Syria
ANCIENT SYRIA
Roman ruins at Palmyra
Courtesy Embassy of Syria
The first recorded mention of Greater Syria is in
Egyptian annals detailing expeditions to the Syrian coastland to log the
cedar, pine, and cypress of the Ammanus and Lebanon mountain ranges in the
fourth millennium. Sumer, a kingdom of non-Semitic peoples that formed the
southern boundary of ancient Babylonia, also sent expeditions in the third
millennium, chiefly in pursuit of cedar from the Ammanus and gold and silver
from Cilicia. The Sumerians most probably traded with the Syrian port city
of Byblos, which was also negotiating with Egypt for exportation of timber
and the resin necessary for mummification.
An enormous commercial network linking Anatolia,
Mesopotamia, Egypt, the Aegean, and the Syrian coast was developed. The
network was perhaps under the aegis of the kingdom of Ebla ("city of the
white stones"), the chief site of which was discovered in 1975 at Tall
Mardikh, 64 kilometers south of Aleppo .Numerous tablets give evidence of a
sophisticated and powerful indigenous Syrian empire, which dominated
northern Syria and portions of lower Mesopotamia, Anatolia, and Iran. Its
chief rival was Akkad in southern Mesopotamia, which flourished circa 2300
B.C. In addition to identifying another great cultural and political power
for the period--and an independent Syrian kingdom at that--the discovery of
Ebla has had other important ramifications. The oldest Semitic language was
thought to have been Amorite, but the newly found language of Ebla, a
variant of Paleo-Canaanite, is considerably older. Ebla twice conquered the
city of Mari, the capital of Amurru, the kingdom of the Semitic- speaking
Amorites. After protracted tension between Akkad and Ebla, the great king of
Akkad, Naram Sin, destroyed Ebla by fire in either 2300 or 2250. Naram Sin
also destroyed Arman, which may have been an ancient name for Aleppo.
Amorite power was effectively eclipsed in 1600 when
Egypt mounted a full attack on Greater Syria and brought the entire region
under its suzerainty. During the fifteenth and fourteenth centuries, the
area was in tremendous political upheaval because of the growing AsSyrian
power pressing from the east and invasions from the north of Hittites who
eventually settled in north and central Syria.
Another Semitic-speaking people, the Canaanites,
may have been part of the same migration that brought the Amorites into
Syria from northern Arabia in approximately 2400. The Amorites came under
the influence of Mesopotamia, whereas the Canaanites, who had intermarried
with indigenous Syrians of the coast, were probably under the initial
influence of Egypt.
The descendants of the intermarriages between
Canaanites and coastal Syrians were the Phoenicians, the greatest seafaring
merchants of the ancient world. The Phoenicians improved and developed iron
tools and significantly advanced the art of shipbuilding. Their mastery of
the seas allowed them to establish a network of independent city-states;
however, these entities were never united politically, partially because of
the continual harassment from Hittites to the north and Egyptians to the
south. The name given to their land--Canaan in Hurrian, Phoenicia in
Greek--refers to the fabulously valued purple dye extracted from mollusks
found at that time only on the Syrian coast. From this period purple became
the color of the robes of kings because only they and other small groups of
the ancient Middle Eastern elite could afford to purchase the rare dye. The
wealth derived in part from the dye trade sparked the economic flame that
made it possible for Greater Syrian city-states to enjoy a wide measure of
prosperity.
Many of Greater Syria's major contributions to
civilization were developed during the ancient period. Syria's greatest
legacy, the alphabet, was developed by Phoenicians during the second
millennium. The Phoenicians introduced their 30-letter alphabet to the
Aramaeans, among other Semitic-speaking people, and to the Greeks, who added
vowel letters not used in Semitic grammatical construction.
The Phoenicians, somewhat pressed for space for
their growing population, founded major colonies on the North African
littoral, the most notable of which was Carthage. In the process of founding
new city-states, they discovered the Atlantic Ocean.
The Aramaeans had settled in Greater Syria at
approximately the end of the thirteenth century B.C., the same time at which
the Jews, or Israelites, migrated to the area. The Aramaeans settled in the
Mesopotamian-Syrian corridor to the north and established the kingdom of
Aram, biblical Syria. As overland merchants, they opened trade to Southwest
Asia, and their capital Damascus became a city of immense wealth and
influence. At Aleppo they built a huge fortress, still standing. The
Aramaeans simplified the Phoenician alphabet and carried their language,
Aramaic, to their chief areas of commerce. Aramaic displaced Hebrew in
Greater Syria as the vernacular (Jesus spoke Aramaic), and it became the
language of commerce throughout the Middle East and the official language of
the Persian Empire. Aramaic continued to be spoken in the Syrian countryside
for almost 1,000 years, and in the 1980s remained in daily use in a handful
of villages on the Syrian-Lebanese border. A dialect of Aramaic continues to
be the language of worship in the Syrian Orthodox Church.
