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Damascus has the reputation of being the oldest
continuously inhabited city in the world. There is firm
evidence that in the third millennium Damascus was a population center of a civilization
that was considerably prosperous and economically influential. The earliest reference to
the city was found in Ebla (Tall Mardikh) in 1975: on one of the clay tablets discovered
in the record depository of this site was the name Dimaski.
There is no real knowledge, however, of what Damascus was
like in the third millennium. It is unclear what role it played, how prominent it was, and
what the lifestyle of its peoples was. The documented history of Damascus starts half-way
through the second millennium B.C., in the Amorite period. At the end of the second
millennium, the city became the capital of a small, Aramaean principality. The
Aramaeans,
who were a semi-nomadic people who spoke a northern Arabian dialect of Arabic called
Syriac, originated in the Arabian peninsula. They moved northwards in search of new
prosperity and settled in the Fertile Crescent in successive waves. The abundant water
supplies, moderate climate, and fertile soil made Syria an ideal place for settlement and
the Aramaeans established small principalities throughout the area. Being a natural oasis
irrigated by the river Barada, Damascus became a focal point for the Aramaean kingdoms, as
documented in the Old Testament. They say it was known as Dar Mesheq (a
well-watered place) and from this time onwards its size and importance increased.
The Assyrian nation to the east became a threat to
the Aramaean kingdoms in the middle of the first millennium. Political relations between
all the neighboring Aramaean kingdoms were good, and a federation was set up to counter
the hostile advances of the Assyrians. The names of most of the Aramaean kings of Damascus
who led their armies in the defense of the city are known. Ben Hadad II, allied with
Hama,
managed to conquer the armies of Salmanesar III (r. 858-824 B.C.) in the battle of
Quarquar in 853 B.C. Ben Hadads successor, Hazael, could not stand up to
Salmanesars armies as effectively and as a result the Assyrian army reached the
Syrian-Phoenician coast in 841 B.C. After repeated Assyrian incursions, Damascus was
besieged and taken by Hadad Nirari III.
It is most probable that the remains of the Aramaean city lie
buried under the western part of the present day walled city.
This is true because the western part of the city is notably
raised compared to the eastern part, forming a rough tell (a mound which has evolved due
to repeated settlement throughout the centuries). Excavation of the area is impossible
because of the architectural value of the buildings now situated on top of the Aramaean
site. Consequently, information about the layout of the city is sparse.
The major buildings of the Aramaean city were the celebrated
Temple of Hadad and the Royal Palace. The French scholar Sauvaget has mapped a likely plan
of the city in the Aramaean period, showing that most of its main thoroughfares ran on
lines similar to those of the present day Old City. The temple was built on the site that
is now occupied by the great Omayad Mosque, and was dedicated to the storm god, Hadad.
After the capture of Damascus by Tiglath Pileser III, the
Assyrian king, in 732 B.C., sovereignty passed into the hands of the Assyrians and
subsequently to the Neo-Babylonians (Chaldeans) under Nebuchadnezzar in 572 B.C.
Babylonian domination was cut short by the Persian king, Cyrus, who took the city in 538
B.C. and made Damascus the capital and military headquarters of the Persian province of
Syria. The Macedonian general, Alexander the Great, and his armies swept through Syria and
the Persian Empire in 333 B.C., marking a turning point in the history of Damascus: the
beginning of an age of classical civilization in this area that lasted until 630 A.D. In
its long history of domination by outside powers, it was the first time that Damascus had
come under Western control.
Seleucus, Alexanders successor, who came to power in
312 B.C., made Syria the heart of a huge empire that included all of Asia Minor up to Iran
and Afghanistan. He made Antioch his capital, which thus supplanted Damascus as the most
prominent political and economic center in the Fertile Crescent. Successive wars between
the Seleucids and the Egyptian Empire under the Ptolemies meant that the control of
Damascus passed rapidly from one side to the other.
The Greek occupation lasted for approximately 250 years, but
few traces of this occupation remain in present day Damascus. When the Romans arrived,
they built an entirely new city over the ruins of the ancient one.
In 64 B.C., the Roman statesman and general Pompeii annexed
Syria and declared it a province of the Roman Empire. Certain principalities with large
Arab populations, such as Palmyra, were given the right to retain a degree of autonomy.
Until 635 A.D., Damascus and its surrounding area remained under the control of the Roman and Byzantine
authorities. The city flourished as a result of the political stability that accompanied
these administrations. Peace and stability brought about an economic boom, making Damascus
an important cross-road on the east-west trade route. The Damascenes became the mercantile
middlemen of the Roman Empire, marketing and distributing products between Europe and the
Orient. As a result, Damascenes products, such as swords, glassware, and cloth, became
renowned throughout the Empire. This prosperity led to a significant increase in
population and consequently an expansion of the city. In the second century A.D., the
Emperor Hadrian gave Damascus the status of metropolis, and it was raise to the rank of
Colony under Alexander Severus. Under Emperor Diocletian, Damascus became the headquarters
of the Roman army in the eastern Empire. By the end of Roman rule in Syria, Damascus had
gained the distinction of being counted among the ten most prominent cities of the Roman
Empire. The major architectural construction in Damascus during the Roman period was the
Temple of Jupiter. Some of its remains can be seen at the far end of the Souq
al-Hamidiyeh, in front of the Omayad Mosque, on the site of the Temple of Hadad.
