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Syrians

Syrians (Arabic: سوريون) are the majority inhabitants of Syria, indigenous to the Levant, who have Arabic, especially its Levantine dialect, as a mother tongue. The cultural and linguistic heritage of the Syrian people is a blend of both indigenous elements and the foreign cultures that have come to rule the land and its people over the course of thousands of years. By the seventh century, most of the inhabitants of the Levant spoke Aramaic. In the aftermath of the Muslim conquest of the Levant in 634, Arabic became the dominant language, but a minority of Syrians retained Aramaic, which is still spoken in its Syriac and Western dialects.

  • Syrians
  • سُورِيُّون
  • Sūriyyīn
Total population
[note 1]
Regions with significant populations
 Syria23,022,427 (2023 estimate)[1]
 Brazil4,011,480[2]
 Turkey3,040,000[3][4]
 Venezuela2,000,000[5][6][7]
 Argentina1,500,000[8][9]
 Germany1,225,000[10]
 Jordan1,200,000[11]
 Lebanon1,129,624[12]
 Saudi Arabia500,000[13]
 United States281,331[14][15][16]
 United Arab Emirates250,000[17]
 Iraq243,000[18]
 Sweden240,717[19][20]
 Chile200,000[21]
 Kuwait150,000[22]
 Egypt114,000 [23]
 Canada77,050[24]
 Sudan60,000 – 250,000[25][26]
 Qatar54,000[27]
 Algeria50,000[28]
 Austria49,779[29]
 France44,000[30][31][32]
 Denmark42,207[33]
 Norway36,026[34]
 Spain11,188[35]
 Finland9,333[36]
 United Kingdom8,848 England & Wales[37] unknown in Scotland[38] and 2,000 in Northern Ireland.[39]
 Italy8,227 (Syrian born)[40]
 Morocco5,250[41]
 Ireland3,000[42]
 Niger3,000[citation needed]
 Mali3,000[43]
 Yemen3,000[44]
 Somalia700-1,056[45]
Languages
Religion
Related ethnic groups
Lebanese, Palestinians and Jordanians

The national name "Syrian" was used in antiquity to denote the inhabitants of the Levant. Following the Muslim conquest of the Levant, Arab identity became dominant and the ethnonym "Syrian" was used mainly by Christians who spoke Syriac. In the 19th century, the name "Syrian" was revived amongst the Arabic speakers of the Levant. Following the establishment of the Arab Kingdom of Syria in 1920, the name "Syrian" began to spread amongst its Arabic speaking inhabitants. The term gained more importance during the Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon, becoming the accepted national name for the Arabic speakers of the Syrian Republic.

Most Arabic speaking Syrians identify as Arabs. There is no contradiction between being an Arab and a Syrian since the Syrian Arab identity is multi-layered and being Syrian complements being Arab. In addition to denoting Syrian Arabs, the term "Syrian" also refer to all Syrian citizens, regardless of their ethnic background. In 2018, Syria had an estimated population of 19.5 million, which includes, aside from the aforementioned majority, Kurds, Assyrians, Turks, Armenians and others.

Before the Syrian Civil War, there was quite a large Syrian diaspora that had immigrated to North America (United States and Canada), European Union member states (including Sweden, France, and Germany), South America (mainly in Brazil, Argentina, Venezuela, and Chile), the West Indies,[46] Africa, Australia, and New Zealand.[47] Six million refugees of the Syrian Civil War also live outside Syria now, mostly in Turkey, Jordan, and Lebanon.

Etymology edit

Various 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 the Akkadian word Aššūrāyu (Assyria) in northern Mesopotamia, modern-day Iraq.[48][49] 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 north Mesopotamia and Arameans of the Levant.[50][51]

Applications of the name in antiquity edit

The Greeks used the terms "Syrian" and "Assyrian" interchangeably to indicate the indigenous Arameans, Assyrians and other inhabitants of the Levant and Mesopotamia, Herodotus considered "Syria" west of the Euphrates. Starting from the 2nd century BC onwards, ancient writers referred to the ruler of the Seleucid Empire as the King of Syria or King of the Syrians.[52] The Seleucids designated the districts of Seleucis and Coele-Syria explicitly as Syria and ruled the Syrians as indigenous populations residing west of the Euphrates (Aramea) in contrast to Assyrians who had their native homeland in Mesopotamia east of the Euphrates.[53] However, the interchangeability between Assyrians and Syrians persisted during the Hellenistic period.[53]

In one instance, the Ptolemaic dynasty of the Hellenistic kingdom of Egypt applied the term "Syrian Village" as the name of a settlement in Fayoum. The Ptolemies referred to all peoples originating from Modern Syria and Palestine as Syrian.[54]

The term Syrian was imposed upon Arameans of modern Levant by the Romans. Pompey created the province of Syria, which included modern-day Lebanon and Syria west of the Euphrates, framing the province as a regional social category with civic implications.[55] Plutarch described the indigenous people of this newly created Roman province as "Syrians",[56][better source needed] so did Strabo, who observed that Syrians resided west of the Euphrates in Roman Syria,[55] and he explicitly mentions that those Syrians are the Arameans, whom he calls Aramaei, indicating an extant ethnicity.[57][better source needed] Posidonius noted that the people called Syrians by the Greeks refer to themselves as Arameans.[58]

In his book The Great Roman-Jewish War, Josephus, a Hebrew native to the Levant, mentioned the Syrians as the non-Hebrew, non-Greek indigenous inhabitants of Syria.[59]

History edit

Syrians are mainly descended from the various ancient Semitic-speaking peoples of the ancient Near East.[60][61][62][page needed] The Seleucids ruled the indigenous peoples of the Levant, whom they named "Syrians", as a conquered nation; Syrians were not assimilated into Greek communities, and many local peasants were exploited financially as they had to pay rent for Greek landlords. Outside Greek colonies, the Syrians lived in districts governed by local temples that did not use the Greek civic system of poleis and colonies.[63] The situation changed after the Roman conquest in 64 BC; Semitic-speaking Syrians obtained the citizenship of Greek poleis, and the line separating the Greeks and the natives blurred. The idioms Syrian and Greek were used by Rome to denote civic societies instead of separate ethnic groups.[64]

Ancient Syria of the first millennium BC was dominated by the Aramaeans;[65] they originated in the Northern Levant as a continuum of the Bronze Age populations of Syria.[66] The Aramaeans assimilated most of the earlier Levantine populations through their language.[65] With the adoption of a common religion, Christianity, most of the inhabitants turned into Syrians (Aramaeans). Islam and the Arabic language had a similar effect where the Aramaeans themselves became Arabs regardless of their ethnic origin following the Muslim conquest of the Levant.[65] The presence of Arabs in Syria is recorded since the 9th century BC,[67] and Roman period historians, such as Strabo, Pliny the Elder, and Ptolemy, reported that Arabs inhabited many parts of Syria,[68] which according to modern historians indicate either an ethnic group or a nomadic way of life.[note 2][69][70] The urheimat of the Arab ethnos is unclear; the traditional 19th century theory locates this in the Arabian Peninsula,[71] while some modern scholars, such as David Frank Graf, note that the epigraphic and archaeological evidence render the traditional theory inadequate to explain the Arabs' appearance in Syria.[note 3][73] The Arabs mentioned in Syria by Greco-Roman writers were assimilated into the newly formed "Greco–Aramaean culture" that dominated the region, and the texts they produced were written in Greek and Aramaic.[76] Old Arabic, the precursor of Classical Arabic, was not a literary language; its speakers used Aramaic for writing purposes.[77]

