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}}Template:Main other BaalbekTemplate:Efn (Template:IPAc-en;<ref>
- {{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}
- Template:Cite encyclopedia
- Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref> Template:Langx; Template:Langx) is a city located east of the Litani River in Lebanon's Beqaa Valley, about Template:Convert northeast of Beirut. It is the capital of Baalbek-Hermel Governorate.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref> In 1998, the city had a population of 82,608.<ref name=":11">Template:Cite book</ref> Most of the population consists of Shia Muslims, followed by Sunni Muslims and Christians;<ref name=":11" /> in 2017, there was also a large presence of Syrian refugees.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
Baalbek has a history that dates back at least 11,000 years, encompassing significant periods such as Prehistoric, Canaanite, Hellenistic, and Roman eras. After Alexander the Great conquered the city in 334 BCE, he renamed it Heliopolis ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, Greek for "Sun City"). The city flourished under Roman rule. However, it underwent transformations during the Christianization period and the subsequent rise of Islam following the Arab conquest in the 7th century. In later periods, the city was sacked by the Mongols and faced a series of earthquakes, resulting in a decline in importance during the Ottoman and modern periods.<ref name=":102">Template:Cite book</ref>
In the modern era, Baalbek enjoys economic advantages as a sought-after tourist destination.<ref>Template:Cite AV media</ref> It is known for the ruins of the Roman temple complex, which includes the Temple of Bacchus and the Temple of Jupiter, and was inscribed in 1984 as a UNESCO World Heritage site. Other tourist attractions are the Great Umayyad Mosque, the Baalbek International Festival, the mausoleum of Sit Khawla, and a Roman quarry site named Hajar al-Hibla.<ref name=":102" /> Baalbek's tourism sector has encountered challenges due to conflicts in Lebanon, particularly the 1975–1990 civil war, the ongoing Syrian civil war since 2011,<ref name=":102" /><ref>Template:Cite book</ref> and the Israel–Hezbollah conflict (2023–present).<ref>Template:Cite AV media</ref>
Baalbek is considered to be part of Hezbollah group's heartland<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> and is known to be their political stronghold.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref> During the Israeli occupation of Southern Lebanon (1982–2000), the group managed to overpower the Lebanese army in Baalbek and gain control of the city. The settlement was subsequently used as a base to recruit and train men for attacks against Israeli forces.<ref name=":12">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":13">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name=":3">Template:Cite book</ref> Hezbollah continues to hold significant political influence and popular support in Baalbek.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> In the 2022 Lebanese general election the Amal-Hezbollah list won 9 out of 10 seats in the Baalbek-Hermel Governorate.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
Israel has conducted numerous airstrikes and raids against military and civilian targets in the Baalbek area in the past decades. For instance, in 2006 during the Operation Sharp and Smooth, Israeli commandos raided a hospital and bombed multiple houses, killing two Hezbollah fighters and at least eleven civilians.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref><ref name="peda">Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="time">Template:Cite news</ref> In 2024, during the Israel–Hezbollah conflict, Israel sent forced displacement calls for the entire city.<ref name=":4">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=":5">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> Shortly after, Israeli airstrikes killed 19 people, including 8 women.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
EtymologyEdit
A few kilometres from the swamp from which the Litani (the classical Leontes) and the Asi (the upper Orontes) flow, Baalbek may be the same as the manbaa al-nahrayn ("Source of the Two Rivers"), the abode of El in the Ugaritic Baal Cycle<ref>KTU 1.4 IV 21.</ref> discovered in the 1920s and a separate serpent incantation.<ref>KTU 1.100.3.</ref>Template:Sfnp
Baalbek was called Heliopolis during the Roman Empire, a latinisation of the Greek Hēlioúpolis ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) used during the Hellenistic period,<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> meaning "Sun City"Template:Sfnp in reference to the solar cult there. The name is attested under the Seleucids and Ptolemies.Template:Sfnp However, Ammianus Marcellinus notes that earlier Assyrian names of Levantine towns continued to be used alongside the official Greek ones imposed by the Diadochi, who were successors of Alexander the Great.<ref>Amm. Marc., Hist., Bk XIV, Ch. 8, §6 Template:Webarchive.</ref> In Greek religion, Helios was both the sun in the sky and its personification as a god. The local Semitic god Baʿal Haddu was more often equated with Zeus or Jupiter or simply called the "Great God of Heliopolis",Template:SfnpTemplate:Efn but the name may refer to the Egyptians' association of Baʿal with their great god Ra.Template:SfnpTemplate:Efn It was sometimes described as Template:Nowrap or Coelesyria (Template:Langx or {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}) to distinguish it from its namesake in Egypt. In Catholicism, its titular see is distinguished as Template:Nowrap, from its former Roman province Phoenice. The importance of the solar cult is also attested in the name Biḳāʿ al-ʿAzīz borne by the plateau surrounding Baalbek, as it references an earlier solar deity named Aziz. In Greek and Roman antiquity, it was known as Heliopolis. Some of the best-preserved Roman ruins in Lebanon are located here, including one of the largest temples of the Roman empire. The gods worshipped there (Jupiter, Venus, and Bacchus) were equivalents of the Canaanite deities Hadad, Atargatis. Local influences are seen in the planning and layout of the temples, which differ from classic Roman design. Template:Sfnp
The name Template:Sc appears in the Mishnah, a second-century rabbinic text, as a kind of garlic, shum ba'albeki (שום בעלבכי).<ref>Mishnah, Maaserot 5:8</ref> It appears in two early 5th-century Syriac manuscripts, a Template:CircaTemplate:Sfnp translation of Eusebius's Theophania<ref>Brit. Mus. Add. 12150.</ref><ref>Eusebius, Theophania, 2.14.</ref> and a Template:CircaTemplate:Sfnp life of Rabbula, bishop of Edessa.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp It was pronounced as Baʿlabakk (Template:Langx) in Classical Arabic.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp In Modern Standard Arabic, its vowels are marked as Baʿlabak ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}})<ref name="alalc">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> or Baʿlabekk.Template:Sfnp It is Bʿalbik ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, is {{#invoke:IPA|main}}) in Lebanese Arabic.<ref name="alalc" />
The etymology of Baalbek has been debated since the 18th century.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp Cook took it to mean "Baʿal (Lord) of the Beka"Template:Sfnp and Donne as "City of the Sun".Template:Sfnp Lendering asserts that it is probably a contraction of Baʿal Nebeq ("Lord of the Source" of the Litani River).Template:Sfnp Steiner proposes a Semitic adaption of "Lord Bacchus", from the classical temple complex.Template:Sfnp
Nineteenth-century Biblical archaeologists proposed the association of Baalbek with the town of Baalgad in the Book of Joshua;<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref> the town of Baalath, one of Solomon's cities in the First Book of Kings;<ref>Template:Bibleverse</ref>Template:Sfnp Baal-hamon, where Solomon had a vineyard;<ref>Template:Bibleverse.</ref>Template:Sfnp and the "Plain of Aven" in Book of Amos.<ref>Template:Bibleverse,</ref>Template:Sfnp
