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Syria (region)

Syria (Hieroglyphic Luwian: 𔒂𔒠Sura/i; Greek: Συρία; Classical Syriac: ܣܘܪܝܐ) or Sham (Arabic: ٱلشَّام, romanizedash-Shām) is the name of a historical region located east of the Mediterranean Sea in West Asia, broadly synonymous with the Levant.[3] Other synonyms are Greater Syria or Syria-Palestine.[2] The region boundaries have changed throughout history. In modern times, the term "Syria" alone is used to refer to the Syrian Arab Republic.

Syria (Sham)
ٱلشَّام
Ash-Shām[1]
Greater Syria[1]
Syria-Palestine[2]
Levant
Map of Ottoman Syria in 1851, by Henry Warren
Coordinates: 33°N 36°E / 33°N 36°E / 33; 36
Countries or territories

The term is originally derived from Assyria, an ancient civilization centered in northern Mesopotamia, modern-day Iraq.[4][5] During the Hellenistic period, the term Syria was applied to the entire Levant as Coele-Syria. Under Roman rule, the term was used to refer to the province of Syria, later divided into Syria Phoenicia and Coele Syria, and to the province of Syria Palaestina. Under the Byzantines, the provinces of Syria Prima and Syria Secunda emerged out of Coele Syria. After the Muslim conquest of the Levant, the term was superseded by the Arabic equivalent Shām, and under the Rashidun, Umayyad, Abbasid, and Fatimid caliphates, Bilad al-Sham was the name of a metropolitan province encompassing most of the region. In the 19th century, the name Syria was revived in its modem Arabic form to denote the whole of Bilad al-Sham, either as Suriyah or the modern form Suriyya, which eventually replaced the Arabic name of Bilad al-Sham.[6]

After World War I, the boundaries of the region were last defined in modern times by the proclamation of and subsequent definition by French and British mandatory agreement. The area was passed to French and British Mandates following World War I and divided into Greater Lebanon, various states under Mandatory French rule, British-controlled Mandatory Palestine and the Emirate of Transjordan. The term Syria itself was applied to several mandate states under French rule and the contemporaneous but short-lived Arab Kingdom of Syria. The Syrian-mandate states were gradually unified as the State of Syria and finally became the independent Syria in 1946. Throughout this period, pan-Syrian nationalists advocated for the creation of a Greater Syria.

Etymology and evolution of the term Edit

Several sources indicate that the name Syria itself is derived from Luwian term "Sura/i", and the derivative ancient Greek name: Σύριοι, Sýrioi, or Σύροι, Sýroi, both of which originally derived from Aššūrāyu (Assyria) in northern Mesopotamia, modern-day Iraq[4][5][7][8] For Herodotus in the 5th century BC, Syria extended as far north as the Halys (the modern Kızılırmak River) and as far south as Arabia and Egypt. For Pliny the Elder and Pomponius Mela, Syria covered the entire Fertile Crescent.

In Late Antiquity, "Syria" meant a region located to the East of the Mediterranean Sea, West of the Euphrates River, North of the Arabian Desert and South of the Taurus Mountains,[9] thereby including modern Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Israel, the Palestine, and parts of Southern Turkey, namely the Hatay Province and the western half of the Southeastern Anatolia Region. This late definition is equivalent to the region known in Classical Arabic by the name ash-Shām (Arabic: ٱَلشَّام /ʔaʃ-ʃaːm/,[10] which means the north [country][10] (from the root šʔm Arabic: شَأْم "left, north")). After the Islamic conquest of Byzantine Syria in the 7th century CE, the name Syria fell out of primary use in the region itself, being superseded by the Arabic equivalent Shām, but survived in its original sense in Byzantine and Western European usage, and in Syriac Christian literature.[6] In the 19th century the name Syria was revived in its modern Arabic form to denote the whole of Bilad al-Sham, either as Suriyah or the modern form Suriyya, which eventually replaced the Arabic name of Bilad al-Sham.[6] After World War I, the name Syria was applied to the French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon and the contemporaneous but short-lived Arab Kingdom of Syria.

Geography Edit

 
Map depicting Syria as the land ranging from the Taurus Mountains to the Sinai Peninsula to the Euphrates, but not including Upper Mesopotamia

In the most common historical sense, 'Syria' refers to the entire northern Levant, including Alexandretta and the Ancient City of Antioch or in an extended sense the entire Levant as far south as Roman Egypt, but not including Mesopotamia. The area of "Greater Syria" (سُوْرِيَّة ٱلْكُبْرَىٰ, Sūrīyah al-Kubrā); also called "Natural Syria" (سُوْرِيَّة ٱلطَّبِيْعِيَّة, Sūrīyah aṭ-Ṭabīʿīyah) or "Northern Land" (بِلَاد ٱلشَّام, Bilād ash-Shām),[1] extends roughly over the Bilad al-Sham province of the medieval Arab caliphates, encompassing the Eastern Mediterranean (or Levant) and Western Mesopotamia. The Muslim conquest of the Levant in the seventh century gave rise to this province, which encompassed much of the region of Syria, and came to largely overlap with this concept. Other sources indicate that the term Greater Syria was coined during Ottoman rule, after 1516, to designate the approximate area included in present-day Palestine, Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, and Israel.[11]

The uncertainty in the definition of the extent of "Syria" is aggravated by the etymological confusion of the similar-sounding names Syria and Assyria. The question of the etymological identity of the two names remains open today, but regardless of etymology, both were thought of as interchangeable around the time of Herodotus.[12] However, by the time of the Roman Empire, 'Syria' and 'Assyria' began to refer to two separate entities, Roman Syria and Roman Assyria.

Killebrew and Steiner, treating the Levant as the Syrian region, gave the boundaries of the region as such: the Mediterranean Sea to the west, the Arabian Desert and Mesopotamia to the east, and the Taurus Mountains of Anatolia to the north.[3] The Muslim geographer Muhammad al-Idrisi visited the region in 1150 and assigned the northern regions of Bilad al-Sham as the following:

In the Levantine sea are two islands: Rhodes and Cyprus; and in Levantine lands: Antarsus, Laodice, Antioch, Mopsuhestia, Adana, Anazarbus, Tarsus, Kirkesia, Ḥamrtash, Antalya, al-Batira, al-Mira, Macri, Astroboli; and in the interior lands: Apamea, Salamiya, Qinnasrin, al-Castel, Aleppo, Resafa, Raqqa, Rafeqa, al-Jisr, Manbij, Mar'ash, Saruj, Ḥarran, Edessa, Al-Ḥadath, Samosata, Malatiya, Ḥusn Mansur, Zabatra, Jersoon, al-Leen, al-Bedandour, Cirra and Touleb.

For Pliny the Elder and Pomponius Mela, Syria covered the entire Fertile Crescent. In Late Antiquity, "Syria" meant a region located to the east of the Mediterranean Sea, west of the Euphrates River, north of the Arabian Desert, and south of the Taurus Mountains,[9] thereby including modern Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Israel, the State of Palestine, and the Hatay Province and the western half of the Southeastern Anatolia Region of southern Turkey. This late definition is equivalent to the region known in Classical Arabic by the name ash-Shām (ٱلشَّام /ʔaʃ-ʃaːm/),[10] which means the north [country][10] (from the root šʔm شَأْم "left, north"). After the Islamic conquest of Byzantine Syria in the seventh century, the name Syria fell out of primary use in the region itself, being superseded by the Arabic equivalent Bilād ash-Shām ("Northern Land'"), but survived in its original sense in Byzantine and Western European usage, and in Syriac Christian literature. In the 19th century, the name Syria was revived in its modern Arabic form to denote the whole of Bilad al-Sham, either as Suriyah or the modern form Suriyya, which eventually replaced the Arabic name of Bilad al-Sham.[6] After World War I, the name 'Syria' was applied to the French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon, and the contemporaneous but short-lived Arab Kingdom of Syria.

Today, the largest metropolitan areas in the region are Amman, Tel Aviv, Damascus, Beirut, Aleppo and Gaza City.

Rank City Country Metropolitan
Population
City
Population
Image
1 Amman   Jordan 4,642,000 4,061,150  
2 Tel Aviv   Israel 3,954,500 438,818  
3 Damascus   Syria 2,900,000 2,078,000  
4 Beirut   Lebanon 2,200,000 361,366  
5 Aleppo   Syria 2,098,210 2,098,210  
6 Gaza City   Palestine 2,047,969 590,481  

Etymology Edit

Syria Edit

Several sources indicate that the name Syria itself is derived from Luwian term "Sura/i", and the derivative ancient Greek name: Σύριοι, Sýrioi, or Σύροι, Sýroi, both of which originally derived from Aššūrāyu (Assyria) in northern Mesopotamia, modern-day Iraq[4][5] However, during the Seleucid Empire, this term was also applied to The Levant, and henceforth the Greeks applied the term without distinction between the Assyrians of Mesopotamia and Arameans of the Levant.[4][7][8]

The oldest attestation of the name 'Syria' is from the 8th century BC in a bilingual inscription in Hieroglyphic Luwian and Phoenician. In this inscription, the Luwian word Sura/i was translated to Phoenician ʔšr "Assyria."[4] For Herodotus in the 5th century BC, Syria extended as far north as the Halys (the modern Kızılırmak River) and as far south as Arabia and Egypt.