Linguistic Arabization edit

On the eve of the Rashidun Caliphate conquest of the Levant, 634 AD, Syria's population mainly spoke Aramaic as the Lingua franca,[78] while Greek was the language of administration. Arabization and Islamization of Syria began in the 7th century, and it took several centuries for Islam, the Arab identity, and language to spread;[79] the Arabs of the caliphate did not attempt to spread their language or religion in the early periods of the conquest, and formed an isolated aristocracy.[80] The Arabs of the caliphate accommodated many new tribes in isolated areas to avoid conflict with the locals; caliph Uthman ordered his governor, Muawiyah I, to settle the new tribes away from the original population.[81] Syrians who belonged to Monophysitic denominations welcomed the Muslim Arabs as liberators.[82]

The Abbasids in the eighth and ninth centuries sought to integrate the peoples under their authority, and the Arabization of the administration was one of their methods.[83] Arabization gained momentum with the increasing numbers of Muslim converts from Christianity;[79] the ascendancy of Arabic as the formal language of the state prompted the cultural and linguistic assimilation of Syrian converts.[84] Some of those who remained Christian also became Arabized, while others stayed Aramean,[85][83] it was probably during the Abbasid period in the ninth century that Christians adopted Arabic as their first language; the first translation of the gospels into Arabic took place in this century.[86] Many historians, such as Claude Cahen and Bernard Hamilton, proposed that the Arabization of Christians was completed before the First Crusade.[87] By the thirteenth century, the Arabic language achieved complete dominance in the region, with many of its speakers having become Arabs.[79]

 
Garshuni sample

Those who retained the Aramaic language are divided among two groups:

  • The Eastern Aramaic Syriac-speaking group, followers of the West Syriac Rite of the Syriac Orthodox Church and the Syrian Catholic Church; kept the pre-Islamic Syrian (Syriac) identity throughout the ages, asserting their culture in face of the Arab dominance. Linguists, such as Carl Brockelmann and François Lenormant, suggested that the rise of the Garshuni writing (using the Syriac alphabet to write Arabic) was an attempt by the Syriac Orthodox to assert their identity.[88] Syriac is still the liturgical language for most of the different Syriac churches in Syria.[89] The Syriac Orthodox Church was known as the Syrian Orthodox Church until 2000, when the holy synod decided to rename it to avoid any nationalistic connotations; the Catholic Church still has "Syrian" in its official name.[90]
  • The Western Neo-Aramaic-speaking group, that is, the inhabitants of Bakh'a, Jubb'adin and Ma'loula. The residents of Bakh'a and Jubb'adin converted to Islam in the eighteenth century (retaining their Aramean identity),[91] while in Ma'loula, the majority are Christians, mainly belonging to the Melkite Greek Catholic Church,[92] but also to the Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch,[93] in addition to a Muslim minority, who speaks the same Aramaic dialect of the Christian residents.[91] The people of those villages use Arabic intensively to communicate with each other and the rest of the country; this led to a noticeable Arabic influence on their Aramaic dialect where around 20% of its vocabulary is of Arabic roots. Bakh'a is steadily losing its dialect; by 1971, people aged younger than 40 could no longer use the Aramaic language properly, although they could understand it. The situation of Bakh'a might eventually lead to the extinction of its Aramaic dialect.[94]

Revival of the designation "Syrian" edit

The Arabs in Arabia called the Greater Syria region al-Sham (Arabic: بِـلَاد الـشَّـام, romanizedBilād al-Šām, lit.'the country of Sham') which became the dominant name of the Levant under the Rashidun Caliphate and its successors. The geographic designation "Syria" returned in 1864 when Ottoman Syria was reorganized and the name was used for a vilayet encompassing generally the southern Levant.[95] The use of the national designation "Syrian" however has its origin in the tense relationship between the Arabic-speaking Muslims and Christians of the Levant, where Christians wanted to distance themselves from the Muslims.[96] Already in the 1830s, the Lebanese traveler As’ad Khayyat identified with the term Syria, but it took till the 1880s for the name to begin to be widely used by the inhabitants to refer to themselves.[96] Both Muslims and Christians agreed that the Muslims were not Syrians because they belonged to the Arabs while the Christians retained the Syrianism of antiquity.[96] The spread of the Syrian "idea" amongst the Muslims can be traced to the efforts of Rashid Rida who contributed to the formulation of the Syrian Union Party's manifesto in 1918, demanding that Syria, in the aftermath of World War I and the Ottoman withdrawal from the region, become an independent state and not part of larger Arab one ruled by the Hashemites of the Kingdom of Hejaz.[97] Rida did not reject the Arab identity but recognized a Syrian uniqueness and advocated the idea of a Syrian state.[97] In the end, Syria did become a separate state but under the Hashemite king Faisal. He entered Damascus in 1918 in the aftermath of the Ottomans' evacuation of the Levant at the end of World War I. His entry ignited the Syrian national consciousness after he decalred an Arab government in the Levant centred in Damascus with him as prince.[98] In June 1919, the Syrian National Congress, which included representatives from Palestine and Lebanon, demanded the full independence of Syria, within borders that encompass more or less the Levant; this helped to further strengthen the development of the Syrian national consciousness.[98] Initially, most inhabitants were against the establishment of Syria as they considered this a step against Arab unity, but gradually, Faisal's Syria, which was declared an independent kingdom in 1920, prompted the Syrians to begin exploring the notion of Syrianism instead of pan-Arabism.[note 4][100][101] Faisal was deposed by the French who established a mandate in 1920, but the formation of a Syrian consciousness amongst the members of the Syrian Arab national movement solidified and spread amongst the Muslims as well as the Christians.[102]

Genetics edit

 
  Arabian Peninsula/East African ancestral components
  Levantine ancestral component
  Other ancestral components

Genetic tests on Syrians were included in many genetic studies.[103][104][105] The genetic marker which identifies descendants of the ancient Levantines is found in Syrians in high proportion.[106] Modern Syrians exhibit "high affinity to the Levant" based on studies comparing modern and ancient DNA samples.[107] Syrians cluster closely with ancient Levantine populations of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages.[108] A Levantine ancestral genetic component was identified; it is estimated that the Levantine, the Peninsular Arabian and East African ancestral components diverged 23,700–15,500 years ago, while the divergence between the Levantine and European components happened 15,900–9,100 years ago.[109] The Levantine ancestral component is the most recurrent in Levantines (42–68%); the Peninsular Arabian and East African ancestral components represent around 25% of Syrian genetic make-up.[110][111]

