|
Early
History of Damascus
Very
early history
The
Aramaeans and the Assyrians
The
Persians and the Seleucids
The
Romans and the Byzantines
The
Omayyads
The
Abbasids
The
Fatimids
The
Seljuks and the Atabegs
The
Ayyubids
The
Memluks
The
Ottoman Turks
Post
World War I
Indpendence
Very
Early History
Damascus
is known to be the oldest continuously
inhabited city in the world. There is firm
evidence that in the third millennium BC,
Damascus was a population center of a
civilization that was considerably
prosperous and economically influential.
The earliest reference to the city was
found in the archaeological site of Ebla
in 1975; where the word "Damaski"
was found on one of the clay tablets. Some
historians believe that the city actually
dates back to the seventh millennium BC.

Aramaeans
and Assyrians
However,
there is no knowledge about how Damascus
was in the third millennium BC. The
documented history of the city starts in
the second millennium BC, in the Amorite
period, when Damascus became the capital
of a small Aramaean principality.
Aramaeans spoke a northern Arabian dialect
of Arabic, later called Syriac or Aramaic.
They originated from the Arabian Peninsula
and moved northwards to settle in the
Fertile Crescent. The moderate climate and
fertile soil of Syria made it an ideal
place for the settlement of the Aramaeans.
Being a natural oasis irrigated by the
River Barada, Damascus became an
increasingly important city in the
Aramaean Kingdom, as mentioned in the Old
Testament. It's said that city used to be
known as "Dar Meshq", which
stands for "a well-watered
place".
Threat
to the Aramaean kingdoms came from the
east, where the Assyrians of Mesopotamia
were trying to expand their territory.
After several battles, the Assyrian armies
managed to reach the Syrian coast and in
841 BC, Damascus was besieged and taken by
King Hadad Niari III.
It
is most probable that the remains of the
Aramaean town lie buried under the eastern
part of the old walled city. However,
excavation of the area is almost
impossible because of the architectural
value of the monuments and buildings
standing there today. It is beleived that
the major buildings of the Aramaean era
were the Temple of Hadad and the Royal
Palace. The Temple was built on the site
now occupied by the Great Omayyad Mosque,
and was dedicated to Hadad, the god of
storm. Ruins believed to have belonged to
the Temple were found in 1949 during
restorations in the Omayyad Mosque.

Persians
and Seleucids
Sovereignty
over Damascus passed from the Assyrians to
the Chaldaeans (Neo-Babylonians) under
King Nebuchadnezzar in 572 BC. Babylonian
domination came to an end in 538 BC, when
Cyrus, King of Persia, took the city and
established it as the capital of the
Persian province of Syria. The year 333 BC
was a turning point in Syria's history; in
this year, the armies of Alexander the
Great swept through the near east, marking
the start of an age of classical
civilization that lasted until 630 AD. It
was the first time that Damascus came
under western control.
After
the breakup of the Macedonian Empire upon
the death of Alexander the Great in 323
BC, Damascus had to face the instability
caused by the struggle between the
Seleucid and Ptolemaic empires.
Seleucus,
Alexander's successor, made Syria the
heart of an empire that included all Asia
Minor, up to Iran and Afghanistan. He made
Antioch the capital, but Damascus remained
to be the most prominent political and
economic center in the Fertile Crescent.
During the wars between the Seleucids and
the Ptolemaic Egyptian Empire, the control
over Damascus passed rapidly from one side
to the other.
The
Greek era lasted for 250 years, but left
very few traces in Damascus. There was
much interaction between the local
inhabitants of Damascus and the new Greek
community, which resulted in Damascenes
adopting many aspects of the Greek
culture, especially in social and economic
fields. The decay of the Seleucid Kingdom
allowed the Nabataeans to conquer Damascus
in the beginning of the first century BC.
In 72 BC, the armies of Armenia took over
Damascus for a short while before the
Roman coquest.

Romans
and Byzantines
In
64 BC, the Roman General Pompey annexed
Syria and declared it as a province of the
Roman Empire. While some Syrian
principalities, like Palmyra, were granted
a certain degree of autonomy, Damascus was
under full control of Roman and Byzantine
authorities. The city flourished as a
result of political stability and economic
growth that accompanied the expansion of
the Roman Empire. Damascus gained a
significant economic importance as the
crossroads on the east-west tarde route.
Damascene products such as swords,
glassware and cloth became renowned
throughout the Empire. This prosperity led
to further expansion of the city.
