of Palmyra by sultan Qalawun 324 Issa was succeeded in 1284 by his son Muhanna bin Issa who was imprisoned by sultan al Ashraf Khalil in 1293 and restored two years later by sultan al Adil Kitbugha 325 Muhanna declared his loyalty to Oljaitu of the Ilkhanate in 1312 and was dismissed and replaced with his brother Fadl by sultan an Nasir Muhammad 325 Although Muhanna was forgiven by an Nasir and restored in 1317 he and his tribe were expelled in 1320 for his continued relations with the Ilkhanate 326 and he was replaced by tribal chief Muhammad ibn Abi Bakr 327 Muhanna was forgiven and restored by an Nasir in 1330 he remained loyal to the sultan until his death in 1335 when he was succeeded by his son 327 Contemporary historian Ibn Fadlallah al Omari described the city as having vast gardens flourishing trades and bizarre monuments 328 The Al Fadl clan protected the trade routes and villages from Bedouin raids 329 raiding other cities and fighting among themselves 330 The Mamluks intervened militarily several times dismissing imprisoning or expelling its leaders 330 In 1400 Palmyra was attacked by Timur the Fadl prince Nu air escaped the battle and later fought Jakam the sultan of Aleppo 331 Nu air was captured taken to Aleppo and executed in 1406 this according to Ibn Hajar al Asqalani ended the Al Fadl clan s power 331 324 Ottoman era edit nbsp Gerard Hofsted van Essen s painting of the ruins following his participation in the 1691 Levant Company expedition the first Western expedition to the site This is the earliest Western depiction of Palmyra A group stands in the center foreground around a large stone on which the date 1693 is shown The gold text at the top explains the 1743 donation of the picture as part of the Papenbroek Collection Scroll left and right to view the full panorama While most of Syria came under Ottoman rule in 1516 Palmyra Tadmur does not appear to have been incorporated into the Empire before the conquest of Iraq in 1534 1535 It first appears as the centre of an administrative district sanjak around 1560 332 note 30 333 The region was important to the Ottomans above all for its salt deposits In 1568 the governor of the sancak restored the medieval citadel 334 After 1568 the Ottomans appointed the Lebanese emir Ali bin Musa Harfush as governor of Palmyra s sanjak 335 dismissing him in 1584 for insubordination 336 In 1630 Palmyra came under the tax authority of another Lebanese emir Fakhr al Din II 337 who renovated Shirkuh II s castle which became known as Fakhr al Din al Maani Castle 320 338 The prince fell from grace with the Ottomans in 1633 and lost control of the village 337 which remained a separate sanjak until it was absorbed by Zor Sanjak in 1857 339 The Ottoman governor of Syria Mehmed Rashid Pasha established a garrison in the village to control the Bedouin in 1867 340 341 20th century edit nbsp The village within the Temple of Bel during the early 20th centuryIn 1918 as World War I was ending the Royal Air Force built an airfield for two planes note 31 342 and in November the Ottomans retreated from Zor Sanjak without a fight note 32 343 The Syrian Emirate s army entered Deir ez Zor on 4 December and Zor Sanjak became part of Syria 344 In 1919 as the British and French argued over the borders of the planned mandates 342 the British permanent military representative to the Supreme War Council Henry Wilson suggested adding Palmyra to the British mandate 342 However the British general Edmund Allenby persuaded his government to abandon this plan 342 Syria including Palmyra became part of the French Mandate after Syria s defeat in the Battle of Maysalun on 24 July 1920 345 With Palmyra gaining importance in the French efforts to pacify the Syrian Desert a base was constructed in the village near the Temple of Bel in 1921 346 In 1929 Henri Seyrig began excavating the ruins and convinced the villagers to move to a new French built village next to the site 347 The relocation was completed in 1932 348 ancient Palmyra was ready for excavation as its villagers settled into the new village of Tadmur 349 347 During World War II the Mandate came under the authority of Vichy France 350 who gave permission to Nazi Germany to use the airfield at Palmyra 351 forces of Free France backed by British forces invaded Syria in June 1941 350 and on 3 July 1941 the British took control over the city in the aftermath of a battle 352 Syrian civil war