The paternal Y-DNA haplogroup J1, which reaches its highest frequencies in Yemen 72.6% and Qatar 58.3%, accounted for 33.6% of Syrians.[112] The J2 group accounted for 20.8% of Syrians; other Y-DNA haplogroups include the E1B1B 12.0%, I 5.0%, R1a 10.0% and R1b 15.0%.[105][113] The Syrians are closest to other Levantine populations: the Lebanese, the Palestinians and Jordanians;[114] this closeness can be explained by the common Canaanite ancestry and geographical unity which was broken only in the twentieth century with the advent of British and French mandates.[115] Regarding the genetic relation between the Syrians and the Lebanese based on Y-DNA, Muslims from Lebanon show closer relations to Syrians than their Christian compatriots.[116] The people of Western Syria show close relations with the people of Northern Lebanon.[117]

Mitochondrial DNA shows the Syrians to have an affinity with Europe; main haplogroups are H and R.[118] Based on Mitochondrial DNA, the Syrians, Palestinians, Lebanese and Jordanians form a close cluster.[119] Compared to the Lebanese, Bedouins and Palestinians, the Syrians have noticeably more Northern European component, estimated at 7%.[120] Regarding the HLA alleles, Syrians, and other Levantine populations, exhibit "key differences" from other Arab populations;[121] based on HLA-DRB1 alleles, Syrians were close to eastern Mediterranean populations, such as the Cretans and Lebanese Armenians.[122] Studying the genetic relation between Jews and Syrians showed that the two populations share a close affinity.[123] Apparently, the cultural influence of Arabian expansion in the Eastern Mediterranean in the seventh century was more prominent than the genetic influx.[124] However, the expansion of Islam did leave an impact on Levantine genes; religion drove Levantine Muslims to mix with other Muslim populations, who were close culturally despite the geographic distance, and this produced genetic similarities between Levantine Muslims and Moroccan and Yemeni populations. Christians and Druze became a genetic isolate in the predominantly Islamic world.[125]

Language edit

Arabic is the mother tongue of the majority of Syrians[126] as well as the official state language. The Syrian variety of Levantine Arabic differs from Modern Standard Arabic. Western Neo-Aramaic, the only surviving Western Aramaic language, is still spoken in three villages (Ma'loula, Al-Sarkha (Bakhah) and Jubb'adin) in the Anti-Lebanon Mountains by both Muslim and Christian residents. Syriac-Arameans in the northeast of the country are mainly Turoyo-Surayt speakers but there are also some speakers of Sureth Aramaic, especially in the Khabour Valley. Classical Syriac is also used as a liturgical language by Syriac Christians. English, and to a lesser extent French, is widely understood and used in interactions with tourists and other foreigners.

Religion and minority groups edit

Clip – Interview with Paolo Dall'Oglio, The Syrian tradition of coexistence and the present scenario of confrontation

Religious differences in Syria have historically been tolerated,[127][128] and religious minorities tend to retain distinct cultural, and religious identities. Sunni Islam is the religion of 74% of Syrians. The Alawites, a variety of Shia Islam, make up 12% of the population and mostly live in and around Tartus and Latakia. Christians make up 10% of the country. Most Syrian Christians adhere to the Byzantine Rite; the two largest are the Antiochian Orthodox Church and the Melkite Greek Catholic Church.[129][130] The Druze are a mountainous people who reside in Jabal al-Druze who helped spark the Great Syrian Revolt. The Ismailis are an even smaller sect that originated in Asia. Many Armenian and Assyrian Christians fled Turkey during the Armenian genocide and the Assyrian genocide and settled in Syria. There are also roughly 500,000 Palestinians, who are mostly descendants of refugees from the 1948 Israeli-Arab War. The community of Syrian Jews inside Syria once numbered 30,000 in 1947, but has only 200 today.[131]

The Syrian people's beliefs and outlooks, similar to those of most Arabs and people of the wider Middle-East, are a mosaic of West and East. Conservative and liberally minded people will live right next to each other. Like the other countries in the region, religion permeates life; the government registers every Syrian's religious affiliation. However, the number of non-believers in Syria is increasing but there is no credible source or statistics to support this information.

Cuisine edit

 
Tabbouleh

Syrian cuisine is dominated by ingredients native to the region. Olive oil, garlic, olives, spearmint, and sesame oil are some of the ingredients that are used in many traditional meals. Traditional Syrian dishes enjoyed by Syrians include, tabbouleh, labaneh, shanklish, wara' 'enab, makdous, kebab, Kibbeh, sfiha, moutabal, hummus, mana'eesh, bameh, and fattoush.

A typical Syrian breakfast is a meze. It is an assortment platter of foods with cheeses, meats, pickles, olives, and spreads. Meze is usually served with Arab-style tea – highly concentrated black tea, which is often highly sweetened and served in small glass cups. Another popular drink, especially with Christians and non-practicing Muslims, is the arak, a liquor produced from grapes or dates and flavored with anise that can have an alcohol content of over 90% ABV (however, most commercial Syrian arak brands are about 40–60% ABV).

Notable people edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Most numbers, aside from these of South American countries, represent all Syrian citizens including ethnic minorities such as the Kurds and Armenians
  2. ^ What antiquity's writers meant by the designation "Arab" is debated; the historian Michael Macdonald suggested that the term is an ethnic designation based on an "ill-defined complex of linguistic and cultural characteristics",[69] while according to academic consensus, "Arab", in addition to it being an ethnic name, had a social meaning describing a nomadic way of life.[70]
  3. ^ Regarding the urheimat of the Arab ethnos: the traditional theory, which dates to the 19th century and became dominant in the middle of the 20th century, holds that Arabs were a Semitic wave from the Arabian peninsula who infiltrated Syria. The traditional theory does not explain the early presence of the Arabs in the Levant as it lacks the evidence for when and how they allegedly arrived from Arabia.[71] Macdonald noted that there is no evidence proving that the inhabitants of the Arabian Peninsula, especially modern Yemen, in the early Hellenistic period (fourth century BC), used the designation "Arab", and that it took several centuries for this ethnic name to be adopted by the majority of the peninsula's inhabitants.[72] The historian David Frank Graf considered the traditional theory inadequate for explaining the Arab presence in the Near East. Graf noted the 4th century BC evidence from Edom, south of the historical region of Syria, represented in a collection of ostraca, which show that the population was either "Arabized Edmoites" or "Edomite Arabs", and that this population was an integral part of the demography of southern Palestine and not a recent infiltration.[73] The historian Robert Hoyland, noting the earliest attestation of Arabs in Assyrian sources in the Syrian desert in the 9th century, followed by their earliest attestation in Southern Arabian inscriptions in the seventh/sixth century BC, suggested that north and central Arabia was the homeland of Arabs.[74] Macdonald refused the paradigm of infiltration from Arabia, and considered the Syria/Arabia division a Western concept that would have been unrecognizable for Arabs who were supposedly migrating.[75]
  4. ^ Even under Faisal, it was clear that the Arabic speakers in Syria considered themselves Syrians first and Arabs second; this is apparent in the response to the presence of Iraqi and other non-Syrian officials in Faisal's army and government. Syrians complained that they were becoming strangers in their own country, and slogans such as "Syria for Syrians" appeared in newspapers. The Syrian youth, an anti-Iraqi organization, was established declaring its desire to protect the rights of Syrians against non Syrians.[99]