The name 'Syria' derives from the ancient Greek name for Assyrians, Greek: Σύριοι Syrioi, which the Greeks applied without distinction to various Near Eastern peoples living under the rule of Assyria. Modern scholarship confirms the Greek word traces back to the cognate Greek: Ἀσσυρία, AssyriaAššur.[13]

The classical Arabic pronunciation of Syria is Sūriya (as opposed to the Modern Standard Arabic pronunciation Sūrya). That name was not widely used among Muslims before about 1870, but it had been used by Christians earlier. According to the Syriac Orthodox Church, "Syrian" meant "Christian" in early Christianity.[citation needed] In English, "Syrian" historically meant a Syrian Christian such as Ephrem the Syrian. Following the declaration of Syria in 1936, the term "Syrian" came to designate citizens of that state, regardless of ethnicity. The adjective "Syriac" (suryāni سُرْيَانِي) has come into common use since as an ethnonym to avoid the ambiguity of "Syrian".

Currently, the Arabic term Sūriya usually refers to the modern state of Syria, as opposed to the historical region of Syria.

Shaam Edit

Greater Syria has been widely known as Ash-Shām. The term etymologically in Arabic means "the left-hand side" or "the north", as someone in the Hejaz facing east, oriented to the sunrise, will find the north to the left. This is contrasted with the name of Yemen (اَلْيَمَن al-Yaman), correspondingly meaning "the right-hand side" or "the south". The variation ش ء م (š-ʾ-m), of the more typical ش م ل (š-m-l), is also attested in Old South Arabian, 𐩦𐩱𐩣 (s²ʾm), with the same semantic development.[10][14]

The root of Shaam, ش ء م (š-ʾ-m) also has connotations of unluckiness, which is traditionally associated with the left-hand and with the colder north-winds. Again this is in contrast with Yemen, with felicity and success, and the positively-viewed warm-moist southerly wind; a theory for the etymology of Arabia Felix denoting Yemen, by translation of that sense.[citation needed]

The Shaam region is sometimes defined as the area that was dominated by Damascus, long an important regional center.[citation needed] In fact, the word Ash-Sām, on its own, can refer to the city of Damascus.[15] Continuing with the similar contrasting theme, Damascus was the commercial destination and representative of the region in the same way Sanaa held for the south.

Quran 106:2 alludes to this practice of caravans traveling to Syria in the summer, to avoid the colder weather, and to likewise sell commodities in Yemen in the winter.[16][17]

There is no connection with the name Shem, son of Noah, whose name usually appears in Arabic as سَام Sām, with a different initial consonant and without any internal glottal stop. Despite this, there has been a long-standing folk association between the two names and even the region, as most of the claimed Biblical descendants of Shem have been historically placed in the vicinity.[citation needed]

Historically, Baalshamin (Imperial Aramaic: ܒܥܠ ܫܡܝܢ, romanized: Ba'al Šamem, lit.'Lord of Heaven(s)'),[18][19] was a Semitic sky god in Canaan/Phoenicia and ancient Palmyra.[20][21] Hence, Sham refers to (heaven or sky). Moreover; in the Hebrew language, sham (שָׁמַ) is derived from Akkadian šamû meaning "sky".[22] For instance, the Hebrew word for the Sun is shemesh, where "shem/sham" from shamayim [note 1] (Akkadian: šamû) means "sky" and esh (Akkadian: išātu) means "fire", i.e. "sky-fire".[citation needed]

Demographics Edit

Historical population of the region of Syria
YearPop.±%
144,300,000—    
1644,800,000+11.6%
5004,127,000−14.0%
9003,120,000−24.4%
12002,700,000−13.5%
15001,500,000−44.4%
17002,028,000+35.2%
18973,231,874+59.4%
19143,448,356+6.7%
19223,198,951−7.2%
Source:[23][24][25][26]

The largest religious group in the Levant are Muslims and the largest ethnic group are Arabs. Levantines predominantly speak Levantine Arabic, who derive their ancestry from the many ancient Semitic-speaking peoples who inhabited the ancient Near East during the Bronze and Iron Ages.[27] Others such as Bedouin Arabs inhabit the Syrian Desert and Naqab, and speak a dialect known as Bedouin Arabic that originated in Arabian Peninsula. Other minor ethnic groups in the Levant include Circassians, Chechens, Turks, Turkmens, Assyrians, Kurds, Nawars and Armenians.

Islam became the predominant religion in the region after the Muslim conquest of the Levant in the 7th century.[28][29] The majority of Levantine Muslims are Sunni with Alawite and Shia (Twelver and Nizari Ismaili) minorities. Alawites and Ismaili Shiites mainly inhabit Hatay and the Syrian Coastal Mountain Range, while Twelver Shiites are mainly concentrated in parts of Lebanon.

Levantine Christian groups are plenty and include Greek Orthodox (Antiochian Greek), Syriac Orthodox, Eastern Catholic (Syriac Catholic, Melkite and Maronite), Roman Catholic (Latin), Nestorian, and Protestant. Armenians mostly belong to the Armenian Apostolic Church. There are also Levantines or Franco-Levantines who adhere to Roman Catholicism. There are also Assyrians belonging to the Assyrian Church of the East and the Chaldean Catholic Church.[30]

Other religious groups in the Levant include Jews, Samaritans, Yazidis and Druze.[31]

History Edit

 
The ancient city of Apamea, Syria was an important trading center, and a prosperous city in Hellenistic and Roman times

Ancient Syria Edit

Herodotus uses Ancient Greek: Συρία to refer to the stretch of land from the Halys river, including Cappadocia (The Histories, I.6) in today's Turkey to the Mount Casius (The Histories II.158), which Herodotus says is located just south of Lake Serbonis (The Histories III.5). According to Herodotus various remarks in different locations, he describes Syria to include the entire stretch of Phoenician coastal line as well as cities such Cadytis (Jerusalem) (The Histories III.159).[12]

Hellenistic Syria Edit

In Greek usage, Syria and Assyria were used almost interchangeably, but in the Roman Empire, Syria and Assyria came to be used as distinct geographical terms. "Syria" in the Roman Empire period referred to "those parts of the Empire situated between Asia Minor and Egypt", i.e. the western Levant, while "Assyria" was part of the Persian Empire, and only very briefly came under Roman control (116–118 AD, marking the historical peak of Roman expansion).

Roman Syria Edit

 
Ruins at Sergiopolis

In the Roman era, the term Syria is used to comprise the entire northern Levant and has an uncertain border to the northeast that Pliny the Elder describes as including, from west to east, the Kingdom of Commagene, Sophene, and Adiabene, "formerly known as Assyria".[32]

 
Palmyra, one of ancient Syria's wealthiest cities

Various writers used the term to describe the entire Levant region during this period; the New Testament used the name in this sense on numerous occasions.[33]

In 64 BC, Syria became a province of the Roman Empire, following the conquest by Pompey. Roman Syria bordered Judea to the south, Anatolian Greek domains to the north, Phoenicia to the West, and was in constant struggle with Parthians to the East. In 135 AD, Syria-Palaestina became to incorporate the entire Levant and Western Mesopotamia. In 193, the province was divided into Syria proper (Coele-Syria) and Phoenice. Sometime between 330 and 350 (likely c. 341), the province of Euphratensis was created out of the territory of Syria Coele and the former realm of Commagene, with Hierapolis as its capital.[34]

After c. 415 Syria Coele was further subdivided into Syria I, with the capital remaining at Antioch, and Syria II or Salutaris, with capital at Apamea on the Orontes River. In 528, Justinian I carved out the small coastal province Theodorias out of territory from both provinces.[35]

Bilad al-Sham Edit

The region was annexed to the Rashidun Caliphate after the Muslim victory over the Byzantine Empire at the Battle of Yarmouk, and became known as the province of Bilad al-Sham. During the Umayyad Caliphate, the Shām was divided into five junds or military districts. They were Jund Dimashq (for the area of Damascus), Jund Ḥimṣ (for the area of Homs), Jund Filasṭīn (for the area of Palestine) and Jund al-Urdunn (for the area of Jordan). Later Jund Qinnasrîn was created out of part of Jund Hims. The city of Damascus was the capital of the Islamic Caliphate, until the rise of the Abbasid Caliphate.[36][37][38]

Ottoman Syria Edit

In the later ages of the Ottoman times, it was divided into wilayahs or sub-provinces the borders of which and the choice of cities as seats of government within them varied over time. The vilayets or sub-provinces of Aleppo, Damascus, and Beirut, in addition to the two special districts of Mount Lebanon and Jerusalem. Aleppo consisted of northern modern-day Syria plus parts of southern Turkey, Damascus covered southern Syria and modern-day Jordan, Beirut covered Lebanon and the Syrian coast from the port-city of Latakia southward to the Galilee, while Jerusalem consisted of the land south of the Galilee and west of the Jordan River and the Wadi Arabah.