HistoryEdit
PrehistoryEdit
The hilltop of Tell Baalbek, part of a valley to the east of the northern Beqaa ValleyTemplate:Sfnp (Template:Langx),Template:Sfnp shows signs of almost continual habitation over the last 8–9000 years.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> It was well-watered both from a stream running from the Rās al-ʿAyn spring southwest of the citadelTemplate:Sfnp and, during the spring, from numerous rills formed by meltwater from the Anti-Lebanons.Template:Sfnp Macrobius later credited the site's foundation to a colony of Egyptian or Assyrian priests.Template:Sfnp The settlement's religious, commercial, and strategic importance was minor enough, however, that it is never mentioned in any known Assyrian or Egyptian record,<ref>Hélène Sader.Template:Where</ref> unless under another name.Template:Sfnp Its enviable position in a fertile valley, major watershed, and along the route from Tyre to Palmyra should have made it a wealthy and splendid site from an early age.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp During the Canaanite period, the local temples were primarily devoted to the Heliopolitan Triad: a male god (Baʿal), his consort (Astarte), and their son (Adon).Template:Sfnp The site of the present Temple of Jupiter was probably the focus of earlier worship, as its altar was located at the hill's precise summit and the rest of the sanctuary raised to its level.Template:Citation needed
In Islamic mythology, the temple complex was said to have been a palace of Solomon'sTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Efn which was put together by djinnTemplate:SfnpTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp and given as a wedding gift to the Queen of Sheba;Template:Sfnp its actual Roman origin remained obscured by the citadel's medieval fortifications as late as the 16th-century visit of the Polish prince Radziwiłł.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp
AntiquityEdit
Template:Stack end After Alexander the Great's conquest of Persia in the 330s BC, Baalbek (under its Hellenic name Heliopolis) formed part of the Diadochi kingdoms of Egypt & Syria. It was annexed by the Romans during their eastern wars. The settlers of the Roman colony Colonia Julia Augusta Felix Heliopolitana may have arrived as early as the time of CaesarTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp but were more probably the veterans of the 5th and 8th Legions under Augustus,Template:SfnpTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp during which time it hosted a Roman garrison.Template:Sfnp From 15 BC to AD 193, it formed part of the territory of Berytus. It is mentioned in Josephus,<ref>Josephus, Ant., XIV.3–4.</ref> Pliny,<ref>Pliny, Nat. Hist., V.22.</ref> Strabo,<ref>Strabo, Geogr., Bk. 14, Ch. 2, §10. Template:In lang</ref> and Ptolemy<ref name="ptol">Ptolemy, Geogr., Bk. V, Ch. 15, §22 Template:Webarchive.</ref> and on coins of nearly every emperor from Nerva to Gallienus.Template:Sfnp The 1st-century Pliny did not number it among the Decapolis, the "Ten Cities" of Coelesyria, while the 2nd-century Ptolemy did.<ref name="ptol" /> The population likely varied seasonally with market fairs and the schedules of the Indian monsoon and caravans to the coast and interior.Template:Sfnp
During Classical Antiquity, the city's temple to Baʿal Haddu was conflated first with the worship of the Greek sun god HeliosTemplate:Sfnp and then with the Greek and Roman sky god under the name "Heliopolitan Zeus" or "Jupiter". The present Temple of Jupiter presumably replaced an earlier one using the same foundation;Template:Efn it was constructed during the mid-1st century and probably completed around AD 60.Template:EfnTemplate:Sfnp His idol was a beardless golden god in the pose of a charioteer, with a whip raised in his right hand and a thunderbolt and stalks of grain in his left;Template:Refn its image appeared on local coinage and it was borne through the streets during several festivals throughout the year.<ref name="macrobe" /> Macrobius compared the rituals to those for Diva Fortuna at Antium and says the bearers were the principal citizens of the town, who prepared for their role with abstinence, chastity, and shaved heads.<ref name="macrobe" /> In bronze statuary attested from Byblos in Phoenicia and Tortosa in Spain, he was encased in a pillarlike term and surrounded (like the Greco-Persian Mithras) by busts representing the sun, moon, and five known planets.Template:Sfnp In these statues, the bust of Mercury is made particularly prominent; a marble stela at Massilia in Transalpine Gaul shows a similar arrangement but enlarges Mercury into a full figure.Template:Sfnp Local cults also revered the Baetylia, black conical stones considered sacred to Baʿal.Template:Sfnp One of these was taken to Rome by the emperor Elagabalus, a former priest "of the sun" at nearby Emesa,Template:Sfnp who erected a temple for it on the Palatine Hill.Template:Sfnp Heliopolis was a noted oracle and pilgrimage site, whence the cult spread far afield, with inscriptions to the Heliopolitan god discovered in Athens, Rome, Pannonia, Venetia, Gaul, and near the Wall in Britain.Template:Sfnp The Roman temple complex grew up from the early part of the reign of Augustus in the late 1st century BC until the rise of Christianity in the 4th century. (The 6th-century chronicles of John Malalas of Antioch, which claimed Baalbek as a "wonder of the world",Template:Sfnp credited most of the complex to the 2nd-century Antoninus Pius, but it is uncertain how reliable his account is on the point.)Template:Sfnp By that time, the complex housed three temples on Tell Baalbek: one to Jupiter Heliopolitanus (Baʿal), one to Venus Heliopolitana (Ashtart), and a third to Bacchus. On a nearby hill, a fourth temple was dedicated to the third figure of the Heliopolitan Triad, Mercury (Adon or SeimiosTemplate:Sfnp). Ultimately, the site vied with Praeneste in Italy as the two largest sanctuaries in the Western world.Template:Citation needed
The emperor Trajan consulted the site's oracle twice. The first time, he requested a written reply to his sealed and unopened question; he was favorably impressed by the god's blank reply as his own paper had been empty.Template:Sfnp He then inquired whether he would return alive from his wars against Parthia and received in reply a centurion's vine staff, broken to pieces.Template:Sfnp In AD 193, Septimius Severus granted the city ius Italicum rights.<ref>Ulpian, De Censibus, Bk. I.</ref>Template:Efn His wife Julia Domna and son Caracalla toured Egypt and Syria in AD 215; inscriptions in their honour at the site may date from that occasion; Julia was a Syrian native whose father had been an Emesan priest "of the sun" like Elagabalus.Template:Sfnp