References edit

Citations edit

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  107. ^ Marshall et al. 2016. Quote:"The mixed Near Eastern–Middle Eastern localisation of the Druze, shown using both modern and ancient DNA data, is distinct from that of neighboring Syrians, Palestinians and most of the Lebanese, who exhibit a high affinity to the Levant."
  108. ^ Marshall et al. 2016. Quote:" Druze exhibited genetic similarity to Chalcolithic and Bronze Age Armenians and a Chalcolithic Anatolian. In that study, Druze clustered remotely from all Bronze Age and Neolithic Levantines, whereas Jews, Assyrians, Syrians and a few Lebanese clustered with Levantine populations."
  109. ^ Haber et al. 2013. Quote:"Our estimates show that the Levantine and the Arabian Peninsula/East African components diverged ~23,700–15,500 y.a., while the Levantine and European components diverged ~15,900–9,100 y.a."
  110. ^ Haber et al. 2013. Quote:1-"ADMIXTURE identifies at K = 10 an ancestral component (light green) with a geographically restricted distribution representing ~50% of the individual component in Ethiopians, Yemenis, Saudis, and Bedouins, decreasing towards the Levant, with higher frequency (~25%) in Syrians, Jordanians, and Palestinians, compared with other Levantines (4%–20%). The geographical distribution pattern of this component (Figure 4A, 4B) correlates with the pattern of the Islamic expansion, but its presence in Lebanese Christians, Sephardi and Ashkenazi Jews, Cypriots and Armenians might suggest that its spread to the Levant could also represent an earlier event."
    2-"Besides this component, the most frequent ancestral component (shown in dark blue) in the Levantines (42–68%) is also present, at lower frequencies, in Europe and Central Asia."
  111. ^ Fernandes et al. 2015. Quote:1-"In the Near East, we included Iraq, Jordan, Israel/Palestine, Turkey, Lebanon and Syria."
    2-"Here it is already possible to distinguish between a Southwest Asian/Caucasian and an Arabian/North African component; these two components have similar proportions of ~30% each in Yemen and UAE, but the Arabian/North African proportion increases to 52–60% in Saudi and Bedouin. In Near Eastern populations, correspondingly, the Southwest Asian/Caucasian component rises to ~50% and the Arabian/North African cluster decreases to ~20–30%, even in Palestinians (similar to the Samaritans and some of the Druze), highlighting their primarily indigenous origin, with the most extreme values for the Druze, carrying the Southwest Asian/Caucasian component at ~80%."
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  115. ^ Hajjej et al. 2018. Quote:"The strong relatedness between Levant Arab populations is explained by their common ancestry, the ancient Canaanites, who came either from Africa or Arabian Peninsula via Egypt in 3300 BC [97], and settled in Levant lowlands after collapse of Ghassulian civilization in 3800–3350 BC [98]. The relatedness is also attributed to the close geographical proximity, which constituted one territory before 19th century British and French colonization."
  116. ^ Haber et al. 2013. Quote:"Lebanese Christians and all Druze cluster together, and Lebanese Muslims are extended towards Syrians, Palestinians, and Jordanians."
  117. ^ Haber et al. 2011. Quote:"Syria is contained within the range of variation of the Lebanese samples. West Syrian samples lie closest to LN Sunnis, and not far from LN, LB, and LM Maronites."
  118. ^ Badro et al. 2013. Quote:"The haplogroups' geographical distribution shows affinity between the Northern Levant (modern day Lebanon and Syria) and Europe with clear distinctions between the Levant and the Arabian Peninsula with regards to Africa (Fig. 1, Table 1). The main mtDNA haplogroups for both Europe and the Northern Levant are H and R*."
  119. ^ Badro et al. 2013. Quote:"Yemenis and Saudis both associate strongly with Egyptians, whereas the Jordanian, Lebanese, Palestinian, and Syrian populations clustered together."
  120. ^ Marshall et al. 2016. Quote:"Druze and Syrians possess a significantly larger amount of the Northern European component (X = 7%) when compared with their neighbouring populations, such as Palestinians (X = 5%) and Lebanese and Bedouins (X = 2%)."
  121. ^ Hajjej et al. 2018. Quote:"On the contrary, key differences were noted between Levant Arabs (Lebanese, Palestinians, Syrians), and other Arab populations, highlighted by high frequencies of A*24, B*35, DRB1*11:01, DQB1*03:01, and DRB1*11:01-DQB1*03:01 haplotype in Levantine Arabs compared to other Arab populations."
  122. ^ Hajjej et al. 2018. Quote:"Syrians are genetically close to Eastern Mediterranean, as Cretans (−0.0001) and Lebanese Armenians (0.0050)."
  123. ^ Hammer et al. 2000. Quote:"This Jewish cluster was interspersed with the Palestinian and Syrian populations, whereas the other Middle Eastern non-Jewish populations (Saudi Arabians, Lebanese, and Druze) closely surrounded it."
  124. ^ Hajjej et al. 2018. Quote:1-"The extent of gene Arab exchange with these autochthonous groups is undetermined but is thought to be lower than religious/cultural influence."
    2-"On the other hand, Levant Arabs are distant from Saudis, Kuwaitis, and Yeminis, an indication that the contribution of the Arabian Peninsula populations to Levantine gene pool is low, probably due to the absence of the demographic aspect of 7th century invasion."
  125. ^ Haber et al. 2013. Quote:1-"We show that religious affiliation had a strong impact on the genomes of the Levantines. In particular, conversion of the region's populations to Islam appears to have introduced major rearrangements in populations' relations through admixture with culturally similar but geographically remote populations, leading to genetic similarities between remarkably distant populations like Jordanians, Moroccans, and Yemenis. Conversely, other populations, like Christians and Druze, became genetically isolated in the new cultural environment. We reconstructed the genetic structure of the Levantines and found that a pre-Islamic expansion Levant was more genetically similar to Europeans than to Middle Easterners."
    2-"The predominantly Muslim populations of Syrians, Palestinians and Jordanians cluster on branches with other Muslim populations as distant as Morocco and Yemen."
    3-Lebanese Christians and all Druze cluster together, and Lebanese Muslims are extended towards Syrians, Palestinians, and Jordanians, which are close to Saudis and Bedouins."
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External links edit