Although the region's population was dominated by Sunni Muslims, it also contained sizable populations of Shi'ite, Alawite and Ismaili Muslims, Syriac Orthodox, Maronite, Greek Orthodox, Roman Catholics and Melkite Christians, Jews and Druze.

Arab Kingdom and French occupation Edit

 
Book of the Independence of Syria (Arabic: ذِكْرَى اِسْتِقْلَال سُوْرِيَا, romanizedDhikrā Istiqlāl Sūriyā), showing the declared borders of the Kingdom of Syria, states the date of the Declaration of Independence on 8 March 1920

The Occupied Enemy Territory Administration (OETA) was a British, French and Arab military administration over areas of the former Ottoman Empire between 1917 and 1920, during and following World War I. The wave of Arab nationalism evolved towards the creation of the first modern Arab state to come into existence, the Hashemite Arab Kingdom of Syria on 8 March 1920. The kingdom claimed the entire region of Syria whilst exercising control over only the inland region known as OETA East. This led to the acceleration of the declaration of the French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon and British Mandate for Palestine at the 19–26 April 1920 San Remo conference, and subsequently the Franco-Syrian War, in July 1920, in which French armies defeated the newly proclaimed kingdom and captured Damascus, aborting the Arab state.[39]

Thereafter, the French general Henri Gouraud, in breach of the conditions of the mandate, subdivided the French Mandate of Syria into six states. They were the states of Damascus (1920), Aleppo (1920), Alawite State (1920), Jabal Druze (1921), the autonomous Sanjak of Alexandretta (1921) (modern-day Hatay in Turkey), and Greater Lebanon (1920) which later became the modern country of Lebanon.

In pan-Syrian nationalism Edit

 
Antoun Saadeh's SSNP map of a "Natural Syria", based on the etymological connection between the name "Syria" and "Assyria"

The boundaries of the region have changed throughout history, and were last defined in modern times by the proclamation of the short-lived Arab Kingdom of Syria and subsequent definition by French and British mandatory agreement. The area was passed to French and British Mandates following World War I and divided into Greater Lebanon, various Syrian-mandate states, Mandatory Palestine and the Emirate of Transjordan. The Syrian-mandate states were gradually unified as the State of Syria and finally became the independent Syria in 1946. Throughout this period, Antoun Saadeh and his party, the Syrian Social Nationalist Party, envisioned "Greater Syria" or "Natural Syria", based on the etymological connection between the name "Syria" and "Assyria", as encompassing the Sinai Peninsula, Cyprus, modern Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, Jordan, Iraq, Kuwait, the Ahvaz region of Iran, and the Kilikian region of Turkey.[40][41]

Religious significance Edit

The region has sites that are significant to Abrahamic religions:[1][42][43]

Place Description Image
Acre Acre is home to the Shrine of Baháʼu'lláh, which is the holiest site for the Baháʼí Faith.[44][45]
 
Aleppo Aleppo is home to a Great Mosque, which is believed to house the remains of Zechariah,[46] who is revered in both Christianity[47] and Islam.[48][49]
 
Bethlehem Bethlehem has sites which are significant for Jews, Christians and Muslims. One of these is Rachel's Tomb, which is revered by members of all three faiths. Another is the Church of the Nativity (of Jesus),[50] revered by Christians, and nearby, the Mosque of Omar, revered by Muslims.[51]
 
Damascus The Old City has a Great Mosque[52][53][54] which is considered to be one of the largest and best preserved mosques from the Umayyad era. It is believed to house the remains of Zechariah's son John the Baptist,[36][55] who is revered in Christianity[47] and Islam, like his father.[49] Other important sites include Bab al-Saghir[56][57] and Sayyidah Ruqayyah Mosque.[58][59]
 
Haifa Haifa is where the Shrine of the Báb is located. It is holy to the Baháʼí Faith.[42][60]

Nearby is Mount Carmel. Being associated with the Biblical figure Elijah, it is important to Christians, Druze, Jews and Muslims.[61]

 
Hebron The Old City is home to the Cave of the Patriarchs, where the Biblical figures Abraham, his wife Sarah, their son Isaac, his wife Rebecca, their son Jacob, and his wife Leah are believed buried, and thus revered by followers of the Abrahamic faiths, including Muslims and Jews.[62][63]
 
Hittin Hittin is near what is believed to near the shrine of Shuaib (possibly Jethro). It is holy to Druze and Muslims.[64][65]
 
Jericho / An-Nabi Musa Near the city of Jericho in the West Bank is the shrine of Nabi Musa (literally: Prophet Moses), which is considered by Muslims to be the burial place of Moses.[43][66][67]
 
Jerusalem The Old City is home to many sites of seminal religious importance for the three major Abrahamic religions—Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. These sites include the Temple Mount,[68][69] Church of the Holy Sepulchre,[70][71] Al-Aqsa and the Western Wall.[72] It is regarded as the holiest city in Judaism,[73] and the third-holiest in Sunni Islam.[74]
 
Mount Gerizim In Samaritanism, Mount Gerizim is the holiest site on earth, and the location chosen by God to build a temple. In their tradition, it is the oldest and most central mountain in the world, towering above the Great Flood and providing the first land for Noah’s disembarkation.[75] It is also the location where Abraham almost sacrificed his son Isaac, in their belief.[76]
 

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ In the Hebrew language, mayim (מַיִם) means "water". In Genesis 1:6 Elohim separated the "water from the water". The area above the earth was filled by sky-water (sham-mayim) and the earth below was covered by sea-water (yam-mayim).