edit Further information Palmyra offensive May 2015 Palmyra offensive March 2016 Palmyra offensive December 2016 and Palmyra offensive 2017 Destructions in Palmyra nbsp nbsp Sculpture in the Palmyra Museum before and after the conflict As a result of the Syrian civil war Palmyra experienced widespread looting and damage by combatants 353 In 2013 the facade of the Temple of Bel sustained a large hole from mortar fire and colonnade columns have been damaged by shrapnel 353 According to Maamoun Abdulkarim the Syrian Army positioned its troops in some archaeological site areas 353 while Syrian opposition fighters positioned themselves in gardens around the city 353 On 13 May 2015 ISIL launched an attack on the modern town of Tadmur sparking fears that the iconoclastic group would destroy the adjacent ancient site of Palmyra 354 On 21 May some artifacts were transported from the Palmyra museum to Damascus for safekeeping a number of Greco Roman busts jewelry and other objects looted from the museum have been found on the international market 355 ISIL forces entered Palmyra the same day 356 Local residents reported that the Syrian Air Force bombed the site on 13 June damaging the northern wall close to the Temple of Baalshamin 357 During ISIL s occupation of the site Palmyra s theatre was used as a place of public executions of their opponents and captives videos were released by ISIL showing the killing of Syrian prisoners in front of crowds at the theatre 358 359 On 18 August Palmyra s retired antiquities chief Khaled al Asaad was beheaded by ISIL after being tortured for a month to extract information about the city and its treasures al Asaad refused to give any information to his captors 360 Syrian government forces supported by Russian airstrikes recaptured Palmyra on 27 March 2016 after intense fighting against ISIL fighters 361 According to initial reports the damage to the archaeological site was less extensive than anticipated with numerous structures still standing 362 Following the recapture of the city Russian de mining teams began clearing mines planted by ISIL prior to their retreat 363 Following heavy fighting ISIL briefly reoccupied the city on 11 December 2016 364 prompting an offensive by the Syrian Army which retook the city on 2 March 2017 365 Government edit nbsp Inscription in Greek and Aramaic honoring the strategos Zabdilas whose Roman name was Julius Aurelius Zenobius dated 242 243 AD 366 From the beginning of its history to the first century AD Palmyra was a petty sheikhdom 367 and by the first century BC a Palmyrene identity began to develop 368 During the first half of the first century AD Palmyra incorporated some of the institutions of a Greek city polis 207 the notion of an existing citizenship first appears in an inscription dated to AD 10 mentioning the people of Palmyra 369 In AD 74 an inscription mentions the city s boule senate 207 The tribal role in Palmyra is debated during the first century four treasurers representing the four tribes seems to have partially controlled the administration but their role became ceremonial by the second century and power rested in the hands of the council 370 The Palmyrene council consisted of about six hundred members of the local elite such as the elders or heads of wealthy families or clans note 33 206 representing the city s four quarters 79 The council headed by a president 371 managed civic responsibilities 206 it supervised public works including the construction of public buildings approved expenditures collected taxes 206 and appointed two archons lords each year 371 372 Palmyra s military was led by strategoi generals appointed by the council 373 374 Roman provincial authority set and approved Palmyra s tariff structure 375 but the provincial interference in local government was kept minimal as the empire sought to ensure the continuous success of Palmyrene trade most beneficial to Rome 376 An imposition of direct provincial administration would have jeopardized Palmyra s ability to conduct its trading activities in the East especially in Parthia 376 With the elevation of Palmyra to a colonia around 213 216 the city ceased being subject to Roman provincial governors and taxes 377 Palmyra incorporated Roman institutions into its system while keeping many of its former ones 378 The council remained and the strategos designated one of two annually elected magistrates 378 This duumviri implemented