  Media related to People of Syria at Wikimedia Commons

  • Syrian people, Every Culture
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  • Syrian people, Encyclopædia Britannica

syrians, this, article, about, majority, ethnicity, country, syria, other, uses, syrian, disambiguation, outside, syria, syrian, diaspora, arabic, سوريون, majority, inhabitants, syria, indigenous, levant, have, arabic, especially, levantine, dialect, mother, t. This article is about Syrians as the majority ethnicity of the country of Syria For other uses see Syrian disambiguation For Syrians outside of Syria see Syrian diaspora Syrians Arabic سوريون are the majority inhabitants of Syria indigenous to the Levant who have Arabic especially its Levantine dialect as a mother tongue The cultural and linguistic heritage of the Syrian people is a blend of both indigenous elements and the foreign cultures that have come to rule the land and its people over the course of thousands of years By the seventh century most of the inhabitants of the Levant spoke Aramaic In the aftermath of the Muslim conquest of the Levant in 634 Arabic became the dominant language but a minority of Syrians retained Aramaic which is still spoken in its Syriac and Western dialects Syriansس ور ي ونSuriyyinTotal population note 1 Regions with significant populations Syria23 022 427 2023 estimate 1 Brazil4 011 480 2 Turkey3 040 000 3 4 Venezuela2 000 000 5 6 7 Argentina1 500 000 8 9 Germany1 225 000 10 Jordan1 200 000 11 Lebanon1 129 624 12 Saudi Arabia500 000 13 United States281 331 14 15 16 United Arab Emirates250 000 17 Iraq243 000 18 Sweden240 717 19 20 Chile200 000 21 Kuwait150 000 22 Egypt114 000 23 Canada77 050 24 Sudan60 000 250 000 25 26 Qatar54 000 27 Algeria50 000 28 Austria49 779 29 France44 000 30 31 32 Denmark42 207 33 Norway36 026 34 Spain11 188 35 Finland9 333 36 United Kingdom8 848 England amp Wales 37 unknown in Scotland 38 and 2 000 in Northern Ireland 39 Italy8 227 Syrian born 40 Morocco5 250 41 Ireland3 000 42 Niger3 000 citation needed Mali3 000 43 Yemen3 000 44 Somalia700 1 056 45 LanguagesLevantine and Mesopotamian ArabicSyriac and othersReligionMainly Islam mostly Sunni Islam minority Shi as Alawite Christianity mostly Antiochian Orthodox and Melkite Greek Catholics a minority of Syriac Orthodox Assyrian Church of the East Chaldean Catholic DruzeJudaismRelated ethnic groupsLebanese Palestinians and JordaniansThe national name Syrian was used in antiquity to denote the inhabitants of the Levant Following the Muslim conquest of the Levant Arab identity became dominant and the ethnonym Syrian was used mainly by Christians who spoke Syriac In the 19th century the name Syrian was revived amongst the Arabic speakers of the Levant Following the establishment of the Arab Kingdom of Syria in 1920 the name Syrian began to spread amongst its Arabic speaking inhabitants The term gained more importance during the Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon becoming the accepted national name for the Arabic speakers of the Syrian Republic Most Arabic speaking Syrians identify as Arabs There is no contradiction between being an Arab and a Syrian since the Syrian Arab identity is multi layered and being Syrian complements being Arab In addition to denoting Syrian Arabs the term Syrian also refer to all Syrian citizens regardless of their ethnic background In 2018 Syria had an estimated population of 19 5 million which includes aside from the aforementioned majority Kurds Assyrians Turks Armenians and others Before the Syrian Civil War there was quite a large Syrian diaspora that had immigrated to North America United States and Canada European Union member states including Sweden France and Germany South America mainly in Brazil Argentina Venezuela and Chile the West Indies 46 Africa Australia and New Zealand 47 Six million refugees of the Syrian Civil War also live outside Syria now mostly in Turkey Jordan and Lebanon Contents 1 Etymology 1 1 Applications of the name in antiquity 2 History 2 1 Linguistic Arabization 2 2 Revival of the designation Syrian 3 Genetics 4 Language 5 Religion and minority groups 6 Cuisine 7 Notable people 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Citations 10 2 Sources 11 External linksEtymology editVarious 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 the Akkadian word Assurayu Assyria in northern Mesopotamia modern day Iraq 48 49 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 north Mesopotamia and Arameans of the Levant 50 51 Applications of the name in antiquity edit The Greeks used the terms Syrian and Assyrian interchangeably to indicate the indigenous Arameans Assyrians and other inhabitants of the Levant and Mesopotamia Herodotus considered Syria west of the Euphrates Starting from the 2nd century BC onwards ancient writers referred to the ruler of the Seleucid Empire as the King of Syria or King of the Syrians 52 The Seleucids designated the districts of Seleucis and Coele Syria explicitly as Syria and ruled the Syrians as indigenous populations residing west of the Euphrates Aramea in contrast to Assyrians who had their native homeland in Mesopotamia east of the Euphrates 53 However the interchangeability between Assyrians and Syrians persisted during the Hellenistic period 53 In one instance the Ptolemaic dynasty of the Hellenistic kingdom of Egypt applied the term Syrian Village as the name of a settlement in Fayoum The Ptolemies referred to all peoples originating from Modern Syria and Palestine as Syrian 54 The term Syrian was imposed upon Arameans of modern Levant by the Romans Pompey created the province of Syria which included modern day Lebanon and Syria west of the Euphrates framing the province as a regional social category with civic implications 55 Plutarch described the indigenous people of this newly created Roman province as Syrians 56 better source needed so did Strabo who observed that Syrians resided west of the Euphrates in Roman Syria 55 and he explicitly mentions that those Syrians are the Arameans whom he calls Aramaei indicating an extant ethnicity 57 better source needed Posidonius noted that the people called Syrians by the Greeks refer to themselves as Arameans 58 In his book The Great Roman Jewish War Josephus a Hebrew native to the Levant mentioned the Syrians as the non Hebrew non Greek indigenous inhabitants of Syria 59 History editMain articles Arameans Phoenicia and Arabs Syrians are mainly descended from the various ancient Semitic speaking peoples of the ancient Near East 60 61 62 page needed The Seleucids ruled the indigenous peoples of the Levant whom they named Syrians as a conquered nation Syrians were not assimilated into Greek communities and many local peasants were exploited financially as they had to pay rent for Greek landlords Outside Greek colonies the Syrians lived in districts governed by local temples that did not use the Greek civic system of poleis and colonies 63 The situation changed after the Roman conquest in 64 BC Semitic speaking Syrians obtained the citizenship of Greek poleis and the line separating the Greeks and the natives blurred The idioms Syrian and Greek were used by Rome to denote civic societies instead of separate ethnic groups 64 Ancient Syria of the first millennium BC was dominated by the Aramaeans 65 they originated in the Northern Levant as a continuum of the Bronze Age populations of Syria 66 The Aramaeans assimilated most of the earlier Levantine populations through their language 65 With the adoption of a common religion Christianity most of the inhabitants turned into Syrians Aramaeans Islam and the Arabic language had a similar effect where the Aramaeans themselves became Arabs regardless of their ethnic origin following the Muslim conquest of the Levant 65 The presence of Arabs in Syria is recorded since the 9th century BC 67 and Roman period historians such as Strabo Pliny the Elder and Ptolemy reported that Arabs inhabited many parts of Syria 68 which according to modern historians indicate either an ethnic group or a nomadic way of life note 2 69 70 The urheimat of the Arab ethnos is unclear the traditional 19th century theory locates this in the Arabian Peninsula 71 while some modern scholars such as David Frank Graf note that the epigraphic and archaeological evidence render