In
the second century AD, Emperor Hadrian
gave Damascus the status of Metropolis,
and the city began to play a greater role
in the politics of the Empire. Under
Alexander Severus, it was raised to the
rank or Roman Colony, and under Emperor
Diocletian, it became the headquarters of
the Roman armies in the eastern Empire.
It
was during this period that Christianity
was introduced to Damascus, shortly after
the death of Christ. It had already taken
root there by the time St. Paul arrived in
Damascus in 34 AD. It was on the road to
Damascus that he had the vision not to
carry out his mission of arresting all
Christians in Damascus. He converted to
Christianity and was cured of blindness by
a native Damascene, Ananias. Damascus soon
became an important center of Christianity
and its bishop used to be considered the
most important ecclesiastical figure after
the Bishop of Antioch. A theological
school was built in Damascus, attracting
scholars such as Sophronius, Andrew of
Crete and St. John of Damascus.
The
Romans incorporated the Aramaean and Greek
sectors of the city to form into a uniform
city plan and built a broad wall
encircling the whole area. Seven gates
were built at intervals along the wall and
were named after the stars in the
constellation of the Seven Sisters, the
Pleiades. Damascus was divided by the
Street Called Straight, which was
mentioned in the bible in connection with
St. Paul's conversion to Christianity. The
Street connected and still connects the
Eastern Gate (Bab Sharqi) to Bab al-Jabieh.
Along the length of the Street was an
aqueduct supported by columns. A covered
colonnade stood along its both sides of
the Street, sheltering warehouses and
stores.
The
major construction in Damascus during the
Roman era was the Temple of Jupiter. Some
of its remains are still standing near the
enterance of the Omayyad Moaque and Souk
al-Hamidieh. It was built on the same site
were the Aramaean temple once was. Another
major construction was the Forum, located
at the eastern side of the Great Mosque. A
colonnaded street connected the Forum to
the Temple of Jupiter, and its columns can
still be found in al-Qaymariyyeh quarter.
With
the breakup of the Roman Empire in 395 AD,
Syria became a part of the eastern
province of the Byzantine Empire. Under
the new rulers, Damascus maintained its
economic and strategic significance. To
defend their eastern border against
Persian attacks, the Byzantines fortified
Damascus and turned it into a military
headquarters, but they were still not able
to face the continuous assaults from the
east, so they entrusted the defense of
Syria to the Ghassanids.
The
Ghassanids were an Arabian tribe that had
converted to Christianity in the fourth
century. They assisted the Byzantine
governorsof Damascus and defended the area
against the Sassanid Persians. However, in
612, the Persian king Chosraes II invaded
Damascus, and the Persians ruled the city
until 627, when Byzantine rule was
restored.
Byzantine
Damascus remained much the same as it had
during the Roman period, except for the
mass construction of churches and the
transformation of the Temple of Jupiter
into a cathedral dedicated to St. John the
Baptist in the fourth century. In addition
to this cathedral, 16 churches were built
in and around Damascus. The Church of al-Mosallaba
was built near the Eastern Gate at the
site where the Chapel of Ananias now
stands. The site has been chosen because
it's thought to be the place where St.
Paul was cured of his blindness after his
vision on the road to Damascus. Two
churches were also built in this area: The
Church of al-Maqsala'at and the Church of
Mariam (Mary), which was replaced by the
Maryamiyyah Church which still stands
there today. There are descriptions of
other churches, but no remains of which
were found.
The
only notable Ghassanid architectural
contribution to Damascus was al-Baris
Citadel, which was built in the center of
the city on the Street Called Straight.
There are also descriptions of a palace
for Ghassanid princes.

The
Omayyads
The
year 635 was a turning point in the
history of Damascus. In March 635, Muslim
armies under Khaled Ibn al-Walid entered
Damascus and annexed Syria to the quickly
expanding Muslim empire. The Muslims had
traveled from the Arabian Peninsula
northwards, inspired by their new
religion, facing little resistance on
their way. But Damascus proved to be more
than an obstacle to the invaders; the city
held against attacks for six months before
a committee of Damascene notables
surrendered the city to the Muslim
leaders.
Islam
brought to Damascus a new set of cultural,
economic and social rules. The way of life
changed in accordance with the teachings
of the Quran, the holy book of Islam.