The town became a battleground upon the rise of Christianity.Template:SfnpTemplate:Efn Early Christian writers such as Eusebius (from nearby Caesarea) repeatedly execrated the practices of the local pagans in their worship of the Heliopolitan Venus. In AD 297, the actor Gelasinus converted in the middle of a scene mocking baptism; his public profession of faith provoked the audience to drag him from the theater and stone him to death.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp In the early 4th century, the deacon Cyril defaced many of the idols in Heliopolis; he was killed and (allegedly) cannibalised.Template:Sfnp Around the same time, Constantine, though not yet a Christian, demolished the goddess' temple, raised a basilica in its place, and outlawed the locals' ancient custom of prostituting women before marriage.Template:Sfnp Bar Hebraeus also credited him with ending the locals' continued practice of polygamy.<ref>Bar Hebraeus, Hist. Compend. Dynast., p. 85. Template:In lang</ref> The enraged locals responded by raping and torturing Christian virgins.Template:Sfnp They reacted violently again under the freedom permitted to them by Julian the Apostate.Template:Sfnp The city was so noted for its hostility to the Christians that Alexandrians were banished to it as a special punishment.Template:Sfnp The Temple of Jupiter, already greatly damaged by earthquakes,Template:Sfnp was demolished under Theodosius in 379 and replaced by another basilica (now lost), using stones scavenged from the pagan complex.Template:Sfnp The Easter Chronicle states he was also responsible for destroying all the lesser temples and shrines of the city.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Around the year 400, Rabbula, the future bishop of Edessa, attempted to have himself martyred by disrupting the pagans of Baalbek but was only thrown down the temple stairs along with his companion.Template:Sfnp It became the seat of its own bishop as well.Template:Sfnp Under the reign of Justinian, eight of the complex's Corinthian columns were disassembled and shipped to Constantinople for incorporation in the rebuilt Hagia Sophia sometime between 532 and 537.Template:Citation needed Michael the Syrian claimed the golden idol of Heliopolitan Jupiter was still to be seen during the reign of Justin II (560s & 570s),Template:Sfnp and, up to the time of its conquest by the Muslims, it was renowned for its palaces, monuments, and gardens.Template:Sfnp
Middle Ages and early modernityEdit
Baalbek was occupied by the Muslim army in AD 634 ([[AH (era)|Template:Sc]] 13),Template:Sfnp in 636,Template:Sfnp or under Abu ʿUbaidah following the Byzantine defeat at Yarmouk in 637 ([[AH (era)|Template:Sc]] 16),Template:Citation needed either peacefully and by agreementTemplate:Sfnp or following a heroic defense and yielding Template:Convert of gold, Template:Convert of silver, 2000 silk vests, and 1000 swords.Template:Sfnp The ruined temple complex was fortified under the name Template:Nowrap (Template:Abbr "The Fortress")Template:Sfnp but was sacked with great violence by the Damascene caliph Marwan II in 748, at which time it was dismantled and largely depopulated.Template:Sfnp It formed part of the district of Damascus under the Umayyads and Abbasids before being conquered by Fatimid Egypt in 942.Template:Sfnp In the mid-10th century, it was said to have "gates of palaces sculptured in marble and lofty columns also of marble" and that it was the most "stupendous" and "considerable" location in the whole of Syria.Template:Sfnp It was sacked and razed by the Byzantines under John I in 974,Template:Sfnp raided by Basil II in 1000,Template:Sfnp and occupied by Salih ibn Mirdas, emir of Aleppo, in 1025.Template:Sfnp
In 1075, it was finally lost to the Fatimids on its conquest by Tutush I, Seljuk emir of Damascus.Template:Sfnp It was briefly held by Muslim ibn Quraysh, emir of Aleppo, in 1083; after its recovery, it was ruled in the Seljuks' name by the eunuch Gümüshtegin until he was deposed for conspiring against the usurper Toghtekin in 1110.Template:Sfnp Toghtekin then gave the town to his son Buri. Upon Buri's succession to Damascus on his father's death in 1128, he granted the area to his son Muhammad.Template:Sfnp After Buri's murder, Muhammad successfully defended himself against the attacks of his brothers Ismaʿil and Mahmud and gave Baalbek to his vizier Unur.Template:Sfnp In July 1139, Zengi, atabeg of Aleppo and stepfather of Mahmud, besieged Baalbek with 14 catapults. The outer city held until 10 October and the citadel until the 21st,Template:Sfnp when Unur surrendered upon a promise of safe passage.Template:Sfnp In December, Zengi negotiated with Muhammad, offering to trade Baalbek or Homs for Damascus, but Unur convinced the atabeg to refuse.Template:Sfnp Zengi strengthened its fortifications and bestowed the territory on his lieutenant Ayyub, father of Saladin. Upon Zengi's assassination in 1146, Ayyub surrendered the territory to Unur, who was acting as regent for Muhammad's son Abaq. It was granted to the eunuch Ata al-Khadim,Template:Sfnp who also served as viceroy of Damascus.
In December 1151, it was raided by the garrison of Banyas as a reprisal for its role in a Turcoman raid on Banyas.Template:Sfnp Following Ata's murder, his nephew Dahhak, emir of the Wadi al-Taym, ruled Baalbek. He was forced to relinquish it to Nur ad-Din in 1154Template:Sfnp after Ayyub had successfully intrigued against Abaq from his estates near Baalbek. Ayyub then administered the area from Damascus on Nur ad-Din's behalf.Template:Sfnp In the mid-12th century, Idrisi mentioned Baalbek's two temples and the legend of their origin under Solomon;Template:Sfnp it was visited by the Jewish traveler Benjamin of Tudela in 1170.Template:Sfnp
Baalbek's citadel served as a jail for Crusaders taken by the Zengids as prisoners of war.Template:Sfnp In 1171, these captives successfully overpowered their guards and took possession of the castle from its garrison. Muslims from the surrounding area gathered, however, and entered the castle through a secret passageway shown to them by a local. The Crusaders were then massacred.Template:Sfnp
Three major earthquakes occurred in the 12th century, in 1139, 1157, and 1170.Template:Sfnp The one in 1170 ruined Baalbek's walls and, though Nur ad-Din repaired them, his young heir Ismaʿil was made to yield it to Saladin by a 4-month siege in 1174.Template:Sfnp Having taken control of Damascus on the invitation of its governor Ibn al-Muqaddam, Saladin rewarded him with the Template:Nowrap following the Ayyubid victory at the Horns of Hama in 1175.Template:Sfnp Baldwin, the young leper king of Jerusalem, came of age the next year, ending the Crusaders' treaty with Saladin.Template:Sfn His former regent, Raymond of Tripoli, raided the Beqaa Valley from the west in the summer, suffering a slight defeat at Ibn al-Muqaddam's hands.Template:Sfnp He was then joined by the main army, riding north under Baldwin and Humphrey of Toron;Template:Sfnp they defeated Saladin's elder brother Turan Shah in August at Ayn al-Jarr and plundered Baalbek.Template:Sfnp Upon the deposition of Turan Shah for neglecting his duties in Damascus, however, he demanded his childhood homeTemplate:Sfnp of Baalbek as compensation. Ibn al-Muqaddam did not consent and Saladin opted to invest the city in late 1178 to maintain peace within his own family.Template:Sfnp An attempt to pledge fealty to the Christians at Jerusalem was ignored on behalf of an existing treaty with Saladin.Template:Sfnp The siege was maintained peacefully through the snows of winter, with Saladin waiting for the "foolish" commander and his garrison of "ignorant scum" to come to terms.Template:Sfnp Sometime in spring, Ibn al-Muqaddam yielded and Saladin accepted his terms, granting him Baʿrin, Kafr Tab, and al-Maʿarra.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp The generosity quieted unrest among Saladin's vassals through the rest of his reignTemplate:Sfnp but led his enemies to attempt to take advantage of his presumed weakness.Template:Sfnp He did not permit Turan Shah to retain Baalbek very long, though, instructing him to lead the Egyptian troops returning home in 1179 and appointing him to a sinecure in Alexandria.Template:Sfnp Baalbek was then granted to his nephew Farrukh Shah, whose family ruled it for the next half-century.Template:Sfnp When Farrukh Shah died three years later, his son Bahram Shah was only a child but he was permitted his inheritance and ruled til 1230.Template:Sfnp He was followed by al-Ashraf Musa, who was succeeded by his brother as-Salih Ismail,Template:Sfnp who received it in 1237 as compensation for being deprived of Damascus by their brother al-Kamil.Template:Sfn It was seized in 1246 after a year of assaults by as-Salih Ayyub, who bestowed it upon Saʿd al-Din al-Humaidi.Template:Sfnp When as-Salih Ayyub's successor Turan Shah was murdered in 1250, al-Nasir Yusuf, the sultan of Aleppo, seized Damascus and demanded Baalbek's surrender. Instead, its emir did homage and agreed to regular payments of tribute.Template:Sfnp