the traditional theory inadequate to explain the Arabs appearance in Syria note 3 73 The Arabs mentioned in Syria by Greco Roman writers were assimilated into the newly formed Greco Aramaean culture that dominated the region and the texts they produced were written in Greek and Aramaic 76 Old Arabic the precursor of Classical Arabic was not a literary language its speakers used Aramaic for writing purposes 77 Linguistic Arabization edit On the eve of the Rashidun Caliphate conquest of the Levant 634 AD Syria s population mainly spoke Aramaic as the Lingua franca 78 while Greek was the language of administration Arabization and Islamization of Syria began in the 7th century and it took several centuries for Islam the Arab identity and language to spread 79 the Arabs of the caliphate did not attempt to spread their language or religion in the early periods of the conquest and formed an isolated aristocracy 80 The Arabs of the caliphate accommodated many new tribes in isolated areas to avoid conflict with the locals caliph Uthman ordered his governor Muawiyah I to settle the new tribes away from the original population 81 Syrians who belonged to Monophysitic denominations welcomed the Muslim Arabs as liberators 82 The Abbasids in the eighth and ninth centuries sought to integrate the peoples under their authority and the Arabization of the administration was one of their methods 83 Arabization gained momentum with the increasing numbers of Muslim converts from Christianity 79 the ascendancy of Arabic as the formal language of the state prompted the cultural and linguistic assimilation of Syrian converts 84 Some of those who remained Christian also became Arabized while others stayed Aramean 85 83 it was probably during the Abbasid period in the ninth century that Christians adopted Arabic as their first language the first translation of the gospels into Arabic took place in this century 86 Many historians such as Claude Cahen and Bernard Hamilton proposed that the Arabization of Christians was completed before the First Crusade 87 By the thirteenth century the Arabic language achieved complete dominance in the region with many of its speakers having become Arabs 79 nbsp Garshuni sampleThose who retained the Aramaic language are divided among two groups The Eastern Aramaic Syriac speaking group followers of the West Syriac Rite of the Syriac Orthodox Church and the Syrian Catholic Church kept the pre Islamic Syrian Syriac identity throughout the ages asserting their culture in face of the Arab dominance Linguists such as Carl Brockelmann and Francois Lenormant suggested that the rise of the Garshuni writing using the Syriac alphabet to write Arabic was an attempt by the Syriac Orthodox to assert their identity 88 Syriac is still the liturgical language for most of the different Syriac churches in Syria 89 The Syriac Orthodox Church was known as the Syrian Orthodox Church until 2000 when the holy synod decided to rename it to avoid any nationalistic connotations the Catholic Church still has Syrian in its official name 90 The Western Neo Aramaic speaking group that is the inhabitants of Bakh a Jubb adin and Ma loula The residents of Bakh a and Jubb adin converted to Islam in the eighteenth century retaining their Aramean identity 91 while in Ma loula the majority are Christians mainly belonging to the Melkite Greek Catholic Church 92 but also to the Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch 93 in addition to a Muslim minority who speaks the same Aramaic dialect of the Christian residents 91 The people of those villages use Arabic intensively to communicate with each other and the rest of the country this led to a noticeable Arabic influence on their Aramaic dialect where around 20 of its vocabulary is of Arabic roots Bakh a is steadily losing its dialect by 1971 people aged younger than 40 could no longer use the Aramaic language properly although they could understand it The situation of Bakh a might eventually lead to the extinction of its Aramaic dialect 94 Revival of the designation Syrian edit The Arabs in Arabia called the Greater Syria region al Sham Arabic ب ـل اد الـش ـام romanized Bilad al Sam lit the country of Sham which became the dominant name of the Levant under the Rashidun Caliphate and its successors The geographic designation Syria returned in 1864 when Ottoman Syria was reorganized and the name was used for a vilayet encompassing generally the southern Levant 95 The use of the national designation Syrian however has its origin in the tense relationship between the Arabic speaking Muslims and Christians of the Levant where Christians wanted to distance themselves from the Muslims 96 Already in the 1830s the Lebanese traveler As ad Khayyat identified with the term Syria but it took till the 1880s for the name to begin to be widely used by the inhabitants to refer to themselves 96 Both Muslims and Christians agreed that the Muslims were not Syrians because they belonged to the Arabs while the Christians retained the Syrianism of antiquity 96 The spread of the Syrian idea amongst the Muslims can be traced to the efforts of Rashid Rida who contributed to the formulation of the Syrian Union Party s manifesto in 1918 demanding that Syria in the aftermath of World War I and the Ottoman withdrawal from the region become an independent state and not part of larger Arab one ruled by the Hashemites of the Kingdom of Hejaz 97 Rida did not reject the Arab identity but recognized a Syrian uniqueness and advocated the idea of a Syrian state 97 In the end Syria did become a separate state but under the Hashemite king Faisal He entered Damascus in 1918 in the aftermath of the Ottomans evacuation of the Levant at the end of World War I His entry ignited the Syrian national consciousness after he decalred an Arab government in the Levant centred in Damascus with him as prince 98 In June 1919 the Syrian National Congress which included representatives from Palestine and Lebanon demanded the full independence of Syria within borders that encompass more or less the Levant this helped to further strengthen the development of the Syrian national consciousness 98 Initially most inhabitants were against the establishment of Syria as they considered this a step against Arab unity but gradually Faisal s Syria which was declared an independent kingdom in 1920 prompted the Syrians to begin exploring the notion of Syrianism instead of pan Arabism note 4 100 101 Faisal was deposed by the French who established a mandate in 1920 but the formation of a Syrian consciousness amongst the members of the Syrian Arab national movement solidified and spread amongst the Muslims as well as the Christians 102 Genetics editSee also Genetic history of the Middle East and Genetic studies on Arabs nbsp Arabian Peninsula East African ancestral components Levantine ancestral component Other ancestral componentsGenetic tests on Syrians were included in many genetic studies 103 104 105 The genetic marker which identifies descendants of the ancient Levantines is found in Syrians in high proportion 106 Modern Syrians exhibit high affinity to the Levant based on studies comparing modern and ancient DNA samples 107 Syrians cluster closely with ancient Levantine populations of the Neolithic and Bronze Ages 108 A Levantine ancestral genetic component was identified it is estimated that the Levantine the Peninsular Arabian and East African ancestral components diverged 23 700 15 500 years ago while the divergence between the Levantine and European components happened 15 900 9 100 years ago 109 The Levantine ancestral component is the most recurrent in Levantines 42 68 the Peninsular Arabian and East African ancestral components represent around 25 of Syrian genetic make up 110 111 The paternal Y DNA haplogroup J1 which reaches its highest frequencies in Yemen 72 6 and Qatar 58 3 accounted for 33 6 of Syrians 112 The J2 group accounted for 20 8 of Syrians other Y DNA haplogroups include the E1B1B 12 0 I 5 0 R1a 10 0 and R1b 15 0 105 113 The Syrians are closest to other Levantine populations the Lebanese the Palestinians and Jordanians 114 this closeness can be explained by the common Canaanite ancestry and geographical unity which was broken only in the twentieth century with the advent of British and French mandates 115 