References Edit

  1. ^ a b c d Mustafa Abu Sway. (PDF). Central Conference of American Rabbis. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 July 2011.
  2. ^ a b Pfoh, Emanuel (22 February 2016). Syria-Palestine in The Late Bronze Age: An Anthropology of Politics and Power. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-3173-9230-9.
  3. ^ a b Killebrew, A. E.; Steiner, M. L. (2014). The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of the Levant: C. 8000–332 BCE. OUP Oxford. p. 2. ISBN 978-0-19-921297-2. The western coastline and the eastern deserts set the boundaries for the Levant ... The Euphrates and the area around Jebel el-Bishrī mark the eastern boundary of the northern Levant, as does the Syrian Desert beyond the Anti-Lebanon range's eastern hinterland and Mount Hermon. This boundary continues south in the form of the highlands and eastern desert regions of Transjordan.
  4. ^ a b c d e Rollinger, Robert (2006). "The terms "Assyria" and "Syria" again". Journal of Near Eastern Studies. 65 (4): 284–287. doi:10.1086/511103. S2CID 162760021.
  5. ^ a b c Frye, R. N. (1992). "Assyria and Syria: Synonyms". Journal of Near Eastern Studies. 51 (4): 281–285. doi:10.1086/373570. S2CID 161323237.
  6. ^ a b c d Salibi, Kamal S. (2003). A House of Many Mansions: The History of Lebanon Reconsidered. I.B.Tauris. pp. 61–62. ISBN 978-1-86064-912-7. To the Arabs, this same territory, which the Roman Empire considered Arabian, formed part of what they called Bilad al-Sham, which was their own name for Syria. From the classical perspective, however, Syria, including Palestine, formed no more than the western fringes of what was reckoned to be Arabia between the first line of cities and the coast. Since there is no clear dividing line between what is called today the Syrian and Arabian deserts, which actually form one stretch of arid tableland, the classical concept of what actually constituted Syria had more to its credit geographically than the vaguer Arab concept of Syria as Bilad al-Sham. Under the Romans, there was actually a province of Syria, with its capital at Antioch, which carried the name of the territory. Otherwise, down the centuries, Syria, like Arabia and Mesopotamia, was no more than a geographic expression. In Islamic times, the Arab geographers used the name arabicized as Suriyah, to denote one special region of Bilad al-Sham, which was the middle section of the valley of the Orontes River, in the vicinity of the towns of Homs and Hama. They also noted that it was an old name for the whole of Bilad al-Sham which had gone out of use. As a geographic expression, however, the name Syria survived in its original classical sense in Byzantine and Western European usage, and also in the Syriac literature of some of the Eastern Christian churches, from which it occasionally found its way into Christian Arabic usage. It was only in the nineteenth century that the use of the name was revived in its modern Arabic form, frequently as Suriyya rather than the older Suriyah, to denote the whole of Bilad al-Sham: first of all in the Christian Arabic literature of the period, and under the influence of Western Europe. By the end of that century it had already replaced the name of Bilad al-Sham even in Muslim Arabic usage.
  7. ^ a b Herodotus. The History of Herodotus (Rawlinson).
  8. ^ a b Joseph, John (2008). "Assyria and Syria: Synonyms?" (PDF).
  9. ^ a b Taylor & Francis Group (2003). The Middle East and North Africa 2004. Psychology Press. p. 1015. ISBN 978-1-85743-184-1.
  10. ^ a b c d e Article "AL-SHĀM" by C.E. Bosworth, Encyclopaedia of Islam, Volume 9 (1997), page 261.
  11. ^ Thomas Collelo, ed. Lebanon: A Country Study Washington, Library of Congress, 1987.
  12. ^ a b Herodotus. "Herodotus VII.63". Fordham University. VII.63: The Assyrians went to war with helmets upon their heads made of brass, and plaited in a strange fashion which is not easy to describe. They carried shields, lances, and daggers very like the Egyptian; but in addition they had wooden clubs knotted with iron, and linen corselets. This people, whom the Hellenes call Syrians, are called Assyrians by the barbarians. The Chaldeans served in their ranks, and they had for commander Otaspes, the son of Artachaeus.
  13. ^ First proposed by Theodor Nöldeke in 1881; cf. Harper, Douglas (November 2001). "Syria". Online Etymology Dictionary. Retrieved 22 January 2013..
  14. ^ Younger, K. Lawson Jr. (7 October 2016). A Political History of the Arameans: From Their Origins to the End of Their Polities (Archaeology and Biblical Studies). Atlanta, GA: SBL Press. p. 551. ISBN 978-1589831285.
  15. ^ Tardif, P. (17 September 2017). "'I won't give up': Syrian woman creates doll to help kids raised in conflict". CBC News. Retrieved 6 March 2018.
  16. ^ Ali, Maulana Muhammad (2002). The Holy Quran Arabic Text with English Translation, Commentary and comprehensive Introduction (in English and Arabic). The Ahmadiyyah Anjuman Ish'at Islam. p. 1247. ISBN 978-0913321058.
  17. ^ "Their protection during their trading caravans in the winter and the summer."[Quran 106:2 (Translated by Shakir)]
  18. ^ Teixidor, Javier (2015). The Pagan God: Popular Religion in the Greco-Roman Near East. Princeton University Press. p. 27. ISBN 9781400871391. Retrieved 14 August 2017.
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  47. ^ a b Gospel of Luke, 1:5–79
  48. ^ Quran 19:2–15
  49. ^ a b Abdullah Yusuf Ali, The Holy Qur'an: Text, Translation and Commentary, Note. 905: "The third group consists not of men of action, but Preachers of Truth, who led solitary lives. Their epithet is: "the Righteous." They form a connected group round Jesus. Zachariah was the father of John the Baptist, who is referenced as "Elias, which was for to come" (Matt 11:14); and John the Baptist is said to have been present and talked to Jesus at the Transfiguration on the Mount (Matt. 17:3)."
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  73. ^ Since the 10th century BCE:
    • "Israel was first forged into a unified nation from Jerusalem some 3,000 years ago, when King David seized the crown and united the twelve tribes from this city... For a thousand years Jerusalem was the seat of Jewish sovereignty, the household site of kings, the location of its legislative councils and courts. In exile, the Jewish nation came to be identified with the city that had been the site of its ancient capital. Jews, wherever they were, prayed for its restoration." Roger Friedland, Richard D. Hecht. To Rule Jerusalem, University of California Press, 2000, p. 8. ISBN 0-520-22092-7
    • "The centrality of Jerusalem to Judaism is so strong that even secular Jews express their devotion and attachment to the city, and cannot conceive of a modern State of Israel without it.... For Jews Jerusalem is sacred simply because it exists... Though Jerusalem's sacred character goes back three millennia...". Leslie J. Hoppe. The Holy City: Jerusalem in the theology of the Old Testament, Liturgical Press, 2000, p. 6. ISBN 0-8146-5081-3
    • "Ever since King David made Jerusalem the capital of Israel 3,000 years ago, the city has played a central role in Jewish existence." Mitchell Geoffrey Bard, The Complete Idiot's Guide to the Middle East Conflict, Alpha Books, 2002, p. 330. ISBN 0-02-864410-7
    • "Jerusalem became the center of the Jewish people some 3,000 years ago" Moshe Maoz, Sari Nusseibeh, Jerusalem: Points of Friction – And Beyond, Brill Academic Publishers, 2000, p. 1. ISBN 90-411-8843-6
  74. ^ Third-holiest city in Islam:
    • Esposito, John L. (2002). What Everyone Needs to Know about Islam. Oxford University Press. p. 157. ISBN 0-19-515713-3. The Night Journey made Jerusalem the third holiest city in Islam
    • Brown, Leon Carl (2000). "Setting the Stage: Islam and Muslims". Religion and State: The Muslim Approach to Politics. Columbia University Press. p. 11. ISBN 0-231-12038-9. The third holiest city of Islam—Jerusalem—is also very much in the center...
    • Hoppe, Leslie J. (2000). The Holy City: Jerusalem in the Theology of the Old Testament. Michael Glazier Books. p. 14. ISBN 0-8146-5081-3. Jerusalem has always enjoyed a prominent place in Islam. Jerusalem is often referred to as the third holiest city in Islam...
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Citations Edit