It was during this period that Christianity was introduced in
Damascus. It had already taken root by the time St. Paul (Saul of Tarsus) arrived in
Damascus in approximately 34 A.D. It was on the road to Damascus that he had his vision
that left him blinded and convinced him that he should not carry out his mission to arrest
the Christians of Damascus. Paul was cured of his blindness by Ananias, who was later
canonized. Damascus became an important center for Christians and the Bishop of Damascus
became the second most important ecclesiastical figure after the Patriarch of Antioch.
The creation of the second imperial capital of the Roman
Empire in Constantinople (Istanbul) in 330 A.D. and the emperors growing tolerance
of Christianity marked the beginning of a new era in Damascus. With the break-up of the
Roman Empire in ca. 395 A.D., Syria became a part of the eastern province of the Byzantine
Empire. Strategically placed between Anatolia and Egypt, the two most important provinces
of the Byzantine Empire, Damascus did not lose the status it had acquired during the
period of Roman rule. Byzantine Damascus remained much the same as it had during the Roman
period, except for the mass construction of churches. The most significant change was the
transformation of the Temple of Jupiter into a cathedral dedicated to St. John the Baptist
in the latter part of the fourth century A.D.
635 A.D. was a
turning point in the history of Damascus. In March of that year, the city faced the
onslaught of the Islamic armies led by Khalid ibn al-Walid. The Muslim invaders had
traveled north from the Arabian peninsula, inspired by their new religion, and had come
across little opposition on their way. Damascus was now subject to an empire of Eastern
origin once again, after a thousand years of Western control. There was mass conversion to
Islam, and Muslims and Christians are said to have prayed side by side in the Cathedral of
St. John until the Muslims insisted on building the Great Mosque in the same place. The
first decades of Islamic rule in Damascus are considered the golden age of the
city. Damascus became in effect the capital of an empire that stretched from the shores of
the Atlantic Ocean to the Indus River basin.
In 661 A.D., Damascus was made the capital of the empire by
Muawiya Abu Sufian, who established himself as the fifth Caliph, or successor to the
Prophet, and founded the Omayad Dynasty. This dynasty ruled Damascus for less than a
hundred years, but made a significant contribution to the cultural and artistic heritage
of the city. Although there are no remains of the splendid palaces that were built by the
Omayad Caliphs, it is believed that over one hundred such structures were constructed
during this period. Architectural plans of these palaces show that they had magnificent
interiors with wall paneling made of the finest woods inlaid with ivory and mother of
pearl. The central core of the city remained behind the old city walls, but suburbs like
al-Shaghour, Midan, Qanawat, and al-Neiral sprung up to incorporate the expanded
population.
In 750, the golden age of Damascus came to an abrupt end. The
Abbasids, a powerful Arab family of Meccan origin that had settled in eastern Iraq,
swept down from the east with their armies and stormed Damascus with a vengeance, putting
an end to Omayad rule. The new rulers, intent on eradicating all traces of Omayad rule,
set about defacing the city and tearing down the beautiful buildings that had been
constructed by the Omayads. The Abbasids transferred the capital of the Islamic
Empire to Baghdad, and Damascus became nothing more than a provincial town with a
declining population and no political role to play. During the next three centuries, her
physical appearance was further scarred by successive assaults and civil strife. Most of
the city was burnt down, including the Omayad Mosque.
Political developments in 878 led to Tulunid rule in
Damascus. A Turk from Bukhara, Ahmad ibn Tulun, was appointed in 868 as governor of Egypt
by the Abbasid Caliph, and he eventually became independent of Abbasid
authority except for the payment of an annual tribute to the Caliph. Having established
himself in Egypt, he decided to extend his rule to Syria, and took Damascus in 878.
>From this time until the take-over of the Fatamids in 969, Damascus witnessed a series
of political comings and goings which were mostly accompanied by violence,
shortages, and general instability. During their century in power, the Fatamids in turn
were under constant attack by the Qarmatians, Turks, Byzantines, Mirdasids, and
Seljuks.
The constant physical batterings that Damascus suffered during this period undermined the
stream-lined city planning that was the legacy of Roman and Greek rule. Self-contained and
crowded quarters of the city established themselves randomly, and each quarter established
an Ahdath, or local militia, to defend its people from the others.
The Fatamids finally lost control of Damascus to the Seljuks,
a nomadic Turkish tribe originally from Turkestan, in 1076. For a time, Syria was split
into northern and southern provinces ruled by two Seljuk brothers; Damascus was the
capital of the smaller and weaker southern province (Aleppo was the capital of the north).
Starting with Seljuk rule, Damascus experienced an artistic and architectural revival.