the new colonial constitution 378 replacing the archons 372 Palmyra s political scene changed with the rise of Odaenathus and his family an inscription dated to 251 describes Odaenathus son Hairan I as Ras lord of Palmyra exarch in the Greek section of the inscription and another inscription dated to 252 describes Odaenathus with the same title note 34 234 Odaenathus was probably elected by the council as exarch 235 which was an unusual title in the Roman empire and was not part of the traditional Palmyrene governance institutions 234 379 Whether Odaenathus title indicated a military or a priestly position is unknown 380 but the military role is more likely 381 By 257 Odaenathus was known as a consularis possibly the legatus of the province of Phoenice 380 In 258 Odaenathus began extending his political influence taking advantage of regional instability caused by Sasanian aggression 380 this culminated in the Battle of Edessa 236 Odaenathus royal elevation and mobilization of troops which made Palmyra a kingdom 236 The monarchy continued most civic institutions 380 382 but the duumviri and the council were no longer attested after 264 Odaenathus appointed a governor for the city 383 In the absence of the monarch the city was administered by a viceroy 384 Although governors of the eastern Roman provinces under Odaenathus control were still appointed by Rome the king had overall authority 385 During Zenobia s rebellion governors were appointed by the queen 386 Not all Palmyrenes accepted the dominion of the royal family a senator Septimius Haddudan appears in a later Palmyrene inscription as aiding Aurelian s armies during the 273 rebellion 387 388 After the Roman destruction of the city Palmyra was ruled directly by Rome 389 and then by a succession of other rulers including the Burids and Ayyubids 310 318 and subordinate Bedouin chiefs primarily the Fadl family who governed for the Mamluks 390 Military edit nbsp Relief in the Temple of Bel depicting Palmyrene war gods nbsp Palmyrene horseman in a hunting scene Due to its military character and efficiency in battle Palmyra was described by Irfan Shahid as the Sparta among the cities of the Orient Arab and other and even its gods were represented dressed in military uniforms 391 Palmyra s army protected the city and its economy helping extend Palmyrene authority beyond the city walls and protecting the countryside s desert trade routes 392 The city had a substantial military 202 Zabdibel commanded a force of 10 000 in the third century BC 46 and Zenobia led an army of 70 000 in the Battle of Emesa 393 Soldiers were recruited from the city and its territories spanning several thousand square kilometers from the outskirts of Homs to the Euphrates valley 202 Non Palmyrene soldiers were also recruited a Nabatean cavalryman is recorded in 132 as serving in a Palmyrene unit stationed at Anah 18 Palmyra s recruiting system is unknown the city might have selected and equipped the troops and the strategoi led trained and disciplined them 394 The strategoi were appointed by the council with the approval of Rome 374 The royal army in the mid 3rd century AD was under the leadership of the monarch aided by generals 395 396 and was modeled on the Sasanians in arms and tactics 97 The Palmyrenes were noted archers 397 They used infantry while a heavily armored cavalry clibanarii constituted the main attacking force note 35 399 400 Palmyra s infantry was armed with swords lances and small round shields 214 the clibanarii were fully armored including their horses and used heavy spears kontos 3 65 metres 12 0 ft long without shields 400 401 Relations with Rome edit Citing the Palmyrenes combat skills in large sparsely populated areas the Romans formed a Palmyrene auxilia to serve in the Imperial Roman army 214 Vespasian reportedly had 8 000 Palmyrene archers in Judea 214 and Trajan established the first Palmyrene Auxilia in 116 a camel cavalry unit Ala I Ulpia dromedariorum Palmyrenorum 214 402 403 Palmyrene units were deployed throughout the Roman Empire note 36 serving in Dacia late in Hadrian s reign 405 and at El Kantara in Numidia and Moesia under Antoninus Pius 405 406 During the late second century Rome formed the Cohors XX Palmyrenorum which was stationed in Dura Europos 407 Religion edit nbsp Baalshamin center Aglibol left and Malakbel right Palmyra s gods were primarily part of the northwestern Semitic pantheon with the