Further reading Edit

syria, region, this, article, about, region, syria, also, called, greater, syria, syria, palestine, modern, country, syria, other, uses, syria, disambiguation, shaam, redirects, here, other, uses, shaam, disambiguation, syria, hieroglyphic, luwian, 𔒂𔒠, sura, g. This article is about the region of Syria also called Greater Syria or Syria Palestine For the modern country see Syria For other uses see Syria disambiguation Shaam redirects here For other uses see Shaam disambiguation Syria Hieroglyphic Luwian 𔒂𔒠 Sura i Greek Syria Classical Syriac ܣܘܪܝܐ or Sham Arabic ٱلش ام romanized ash Sham is the name of a historical region located east of the Mediterranean Sea in West Asia broadly synonymous with the Levant 3 Other synonyms are Greater Syria or Syria Palestine 2 The region boundaries have changed throughout history In modern times the term Syria alone is used to refer to the Syrian Arab Republic Syria Sham ٱلش ام Ash Sham 1 Greater Syria 1 Syria Palestine 2 LevantMap of Ottoman Syria in 1851 by Henry WarrenCoordinates 33 N 36 E 33 N 36 E 33 36Countries or territories Jordan Israel Lebanon Palestine Syria Turkey Hatay Gaziantep Kilis The term is originally derived from Assyria an ancient civilization centered in northern Mesopotamia modern day Iraq 4 5 During the Hellenistic period the term Syria was applied to the entire Levant as Coele Syria Under Roman rule the term was used to refer to the province of Syria later divided into Syria Phoenicia and Coele Syria and to the province of Syria Palaestina Under the Byzantines the provinces of Syria Prima and Syria Secunda emerged out of Coele Syria After the Muslim conquest of the Levant the term was superseded by the Arabic equivalent Sham and under the Rashidun Umayyad Abbasid and Fatimid caliphates Bilad al Sham was the name of a metropolitan province encompassing most of the region In the 19th century the name Syria was revived in its modem Arabic form to denote the whole of Bilad al Sham either as Suriyah or the modern form Suriyya which eventually replaced the Arabic name of Bilad al Sham 6 After World War I the boundaries of the region were last defined in modern times by the proclamation of and subsequent definition by French and British mandatory agreement The area was passed to French and British Mandates following World War I and divided into Greater Lebanon various states under Mandatory French rule British controlled Mandatory Palestine and the Emirate of Transjordan The term Syria itself was applied to several mandate states under French rule and the contemporaneous but short lived Arab Kingdom of Syria The Syrian mandate states were gradually unified as the State of Syria and finally became the independent Syria in 1946 Throughout this period pan Syrian nationalists advocated for the creation of a Greater Syria Contents 1 Etymology and evolution of the term 2 Geography 3 Etymology 3 1 Syria 3 2 Shaam 4 Demographics 5 History 5 1 Ancient Syria 5 2 Hellenistic Syria 5 3 Roman Syria 5 4 Bilad al Sham 5 5 Ottoman Syria 5 6 Arab Kingdom and French occupation 5 7 In pan Syrian nationalism 6 Religious significance 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Citations 11 Further readingEtymology and evolution of the term EditSeveral sources indicate that the name Syria itself is derived from Luwian term Sura i and the derivative ancient Greek name Syrioi Syrioi or Syroi Syroi both of which originally derived from Assurayu Assyria in northern Mesopotamia modern day Iraq 4 5 7 8 For Herodotus in the 5th century BC Syria extended as far north as the Halys the modern Kizilirmak River and as far south as Arabia and Egypt For Pliny the Elder and Pomponius Mela Syria covered the entire Fertile Crescent In Late Antiquity Syria meant a region located to the East of the Mediterranean Sea West of the Euphrates River North of the Arabian Desert and South of the Taurus Mountains 9 thereby including modern Syria Lebanon Jordan Israel the Palestine and parts of Southern Turkey namely the Hatay Province and the western half of the Southeastern Anatolia Region This late definition is equivalent to the region known in Classical Arabic by the name ash Sham Arabic ٱ لش ام ʔaʃ ʃaːm 10 which means the north country 10 from the root sʔm Arabic ش أ م left north After the Islamic conquest of Byzantine Syria in the 7th century CE the name Syria fell out of primary use in the region itself being superseded by the Arabic equivalent Sham but survived in its original sense in Byzantine and Western European usage and in Syriac Christian literature 6 In the 19th century the name Syria was revived in its modern Arabic form to denote the whole of Bilad al Sham either as Suriyah or the modern form Suriyya which eventually replaced the Arabic name of Bilad al Sham 6 After World War I the name Syria was applied to the French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon and the contemporaneous but short lived Arab Kingdom of Syria Geography EditFurther information Canaan and Levant nbsp Map depicting Syria as the land ranging from the Taurus Mountains to the Sinai Peninsula to the Euphrates but not including Upper MesopotamiaIn the most common historical sense Syria refers to the entire northern Levant including Alexandretta and the Ancient City of Antioch or in an extended sense the entire Levant as far south as Roman Egypt but not including Mesopotamia The area of Greater Syria س و ر ي ة ٱل ك ب ر ى Suriyah al Kubra also called Natural Syria س و ر ي ة ٱلط ب ي ع ي ة Suriyah aṭ Ṭabiʿiyah or Northern Land ب ل اد ٱلش ام Bilad ash Sham 1 extends roughly over the Bilad al Sham province of the medieval Arab caliphates encompassing the Eastern Mediterranean or Levant and Western Mesopotamia The Muslim conquest of the Levant in the seventh century gave rise to this province which encompassed much of the region of Syria and came to largely overlap with this concept Other sources indicate that the term Greater Syria was coined during Ottoman rule after 1516 to designate the approximate area included in present day Palestine Syria Jordan Lebanon and Israel 11 The uncertainty in the definition of the extent of Syria is aggravated by the etymological confusion of the similar sounding names Syria and Assyria The question of the etymological identity of the two names remains open today but regardless of etymology both were thought of as interchangeable around the time of Herodotus 12 However by the time of the Roman Empire Syria and Assyria began to refer to two separate entities Roman Syria and Roman Assyria Killebrew and Steiner treating the Levant as the Syrian region gave the boundaries of the region as such the Mediterranean Sea to the west the Arabian Desert and Mesopotamia to the east and the Taurus Mountains of Anatolia to the north 3 The Muslim geographer Muhammad al Idrisi visited the region in 1150 and assigned the northern regions of Bilad al Sham as the following In the Levantine sea are two islands Rhodes and Cyprus and in Levantine lands Antarsus Laodice Antioch Mopsuhestia Adana Anazarbus Tarsus Kirkesia Ḥamrtash Antalya al Batira al Mira Macri Astroboli and in the interior lands Apamea Salamiya Qinnasrin al Castel Aleppo Resafa Raqqa Rafeqa al Jisr Manbij Mar ash Saruj Ḥarran Edessa Al Ḥadath Samosata Malatiya Ḥusn Mansur Zabatra Jersoon al Leen al Bedandour Cirra and Touleb For Pliny the Elder and Pomponius Mela Syria covered the entire Fertile Crescent In Late Antiquity Syria meant a region located to the east of the Mediterranean Sea west of the Euphrates River north of the Arabian Desert and south of the Taurus Mountains 9 thereby including modern Syria Lebanon Jordan Israel the State of Palestine and the Hatay Province and the western half of the Southeastern Anatolia Region of southern Turkey This late definition is equivalent to the region known in Classical Arabic by the name ash Sham ٱلش ام ʔaʃ ʃaːm 10 which means the north country 10 from the root sʔm ش أ م left north After the Islamic conquest of Byzantine Syria in the seventh century the name Syria fell out of primary use in the region itself being superseded by the Arabic equivalent Bilad ash Sham Northern Land but survived in its original sense in Byzantine and Western European usage and in Syriac Christian literature In the 19th century the name Syria was revived in its modern Arabic form to denote the whole of Bilad al Sham either as Suriyah or the modern form Suriyya which eventually replaced the Arabic name of Bilad al Sham 6 After World War I the name Syria was applied to the French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon and the contemporaneous but short lived Arab Kingdom of Syria Today the largest metropolitan areas in the region are Amman Tel Aviv Damascus Beirut Aleppo and Gaza City Rank City Country MetropolitanPopulation CityPopulation Image1 Amman nbsp Jordan 4 642 000 4 061 150 nbsp 2 Tel Aviv nbsp Israel 3 954 500 438 818 nbsp 3 Damascus nbsp Syria 2 900 000 2 078 000 nbsp 4 Beirut nbsp Lebanon 2 200 000 361 366 nbsp 5 Aleppo nbsp Syria 2 098 210 2 098 210 nbsp 6 Gaza City nbsp Palestine 2 047 969 590 481 nbsp Etymology EditMain article Name of Syria Syria Edit Several sources indicate that the name Syria itself is derived from Luwian term Sura i and the derivative ancient Greek name Syrioi Syrioi or Syroi Syroi both of which originally derived from Assurayu Assyria in northern Mesopotamia modern day Iraq 4 5 However during the Seleucid Empire this term was also applied to The Levant and henceforth the Greeks applied the term without distinction between the Assyrians of Mesopotamia and Arameans of the Levant 4 7 8 The oldest attestation of the name Syria is from the 8th century BC in a bilingual inscription in Hieroglyphic Luwian and Phoenician In this inscription the Luwian word Sura i was translated to Phoenician ʔsr Assyria 4 For Herodotus in the 5th century BC Syria extended as far north as the Halys the modern Kizilirmak River and as far south as Arabia and Egypt The name Syria derives from the ancient Greek name for Assyrians Greek Syrioi Syrioi which the Greeks applied without distinction to various Near Eastern peoples living under the rule of Assyria Modern scholarship confirms the Greek word traces back to the cognate Greek Ἀssyria AssyriaAssur 13 The classical Arabic pronunciation of Syria is Suriya as opposed to the Modern Standard