There was mass conversion to Islam, but
Jews and Christians, who now became a
minority, were treated with tolerance by
the Muslims. Christians and Muslims prayed
side by side in the Cathedral of St. John
the Baptist, before Muslim rulers decided
to build the Great Mosque on the same
site.
In
661, a golden age started for Damascus
when Muawiyah Bin Abi Sufian established
himself as the fifth caliph or successor
of the prophet, founding the Omayyad
Dynasty that continued to rule the Muslim
empire for about one century. Muawiyah
made Damascus the capital of his empire,
which was expanding to the east and the
west. Soon, Damascus became the most
important cultural, economic and political
center in an empire that stretched from
Spain and shores of the Atlantic Ocean to
Iran and India.
Each
of the 14 Omayyad caliphs that ruled
Damascus, made their own contribution to
the city, either by building mosques and
palaces, patronizing arts and sciences, or
developing the administrative system. The
first palace they built was Qasr al Amara
or Qasr al Khadra (the Green Palace), so
named because of its splendid green dome.
The palace was built very close to the
Great Mosque and it was used by most
Omayyad caliphs. It was destroyed after
the Abbasids took over the city, so
nothing remains of it today.
Omayyads
built tens of palaces, some of them
outside the city walls as country
residences. The most prolific builder
amongst the Omayyad Caliphs is said to
have been al-Walid (who was responsible
for building the Great Mosque), Hisham and
Yazid. The Omayyad rulers were also
responsible for the introduction of new
styles of art and architecture which were
mainly inspired by Islam. These new styles
combined with Byzantine and Persian
influences to produce the Great Omayyad
Mosque, Damascus' greatest monument. The
Mosque, built between 705 and 715, was the
first of its type and became the blueprint
for other mosques throughout the Islamic
world.
The
center of the city remained behind the
city walls, but suburbs like Shaghour,
Midan and Qanawat were built to
incorporate the growing population. As
houses crowded the limited area of the
walled city, Damascus became a labyrinth
of passageways rather than the Roman
streamlined city. It was served by an
advanced water supply system built by
Yazid, the son of Muawiyah. A canal,
called Nahr Yazid (Yazid's River) was
constructed to divert water from River
Barada to the houses inside and outside
the walls, and to supply Hammams (Baths)
that sprang up all over the city in that
period.
To
the south and west of the Old City were
two large open spaces. One was Haql al-Husa
(field of pebbles) and the other was Marj
al-Akhdar (Green Meadow), the site where
Damascus International Fair is held today.
In these two sites, Omayyad princes spent
their leisure times, watching horse races
and various tournaments.

The
Abbasids
In
750 the golden age of Damascus came to an
abrupt end. The Abbasids, a powerful Arab
family that had settled in Iran and led
the opposition against the Omayyad rule,
swept from the east and occupied Damascus,
killing the Omayyad Caliph and putting an
end to the Omayyad Caliphate. The new
rulers, with the aim of eradicating all
traces of the Omayyad rule, set about
defacing Damascus and tearing down all the
great buildings constructed by the
Omayyads. They moved the capital of the
Islamic empire to Baghdad, and Damascus
became just a provincial town with a
declining population and a declining role
in politics and culture. The next three
centuries were marked by successive
assaults and civil strife, and Damascus
continued to lose its strategic importance
in the empire.
Most
of the city was burnt down, including the
anterior of the Great Mosque. No effort
was made to maintain the beautiful
buildings left by the Omayyads. An Abbasid
palace was built for the city's governor
on the site of Qasr al-Khadra; it was
destroyed in a riot in 1069.
Political
developments in the Empire in 878 led to
Tulunid rule in Damascus. Ahmad Bin Tulun,
a Turk from Central Asia, was appointed in
868 as a governor of Egypt by the Abbasid
Caliph, but he soon proclaimed
independence. He later decided to expand
his rule and took Damascus in 878. From
this time until the takeover of the
Fatimids, Damascus witnessed political
disturbances that were usually accompanied
by violence and shortages. The city was
easily overrun by the Ikhshidis then the
Hamdanid dynasty of Aleppo. The Ikhshidis
regained the city but in 969, they were
driven out by the powerful Fatimids of
Egypt. It took the Fatimids only six
months to establish themselves as the new
rulers of Damascus.

The
Fatimids
During
their century-long rein, the Fatimids had
to face internal opposition and external
enemies, including the Qarmatians, the
Turks, the Byzantines and the Seljuks. The
most serious internal revolt occured in
975, when Atfakin, a Turkish general,
managed to take over the governorship of
Damascus. He was ousted after two years
when the Fatimids conquered the city.