The Mongolian general Kitbuqa took Baalbek in 1260 and dismantled its fortifications. Later in the same year, however, Qutuz, the sultan of Egypt, defeated the Mongols and placed Baalbek under the rule of their emir in Damascus.Template:Sfnp Most of the city's still-extant fine mosque and fortress architecture dates to the reign of the sultan Qalawun in the 1280s.Template:Citation needed By the early 14th century, Abulfeda the Hamathite was describing the city's "large and strong fortress".Template:Sfnp The revived settlement was again destroyed by a flood on 10 May 1318, when water from the east and northeast made holes Template:Convert wide in walls Template:Convert thick.Template:Sfnp 194 people were killed and 1500 houses, 131 shops, 44 orchards, 17 ovens, 11 mills, and 4 aqueducts were ruined, along with the town's mosque and 13 other religious and educational buildings.Template:Sfnp In 1400, Timur pillaged the town,<ref>le Strange, 1890, p. xxiii.</ref> and there was further destruction from a 1459 earthquake.Template:Sfnp
Early modernityEdit
In 1516, Baalbek was conquered with the rest of Syria by the Ottoman sultan Selim the Grim.Template:Sfnp In recognition of their prominence among the Shiites of the Beqaa Valley, the Ottomans awarded the sanjak of Homs and local iltizam concessions to Baalbek's Harfush family. Like the Hamadas, the Harfush emirs were involved on more than one occasion in the selection of Church officials and the running of local monasteries.
Tradition holds that many Christians quit the Baalbek region in the eighteenth century for the newer, more secure town of Zahlé on account of the Harfushes' oppression and rapacity, but more critical studies have questioned this interpretation, pointing out that the Harfushes were closely allied to the Orthodox Ma'luf family of Zahlé (where indeed Mustafa Harfush took refuge some years later) and showing that depredations from various quarters as well as Zahlé's growing commercial attractiveness accounted for Baalbek's decline in the eighteenth century. What repression there was did not always target the Christian community per se. The Shiite 'Usayran family, for example, is also said to have left Baalbek in this period to avoid expropriation by the Harfushes, establishing itself as one of the premier commercial households of Sidon and later even serving as consuls of Iran.<ref>Stefan Winter (11 March 2010). The Shiites of Lebanon under Ottoman Rule, 1516–1788. Cambridge University Press, Page 166.</ref>
From the 16th century, European tourists began to visit the colossal and picturesque ruins.Template:SfnpTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Efn Donne hyperbolised "No ruins of antiquity have attracted more attention than those of Heliopolis, or been more frequently or accurately measured and described."Template:Sfnp Misunderstanding the temple of Bacchus as the "Temple of the Sun", they considered it the best-preserved Roman temple in the world.Template:Citation needed The Englishman Robert Wood's 1757 Ruins of BalbecTemplate:Sfnp included carefully measured engravings that proved influential on British and Continental Neoclassical architects. For example, details of the Temple of Bacchus's ceiling inspired a bed<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> and ceiling by Robert Adam and its portico inspired that of St George's in Bloomsbury.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
During the 18th century, the western approaches were covered with attractive groves of walnut trees,Template:Sfnp but the town itself suffered badly during the 1759 earthquakes, after which it was held by the Metawali, who again feuded with other Lebanese tribes.Template:Citation needed Their power was broken by Jezzar Pasha, the rebel governor of Acre, in the last half of the 18th century.Template:Citation needed All the same, Baalbek remained no destination for a traveller unaccompanied by an armed guard.Template:Citation needed Upon the pasha's death in 1804, chaos ensued until Ibrahim Pasha of Egypt occupied the area in 1831, after which it again passed into the hands of the Harfushes.Template:Sfnp In 1835, the town's population was barely 200 people.Template:Sfnp In 1850, the Ottomans finally began direct administration of the area, making Baalbek a kaza under the Damascus Eyalet and its governor a kaymakam.Template:Sfnp
ExcavationsEdit
Emperor Wilhelm II of Germany and his wife passed through Baalbek on 1 November 1898,Template:Sfnp on their way to Jerusalem. He noted both the magnificence of the Roman remains and the drab condition of the modern settlement.Template:Sfnp It was expected at the time that natural disasters, winter frosts, and the raiding of building materials by the city's residents would shortly ruin the remaining ruins.Template:Sfnp The archaeological team he dispatched began work within a month. Despite finding nothing they could date prior to Baalbek's Roman occupation,Template:Sfnp Otto Puchstein and his associates worked until 1904Template:Sfnp and produced a meticulously researched and thoroughly illustrated series of volumes.Template:Sfnp Later excavations under the Roman flagstones in the Great Court unearthed three skeletons and a fragment of Persian pottery dated to the 6th–4th centuries BC. The sherd featured cuneiform letters.Template:Sfnp
In 1977, Jean-Pierre Adam made a brief study suggesting most of the large blocks could have been moved on rollers with machines using capstans and pulley blocks, a process which he theorised could use 512 workers to move a Template:Convert block.Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp "Baalbek, with its colossal structures, is one of the finest examples of Imperial Roman architecture at its apogee", UNESCO reported in making Baalbek a World Heritage Site in 1984.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}.</ref> When the committee inscribed the site, it expressed the wish that the protected area include the entire town within the Arab walls, as well as the southwestern extramural quarter between Bastan-al-Khan, the Roman site and the Mameluk mosque of Ras-al-Ain. Lebanon's representative gave assurances that the committee's wish would be honoured. Recent cleaning operations at the Temple of Jupiter discovered the deep trench at its edge, whose study pushed back the date of Tell Baalbek's settlement to the PPNB Neolithic. Finds included pottery sherds including a spout dating to the early Bronze Age.Template:Sfnp In the summer of 2014, a team from the German Archaeological Institute led by Jeanine Abdul Massih of the Lebanese University discovered a sixth, much larger stone suggested to be the world's largest ancient block. The stone was found underneath and next to the Stone of the Pregnant Woman ("Hajjar al-Hibla") and measures around Template:Convert. It is estimated to weigh <ref name=":9">Template:Cite news</ref>Template:Convert.Template:Sfnp
Modern historyEdit
Baalbek was connected to the DHP, the French-owned railway concession in Ottoman Syria, on 19 June 1902.<ref name="back">Template:Cite book</ref> It formed a station on the standard-gauge line between Riyaq to its south and Aleppo (now in Syria) to its north.<ref name="riho">Template:Cite book</ref> This Aleppo Railway connected to the Beirut–Damascus Railway but—because that line was built to a 1.05-meter gauge—all traffic had to be unloaded and reloaded at Riyaq.<ref name="riho" /> Just before the First World War, the population was still around 5000, about 2000 each of Sunnis and Shia MutawalisTemplate:Sfnp and 1000 Orthodox and Maronites.Template:Sfnp The French general Georges Catroux proclaimed the independence of Lebanon in 1941 but colonial rule continued until 1943. Baalbek still has its railway station<ref name="riho" /> but service has been discontinued since the 1970s, originally owing to the Lebanese Civil War.