Arabic pronunciation Surya That name was not widely used among Muslims before about 1870 but it had been used by Christians earlier According to the Syriac Orthodox Church Syrian meant Christian in early Christianity citation needed In English Syrian historically meant a Syrian Christian such as Ephrem the Syrian Following the declaration of Syria in 1936 the term Syrian came to designate citizens of that state regardless of ethnicity The adjective Syriac suryani س ر ي ان ي has come into common use since as an ethnonym to avoid the ambiguity of Syrian Currently the Arabic term Suriya usually refers to the modern state of Syria as opposed to the historical region of Syria Shaam Edit Greater Syria has been widely known as Ash Sham The term etymologically in Arabic means the left hand side or the north as someone in the Hejaz facing east oriented to the sunrise will find the north to the left This is contrasted with the name of Yemen ا ل ي م ن al Yaman correspondingly meaning the right hand side or the south The variation ش ء م s ʾ m of the more typical ش م ل s m l is also attested in Old South Arabian 𐩦𐩱𐩣 s ʾm with the same semantic development 10 14 The root of Shaam ش ء م s ʾ m also has connotations of unluckiness which is traditionally associated with the left hand and with the colder north winds Again this is in contrast with Yemen with felicity and success and the positively viewed warm moist southerly wind a theory for the etymology of Arabia Felix denoting Yemen by translation of that sense citation needed The Shaam region is sometimes defined as the area that was dominated by Damascus long an important regional center citation needed In fact the word Ash Sam on its own can refer to the city of Damascus 15 Continuing with the similar contrasting theme Damascus was the commercial destination and representative of the region in the same way Sanaa held for the south Quran 106 2 alludes to this practice of caravans traveling to Syria in the summer to avoid the colder weather and to likewise sell commodities in Yemen in the winter 16 17 There is no connection with the name Shem son of Noah whose name usually appears in Arabic as س ام Sam with a different initial consonant and without any internal glottal stop Despite this there has been a long standing folk association between the two names and even the region as most of the claimed Biblical descendants of Shem have been historically placed in the vicinity citation needed Historically Baalshamin Imperial Aramaic ܒܥܠ ܫܡܝܢ romanized Ba al Samem lit Lord of Heaven s 18 19 was a Semitic sky god in Canaan Phoenicia and ancient Palmyra 20 21 Hence Sham refers to heaven or sky Moreover in the Hebrew language sham ש מ is derived from Akkadian samu meaning sky 22 For instance the Hebrew word for the Sun is shemesh where shem sham from shamayim note 1 Akkadian samu means sky and esh Akkadian isatu means fire i e sky fire citation needed Demographics EditSee also Demographics of the Middle East Historical population of the region of SyriaYearPop 144 300 000 1644 800 000 11 6 5004 127 000 14 0 9003 120 000 24 4 12002 700 000 13 5 15001 500 000 44 4 17002 028 000 35 2 18973 231 874 59 4 19143 448 356 6 7 19223 198 951 7 2 Source 23 24 25 26 The largest religious group in the Levant are Muslims and the largest ethnic group are Arabs Levantines predominantly speak Levantine Arabic who derive their ancestry from the many ancient Semitic speaking peoples who inhabited the ancient Near East during the Bronze and Iron Ages 27 Others such as Bedouin Arabs inhabit the Syrian Desert and Naqab and speak a dialect known as Bedouin Arabic that originated in Arabian Peninsula Other minor ethnic groups in the Levant include Circassians Chechens Turks Turkmens Assyrians Kurds Nawars and Armenians Islam became the predominant religion in the region after the Muslim conquest of the Levant in the 7th century 28 29 The majority of Levantine Muslims are Sunni with Alawite and Shia Twelver and Nizari Ismaili minorities Alawites and Ismaili Shiites mainly inhabit Hatay and the Syrian Coastal Mountain Range while Twelver Shiites are mainly concentrated in parts of Lebanon Levantine Christian groups are plenty and include Greek Orthodox Antiochian Greek Syriac Orthodox Eastern Catholic Syriac Catholic Melkite and Maronite Roman Catholic Latin Nestorian and Protestant Armenians mostly belong to the Armenian Apostolic Church There are also Levantines or Franco Levantines who adhere to Roman Catholicism There are also Assyrians belonging to the Assyrian Church of the East and the Chaldean Catholic Church 30 Other religious groups in the Levant include Jews Samaritans Yazidis and Druze 31 History EditFurther information Syro Hittite states and History of the ancient Levant nbsp The ancient city of Apamea Syria was an important trading center and a prosperous city in Hellenistic and Roman timesAncient Syria Edit Herodotus uses Ancient Greek Syria to refer to the stretch of land from the Halys river including Cappadocia The Histories I 6 in today s Turkey to the Mount Casius The Histories II 158 which Herodotus says is located just south of Lake Serbonis The Histories III 5 According to Herodotus various remarks in different locations he describes Syria to include the entire stretch of Phoenician coastal line as well as cities such Cadytis Jerusalem The Histories III 159 12 Hellenistic Syria Edit In Greek usage Syria and Assyria were used almost interchangeably but in the Roman Empire Syria and Assyria came to be used as distinct geographical terms Syria in the Roman Empire period referred to those parts of the Empire situated between Asia Minor and Egypt i e the western Levant while Assyria was part of the Persian Empire and only very briefly came under Roman control 116 118 AD marking the historical peak of Roman expansion Roman Syria Edit Further information Roman Syria Assyria Roman province and Coele Syria nbsp Ruins at SergiopolisIn the Roman era the term Syria is used to comprise the entire northern Levant and has an uncertain border to the northeast that Pliny the Elder describes as including from west to east the Kingdom of Commagene Sophene and Adiabene formerly known as Assyria 32 nbsp Palmyra one of ancient Syria s wealthiest citiesVarious writers used the term to describe the entire Levant region during this period the New Testament used the name in this sense on numerous occasions 33 In 64 BC Syria became a province of the Roman Empire following the conquest by Pompey Roman Syria bordered Judea to the south Anatolian Greek domains to the north Phoenicia to the West and was in constant struggle with Parthians to the East In 135 AD Syria Palaestina became to incorporate the entire Levant and Western Mesopotamia In 193 the province was divided into Syria proper Coele Syria and Phoenice Sometime between 330 and 350 likely c 341 the province of Euphratensis was created out of the territory of Syria Coele and the former realm of Commagene with Hierapolis as its capital 34 After c 415 Syria Coele was further subdivided into Syria I with the capital remaining at Antioch and Syria II or Salutaris with capital at Apamea on the Orontes River In 528 Justinian I carved out the small coastal province Theodorias out of territory from both provinces 35 Bilad al Sham Edit Main article Bilad al Sham The region was annexed to the Rashidun Caliphate after the Muslim victory over the Byzantine Empire at the Battle of Yarmouk and became known as the province of Bilad al Sham During the Umayyad Caliphate the Sham was divided into five junds or military districts They were Jund Dimashq for the area of Damascus Jund Ḥimṣ for the area of Homs Jund Filasṭin for the area of Palestine and Jund al Urdunn for the area of Jordan Later Jund Qinnasrin was created out of part of Jund Hims The city of Damascus was the capital of the Islamic Caliphate until the rise of the Abbasid Caliphate 36 37 38 Ottoman Syria Edit Main articles Ottoman Syria Damascus Eyalet and Syria Vilayet In the later ages of the Ottoman times it was divided into wilayahs or sub provinces the borders of which and the choice of cities as seats of government within them varied over time The vilayets or sub provinces of Aleppo Damascus and Beirut in addition to the two special districts of Mount Lebanon and Jerusalem Aleppo consisted of northern modern day Syria plus parts of southern Turkey Damascus covered southern Syria and modern day Jordan Beirut covered Lebanon and the Syrian coast from the port city of Latakia southward to the Galilee while Jerusalem consisted of the land south of the Galilee and west of the Jordan River and the Wadi Arabah Although the region s population was dominated by Sunni Muslims it also contained sizable populations of Shi ite Alawite and Ismaili Muslims Syriac Orthodox Maronite Greek Orthodox Roman Catholics and Melkite Christians Jews and Druze nbsp 1803 Cedid Atlas showing Ottoman Syria in yellow nbsp An 1810 map of the Ottoman Empire in Asia showing the region of Ottoman Syria nbsp Ethnic groups in the Middle East shown in a pre World War I British government map The primary population of the region of Syria is described as Arabs settled and inland as Arabs nomadic Arab Kingdom and French occupation Edit Main articles Occupied Enemy Territory Administration Arab Kingdom of Syria and Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon nbsp Book of the Independence of Syria Arabic ذ ك ر ى ا س ت ق ل ال س و ر ي ا romanized Dhikra Istiqlal Suriya showing the declared borders of the Kingdom of Syria states the date of the Declaration of Independence on 8 March 1920The Occupied Enemy Territory Administration OETA was a British French and Arab military administration over areas of the former Ottoman Empire between 1917 and 1920 during and following World War I The wave of Arab nationalism evolved towards the creation of the first modern Arab state to come into existence the Hashemite Arab Kingdom of Syria on 8 March 1920 The kingdom claimed the entire region of Syria whilst exercising control over only the inland region known as OETA East This led to the acceleration of the declaration of the French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon and British Mandate for Palestine at the 19 26 April 1920 San Remo conference and subsequently the Franco Syrian War in July 1920 in which French armies defeated