Regarding the genetic relation between the Syrians and the Lebanese based on Y DNA Muslims from Lebanon show closer relations to Syrians than their Christian compatriots 116 The people of Western Syria show close relations with the people of Northern Lebanon 117 Mitochondrial DNA shows the Syrians to have an affinity with Europe main haplogroups are H and R 118 Based on Mitochondrial DNA the Syrians Palestinians Lebanese and Jordanians form a close cluster 119 Compared to the Lebanese Bedouins and Palestinians the Syrians have noticeably more Northern European component estimated at 7 120 Regarding the HLA alleles Syrians and other Levantine populations exhibit key differences from other Arab populations 121 based on HLA DRB1 alleles Syrians were close to eastern Mediterranean populations such as the Cretans and Lebanese Armenians 122 Studying the genetic relation between Jews and Syrians showed that the two populations share a close affinity 123 Apparently the cultural influence of Arabian expansion in the Eastern Mediterranean in the seventh century was more prominent than the genetic influx 124 However the expansion of Islam did leave an impact on Levantine genes religion drove Levantine Muslims to mix with other Muslim populations who were close culturally despite the geographic distance and this produced genetic similarities between Levantine Muslims and Moroccan and Yemeni populations Christians and Druze became a genetic isolate in the predominantly Islamic world 125 Language editFurther information on Syrian Arabic Levantine Arabic Arabic is the mother tongue of the majority of Syrians 126 as well as the official state language The Syrian variety of Levantine Arabic differs from Modern Standard Arabic Western Neo Aramaic the only surviving Western Aramaic language is still spoken in three villages Ma loula Al Sarkha Bakhah and Jubb adin in the Anti Lebanon Mountains by both Muslim and Christian residents Syriac Arameans in the northeast of the country are mainly Turoyo Surayt speakers but there are also some speakers of Sureth Aramaic especially in the Khabour Valley Classical Syriac is also used as a liturgical language by Syriac Christians English and to a lesser extent French is widely understood and used in interactions with tourists and other foreigners Religion and minority groups editMain articles Freedom of religion in Syria Religion in Syria Islam in Syria and Christianity in Syria source source source source source Clip Interview with Paolo Dall Oglio The Syrian tradition of coexistence and the present scenario of confrontationReligious differences in Syria have historically been tolerated 127 128 and religious minorities tend to retain distinct cultural and religious identities Sunni Islam is the religion of 74 of Syrians The Alawites a variety of Shia Islam make up 12 of the population and mostly live in and around Tartus and Latakia Christians make up 10 of the country Most Syrian Christians adhere to the Byzantine Rite the two largest are the Antiochian Orthodox Church and the Melkite Greek Catholic Church 129 130 The Druze are a mountainous people who reside in Jabal al Druze who helped spark the Great Syrian Revolt The Ismailis are an even smaller sect that originated in Asia Many Armenian and Assyrian Christians fled Turkey during the Armenian genocide and the Assyrian genocide and settled in Syria There are also roughly 500 000 Palestinians who are mostly descendants of refugees from the 1948 Israeli Arab War The community of Syrian Jews inside Syria once numbered 30 000 in 1947 but has only 200 today 131 The Syrian people s beliefs and outlooks similar to those of most Arabs and people of the wider Middle East are a mosaic of West and East Conservative and liberally minded people will live right next to each other Like the other countries in the region religion permeates life the government registers every Syrian s religious affiliation However the number of non believers in Syria is increasing but there is no credible source or statistics to support this information Cuisine edit nbsp TabboulehFurther information Syrian cuisine Syrian cuisine is dominated by ingredients native to the region Olive oil garlic olives spearmint and sesame oil are some of the ingredients that are used in many traditional meals Traditional Syrian dishes enjoyed by Syrians include tabbouleh labaneh shanklish wara enab makdous kebab Kibbeh sfiha moutabal hummus mana eesh bameh and fattoush A typical Syrian breakfast is a meze It is an assortment platter of foods with cheeses meats pickles olives and spreads Meze is usually served with Arab style tea highly concentrated black tea which is often highly sweetened and served in small glass cups Another popular drink especially with Christians and non practicing Muslims is the arak a liquor produced from grapes or dates and flavored with anise that can have an alcohol content of over 90 ABV however most commercial Syrian arak brands are about 40 60 ABV Notable people editFurther information List of SyriansSee also editHistory of Syria Ottoman Syria Arameans Armenians Arabs Al Shaitat Assyrians GreeksNotes edit Most numbers aside from these of South American countries represent all Syrian citizens including ethnic minorities such as the Kurds and Armenians What antiquity s writers meant by the designation Arab is debated the historian Michael Macdonald suggested that the term is an ethnic designation based on an ill defined complex of linguistic and cultural characteristics 69 while according to academic consensus Arab in addition to it being an ethnic name had a social meaning describing a nomadic way of life 70 Regarding the urheimat of the Arab ethnos the traditional theory which dates to the 19th century and became dominant in the middle of the 20th century holds that Arabs were a Semitic wave from the Arabian peninsula who infiltrated Syria The traditional theory does not explain the early presence of the Arabs in the Levant as it lacks the evidence for when and how they allegedly arrived from Arabia 71 Macdonald noted that there is no evidence proving that the inhabitants of the Arabian Peninsula especially modern Yemen in the early Hellenistic period fourth century BC used the designation Arab and that it took several centuries for this ethnic name to be adopted by the majority of the peninsula s inhabitants 72 The historian David Frank Graf considered the traditional theory inadequate for explaining the Arab presence in the Near East Graf noted the 4th century BC evidence from Edom south of the historical region of Syria represented in a collection of ostraca which show that the population was either Arabized Edmoites or Edomite Arabs and that this population was an integral part of the demography of southern Palestine and not a recent infiltration 73 The historian Robert Hoyland noting the earliest attestation of Arabs in Assyrian sources in the Syrian desert in the 9th century followed by their earliest attestation in Southern Arabian inscriptions in the seventh sixth century BC suggested that north and central Arabia was the homeland of Arabs 74 Macdonald refused the paradigm of infiltration from Arabia and considered the Syria Arabia division a Western concept that would have been unrecognizable for Arabs who were supposedly migrating 75 Even under Faisal it was clear that the Arabic speakers in Syria considered themselves Syrians first and Arabs second this is apparent in the response to the presence of Iraqi and other non Syrian officials in Faisal s army and government Syrians complained that they were becoming strangers in their own country and slogans such as Syria for Syrians appeared in newspapers The Syrian youth an anti Iraqi organization was established declaring its desire to protect the rights of Syrians against non Syrians 99 References editCitations edit Syria Population 2023 Live World Population Review Archived from the original on 2013 12 24 Retrieved 2023 05 08 Syrian Arabic Republic www itamaraty gov br Archived from the original on 20 October 2018 Retrieved 19 September 2017 UNHCR Turkey Operational Update February March 2021 Archived from the original on 2023 05 21 Retrieved 2021 06 25 UNHCR United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees UNHCR Syria Regional Refugee Response unhcr org Archived