addition of gods from the Mesopotamian and Arab pantheons 408 The city s chief pre Hellenistic deity was called Bol 409 an abbreviation of Baal a northwestern Semitic honorific 410 The Babylonian cult of Bel Marduk influenced the Palmyrene religion and by 217 BC the chief deity s name was changed to Bel 409 This did not indicate the replacing of the northwestern Semitic Bol with a Mesopotamian deity but was a mere change in the name 410 Second in importance after the supreme deity 411 were over sixty ancestral gods of the Palmyrene clans 411 412 Palmyra had unique deities 413 such as the god of justice and Efqa s guardian Yarhibol 414 415 the sun god Malakbel 416 and the moon god Aglibol 416 Palmyrenes worshiped regional deities including the greater Levantine gods Astarte Baal hamon Baalshamin and Atargatis 413 the Babylonian gods Nabu and Nergal 413 and the Arab Azizos Arsu Sams and Al lat 413 414 The deities worshiped in the countryside were depicted as camel or horse riders and bore Arab names 349 The nature of those deities is uncertain as only names are known most importantly Abgal 417 The Palmyrene pantheon included ginnaye some were given the designation Gad 418 a group of lesser deities popular in the countryside 419 who were similar to the Arab jinn and the Roman genius 420 Ginnaye were believed to have the appearance and behavior of humans similar to Arab jinn 420 Unlike jinn however the ginnaye could not possess or injure humans 420 Their role was similar to the Roman genius tutelary deities who guarded individuals and their caravans cattle and villages 411 420 Although the Palmyrenes worshiped their deities as individuals some were associated with other gods 421 Bel had Astarte Belti as his consort and formed a triple deity with Aglibol and Yarhibol who became a sun god in his association with Bel 414 422 Malakbel was part of many associations 421 pairing with Gad Taimi and Aglibol 423 423 and forming a triple deity with Baalshamin and Aglibol 424 Palmyra hosted an Akitu spring festival each Nisan 425 Each of the city s four quarters had a sanctuary for a deity considered ancestral to the resident tribe Malakbel and Aglibol s sanctuary was in the Komare quarter 426 The Baalshamin sanctuary was in the Ma zin quarter the Arsu sanctuary in the Mattabol quarter 426 and the Atargatis sanctuary in the fourth tribe s quarter note 37 424 nbsp An Altar found in Trastevere dedicated to Malakbel bearing the epithet Sol SanctissimusThe priests of Palmyra were selected from the city s leading families 427 and are recognized in busts through their headdresses which have the shape of a polos adorned with laurel wreath or other tree made of bronze among other elements 428 The high priest of Bel s temple was the highest religious authority and headed the clergy of priests who were organized into collegia each headed by a higher priest 429 The personnel of Efqa spring s sanctuary dedicated to Yarhibol belonged to a special class of priests as they were oracles 429 Palmyra s paganism was replaced with Christianity as the religion spread across the Roman Empire and a bishop was reported in the city by 325 288 Although most temples became churches the Temple of Al lat was destroyed in 385 at the order of Maternus Cynegius the eastern praetorian prefect 288 After the Muslim conquest in 634 Islam gradually replaced Christianity and the last known bishop of Palmyra was consecrated after 818 430 Malakbel and the Roman Sol Invictus edit In 274 following his victory over Palmyra Aurelian dedicated a large temple of Sol Invictus in Rome 431 most scholars consider Aurelian s Sol Invictus to be of Syrian origin 432 either a continuation of emperor Elagabalus cult of Sol Invictus Elagabalus or Malakbel of Palmyra 433 The Palmyrene deity was commonly identified with the Roman god Sol and he had a temple dedicated for him on the right bank of the Tiber since the second century 434 Also he bore the epithet Invictus and was known with the name Sol Sanctissimus the latter was an epithet Aurelian bore on an inscription from Capena 434 The position of the Palmyrene deity as Aurelian s Sol Invictus is inferred from a passage by Zosimus reading and the magnificent temple of the sun he i e Aurelian embellished with votive gifts from Palmyra setting up statues of Helios and Bel 435 Three deities from Palmyra exemplified solar features Malakbel Yarhibol and Sams hence the identification of