In March 1974, Musa al-Sadr announced the launching of the "Movement of the Deprived" in front of a rally in Baalbek attended by 75,000 men. Its objective was to stand up for Lebanon's neglected Shia community. In his speech he listed grievances with the Lebanese government, including Baalbek's lack of a secondary school, Shia communities receiving disproportionately less funds from the national budget, most of the homeless being Shia etc. The occasion was a religious one, and there was celebratory gunfire preceding it.<ref>Ajami, Fouad (1986) The vanished Imam : Musa al Sadr and the Shia of Lebanon. I.B. Tauris. Template:ISBN p.145</ref> He also announced the setting up of military training camps to train villagers in southern Lebanon to protect their homes from Israeli attacks. These camps led to the creation of the Amal Militia.<ref>Hirst, David (2010) Beware of Small States. Lebanon, battleground of the Middle East. Faber and Faber. Template:ISBN p.101</ref>
By the 2000s, Baalbek was frequently described as a stronghold of Hezbollah,<ref name=":12" /><ref name=":13" /><ref name=":3" /> although it also has a large presence of Christians and Sunni Muslims.<ref name=":6">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref name=":9"/> Many of the city's mayors have been Shia, but since 2022, Baalbek has had a Sunni mayor.<ref name=":9" />
Israeli–Lebanon conflictEdit
In 1978, Israel invaded south Lebanon, forcing hundreds of thousands of Shia Muslims to flee.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> As a result of the invasion, when Hassan Nasrallah returned to Lebanon from his studies in Najaf, he was unable to return to his hometown in the south, and instead settled in Baalbek.<ref name=":10">Template:Cite book</ref> Abbas al-Musawi also moved to Baalbek.<ref name=":10" />
In 1982, at the height of another Israeli invasion, Amal split into two factions over Nabih Berri's acceptance of the American plan to evacuate Palestinians from West Beirut. A large number of dissidents, led by Amal's military commander Hussein Musawi moved to Baalbek.<ref>David Hirst pp.187-188</ref> Once established in the town the group, which was to evolve into Hezbollah, began to work with Iranian Revolutionary Guards, veterans of the Iran Iraq War. The following year the Iranians established their headquarters in the Sheikh Abdullah barracks in Baalbek.<ref>David Hirst p.190</ref> Ultimately there were between 1,500 and 2,000 Revolutionary Guards in Lebanon,<ref>David Hirst p.186</ref> with outposts further south in the Shia villages, such as Jebchit.<ref>David Hirst p.235</ref>
In 1984, Israel launched raids on Baalbek, killing 100 Lebanese civilians and wounding hundreds inside the city.<ref name=":0">Template:Cite journal</ref> Israel also bombed a school in the Wavel Palestinian refugee camp next to the city, wounding 150 school children.<ref name=":0" />
On 24/25 June 1999, following elections in Israel and the new administration undecided, the IAF launched two massive air raids across Lebanon. One of the targets was the al Manar radio station's offices in a four-storey building in Baalbek which was completely demolished. The attacks also hit Beirut's power stations and bridges on the roads to the south. An estimated $52 million damage was caused. Eleven Lebanese were killed as well as two Israelis in Kiryat Shmona.<ref>Middle East International. No 603, 2 July 1999; Publishers Christopher Mayhew. Dennis Walters; Michael Jansen pp.4-5; Reinoud Leendes pp.5&7</ref>
2006 Lebanon WarEdit
During the 2006 Lebanon war, many Israeli bombs fell inside the historic Roman town, and some fell as close as 300 meters from the temple of Baalbek.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> After the war, UNESCO stated that the cracks in the Roman temples had widened.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The damage was thought to be due to shockwaves created by the bombs.<ref name=":1"/>
More than 250 houses and buildings were destroyed by Israel during the war.<ref name=":6" /> Reporters investigating the aftermath found these to be civilian houses and didn't find any evidence of military use.<ref name=":6" />
On the evening of 1 August 2006,Template:Sfnp hundreds of Israeli Defense Forces (IDF) soldiers raided Baalbek and the Dar al-Hikma<ref name="timetimetime">Template:Cite magazine</ref> or Hikmeh Hospital<ref name="mxm">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> in JamaliyehTemplate:Sfnp to its north ("Operation Sharp and Smooth"). Their mission was to rescue two captured soldiers, Ehud Goldwasser and Eldad Regev, who were abducted by Hezbollah on 12 July 2006. They were transported by helicopterTemplate:Sfnp and supported by Apache helicopters and unmanned drones,<ref name="timetimetime" />Template:Sfnp The IDF was acting on information that Goldwasser and Regev were at the hospital. al-Jazeera and other sources claimed the IDF was attempting to capture senior Hezbollah officials, particularly Sheikh Mohammad Yazbek.<ref name="mxm" /> The hospital had been empty for four days, the most unwell patients having been transferred and the rest sent home.<ref name="timetimetime" /> No Israelis were killed;Template:Sfnp Five civilians were abducted and interrogated by the Israelis, presumably because one shared his name with Hassan Nasrallah, the secretary general of Hezbollah;Template:Sfnp they were released on August 21.Template:Sfnp
On August 7, Israel killed 9 civilians in an attack on Brital, just south of Baalbek, and by the subsequent attack on the car leaving the scene for the hospital.Template:Sfnp A Human Rights Watch investigation showed that none of those killed were combatants, it is likely none were members of Hezbollah, and none of the survivors had any knowledge of any military presence at place of the attack.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
On 14 August just before the ceasefire took effect, two Lebanese police and five Lebanese soldiers were killed by a drone strike while driving their van around the still-damaged road through Jamaliyeh.Template:Sfnp
GeographyEdit
ClimateEdit
Baalbek has a mediterranean climate (Köppen climate classification: Csa) with significant continental influences. It is located in one of the drier regions of the country, giving it an annual average of Template:Convert of rainfall compared with Template:Convert in coastal areas, overwhelmingly concentrated in the months from November to April. Baalbek has hot rainless summers with cool (and occasionally snowy) winters. Autumn and spring are mild and fairly rainy.