The plethora of city-states in Greater Syria could
not withstand the repeated attacks from the north by the powerful AsSyrian
Empire, which under the leadership of Nebuchadnezzar finally overwhelmed
them in the eighth century. AsSyrian aggressors were replaced by the
conquering Babylonians in the seventh century, and the then mighty Persian
Empire in the sixth century. Under Persian aegis, Syria had a measure of
self-rule, as it was to have under a succession of foreign rulers from that
time until independence in the twentieth century. When Alexander the Great
conquered the Persian Empire in 333, local political powers--which probably
would have continued to contest for control of Greater Syria--were
effectively shattered, and the area came into the strong cultural orbit of
Western ideas and institutions.
At Alexander's death, the empire was divided among
five of his generals. General Seleucus became heir to the lands formerly
under Persian control, which included Greater Syria. The Seleucids ruled for
three centuries and founded a kingdom with the capital at Damascus, which
later became referred to as the Kingdom of Syria. Seleucus named many cities
after his mother, Laodicea; the greatest became Latakia, Syria's major port.
Enormous numbers of Greek immigrants flocked to the
Kingdom of Syria. Syrian trade was vastly expanded as a result of the
newcomers' efforts, reaching into India, the Far East, and Europe. The
Greeks built new cities in Syria and colonized existing ones. Syrian and
Greek cultures synthesized to create Near Eastern Hellenism, noted for
remarkable developments in jurisprudence, philosophy, and science.
Replacing the Greeks and the Seleucids, Roman
emperors inherited already thriving cities--Damascus, Tadmur (once called
Palmyra), and Busra ash Sham in the fertile Hawran Plateau south of
Damascus. Under the emperor Hadrian, Syria was prosperous and its cities,
major trading centers; Hawran was a well-watered breadbasket. After making a
survey of the country, the Romans established a tax system based on the
potential harvest of farmlands; it remained the key to the land tax
structure until 1945. They bequeathed Syria some of the grandest buildings
in the world, as well as aqueducts, wells, and roads that were still in use
in modern times.
Neither the Seleucids nor the Romans ruled the area
without conflict. The Seleucids had to deal with powerful Arab peoples, the
Nabataeans, who had established an empire at Petra (in present-day Jordan)
and at Busra ash Sham. The Romans had to face the Palmyrenes, who had built
Palmyra, a city even more magnificent than Damascus and the principal stop
on the caravan route from Homs to the Euphrates.
By the time the Romans arrived, Greater Syrians had
developed irrigation techniques, the alphabet, and astronomy. In A.D. 324
the Emperor Constantine moved his capital from Rome to Byzantium, renaming
it Constantinople (modern Istanbul). From there the Byzantines ruled Greater
Syria, dividing it into two provinces: Syria Prima, with Antioch as the
capital and Aleppo the major city; and Syria Secunda, ruled frequently from
Hamah. Syria Secunda was divided into two districts: Phoenicia Prima, with
Tyre as the capital; and Phoenicia Secunda, ruled from Damascus. (Most of
Phoenicia Prima is now Lebanon.) The ruling families of Syria during this
period were the Ghassanids, Christian Arabs loyal to Byzantium, from whom
many Syrians now trace descent.
Byzantine rule in Syria was marked by constant
warfare with the Persian Sassanian Empire to the east. In these struggles,
Syria often became a battleground. In 611 the Persians succeeded in invading
Syria and Palestine, capturing Jerusalem in 614. Shortly thereafter, the
Byzantines counterattacked and retook their former possessions. During the
campaign the Byzantines tried to force Greek orthodoxy on the Syrian
inhabitants, but were unsuccessful. Beset by financial problems, largely as
a result of their costly campaigns against the Persians, the Byzantines
stopped subsidizing the Christian Arab tribes guarding the Syrian steppe.
Some scholars believe this was a fatal mistake, for these tribes were then
susceptible to a new force emanating from the south--Islam.
The Byzantine heritage remains in Syria's Christian
sects and great monastic ruins. In the fourth century A.D., Roman Emperor
Theodosius destroyed the temple to Jupiter in Damascus and built a cathedral
in honor of John the Baptist. The huge monastery at Dayr Siman near Aleppo,
erected by Simeon Stylites in the fifth century, is perhaps the greatest
Christian monument built before the tenth century.