Political instability resulted in great
economic hardships for the people of
Damascus. There was a sharp decrease in
the population with the increasing poverty
and inflation.
All
this had effect on the city planning.
Houses were built close together and
quarters built fortified gates and fences
for protection. Young men of each quarter
formed local militias called "Ahdath"
to defend inhabitants against aggressive
neighbours. The division of the old city
into separate quarters led to a
significant increase in the number of
mosques, as each quarter wanted to build
its own. By the 12th century, there were
242 mosques in the Old City alone. The
Fatimids left no great artistic heritage
behind.

The
Seljuks and the Atabegs
In
1076, the Fatimids lost control over
Damascus to the Seljuks, a Turkish tribe
that converted to Islam in the 10th
century. Syria fell victim to rivalries
between Seljuk princes, the country was
split into two to satisfy the ambitions of
the two Seljuk brothers, Redwan and Duqaq.
Ridwan governed northern Syria and Aleppo,
while Duqaq became the ruler of Damascus.
He was a weak ruler, and when he died, the
Atabeg dynasty, established by Tughtakin,
took over.
The
Assasins, under their leader Bahram, were
the greatest threat to Tughtakin. The
Assasins carried out a series of political
assasinations in an attempt to take power,
and the Atabeg leader had to give Bahram
the castle Banyas (western Syria) just to
get rid of him and his threats.
Another
more serious threat came from Europe this
time. In 1069 the First Crusade was
launched, starting two centuries of
conflict in the Middle East. By 1099, the
Crusaders had taken over Jerusalem, the
city with religious significance for both
Muslims and Christians. The truce that
Tughtakin held with the Crusaders did not
last long; in 1113, an army of Damascenes
and followers of Sharaf Addin Mawdud of
Musul, defeated the Crusader King Baldwin
I near lake Tiberias.
The
period up until the arrival of Nour Ed-Din
in 1154 was marked by attacks, counter
attacks and seiges. Nour Ed-Din appeared
on the scene at the time of the Second
Crusade, when Damascus was beseiged by
Crusaders under the leadership of three
European kings: Baldwin III, Louis VII and
Conrad III. Nour Ed-Din defeated the
Crusader armies, driving them back from
the walls of Damascus. The people of the
city opened their gates and welcomed their
new ruler and his armies. He used Damascus
as the base for his military campaigns.
His victories led to a rapprochement with
the Fatimid Caliph in Cairo, and soon
Syria and Egypt were united.
The
Seljuk and Atabeg eras brought an artistic
and architectural revival to Damascus. A
citadel was built in 1078 to house the
ruler of the city as well as to provide a
military stronghold. Tens of schools (Madrassas)
were built across the city. Nour Ed-Din
was a great patron of art and
architecture. Many monuments carried his
name and some still stand today: The
Maristan (Hospital) of Nour Ed-Din, the
Hammam (Bath) of Nour Ed-Din and the
Madrassa (School) of Nour Ed-Din. He also
ordered the construction of a Shams al-Muluk
Palace and the renovation of the city's
walls and gates.

The
Ayyubids
Nour
Ed-Din died in 1174 and was succeeded by
his eleven-year-old son, whose regent
tried to take power. However, his plans
were thwarted by the arrival of Salah
Ed-Din (Saladin). Saladin had been
appointed by Nour Ed-Din as a Vizier and
commander of the Syrian forces in Egypt.
He had gained a reputation of being a
skilled military and political leader.
Fearful that the city would fall into the
hands of a weak leader, Saladin took over
Damascus, starting the rule of the Ayyubid
dynasty.
After
successive military victories over the
Crusaders and the liberation of Jerusalem,
Saladin was seen as the champion of the
Arabs and the arch enemy of the Crusader
invaders. By his death in 1193, he had
expanded his control over an empire that
included Syria, northern Mesopotamia,
Hijaz, Nubia, Yemen and Egypt. The irony
was that when he died after four years of
successful campaigns against the
Crusaders, he left a fortune of no more
than 47 dinars.
After
the death of Saladin, his empire was
divided between his three sons. One of
them, Al-Afdal became the ruler of
Damascus, but was overthrown by his uncle,
Al-Malik Al-Adil, who moved the Ayyubid
capital to Cairo. When Al-Adil died, the
power of the Ayyubids was weakened by
family feuds that allowed the Crusaders to
reoccupy some cities that had been
liberated by Saladin. By 1229, the
Crusaders had regained control over
Jerusalem, Nazareth and the Ayyubids were
still being weakened by dynastic disputes.