from the original on 5 March 2018 Retrieved 19 September 2017 Jordan Levi Syria Steps into Latin America Americas Society Council of the Americas Archived from the original on 16 January 2017 Retrieved 15 January 2017 Syria 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the Close of Empire University of California Press pp 51 287 298 Zisser Eyal 2006 Who s Afraid of Syrian Nationalism National and State Identity in Syria Middle Eastern Studies Routledge 42 2 189 doi 10 1080 00263200500417512 S2CID 142992865 Ma os Moshe 2011 The Emergence of Modern Syria In Ma os Moshe Yanic Avner eds Syria Under Assad Domestic Constraints and Regional Risks Routledge p 14 Badro et al 2013 Haber et al 2011 a b El Sibai et al 2009 sfn error no target CITEREFEl SibaiPlattHaberXue2009 help Perry 2007 Quote The marker known as the J2 haplogroup was found in an unusually high proportion among Lebanese Palestinians and Syrians tested by Zalloua during more than five years of research He tested 1 000 people in the region Marshall et al 2016 Quote The mixed Near Eastern Middle Eastern localisation of the Druze shown using both modern and ancient DNA data is distinct from that of neighboring Syrians Palestinians and most of the Lebanese who exhibit a high affinity to the Levant Marshall et al 2016 Quote Druze exhibited genetic similarity to Chalcolithic and Bronze Age Armenians and a Chalcolithic Anatolian In that study Druze clustered remotely from all Bronze Age and Neolithic Levantines whereas Jews Assyrians Syrians and a few Lebanese clustered with Levantine populations Haber et al 2013 Quote Our estimates show that the Levantine and the Arabian Peninsula East African components diverged 23 700 15 500 y a while the Levantine and European components diverged 15 900 9 100 y a Haber et al 2013 Quote 1 ADMIXTURE identifies at K 10 an ancestral component light green with a geographically restricted distribution representing 50 of the individual component in Ethiopians Yemenis Saudis and Bedouins decreasing towards the Levant with higher frequency 25 in Syrians Jordanians and Palestinians compared with other Levantines 4 20 The geographical distribution pattern of this component Figure 4A 4B correlates with the pattern of the Islamic expansion but its presence in Lebanese Christians Sephardi and Ashkenazi Jews Cypriots and Armenians might suggest that its spread to the Levant could also represent an earlier event 2 Besides this component the most frequent ancestral component shown in dark blue in the Levantines 42 68 is also present at lower frequencies in Europe and Central Asia Fernandes et al 2015 Quote 1 In the Near East we included Iraq Jordan Israel Palestine Turkey Lebanon and Syria 2 Here it is already possible to distinguish between a Southwest Asian Caucasian and an Arabian North African component these two components have similar proportions of 30 each in Yemen and UAE but the Arabian North African proportion increases to 52 60 in Saudi and Bedouin In Near Eastern populations correspondingly the Southwest Asian Caucasian component rises to 50 and the Arabian North African cluster decreases to 20 30 even in Palestinians similar to the Samaritans and some of the Druze highlighting their primarily indigenous origin with the most extreme values for the Druze carrying the Southwest Asian Caucasian component at 80 El Sibai et al 2009 Quote J1 frequencies in Syria Akka and Jordan were more comparable to Lebanon than to the remaining Arabic countries 58 3 in Qatar and 72 5 in Yemen Fig 2G Semino et al 2000 Hajjej et al 2018 Quote Using genetic distances correspondence analysis and NJ trees we showed earlier 61 62 and in this study that Palestinians Syrians Lebanese and Jordanians are closely related to each other Hajjej et al 2018 Quote The strong relatedness between Levant Arab populations is explained by their common ancestry the ancient Canaanites who came either from Africa or Arabian Peninsula via Egypt in 3300 BC 97 and settled in Levant lowlands after collapse of Ghassulian civilization in 3800 3350 BC 98 The relatedness is also attributed to the close geographical proximity which constituted one territory before 19th century British and French colonization Haber et al 2013 Quote Lebanese Christians and all Druze cluster together and Lebanese Muslims are extended towards Syrians Palestinians and Jordanians Haber et al 2011 Quote Syria is contained within the range of variation of the Lebanese samples West Syrian samples lie closest to LN Sunnis and not far from LN LB and LM Maronites Badro et al 2013 Quote The haplogroups geographical distribution shows affinity between the Northern Levant modern day Lebanon and Syria and Europe with clear distinctions between the Levant and the Arabian Peninsula with regards to Africa Fig 1 Table 1 The main mtDNA haplogroups for both Europe and the Northern Levant are H and R Badro et al 2013 Quote Yemenis and Saudis both associate strongly with Egyptians whereas the Jordanian Lebanese Palestinian and Syrian populations clustered together Marshall et al 2016 Quote Druze and Syrians possess a significantly larger amount of the Northern European component X 7 when compared with their neighbouring populations such as Palestinians X 5 and Lebanese and Bedouins X 2 Hajjej et al 2018 Quote On the contrary key differences were noted between Levant Arabs Lebanese Palestinians Syrians and other Arab populations highlighted by high frequencies of A 24 B 35 DRB1 11 01 DQB1 03 01 and DRB1 11 01 DQB1 03 01 haplotype in Levantine Arabs compared to other Arab populations Hajjej et al 2018 Quote Syrians are genetically close to Eastern Mediterranean as Cretans 0 0001 and Lebanese Armenians 0 0050 Hammer et al 2000 Quote This Jewish cluster was interspersed with the Palestinian and Syrian populations whereas the other Middle Eastern non Jewish populations Saudi Arabians Lebanese and Druze closely surrounded it Hajjej et al 2018 Quote 1 The extent of gene Arab exchange with these autochthonous groups is undetermined but is thought to be lower than religious cultural influence 2 On the other hand Levant Arabs are distant from Saudis Kuwaitis and Yeminis an indication that the contribution of the Arabian Peninsula populations to Levantine gene pool is low probably due to the absence of the demographic aspect of 7th century invasion Haber et al 2013 Quote 1 We show that religious affiliation had a strong impact on the genomes of the Levantines In particular conversion of the region s populations to Islam appears to have introduced major rearrangements in populations relations through admixture with culturally similar but geographically remote populations leading to genetic similarities between remarkably distant populations like Jordanians Moroccans and Yemenis Conversely other populations like Christians and Druze became genetically isolated in the new cultural environment We reconstructed the genetic structure of the Levantines and found that a pre Islamic expansion Levant was more genetically similar to Europeans than to Middle Easterners 2 The predominantly Muslim populations of Syrians Palestinians and Jordanians cluster on branches with other Muslim populations as distant as Morocco and Yemen 3 Lebanese Christians and all 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Zalloua Pierre A 16 August 2009 Geographical Structure of the Y chromosomal Genetic Landscape of the Levant A coastal inland contrast Annals of Human Genetics 73 6 568 581 doi 10 1111 j 1469 1809 2009 00538 x PMC 3312577 PMID 19686289 Semino O Passarino G Oefner PJ Lin AA Arbuzova S Beckman LE De Benedictis G Francalacci P Kouvatsi A Limborska S Marcikiae M Mika A Mika B Primorac D Santachiara Benerecetti A S Cavalli Sforza L L Underhill P A 2000 The Genetic Legacy of Paleolithic Homo sapiens sapiens in Extant Europeans A Y Chromosome Perspective Science 290 5494 1155 9 Bibcode 2000Sci 290 1155S doi 10 1126 science 290 5494 1155 PMID 11073453 External links edit nbsp Media related to People of Syria at Wikimedia Commons Syrian people Every Culture Photos and images of Syrian people Syrian History Online Collections of images of Eastern Mediterranean people including Syrian people Mideast Image Syrian people Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php 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