the newly proclaimed kingdom and captured Damascus aborting the Arab state 39 Thereafter the French general Henri Gouraud in breach of the conditions of the mandate subdivided the French Mandate of Syria into six states They were the states of Damascus 1920 Aleppo 1920 Alawite State 1920 Jabal Druze 1921 the autonomous Sanjak of Alexandretta 1921 modern day Hatay in Turkey and Greater Lebanon 1920 which later became the modern country of Lebanon In pan Syrian nationalism Edit See also Ba athism Fertile Crescent Plan and Arab Kingdom of Syria nbsp Antoun Saadeh s SSNP map of a Natural Syria based on the etymological connection between the name Syria and Assyria The boundaries of the region have changed throughout history and were last defined in modern times by the proclamation of the short lived Arab Kingdom of Syria and subsequent definition by French and British mandatory agreement The area was passed to French and British Mandates following World War I and divided into Greater Lebanon various Syrian mandate states Mandatory Palestine and the Emirate of Transjordan The Syrian mandate states were gradually unified as the State of Syria and finally became the independent Syria in 1946 Throughout this period Antoun Saadeh and his party the Syrian Social Nationalist Party envisioned Greater Syria or Natural Syria based on the etymological connection between the name Syria and Assyria as encompassing the Sinai Peninsula Cyprus modern Syria Lebanon Palestine Jordan Iraq Kuwait the Ahvaz region of Iran and the Kilikian region of Turkey 40 41 Religious significance EditSee also Religious significance of Jerusalem The region has sites that are significant to Abrahamic religions 1 42 43 Place Description ImageAcre Acre is home to the Shrine of Bahaʼu llah which is the holiest site for the Bahaʼi Faith 44 45 nbsp Aleppo Aleppo is home to a Great Mosque which is believed to house the remains of Zechariah 46 who is revered in both Christianity 47 and Islam 48 49 nbsp Bethlehem Bethlehem has sites which are significant for Jews Christians and Muslims One of these is Rachel s Tomb which is revered by members of all three faiths Another is the Church of the Nativity of Jesus 50 revered by Christians and nearby the Mosque of Omar revered by Muslims 51 nbsp Damascus The Old City has a Great Mosque 52 53 54 which is considered to be one of the largest and best preserved mosques from the Umayyad era It is believed to house the remains of Zechariah s son John the Baptist 36 55 who is revered in Christianity 47 and Islam like his father 49 Other important sites include Bab al Saghir 56 57 and Sayyidah Ruqayyah Mosque 58 59 nbsp Haifa Haifa is where the Shrine of the Bab is located It is holy to the Bahaʼi Faith 42 60 Nearby is Mount Carmel Being associated with the Biblical figure Elijah it is important to Christians Druze Jews and Muslims 61 nbsp Hebron The Old City is home to the Cave of the Patriarchs where the Biblical figures Abraham his wife Sarah their son Isaac his wife Rebecca their son Jacob and his wife Leah are believed buried and thus revered by followers of the Abrahamic faiths including Muslims and Jews 62 63 nbsp Hittin Hittin is near what is believed to near the shrine of Shuaib possibly Jethro It is holy to Druze and Muslims 64 65 nbsp Jericho An Nabi Musa Near the city of Jericho in the West Bank is the shrine of Nabi Musa literally Prophet Moses which is considered by Muslims to be the burial place of Moses 43 66 67 nbsp Jerusalem The Old City is home to many sites of seminal religious importance for the three major Abrahamic religions Judaism Christianity and Islam These sites include the Temple Mount 68 69 Church of the Holy Sepulchre 70 71 Al Aqsa and the Western Wall 72 It is regarded as the holiest city in Judaism 73 and the third holiest in Sunni Islam 74 nbsp Mount Gerizim In Samaritanism Mount Gerizim is the holiest site on earth and the location chosen by God to build a temple In their tradition it is the oldest and most central mountain in the world towering above the Great Flood and providing the first land for Noah s disembarkation 75 It is also the location where Abraham almost sacrificed his son Isaac in their belief 76 nbsp See also EditCradle of civilization Crusader states Mashriq Middle East Names of the Levant Southern LevantNotes Edit In the Hebrew language mayim מ י ם means water In Genesis 1 6 Elohim separated the water from the water The area above the earth was filled by sky water sham mayim and the earth below was covered by sea water yam mayim References Edit a b c d Mustafa Abu Sway The Holy Land Jerusalem and Al Aqsa Mosque in the Qur an Sunnah and other Islamic Literary Source PDF Central Conference of American Rabbis Archived from the original PDF on 28 July 2011 a b Pfoh Emanuel 22 February 2016 Syria Palestine in The Late Bronze Age An Anthropology of Politics and Power Routledge ISBN 978 1 3173 9230 9 a b Killebrew A E Steiner M L 2014 The Oxford Handbook of the Archaeology of the Levant C 8000 332 BCE OUP Oxford p 2 ISBN 978 0 19 921297 2 The western coastline and the eastern deserts set the boundaries for the Levant The Euphrates and the area around Jebel el Bishri mark the eastern boundary of the northern Levant as does the Syrian Desert beyond the Anti Lebanon range s eastern hinterland and Mount Hermon This boundary continues south in the form of the highlands and eastern desert regions of Transjordan a b c d e Rollinger Robert 2006 The terms Assyria and Syria again Journal of Near Eastern Studies 65 4 284 287 doi 10 1086 511103 S2CID 162760021 a b c Frye R N 1992 Assyria and Syria Synonyms Journal of Near Eastern Studies 51 4 281 285 doi 10 1086 373570 S2CID 161323237 a b c d Salibi Kamal S 2003 A House of Many Mansions The History of Lebanon Reconsidered I B Tauris pp 61 62 ISBN 978 1 86064 912 7 To the Arabs this same territory which the Roman Empire considered Arabian formed part of what they called Bilad al Sham which was their own name for Syria From the classical perspective however Syria including Palestine formed no more than the western fringes of what was reckoned to be Arabia between the first line of cities and the coast Since there is no clear dividing line between what is called today the Syrian and Arabian deserts which actually form one stretch of arid tableland the classical concept of what actually constituted Syria had more to its credit geographically than the vaguer Arab concept of Syria as Bilad al Sham Under the Romans there was actually a province of Syria with its capital at Antioch which carried the name of the territory Otherwise down the centuries Syria like Arabia and Mesopotamia was no more than a geographic expression In Islamic times the Arab geographers used the name arabicized as Suriyah to denote one special region of Bilad al Sham which was the middle section of the valley of the Orontes River in the vicinity of the towns of Homs and Hama They also noted that it was an old name for the whole of Bilad al Sham which had gone out of use As a geographic expression however the name Syria survived in its original classical sense in Byzantine and Western European usage and also in the Syriac literature of some of the Eastern Christian churches from which it occasionally found its way into Christian Arabic usage It was only in the nineteenth century that the use of the name was revived in its modern Arabic form frequently as Suriyya rather than the older Suriyah to denote the whole of Bilad al Sham first of all in the Christian Arabic literature of the period and under the influence of Western Europe By the end of that century it had already replaced the name of Bilad al Sham even in Muslim Arabic usage a b Herodotus The History of Herodotus Rawlinson a b Joseph John 2008 Assyria and Syria Synonyms PDF a b Taylor amp Francis Group 2003 The Middle East and North Africa 2004 Psychology Press p 1015 ISBN 978 1 85743 184 1 a b c d e Article AL SHAM by C E Bosworth Encyclopaedia of Islam Volume 9 1997 page 261 Thomas Collelo ed Lebanon A Country Study Washington Library of Congress 1987 a b Herodotus Herodotus VII 63 Fordham University VII 63 The Assyrians went to war with helmets upon their heads made of brass and plaited in a strange fashion which is not easy to describe They carried shields lances and daggers very like the Egyptian but in addition they had wooden clubs knotted with iron and linen corselets This people whom the Hellenes call Syrians are called Assyrians by the barbarians The Chaldeans served in their ranks and they had for commander Otaspes the son of Artachaeus First proposed by Theodor Noldeke in 1881 cf Harper Douglas November 2001 Syria Online Etymology Dictionary Retrieved 22 January 2013 Younger K Lawson Jr 7 October 2016 A Political History of the Arameans From Their Origins to the End of Their Polities Archaeology and Biblical Studies Atlanta GA SBL Press p 551 ISBN 978 1589831285 Tardif P 17 September 2017 I won t give up Syrian woman creates doll to help kids raised in conflict CBC News Retrieved 6 March 2018 Ali Maulana Muhammad 2002 The Holy Quran Arabic Text with English Translation Commentary and comprehensive Introduction in English and Arabic The Ahmadiyyah Anjuman Ish at Islam p 1247 ISBN 978 0913321058 Their protection during their trading caravans in the winter and the summer Quran 106 2 Translated by Shakir Teixidor Javier 2015 The Pagan God Popular Religion in the Greco Roman Near East Princeton University Press p 27 ISBN 9781400871391 Retrieved 14 August 2017 Beattie Andrew Pepper Timothy 2001 The Rough Guide to Syria Rough Guides p 290 ISBN 9781858287188 Retrieved 14 August 2017 Dirven Lucinda 1999 The Palmyrenes of Dura Europos A Study of Religious Interaction in Roman Syria BRILL p 76 ISBN 978 90 04 11589 7 Retrieved 17 July 2012 J F Healey 2001 The Religion of the Nabataeans A Conspectus BRILL p 126 ISBN 9789004301481 Retrieved 14 August 2017 Caplice Richard I Snell Daniel C 1988 Introduction to Akkadian Gregorian Biblical BookShop p 6 ISBN 9788876535666 Retrieved 14 August 2017 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Mutlu Servet Late Ottoman population and its ethnic distribution pp 29 31 Corrected population M8 Frier Bruce W Demography in Alan K Bowman Peter Garnsey and Dominic Rathbone eds The Cambridge Ancient History XI The High Empire A D 70 192 