In
1260, Damascus was occupied by another
enemy, this time coming from the east. The
Tartars under their leader, Houlagou,
besieged the city for one month before
taking over the city. However, they did
not stay for long, as they were driven out
by the Memluks, led by Sultan Baybars. The
Ayyubids were to weak to resist, and
Damascus easily fell to the Memluks.

The
Memluks
The
period between the Memluk takeover in 1260
and the invasion of Tamurlane in 1400 was
one of a relative prosperity to Damascus.
After driving the Tartars out, Sultan
Baybars established Memluk sovereignty
over the city and continued to fight
against the Crusaders. One after another,
the Crusader strongholds fell into the
Memluk hands and were annexed to the
Memluk empire which was ruled from Cairo.
A
new sophisticated administration system
was introduced. Two governors were
appointed to run the city affairs: The
Governor of the Citadel was appointed
directly from the central government in
Cairo, while his subordinate, the Governor
of the City, was appointed by Memluk
princes and notables who resided in
Damascus. An army of officials was
appointed to help the Governor of the
City, and thus, he was able to intrigue
against the Governor of the Citadel.
Many
competed for the governorship, and the
position passed into different hands 60
times during the period between 1312 and
1340. However, this was a period of great
stability and prosperity under the
governorship of Tankiz. His overthrow in
1340 marked the beginning of Memluk
decline as Damascus did not find another
strong leader that can bring back
political stability. At the end of the
14th century, the governor of Damascus,
Tanabik, made a fatal mistake by launching
a military campaign against his Memluk
overlords in Cairo.
Atabik
left Damascus leading is armies against
Cairo, only to be defeated. At the same
time he lost the now vulnerable Damascus
to the Mongols under the leadership of
Tanurlane. The notorious leader of the
Tartars did not spare the city nor its
people. The stories of how he put all male
population to the sword, raped and
imprisoned women, looted and destroyed
mosques and schools, and burnt down much
of the city, had become legendary.
Tamurlane only left after the people of
Damascus bought their freedom back for the
sum of a million pieces of gold. He took
the celebrated Damascene craftsmen back
with him to his capital, Samarkand, and
from that time on, the Damascus blades
were manufactured in that city.
Before
the invasion of Tamurlane in 1400,
Damascus was a flourishing city. As the
second most important city in the Memluk
empire, the development of Damascus was
put high on the list of Memluk priorities.
Ideally situated on the trade route
between east and west, the city attracted
foreign traders who particularly impressed
by the quality of its luxury items that
were being produced for Memluk Sultans,
such as silk brocades, fine glass,
copperware and brassware.
The
Memluks were also great contributors to
the Damascus' architectural heritage. The
city grew rapidly with the new wealth
generated. There was little room for
building in the Old City, and most Memluk
buildings that can be seen today are found
outside the Old City. Salhiyyeh quarter
underwent a surge of building and
developed into a twon of its own, with 500
mosques, 10 khans (motels), 20 baths and a
number of different markets. The map of
Damascus at the time shows that, unlike in
former periods, the city was completely
surrounded by suburbs.
The
Memluks built lots of mosques and
introduced the idea of the minaret as an
essential element in a mosque. Before this
period, only the Great Omayyad Mosque and
few other mosques had minarets. The most
notable exapmles of Memluk minarets in
Damascus are those of Hisham al-Qali, al-Aqsab
and Al-Sabuniyyeh mosques. One of the
major constructions of the Memluk era was
Al-Ablaq Palace, which was built by Sultan
Baybars on the site where the Tekiyyeh
Sulaymaniyeh mosque stands today. A
thriving commercial area grew around the
Palace and was called al-Marjeh, it's the
same site known today as the Marjeh Square
or the Martyrs Square.
Unfortunately,
Memluk Damascus never recovered from the
blow that Temurlane gave it. The city
declined with successive shortages,
epidemics and constant political
instability and attacks from Bedouin
raiding parties. The Memluks could no
longer hold on when their armies were
defeated by the Ottoman Turks under Sultan
Selim I in northern Syria. In 1516, the
Ottomans took control over Damascus.