DemographicsEdit
In 2014, Muslims made up 93.85% and Christians made up 5.66% of registered voters in Baalbek. 59.61% of the voters were Shiite Muslims and 34.24% were Sunni Muslims.<ref name="lub-anan.com">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
EconomyEdit
TourismEdit
The Roman ruins have been the setting for the long running Baalbek International Festival.
Baalbek's tourism sector suffered significantly due to the Lebanese Civil war (1975–1990). After the civil war ended, tourism gradually saw a resurgence, including opera, orchestras.<ref name=":8">Template:Cite book</ref> But it was once again disrupted by Israeli bombings of Baalbek during the 2006 war.<ref name=":8" />
After the 2006 war, conservation work at Lebanon's historic sites began in October that year.<ref name="wapo">Template:Cite news</ref> The ruins at Baalbek were not directly hit by Israeli bombing but the effects of blasts during the conflict toppled a block of stones at the Roman ruins and existing cracks in the temples of Jupiter and Bacchus were feared to have widened.<ref name="wapo" /> Frederique Husseini, director-general of Lebanon's Department of Antiquities, requested $550,000 from Europeans to restore Baalbek's souk and another $900,000 for repairs to other damaged structures.<ref name="wapo" />
Starting in the early 2000s, Hezbollah organized permanent or temporary exhibitions called "Exposition of the Resistance" which commemorate what is considered to be Lebanese resistance to Israeli occupation. Spanning several hundred square meters, the exhibitions feature defused Israeli weapons, recreated scenes of war, and photos and videos of Lebanese people killed by Israel.<ref name=":7">Template:Cite book</ref>Template:Sfn Starting in 2009, Hezbollah setup an exhibition to commemorate the 2006 war.<ref name=":7" />
During the Syrian civil war, the UK FCO designated areas close to the Syrian border, including Baalbek and the rest of Beqaa valley, as "red zone" – advising against all travel.<ref name=":2">{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> The US State Department made a similar designation. These designations, prompted by perceived proximity to Syria and clashes between Sunnis and Alawites, discouraged international tourism.<ref name=":2" />
During its 2024 invasion of Lebanon, Israel bombed a restaurant frequented by tourists<ref name=":9" /> and damaged the historic Hotel Palmyra.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref> In November, UNESCO gave Baalbek enhanced protection to safeguard against damage to the archaeological site during the invasion; it was one of 34 areas to receive this protection.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
RuinsEdit
The Tell Baalbek temple complex, fortified as the town's citadel during the Middle Ages,Template:Sfnp was constructed from local stone, mostly white granite and a rough white marble.Template:Sfnp Over the years, it has suffered from the region's numerous earthquakes, the iconoclasm of Christian and Muslim lords,Template:Sfnp and the reuse of the temples' stone for fortification and other construction. The temples also suffered minor damage from the shockwaves generated by nearby Israeli bombings in the 2006 Lebanon war.<ref name=":1">Template:Cite book</ref> The nearby Qubbat Duris, a 13th-century Muslim shrine on the old road to Damascus, is built out of granite columns, apparently removed from Baalbek.Template:Sfnp Further, the jointed columns were once banded together with iron; many were gouged openTemplate:Sfnp or toppled by the emirs of Damascus to get at the metal.Template:Sfnp As late as the 16th century, the Temple of Jupiter still held 27 standing columnsTemplate:Sfnp out of an original 58;Template:Sfnp there were only nine before the 1759 earthquakesTemplate:Sfnp and six today.Template:When
The complex is located on a raised plaza erected Template:Convert over an earlier T-shaped base consisting of a podium, staircase, and foundation walls.Template:Efn These walls were built from about 24 monoliths, at their lowest level weighing approximately Template:Convert each. The tallest retaining wall, on the west, has a second course of monoliths containing the famous "Three Stones" (Template:Langx, Trílithon):Template:Sfnp a row of three stones, each over Template:Convert long, Template:Convert high, and Template:Convert broad, cut from limestone. They weigh approximately Template:Convert each.Template:Sfnp A fourth, still larger stone is called the Stone of the Pregnant Woman: it lies unused in a nearby quarry Template:Convert from the town.Template:Sfnp Its weight is estimated at Template:Convert.Template:Sfnp A fifth, still larger stone weighing approximately Template:ConvertTemplate:Sfnp lies in the same quarry. This quarry was slightly higher than the temple complex,<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp so no lifting was required to move the stones.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite book</ref>
The temple complex was entered from the east through the Propylaea ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, propýlaion) or Portico,Template:Sfnp consisting of a broad staircase rising Template:ConvertTemplate:Sfnp to an arcade of 12 columns flanked by 2 towers.Template:Sfnp Most of the columns have been toppled and the stairs were entirely dismantled for use in the nearby later wall,Template:SfnpTemplate:Efn but a Latin inscription remains on several of their bases stating that Longinus, a lifeguard of the 1st Parthian Legion, and Septimius, a freedman, gilded their capitals with bronze in gratitude for the safety of Septimius Severus's son Antoninus Caracalla and empress Julia Domna.Template:SfnpTemplate:Efn
Immediately behind the Propylaeum is a hexagonal forecourtTemplate:Sfnp reached through a threefold entranceTemplate:Sfnp that was added in the mid-3rd century by the emperor Philip the Arab.Template:Citation needed Traces remain of the two series of columns which once encircled it, but its original function remains uncertain.Template:Sfnp Donne reckoned it as the town's forum.Template:Sfnp Badly preserved coins of the era led some to believe this was a sacred cypress grove, but better specimens show that the coins displayed a single stalk of grain instead.Template:Sfnp
The rectangular Great Court to its west covers around Template:ConvertTemplate:Sfnp and included the main altar for burnt offering, with mosaic-floored lustration basins to its north and south, a subterranean chamber,Template:Sfnp and three underground passageways Template:Convert wide by Template:Convert high, two of which run east and west and the third connecting them north and south, all bearing inscriptions suggesting their occupation by Roman soldiers.Template:Sfnp These were surrounded by Corinthian porticoes, one of which was never completed.Template:Sfnp The columns' bases and capitals were of limestone; the shafts were monoliths of highly polished red Egyptian granite Template:Convert high.Template:Sfnp Six remain standing, out of an original 128.Template:Citation needed Inscriptions attest that the court was once adorned by portraits of Marcus Aurelius's daughter Sabina, Septimius Severus, Gordian, and Velius Rufus, dedicated by the city's Roman colonists.Template:Sfnp The entablature was richly decorated but is now mostly ruined.Template:Sfnp A westward-facing basilica was constructed over the altar during the reign of Theodosius; it was later altered to make it eastward-facing like most Christian churches.Template:Sfnp