the Palmyrene Helios appearing in Zosimus work with Malakbel 435 Some scholars criticize the notion of Malakbel s identification with Sol Invictus according to Gaston Halsberghe the cult of Malakbel was too local for it to become an imperial Roman god and Aurelian s restoration of Bel s temple and sacrifices dedicated to Malakbel were a sign of his attachment to the sun god in general and his respect to the many ways in which the deity was worshiped 436 Richard Stoneman suggested another approach in which Aurelian simply borrowed the imagery of Malakbel to enhance his own solar deity 437 The relation between Malakbel and Sol Invictus can not be confirmed and will probably remain unresolved 434 Economy editSee also Canalizations of Zenobia nbsp Palmyra s Agora the two front entrances lead to the interior the city s marketplacePalmyra s economy before and at the beginning of the Roman period was based on agriculture pastoralism and trade 18 the city served as a rest station for the caravans which sporadically crossed the desert 195 By the end of the first century BC the city had a mixed economy based on agriculture pastoralism taxation 438 439 and most importantly the caravan trade 440 Taxation was an important source of revenue for the Palmyrene government 439 Caravaneers paid taxes in the building known as the Tariff Court 76 where a tax law dating to AD 137 was exhibited 133 441 The law regulated the tariffs paid by the merchants for goods sold at the internal market or exported from the city note 38 76 443 The classicist Andrew M Smith II suggested that most land in Palmyra was owned by the city which collected grazing taxes 438 The oasis had about 1 000 hectares 2 500 acres of irrigable land 444 which surrounded the city 445 The Palmyrenes constructed an extensive irrigation system in the northern mountains that consisted of reservoirs and channels to capture and store the occasional rainfall 446 The most notable irrigation work is Harbaqa Dam which was constructed in the late first century AD note 39 447 it is located 48 km 30 mi southwest of the city and can collect 140 000 cubic metres 4 900 000 cu ft of water 448 Terebinth trees in the hinterland were an important source of charcoal resin and oil although evidence is lacking it is possible that olive trees were also planted and dairy products were produced in the villages 204 it is also apparent that barley was cultivated 449 However agriculture could not support the population and food was imported 445 After Palmyra s destruction in 273 it became a market for villagers and nomads from the surrounding area 450 The city regained some of its prosperity during the Umayyad era indicated by the discovery of a large Umayyad souq in the colonnaded street 451 Palmyra was a minor trading center until its destruction in 1400 452 according to Sharaf ad Din Ali Yazdi Timur s men took 200 000 sheep 453 and the city was reduced into a settlement on the desert border whose inhabitants herded and cultivated small plots for vegetables and corn 454 Commerce edit See also Silk Road nbsp Palmyra caravan Palmyra Archaeological Museum nbsp The Silk RoadIf the Laghman II inscription in Afghanistan is referring to Palmyra then the city s role in Central Asian overland trade was prominent as early as the third century BC 189 During the first centuries AD Palmyra s main trade route ran east to the Euphrates where it connected at the city of Hit 455 The route then ran south along the river toward the port of Charax Spasinu on the Persian Gulf where Palmyrene ships traveled back and forth to India 456 Goods were imported from India China and Transoxiana 457 and exported west to Emesa or Antioch then the Mediterranean ports 458 from which they were distributed throughout the Roman Empire 456 In addition to the usual route some Palmyrene merchants used the Red Sea 457 probably as a result of the Roman Parthian Wars 459 Goods were carried overland from the seaports to a Nile port and then taken to the Egyptian Mediterranean ports for export 459 Inscriptions attesting a Palmyrene presence in Egypt date to the reign of Hadrian 460 Since Palmyra was not on the main trading route which followed the Euphrates 18 the Palmyrenes secured the desert route passing their city 18 They connected it to the Euphrates valley providing water and shelter 18 The Palmyrene route connected the Silk Road with the Mediterranean 461 and was used almost