The
Ottomans
From
1516 to 1918, Damascus was under Ottoman
occupation. The Ottoman dynasty was
established in Turkey in 1299, they
started invading the weak, divided Arab
states in Syria and Iraq, and by mid 16th
century, they managed to dominate large
parts of the Near East.
A
Memluk defector became the first Ottoman
governor of Damascus. Janbirdi al-Ghazali
helped Sultan Selim capture Damascus, and
was rewarded for his betrayal by giving
him the governorship of the city. When
Selim died, Ghazali proclaimed himself
Sultan of Syria, but his ambitions were
stopped by Sultan Suleiman the
Magnificent, who quickly intervened. Sine
then, governors of Damascus were directly
appointed from the capital of the Ottoman
Empire, Constantinople (Istanbul).
Suleiman
the Magnificent divided the Fertile
Crescent into 3 vilayets (provinces):
Damascus, Aleppo and Tripoli. Damascus
became the administrative capital of the
vilayet that included the sanjaks (smaller
administrative areas) of Gaza, Nablus,
Palmyra, Sido, Beirut and Jerusalem.
In
1634, the Ottomans were forced to cede
rule over Syria to the very powerful
warlord of Mount Lebanon, Fakhr Eddin el-Ma'ni.
He governed the area with very little
interference from the Ottoman authorities
until the central government in
Costantipole ordered its armies based in
Damascus to destroy his power bases in
Lebanon. The Ottomans won and Damascus was
reinforced with Ottoman troops. The
governors of Damascus, who in the 18th
century were chosen from the Damascene
Azem family, were unable to put an end to
armed incursions from Lebanon. Another
threat came from the Memluks of Egypt, who
sent armed forces that succeeded in
capturing Damascus in 1771. The Memluks
left shortly after, but left the city to
the power thriving Ahmad Al-Jazzar, who
entrenched himself in Syria and forced the
Ottoman Sultan to recognize him as the
governor of Damascus.
The
19th century witnessed a further decline
in the Ottoman Empire. The governor of
Damascus, Selim Pasha, was killed by his
townspeople in 1831. Next year, Ottoman
forces were driven out of Syria by Ibrahim
Pasha, son of Muhammad Ali, the
self-proclaimed ruler of Egypt. Damascus
was subject to enlightened and reformist
Egyptian administration between 1832 and
1840. Only British intervention was able
to stop Ibrahim Pasha's conquests, and
after fierce naval battles, he was forced
to return to Egypt and Ottoman rule was
restored in Syria.
The
foreign powers that helped restoring the
Ottoman rule in Syria took advantage of
the weak Ottoman administration to achieve
their own economic aims. Foreign merchants
poured to Damascus to buy raw materials
that were processed by the new machines of
the industrial revolution. The British had
the first foreign consulate opened in
Damascus in 1834 and other western powers
followed soon after.
During
World War I, the Ottomans sided with
Germany, and Syria was drawn into the
conflict. An Arab revolution against
Turkish rule started from Hijaz under
leadership of Sherfi Hussein of Mecca. In
1918, Arab troups under his son. Faisal,
entered Damascus along with British
forces, marking the end of a four-century
long Ottoman occupation.
Damascus
witnessed great changes during the Ottoman
era. Most building took place during the
first century of the Ottoman rule, when
the empire was economically and militarily
strong. Immediately after taking Damascus,
Sultan Selim I built the Tkiyyeh Mosque.
Similar projects were unbdertaken by
Darwish Pasha in 1574 and Sinan Pasha in
1586. Darwish Pasha was also responsible
for building the Silk Souk, a bath and a
khan inside the walled Old City. In the
same period, Murad Pasha built another
souk that was crowned by a huge dome
supported by remaining columns of the
Roman Temple of Jupiter, but this souk was
later destroyed by fire and no longer
exists today.
The
governorship of the wealthy Azem family in
the 18th century brought a building bloom
to Damascus. Tens of baths, khans, schools
and souks were built, most of which still
remain today. Ismael Pasha built the
school in Souk al-Khayyatin (tailors'
market) and his successor, Suleiman Pasha
built the khan in the Street Called
Straight in 1732. Rge finest Azem-sponsored
buildings in Damascus owe their existence
to Assaad Pasha al-Azem, whose
architectural legacy includes the Azem
Palace, a typical example of luxury
Damascene houses.
Damascus
grew to twice its former size during the
19th century. The city was streamlined
with new avenues, and many new souks were
constructed in residential areas,
including Souk al-Hamidiyyeh, Souk Medhat
Pasha, Souk Nazem Pasha and Souk Ali
Pasha, all named after the governors who
ordered their construction.