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2000 827 54 Russell Josiah C 1985 The Population of the Crusader States In Setton Kenneth M Zacour Norman P Hazard Harry W eds A History of the Crusades Volume V The Impact of the Crusades on the Near East Madison and London University of Wisconsin Press pp 295 314 ISBN 0 299 09140 6 Syria Population Our World in Data www ourworldindata org Haber Marc Nassar Joyce Almarri Mohamed A Saupe Tina Saag Lehti Griffith Samuel J Doumet Serhal Claude Chanteau Julien Saghieh Beydoun Muntaha Xue Yali Scheib Christiana L Tyler Smith Chris 2020 A Genetic History of the Near East from an aDNA Time Course Sampling Eight Points in the Past 4 000 Years American Journal of Human Genetics 107 1 149 157 doi 10 1016 j ajhg 2020 05 008 PMC 7332655 PMID 32470374 Kennedy Hugh N 2007 The Great Arab Conquests How the Spread of Islam Changed the World We Live In Da Capo Press p 376 ISBN 978 0 306 81728 1 Lapidus Ira M 13 October 2014 1988 A History of Islamic Societies 3rd ed Cambridge University Press p 70 ISBN 978 0 521 51430 9 Christian Population of Middle East in 2014 The Gulf 2000 Project School of International and Public Affairs of Columbia University 2017 Retrieved 31 August 2018 Shoup John A 31 October 2011 Ethnic Groups of Africa and the Middle East An Encyclopedia Abc Clio ISBN 978 1 59884 362 0 Retrieved 26 May 2014 Pliny AD 77 March 1998 Book 5 Section 66 Natural History University of Chicago ISBN 84 249 1901 7 A commentary on the Bible quote In the time of the Greek predominance it came into use as it is employed to day as the name of the whole western borderland of the Mediterranean and in the NT it is used several times in that sense Mt 4 24 Lk 2 2 Ac 15 23 41 18 18 21 3 Gal 1 21 Kazhdan Alexander ed 1991 Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford University Press p 748 ISBN 978 0 19 504652 6 Kazhdan Alexander ed 1991 Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford University Press p 1999 ISBN 978 0 19 504652 6 a b Le Strange G 1890 Palestine Under the Moslems A Description of Syria and the Holy Land from A D 650 to 1500 London Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund pp 30 234 OCLC 1004386 Blankinship Khalid Yahya 1994 The End of the Jihad State The Reign of Hisham ibn ʻAbd al Malik and the Collapse of the Umayyads Albany New York State University of New York Press pp 47 50 ISBN 0 7914 1827 8 Cobb Paul M 2001 White Banners Contention in Abbasid Syria 750 880 Albany NY State University of New York Press pp 12 182 ISBN 0 7914 4880 0 Itamar Rabinovich Symposium The Greater Syria Plan and the Palestine Problem in The Jerusalem Cathedra 1982 p 262 Sa adeh Antoun 2004 The Genesis of Nations Beirut a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Translated and Reprinted Ya ari Ehud June 1987 Behind the Terror The Atlantic a b World Heritage Committee 2 July 2007 Convention concerning the protection of the world cultural and natural heritage PDF p 34 Retrieved 8 July 2008 a b O Connor J M 1998 The Holy Land An Oxford Archaeological Guide from Earliest Times to 1700 Oxford University Press p 369 ISBN 978 0 1915 2867 5 National Spiritual Assembly of the United States January 1966 Shrine of Baha u llah Bahaʼi News 418 4 Retrieved 12 August 2006 UNESCO World Heritage Centre 8 July 2008 Bahaʼi Holy Places in Haifa and the Western Galilee Retrieved 8 July 2008 The Great Mosque of Aleppo Muslim Heritage www muslimheritage com 24 March 2005 Retrieved 30 June 2016 a b Gospel of Luke 1 5 79 Quran 19 2 15 a b Abdullah Yusuf Ali The Holy Qur an Text Translation and Commentary Note 905 The third group consists not of men of action but Preachers of Truth who led solitary lives Their epithet is the Righteous They form a connected group round Jesus Zachariah was the father of John the Baptist who is referenced as Elias which was for to come Matt 11 14 and John the Baptist is said to have been present and talked to Jesus at the Transfiguration on the Mount Matt 17 3 Strickert Frederick M 2007 Rachel weeping Jews Christians and Muslims at the Fortress Tomb Liturgical Press pp 64 84 ISBN 978 0 8146 5987 8 Archived from the original on 3 March 2020 Retrieved 3 March 2020 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Guidetti Mattia 2016 In the Shadow of the Church The Building of Mosques in Early Medieval Syria Arts and Archaeology of the Islamic World Book 8 Brill Lam edition pp 30 31 ISBN 978 9 0043 2570 8 Retrieved 9 April 2018 Abu Lughod Janet L 2007 Damascus In Dumper Michael R T Stanley Bruce E eds Cities of the Middle East and North Africa A Historical Encyclopedia ABC CLIO pp 119 126 ISBN 978 1 5760 7919 5 Birke Sarah 2 August 2013 Damascus What s Left New York Review of Books Totah Faedah M 2009 Return to the origin negotiating the modern and unmodern in the old city of Damascus City amp Society 21 1 58 81 doi 10 1111 j 1548 744X 2009 01015 x Burns 2005 p 88 Bab Al Saghir Love Damascus Retrieved 31 October 2017 Demeter D 24 September 2014 Damascus Bab al Saghir Cemetery دمـشـق مـقـبـرة الـبـاب الـصـغـيـر Syria Photo Guide Retrieved 12 March 2018 Summary of the Tragedy of Sayyeda Ruqayya Booklet at Ruqayya Mosque 2008 Kramer H 12 April 2015 Bab Al Saghir Cemetery The Complete Pilgrim Retrieved 12 March 2018 Beauty of restored Shrine set to dazzle visitors and pilgrims Bahaʼi World News Service 12 April 2011 Retrieved 12 April 2011 Breger M J Hammer L Reiter Y 16 December 2009 Holy Places in the Israeli Palestinian Conflict Confrontation and Co existence Routledge pp 231 246 ISBN 978 1 1352 6812 1 Emmett Chad F 2000 Sharing Sacred Space in the Holy Land In Murphy Alexander B Johnson Douglas L Haarmann Viola eds Cultural encounters with the environment enduring and evolving geographic themes Rowman amp Littlefield pp 271 291 ISBN 978 0 7425 0106 5 Gish Arthur G 20 December 2018 Hebron Journal Stories of Nonviolent Peacemaking Wipf and Stock Publishers ISBN 978 1 5326 6213 3 Firro K M 1999 The Druzes in the Jewish State A Brief History Leiden The Netherlands Brill Publishers pp 22 240 ISBN 90 04 11251 0 Dana N 2003 The Druze in the Middle East Their Faith Leadership Identity and Status Sussex Academic Press pp 28 30 ISBN 978 1 9039 0036 9 Canaan Tawfiq 1927 Mohammedan Saints and Sanctuaries in Palestine London Luzac amp Co Kupferschmidt Uri M 1987 The Supreme Muslim Council Islam Under the British Mandate for Palestine Brill p 231 ISBN 978 9 0040 7929 8 Rivka Gonen 2003 Contested Holiness Jewish Muslim and Christian Perspectives on the Temple Mount in Jerusalem Jersey City NJ KTAV Publishing House Inc p 4 ISBN 0 88125 798 2 OCLC 1148595286 To the Jews the Temple Mount is the holiest place on Earth the place where God manifested himself to King David and where two Jewish temples Solomon s Temple and the Second Temple were located Marshall J Breger Ahimeir Ora 2002 Jerusalem A City and Its Future Syracuse University Press p 296 ISBN 0 8156 2912 5 OCLC 48940385 Strickert Frederick M 2007 Rachel weeping Jews Christians and Muslims at the Fortress Tomb Liturgical Press pp 64 84 ISBN 978 0 8146 5987 8 Archived from the original on 3 March 2020 Retrieved 3 March 2020 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Church of the Holy Sepulchre Jerusalem Jerusalem Sacred destinations com 21 February 2010 Retrieved 7 July 2012 Frishman Avraham 2004 Kum Hisalech Be aretz Jerusalem a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Since the 10th century BCE Israel was first forged into a unified nation from Jerusalem some 3 000 years ago when King David seized the crown and united the twelve tribes from this city For a thousand years Jerusalem was the seat of Jewish sovereignty the household site of kings the location of its legislative councils and courts In exile the Jewish nation came to be identified with the city that had been the site of its ancient capital Jews wherever they were prayed for its restoration Roger Friedland Richard D Hecht To Rule Jerusalem University of California Press 2000 p 8 ISBN 0 520 22092 7 The centrality of Jerusalem to Judaism is so strong that even secular Jews express their devotion and attachment to the city and cannot conceive of a modern State of Israel without it For Jews Jerusalem is sacred simply because it exists Though Jerusalem s sacred character goes back three millennia Leslie J Hoppe The Holy City Jerusalem in the theology of the Old Testament Liturgical Press 2000 p 6 ISBN 0 8146 5081 3 Ever since King David made Jerusalem the capital of Israel 3 000 years ago the city has played a central role in Jewish existence Mitchell Geoffrey Bard The Complete Idiot s Guide to the Middle East Conflict Alpha Books 2002 p 330 ISBN 0 02 864410 7 Jerusalem became the center of the Jewish people some 3 000 years ago Moshe Maoz Sari Nusseibeh Jerusalem Points of Friction And Beyond Brill Academic Publishers 2000 p 1 ISBN 90 411 8843 6 Third holiest city in Islam Esposito John L 2002 What Everyone Needs to Know about Islam Oxford University Press p 157 ISBN 0 19 515713 3 The Night Journey made Jerusalem the third holiest city in Islam Brown Leon Carl 2000 Setting the Stage Islam and Muslims Religion and State The Muslim Approach to Politics Columbia University Press p 11 ISBN 0 231 12038 9 The third holiest city of Islam Jerusalem is also very much in the center Hoppe Leslie J 2000 The Holy City Jerusalem in the Theology of the Old Testament Michael Glazier Books p 14 ISBN 0 8146 5081 3 Jerusalem has always enjoyed a prominent place in Islam Jerusalem is often referred to as the third holiest city in Islam Anderson Robert T Mount Gerizim Navel of the World Biblical Archaeologist Vol 43 No 4 Autumn 1980 pp 217 218 UNESCO World Heritage Centre 11 October 2017 Mount Gerizim and the Samaritans Retrieved 24 December 2020 Citations EditDictionary of Modern Written Arabic by Hans Wehr 4th edition 1994 Michael Provence The Great Syrian Revolt and the Rise of Arab Nationalism University of Texas Press 2005 Further reading EditPipes Daniel 1990 Greater Syria the History of an Ambition New York Oxford University Press pp 240 ISBN 978 0 19 506022 5 pbk illustrated with b amp w photos and maps alternative ISBN on back cover 0 19 506002 4 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Syria region amp oldid 1178042730, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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