The Temple of Jupiter—once wrongly credited to HeliosTemplate:Sfnp—lay at the western end of the Great Court, raised another Template:Convert on a Template:Convert platform reached by a wide staircase.Template:Sfnp Under the Byzantines, it was also known as the "Trilithon" from the three massive stones in its foundation and, when taken together with the forecourt and Great Court, it is also known as the Great Temple.Template:Sfnp The Temple of Jupiter proper was circled by a peristyle of 54 unfluted Corinthian columns:Template:Sfnp 10 in front and back and 19 along each side.Template:Sfnp The temple was ruined by earthquakes,Template:Sfnp destroyed and pillaged for stone under Theodosius,Template:Sfnp and 8 columns were taken to Constantinople (Istanbul) under Justinian for incorporation into the Hagia Sophia.Template:Citation needed Three fell during the late 18th century.Template:Sfnp 6 columns, however, remain standing along its south side with their entablature.Template:Sfnp Their capitals remain nearly perfect on the south side, while the Beqaa's winter winds have worn the northern faces almost bare.Template:Sfnp The architrave and frieze blocks weigh up to Template:Convert each, and one corner block over Template:Convert, all of them raised to a height of Template:Convert above the ground.Template:Sfnp Individual Roman cranes were not capable of lifting stones this heavy. They may have simply been rolled into position along temporary earthen banks from the quarry.Template:Sfnp The Julio-Claudian emperors enriched its sanctuary in turn. In the mid-1st century, Nero built the tower-altar opposite the temple. In the early 2nd century, Trajan added the temple's forecourt, with porticos of pink granite shipped from Aswan at the southern end of Egypt.Template:Citation needed
The Temple of Bacchus—once wrongly credited to JupiterTemplate:SfnpTemplate:Efn—may have been completed under Septimius Severus in the 190s, as his coins are the first to show it beside the Temple of Jupiter.Template:Citation needed It is the best preserved of the sanctuary's structures, as the other rubble from its ruins protected it.Template:Citation needed It is enriched by some of the most refined reliefs and sculpture to survive from antiquity.Template:Sfnp The temple is surrounded by forty-two columns—8 along each end and 15 along each sideTemplate:Sfnp—nearly Template:Convert in height.Template:Citation needed These were probably erected in a rough state and then rounded, polished, and decorated in position.Template:SfnpTemplate:Efn The entrance was preserved as late as PocockeTemplate:Sfnp and Wood,Template:Sfnp but the keystone of the lintel had slid Template:Convert following the 1759 earthquakes; a column of rough masonry was erected in the 1860s or '70s to support it.Template:Sfnp The 1759 earthquakes also damaged the area around the soffit's famed inscription of an eagle,Template:Sfnp which was entirely covered by the keystone's supporting column. The area around the inscription of the eagle was greatly damaged by the 1759 earthquake.Template:Sfnp The interior of the temple is divided into a Template:Convert nave and a Template:Convert adytum or sanctuaryTemplate:Sfnp on a platform raised Template:Convert above it and fronted by 13 steps.Template:Sfnp The screen between the two sections once held reliefs of Neptune, Triton, Arion and his dolphin, and other marine figuresTemplate:Sfnp but these have been lost.Template:Sfnp The temple was used as a kind of donjon for the medieval Arab and Turkish fortifications,Template:Sfnp although its eastern steps were lost sometime after 1688.Template:Sfnp Much of the portico was incorporated into a huge wall directly before its gate, but this was demolished in July 1870 by BarkerTemplate:Who on orders from Syria's governor Rashid Pasha.Template:Sfnp Two spiral staircases in columns on either side of the entrance lead to the roof.Template:Sfnp
The Temple of Venus—also known as the Circular Temple or NymphaeumTemplate:Sfnp—was added under Septimius Severus in the early 3rd centuryTemplate:Citation needed but destroyed under Constantine, who raised a basilica in its place.Template:Sfnp Jessup considered it the "gem of Baalbek".Template:Sfnp It lies about Template:Convert from the southeast corner of the Temple of Bacchus.Template:Sfnp It was known in the 19th century as El BarbaraTemplate:Sfnp or Barbarat el-Atikah (St Barbara's), having been used as a Greek Orthodox church into the 18th century.Template:SfnpTemplate:Efn
The ancient walls of Heliopolis had a circumference of a little less than Template:Convert.Template:Sfnp Much of the extant fortifications around the complex date to the 13th centuryTemplate:Sfnp reconstruction undertaken by the Mamluk sultan Qalawun following the devastation of the earlier defenses by the Mongol army under Kitbuqa.Template:Sfnp This includes the great southeast tower.Template:Sfnp The earliest round of fortifications were two walls to the southwest of the Temples of Jupiter and Bacchus.Template:Sfnp The original southern gateway with two small towers was filled in and replaced by a new large tower flanked by curtains,Template:Clarify probably under Buri or Zengi.Template:Sfnp Bahramshah replaced that era's southwest tower with one of his own in 1213 and built another in the northwest in 1224; the west tower was probably strengthened around the same time.Template:Sfnp An inscription dates the barbican-like strengthening of the southern entrance to around 1240.Template:Sfnp Qalawun relocated the two western curtainsTemplate:Clarify nearer to the western tower, which was rebuilt with great blocks of stone. The barbican was repaired and more turns added to its approach.Template:Sfnp From around 1300, no alterations were made to the fortifications apart from repairs such as Sultan Barkuk's restoration of the moat in preparation for Timur's arrival.Template:Sfnp
Material from the ruins is incorporated into a ruined mosque north of downtownTemplate:Sfnp and probably also in the Qubbat Duris on the road to Damascus.Template:Sfnp In the 19th century, a "shell-topped canopy" from the ruins was used nearby as a mihrab, propped up to show locals the direction of Mecca for their daily prayers.Template:Sfnp
Tomb of Husayn's daughterEdit
Under a white dome further towards town is the tomb of Khawla, daughter of Hussein and granddaughter of Ali, who died in Baalbek while Husayn's family was being transported as prisoners to Damascus.<ref>Michel M. Alouf -History of Baalbek 1922 "After the defeat and murder of Hossein by the Ommiads, his family was led captive to Damascus; but Kholat died at Baalbek on her way into exile."</ref><ref>Nelles Guide Syria – Lebanon -Wolfgang Gockel, Helga Bruns – 1998 – Page 202 3886181057 "Ensconced under a white dome further towards town are the mortal remains of Kholat, daughter of Hussein and granddaughter of."</ref>
Ecclesiastical historyEdit
Heliopolis (in Phoenicia; not to be confused with the Egyptian bishopric Heliopolis in Augustamnica) was a bishopric under Roman and Byzantine rule, but it disappeared due to the Islamic rule.
In 1701, Eastern Catholics (Byzantine Rite) established anew an Eparchy of Baalbek, which in 1964 was promoted to the present Melkite Greek Catholic Archeparchy of Baalbek.Template:Citation needed
Titular seeEdit
In the Latin Church, the Ancient diocese was only nominally restored (no later than 1876) as Titular archbishopric of Heliopolis (Latin) / Eliopoli (Curiate Italian), demoted in 1925 to Episcopal Titular bishopric, promoted back in 1932, with its name changed (avoiding Egyptian confusion) in 1933 to (non-Metropolitan) Titular archbishopric of Heliopolis in Phoenicia.