Architects were commissioned to rebuild the city, which had fallen into considerable
disrepair. The Citadel of Damascus was built in 1078 to house the ruler of Damascus and
provide a military stronghold.
The First Crusade, which began in 1096, gave Syria the choice
of siding with the Christians to repel the Fatamids, who were again attacking from the
south, or siding with the hated Fatamids against the Christians, who captured one of the
holiest cities in Islam, Jerusalem, in 1099. A short truce with the Christians ended when
the armies of Damascus allied with Iraqi forces under Sharif al-Din Mawdud of Mosul to
defeat Baldwin I near Lake Tiberias in 1113.
Nur
al-Din (al-Ayyubi) appeared on the scene with his Muslim armies at the time of the Second
Crusade. At the time, Damascus was heavily besieged by Baldwin III, Louis VII, and Conrad
III. After Nur al-Din drove off the Crusaders, he made Damascus his military headquarters
and achieved a rapprochement with the Fatamids. Nur al- Din was succeeded briefly by his
eleven-year-old son, al-Malik Salih Ismael. But the boys regent tried to usurp his
power, and was put down by Salah al-Din, who had been appointed Vizier by Nur al-Din and
ruled Egypt. Salah al-Din founded the Ayyubid Dynasty in Damascus and, by his death in
1193, he had extended his control over an empire that included Syria, Upper Mesopotamia,
the Hijaz, Nubia, the Yemen, and Egypt. After Salah al-Dins death, the empire was
briefly split between his three sons, but united by al-Malik al-Adil, who transferred the
Ayyubid capital to Cairo. By 1229, the Crusader leader, Frederick II, had secured
Jerusalem, Bethlehem, and Nazareth, and Ayyubid rule had degenerated into a series of
dynastic disputes. In 1260, Damascus was overrun by the Tartar hordes of
Houlagou, but was
quickly recaptured by the new rulers of Egypt, the Mamlukes, led by Sultan
Baybars.
The period between the Mamluke take-over in 1260 and the
invasion of Tamurlane in 1400 was one of relative prosperity for Damascus. One after
another, the Crusader states fell to the Mamlukes, and the newly acquired territory was
incorporated into the Mamluke Kingdom and ruled from Cairo. The expansion of the city was
the most marked physical change that Damascus underwent during this period.
In 1400, while the Damascene armies were in the south, in an
unsuccessful revolt against Mamluke rule, Tamurlane took advantage of the citys lack
of defenses. His Mongol hordes almost completely destroyed the city and killed everyone
they could capture. After a ransom of one million pieces of gold was paid, Tamurlane
departed the ruins of Damascus, taking the surviving armorers with him. From thence
forward, the famous Damascus swords were to be manufactured in Samarkand.
From 1516 to 1918, Damascus was part of the Ottoman Empire.
Suleiman the Magnificent, who ruled from 1520 until 1566, divided Syria into the three vilayets
(provinces) of Damascus, Aleppo, and Tripoli. Damascus became the administrative
headquarters of the vilayet, which included the sanjaks of Gaza, Nablus,
Palmyra, Sidon, Beirut, and Jerusalem. In 1634, the Ottomans were forced to cede
governorship of Syria to a very powerful Lebanese warlord, Fakhr al-Din al-Maeni. He ruled
the area with very little interference from the Ottoman government in Constantinople until
Ottoman forces based in Damascus were ordered to destroy his power base. They were
successful, and the Ottomans tightened control over the region. However, the 18th century
governors, appointed from the Azem family, still could not end the armed incursions from
Lebanon. In 1771, the Mamlukes captured Damascus once again, but they departed shortly
thereafter. This left the city open to conquest by Ahmad Pasha al-Jazzar of Acre, who
forced the Ottoman Sultan to recognize him as governor of Damascus.
The 19th century witnessed the continued decline of
the Ottoman Empire. In Damascus, the Ottoman governor, Selim Pasha, was executed by the
townspeople in 1831 and, in 1832, Turkish forces were driven out of Syria by Ibrahim
Pasha, the son of the self-proclaimed ruler of Egypt, Mohammed Ali. Damascus was
once again ruled by Egypt, until the British assisted the Ottomans in driving Ibrahim
Pasha out in 1840. Damascus grew to twice its former size during the 19th century.
During World War I, the Ottoman Empire sided with the Central
Powers and lost. Syrian nationalists, however, conspired against the Turks and assisted
Faisal, the son of the Sherif of Mecca, in capturing Damascus with British support. At the
end of the war, the Kingdom of Syria, which included Lebanon and Palestine, was
proclaimed, and Faisal was crowned king. The kingdom was short-lived, however, as the
British had made a separate, secret agreement with the French, giving the latter the
right to control Syria after the war. The newly-formed League of Nations gave
the French the Mandate for Syria, and the French forced Faisal out of power in 1920. The
people of Syria revolted against the French in 1925, 1936, and 1945, but didnt
regain their freedom from foreign rule until 1946. Damascus suffered heavy bombardments in
the last year of the French Mandate.
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