exclusively by the city s merchants 18 who maintained a presence in many cities including Dura Europos in 33 BC 216 Babylon by AD 19 Seleucia by AD 24 210 Dendera Coptos 462 Bahrain the Indus River Delta Merv and Rome 463 The caravan trade depended on patrons and merchants 464 Patrons owned the land on which the caravan animals were raised providing animals and guards for the merchants 464 The lands were located in the numerous villages of the Palmyrene countryside 349 Although merchants used the patrons to conduct business their roles often overlapped and a patron would sometimes lead a caravan 464 Commerce made Palmyra and its merchants among the wealthiest in the region 440 Some caravans were financed by a single merchant 76 such as Male Agrippa who financed Hadrian s visit in 129 and the 139 rebuilding of the Temple of Bel 220 The primary income generating trade good was silk which was exported from the East to the West 465 Other exported goods included jade muslin spices ebony ivory and precious stones 463 For its domestic market Palmyra imported a variety of goods including slaves prostitutes olive oil dyed goods myrrh and perfume 442 463 Research and excavations edit nbsp The Colonnade nbsp The Tetrapylon destroyed in 2017 Palmyra s first scholarly description appeared in a 1696 book by Abednego Seller 466 In 1751 an expedition led by Robert Wood and James Dawkins studied Palmyra s architecture 467 French artist and architect Louis Francois Cassas conducted an extensive survey of the city s monuments in 1785 publishing over a hundred drawings of Palmyra s civic buildings and tombs 466 Palmrya was photographed for the first time in 1864 by Louis Vignes 466 In 1882 the Palmyra Tariff an inscribed stone slab from AD 137 in Greek and Palmyrene detailing import and export taxation was discovered by prince Semyon Semyonovich Abamelik Lazarev in the Tariff Court 468 It has been described by the historian John F Matthews as one of the most important single items of evidence for the economic life of any part of the Roman Empire 469 In 1901 the slab was gifted by the Ottoman Sultan Abdul Hamid II to the Russian Tsar and is now in the Hermitage Museum in Saint Petersburg 470 nbsp Excavations at Palmyra 1962 Polish archaeologist Kazimierz MichalowskiPalmyra s first excavations were conducted in 1902 by Otto Puchstein and in 1917 by Theodor Wiegand 348 In 1929 French general director of antiquities of Syria and Lebanon Henri Seyrig began large scale excavation of the site 348 interrupted by World War II it resumed soon after the war s end 348 Seyrig started with the Temple of Bel in 1929 and between 1939 and 1940 he excavated the Agora 349 Daniel Schlumberger conducted excavations in the Palmyrene northwest countryside in 1934 and 1935 where he studied different local sanctuaries in the Palmyrene villages 349 From 1954 to 1956 a Swiss expedition organized by UNESCO excavated the Temple of Baalshamin 348 Since 1958 the site has been excavated by the Syrian Directorate General of Antiquities 347 and Polish expeditions of the Polish Centre of Mediterranean Archaeology University of Warsaw 471 led by many archaeologists including Kazimierz Michalowski until 1980 and Michael Gawlikowski until 2009 348 472 The stratigraphic sounding beneath the Temple of Bel was conducted in 1967 by Robert du Mesnil du Buisson 87 who also discovered the Temple of Baal hamon in the 1970s 147 In 1980 the historic site including the necropolis outside the walls was declared a World Heritage Site by the UNESCO 473 The Polish expedition concentrated its work on the Camp of Diocletian while the Syrian Directorate General of Antiquities excavated the Temple of Nabu 349 Most of the hypogea were excavated jointly by the Polish expedition and the Syrian Directorate 474 while the area of Efqa was excavated by Jean Starcky and Jafar al Hassani 32 The Palmyrene irrigation system was discovered in 2008 by Jorgen Christian Meyer who researched the Palmyrene countryside through ground inspections and satellite images 475 Most of Palmyra still remains unexplored especially the residential quarters in the north and south while the necropolis has been thoroughly excavated by the Directorate and the Polish expedition 32 Excavation expeditions left Palmyra in 2011 due to the Syrian Civil War 476 See also edit nbsp Asia portalAureliano in Palmira Crisis of the Third Century Palmyrene Unicode block Thirty Tyrants Roman