The title has not been assigned since 1965. It was held by:<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>
- Titular Archbishop: Luigi Poggi (1876.09.29 – death 1877.01.22) on emeritate (promoted) as former Bishop of Rimini (Italy) (1871.10.27 – 1876.09.29)
- Titular Archbishop: Mario Mocenni (1877.07.24 – 1893.01.16) as papal diplomat : Apostolic Delegate to Colombia (1877.08.14 – 1882.03.28), Apostolic Delegate to Costa Rica, Nicaragua and Honduras (1877.08.14 – 1882.03.28), Apostolic Delegate to Ecuador (1877.08.14 – 1882.03.28), Apostolic Delegate to Peru and Bolivia (1877.08.14 – 1882.03.28), Apostolic Delegate to Venezuela (1877.08.14 – 1882.03.28), Apostolic Internuncio to Brazil (1882.03.28 – 1882.10.18), created Cardinal-Priest of S. Bartolomeo all'Isola (1893.01.19 – 1894.05.18), promoted Cardinal-Bishop of Sabina (1894.05.18 – death 1904.11.14)
- Titular Archbishop: Augustinus Accoramboni (1896.06.22 – death 1899.05.17), without prelature
- Titular Archbishop: Robert John Seton (1903.06.22 – 1927.03.22), without prelature
- Titular Bishop: Gerald O'Hara (1929.04.26 – 1935.11.26) as Auxiliary Bishop of Philadelphia (Pennsylvania, USA) (1929.04.26 – 1935.11.26), later Bishop of Savannah (USA) (1935.11.26 – 1937.01.05), restyled (only) Bishop of Savannah–Atlanta (USA) (1937.01.05 – 1950.07.12), promoted Archbishop-Bishop of Savannah (1950.07.12 – 1959.11.12), also Apostolic Nuncio (papal ambassador) to Ireland (1951.11.27 – 1954.06.08), Apostolic Delegate to Great Britain (1954.06.08 – death 1963.07.16) and Titular Archbishop of Pessinus (1959.11.12 – 1963.07.16)
- Titular Archbishop: Alcide Marina, C.M. (1936.03.07 – death 1950.09.18), mainly as papal diplomat : Apostolic Delegate to Iran (1936.03.07 – 1945), Apostolic Administrator of Roman Catholic Apostolic Vicariate of Constantinople (Turkey) (1945–1947) and Apostolic Delegate to Turkey (1945–1947), Apostolic Nuncio to Lebanon (1947 – 1950.09.18)
- Titular Archbishop: Daniel Rivero Rivero (1951 – death 1960.05.23) (born Bolivia) on emeritate, formerly Titular Bishop of Tlous (1922.05.17 – 1931.03.30) as Coadjutor Bishop of Santa Cruz de la Sierra (Bolivia) (1922.05.17 – 1931.03.30) succeeding as Bishop of Santa Cruz de la Sierra (1931.03.30 – 1940.02.03), Metropolitan Archbishop of Sucre (Bolivia) (1940.02.03 – 1951)
- Titular Archbishop: Raffaele Calabria (1960.07.12 – 1962.01.01) as Coadjutor Archbishop of Benevento (Italy) (1960.07.12 – 1962.01.01), succeeding as Metropolitan Archbishop of Benevento (1962.01.01 – 1982.05.24); previously Titular Archbishop of Soteropolis (1950.05.06 – 1952.07.10) as Coadjutor Archbishop of Otranto (Italy) (1950.05.06 – 1952.07.10), succeeding as Metropolitan Archbishop of Otranto (Italy) (1952.07.10 – 1960.07.12)
- Titular Archbishop: Ottavio De Liva (1962.04.18 – death 1965.08.23) as papal diplomat : Apostolic Internuncio to Indonesia (1962.04.18 – 1965.08.23).
Notable peopleEdit
- Saint Barbara (273–306)
- Callinicus of Heliopolis (c. 600 – c. 680), chemist and inventor
- Abd al-Rahman al-Awza'i (707–774)
- Qusta ibn Luqa (820–912), mathematician and translator
- Sheikh Adi ibn Musafir (1070s–1162)
- Bahāʾ al-dīn al-ʿĀmilī (1547–1621), Lebanese-Iranian scholar, philosopher, architect, mathematician, astronomer
- Rahme Haider (1880s–1939), American lecturer from Baalbek
- Khalil Mutran (1872–1949), poet and journalist
- Harfush dynasty
- Hussein Sharafeddine (born 1997), footballer
In popular cultureEdit
- Letitia Elizabeth Landon's poetical illustration Template:Ws is on a painting by William Henry Bartlett entitled Six detached pillars of the Great Temple at Balbec, and was published in Fisher's Drawing Room Scrap Book, 1839.<ref>Template:Cite bookTemplate:Cite book</ref>
- Ameen Rihani's The Book of Khalid (1911), the first English novel by an Arab-American, is set in Baalbek.
- The events of the 1984 novel Les fous de Baalbek (SAS, #74) by Gérard de Villiers take place in Baalbek.
Twin townsEdit
Baalbek is twinned with:
- Template:Flagicon Bari, Italy
- Template:Flagicon L'Aquila, Italy
- Template:Flagicon Bergama, Turkey
- Template:Flagicon Thrace, Greece
- Template:Flagicon Yogyakarta, Indonesia<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation
|CitationClass=web }}</ref>
GalleryEdit
- The Round Temple and the Temple of the Muses located outside the sanctuary complex, Heliopolis (Baalbek), Lebanon.jpg
The Round Temple and the Temple of the Muses located outside the sanctuary complex
- Propylaea of Baalbek temples complex 16062.JPG
Remains of the Propylaeum, the eastern entrance to the site
- Great Court of Temples Complex in Baalbek (49856240571).jpg
The Great Court of Temples Complex
- Temple of Venus, Baalbek 14114.JPG
Temple of Venus
- Baalbeck Temple.jpg
Massive columns of the Temple of Jupiter
- 1873 Stieler Map of Asia Minor, Syria and Israel - Palestine (modern Turkey) - Geographicus - Klein-AsienSyrien-stieler-1873.jpg
An 1873 German map of Asia Minor & Syria, with relief illustrating the Beqaa (El Bekaa) valley
- Baalbec. Panorama - Bonfils. LCCN93500455.jpg
Panorama, around 1870, by Félix Bonfils
- Birdseye View of Baalbek and the Lebanons.jpg
Baalbek in 1910, after the arrival of rail
- Baalbek. General view 04956r.jpg
The ruins of Baalbek facing west from the hexagonal forecourt in the 19th century
- Colossal Hewn Block, Ancient Quarries Baalbek.jpg
The "Stone of the Pregnant Woman" in the early 20th century, the Temple of Jupiter in the background
See alsoEdit
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NotesEdit
ReferencesEdit
External linksEdit
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- Google Maps satellite view
- Panoramas of the temples at Lebanon 360 and Discover Lebanon
- Archaeological research in Baalbek from the German Archaeological Institute
- GCatholic – Latin titular see
- Baalbeck International Festival
- Baalbek Railway Station (2006) at Al Mashriq
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Further readingEdit
Template:World Heritage Sites in Lebanon Template:Baalbek District Template:Archaeological sites in Lebanon Template:Phoenician cities and colonies Template:Roman colonies in ancient Levant