Post
World War I
Damascus
became a major center of Arab nationalism
in the early 20th century. In April 1915,
a committee of Damascus leaders reached a
secret agreement with Prince Faisal, son
of Sherif Hussein of Mecca, in which they
pledged to join forces against the Ottoman
authorities. Negotiations then ensued
between Britain and Sherif Hussein, and an
agreement was reached whereby Britain
guaranteed the independence of Syria, Iraq
and the Arabian Peninsula after the war
ends.
In
1916, the Great Arab Revolution, led by
Sherif Hussein, was declared. On May 6,
tens of national Syrian leaders were
accused of spying and allying with foreign
powers, and were hanged in Beirut in
Marjeh Square in Damascus. Since then, the
square is known as the Martyrs' Square. In
1918, Arab and British troops entered
Damascus, ending four centuries of Ottoman
rule. In the same year, a Syrian general
conference declared Syria (including
current-day Lebanon, Palestine and Jordan)
an independent kingdom under King Faisal.
The
newly won independence was short lived,
however. In 1916, it was revealed that
Britain and France had secretly concluded
an agreement, known as the Sykes-Picot
agreement, in which these two major powers
carved the Middle East up into
"spheres of influence". Ignoring
the guarantees of independence promised to
King Faisal earlier, the French army
landed in Syria, imposed a mandate, and
forced King Faisal into exile.
Syrians
tried to resist. A poorly equipped army
under Defense Minister Youssef Al-Azmah
fought the French near the village of
Maysaloon. The French acheived an easy
victory, and Azmah was killed in battle.
Other revolutions that sprang up in many
parts of Syria were soon repressed by the
new occupiers.
But
still, Syrians did not accept the mandate.
In 1925, the Great Syrian Revolt started
from Jabal Al-Arab, southern Syria.
Battles quickly spread to Damascus, and
the French warplanes bombed the capital,
causing much damage in parts of the Old
City. In 1941, during World War II, France
recognized Syrian independence, but France
kept its military presence on Syrian soil,
promising full independence after the war.
When the French did not live up to their
promise, Syrian revolted again. Damascus
came under heavy bombardment again in May
1945 and the Parliament building was
targeted. Growing international pressure
forced France to leave. On April 17, 1946,
the last French troops left Syrian soil.

Independence
The
early years of independence were marked
with political instability and successive
coups d'etat. The national government of
President Shukri Al-Qouwatli was
overthrown in 1949 by Hussni Al-Zaim, who
established a military dictatorial rule.
Five other coups occured between 1949 and
1954. Syria also had to face regional
instability. In 1948, the State of Israel
was declared on Arab Palestinian
territory. Syria was among Arab countries
that sent troops to Palestine to prevent
the creation of Israel. However, Arabs
were defeated and armistice agreements
were signed with Israel. It was only the
start of the long Arab-Israeli conflict.
In
1958, Syria and Egypt were united under
the United Arab Republic (UAR). The unity
came to a soon end in 1961, when Syrian
military took power in Damascus. In 1963,
a new era started with the coup d'etat of
Baath Arab Socialist Party, known today as
the March Revolution. The Baath continued
to rule Syria ever since.
In
1967, Arabs and Israel went into war when
Israel invaded Sinai of Egypt and the West
Bank of Jordan on June 5. Four days later,
Israeli troops broke through Syrian
defense lines in the Golan Heights, and
Syria lost the strategic Heights to
Israel.
The
early years of Baathist rule was also
charectarized by instability and
inter-party conflicts. Political stability
was only achieved on the accession of
power of President Hafez al-Assad on
November 16, 1970. Assad was later elected
President. In October 1973, he led the
country into war to liberate the occupied
Golan Heights. During the fighting, and
while its troops were suffering great
losses on the frontlines, Israel sent
warplanes to bomb civilian targets in
Damascus and other Syrian cities, causing
damage and human losses. Although the war
did not achieve the main goal of
liberating the Golan, it proved to be a
major moral victory for Arabs. In June
1974, Syria regained control over parts of
the occupied Golan, including the main
city of Quneitra.
Stability
changed the face of Syria. There were
major developments in industrial,
agricultural and commercial sectors, and
the capital, Damascus, continued to grow.
It is estimated that more than 4 million
people live in the city today.
|