Septimius Worod ZabdasNotes edit The Semitic word T M R is the common root for the words that designate palm dates in Arabic Hebrew Ge ez and other Semitic languages 5 Schultens argued that in the Bible 1 Kings 9 18 the name is written Tamor in the text and Tadmor in the margin 6 Schultens considered Tamor to be the original name and derived from Tamar 7 However the inclusion of a d in Tamar cannot be explained 8 Pliny mentioned that Palmyra was independent but by AD 70 Palmyra was part of the Roman empire modern scholars dismiss Pliny s account of Palmyra s political situation considering it to rely on older accounts dating to the period of Octavian when Palmyra was independent 19 Estimates vary from as low as 30 000 to 200 000 the latter number is doubted considering the environment of Palmyra and its hinterland which makes it difficult to provide the population with the necessary foodstuff 41 E g for Aramaic Gaddibol and Yedi bel 59 E g for Arab Bene Ma zin 59 E g for Amorite Zmr and Kohen Nadu 59 These criteria are dispersion in a wide geographical range orientation towards a homeland through the usage of own language and reference to a distinct origin and pantheon the usage of own language and origin to preserve a distinct identity amongst host societies 64 The Phylai are the Bene Mita Komare Mattabol Ma zin and Claudia 77 In general a civic tribe Phyle is a collection of people chosen from the collective population and ascribed a deity as a tribal ancestor then assigned a territory for them to reside in The Phylai were united by their citizenship instead of origin 80 The clans might have gathered under the name of the four tribes causing them to disappear 78 E g by the second century AD Palmyrene goddess Al lat was portrayed in the style of the Greek goddess Athena and named Athena Al lat However this assimilation of Al lat to Athena did not extend beyond iconography 90 In the Hellenistic tradition the agora was the center of athletic artistic spiritual and political life of the city 99 There are hints of Greek training the names of three Greeks who worked on the construction of the Temple of Bel are known through inscriptions including a probably Greek architect named Alexandras Ale3andras 116 117 However some Palmyrenes adopted Greco Roman names and native citizens with the name Alexander are attested in the city 118 The historian Rudolf Fellmann suggested that this building was the royal palace 128 According to the reading of Dupont Sommer Palmyra is separated by two hundreds bows from Laghman In the inscription the word used to indicate bow is QSTN and Dupont Sommer asserted that it is an Aramaic word denoting a unit to measure a distance of 15 to 20 kilometres 186 Franz Altheim and Ruth Altheim Stiehl read three hundred instead of two hundred bows they equated it with the Vedic unit of measurement yojona c 12 kilometres which would result in a number close to the actual 3800 kilometres distance between Laghman and Palmyra 187 The linguist Helmut Humbach criticized the reading of Dupont Sommer and considered his claims regarding the distance to have no validation 188 In the Aramaic alphabet the letters r and d share an identical character 189 Jean de Menasce read the city s name Trmd and identified it with Termez on the Oxus river 190 The linguist Franz Rosenthal also contested the reading of Dupont Sommer and considered that the inscription refers to an estate called Trmn 191 Historian Bratindra Nath Mukherjee rejected the readings of both Dupont Sommer and de Menasce he contested the large value attributed to bow considering it a small unit The historian also rejected the reading of Tdmr and Trmd as referring to a city in the view of Mukherjee the name whether Tdmr or Trmd refers to the rock on which the inscription was carved itself 190 The inscription is in bad shape but the letters form especially the four branched sigma indicate that it is one of the earliest inscriptions from Palmyra dating to the beginning of the first century AD or the former first century BC Seyrig concluded that it is futile to identify the king as the title Epiphanes was borne by many Seleucid kings the last of them Antiochus XII died in 82 BC Even then according to Seyrig the date is too high for the form of the letters Seyrig suggested a king of Commagene or more likely a Parthian king 192 The attribution of Palmyra annexation to Tiberius was supported by Seyrig and became the most influential However other dates have been suggested ranging from as early as Pompey s era to as late as Vespasian s reign 196 Inscription reproduced 200 Fin es inteṛHadriano s Palmyrenos et He ṃesenos The exact year for when Palmyra first made use of some Greek institutions is not known the evidence that specifically identify Palmyra as a polis is not extensive and the earliest known reference is an inscription dated to AD 51 written in Palmyrene and Greek mentioning the City of the Palmyrenes in its Greek section 207 Despite his Greek name Alexandros was probably a native Palmyrene 208 There is no evidence that Germanicus visited Palmyra 209 The legion was part of Germanicus eastern campaign and was not stationed in the city as a garrison 211 Commissioned by Traianus 213 The transformation already began in the first century BC 216 Although Palmyra benefiting from the annexation of Petra is a mainstream view Palmyra s trade was mostly with the East while Petra s trade counted on southern Arabia In addition to the fact that Palmyra and Petra traded in different articles hence the annexation of Petra might have not had a real effect on Palmyra s trade 219 The Ala I Thracum Herculiana was a milliaria 223 Generally a milliaria consisted of a thousand horsemen 224 No evidence exist for Roman units serving in the ranks of Odaenathus whether Roman soldiers fought under Odaenathus or not is a matter of speculation 238 The Mesopotamian Jewish population was regarded by the Palmyrenes as loyal to the Persians 248 The first decisive evidence for the use of this title for Odaenathus is an inscription dated to 271 posthumously describing Odaenathus as King of Kings 236 252 Known inscriptions dating to his reign address him as king However Odaenathus son Hairan I is directly attested as King of Kings during his lifetime Hairan I was proclaimed by his father as co ruler and was assassinated during the same assassination incident that took the life of Odaenathus and it is unlikely that Odaenathus was simply a king while his son held the King of Kings title 253 Claudius died in August 270 shortly before Zenobia s invasion of Egypt 268 Scholarly opinion is divided as to whether this was a declaration of independence or a usurpation of the Roman throne 275 276 277 All other accounts indicate that a military action was not necessary as it seems that Zenobia withdrew her forces in order to defend Syria 279 Named in Ottoman system Salyane Sanjak which is a Sanjak that had an annual allowance from the government in contrast to the Khas Sanjaks which yielded a land revenue 333 The British did not occupy the area and the local Bedouins agreed to protect the field 342 Neither the British French or Arab armies attacked the Sanjak 343 The number of 600 is hypothetical 206 Hairan I was described as Ras in 251 indicating that Odaenathus was promoted at that time as well 234 The Palmyrene army that invaded Egypt was mainly composed of clibanarii supported by archers 398 A Palmyrene monument was discovered near Newcastle in England it was set by a Palmyrene named Baratas who was either a soldier or a camp follower 404 The fourth tribe s name is not certain but most likely the Mita 424 Richard Stoneman proposes that the law regulated taxes imposed on goods destined for the internal market and did not cover the transit trade 442 The dating of the dam s construction was questioned by the archaeologist Denis Genequand who compared it to several Umayyad dams and suggested a date corresponding to the Umayyad period 41 References editCitations edit a b c d O Connor 1988 p 238 Limet 1977 p 104 Bubenik 1989 p 229 Wolfensohn 2016 p 118 Murtonen 1986 p 445 Ibn Saddad 1732 p 79 a b c d Charnock 1859 p 200 a b c d e f O Connor 1988 p 235 a b O Connor 1988 p 248 Charnock 1859 p 201 a b O Connor 1988 p 236 Guntern 2010 p 433 Intagliata 2018 p 1 Stoneman 1994 p 56 a b Izumi 1995 p 19 a b c d Zuchowska 2008 p 229 Dirven 1999 p 17 a b c d e f g h i Young 2003 p 124 Edwell 2008 p 44 a b Tomlinson 2003 p 204 a b c d Juchniewicz 2013 p 194 Zuchowska 2008 p 230 a b Smith II 2013 p 63 a b Zuchowska 2008 p 231 a b c Crawford 1990 p 123 Cotterman 2013 p 17 a b c Gawlikowski 2005 p 55 Ball 2002 p 364 De Laborde 1837 p 239 Ricca 2007 p 295 Stoneman 1994 p 124 a b c Drijvers 1976 p 5 Smith II 2013 p 22 a b Majcherek 2013 p 254 Majcherek 2013 p 256 a b c d 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