Tuesday 1 November 2016

Syria

Facts in brief about Syria
Capital: Damascus.
Official language: Arabic.
Official name: Al-Jumhuria Al-Arabia Al-Suria (The Syrian Arab Republic).
Area: 185,180 kmz. Greatest distances— east-west, 829 km; north- south, 748 km. Coastline- -151 km.
Elevation: Highest— Mount Hermon, 2,814 m above sea level.
Lowest— sea levef along the coast.
Population: Estimated 1996population -15,283,000; density, 82 people per km2; distribution, 53 per cent urban, 47 per cent rural. 1981 census—9,046,144. Estimated2001 population— 18,125,000.
Chief products: Agriculture— cotton, wheat, barley, milk, grapes, sugar beet. Manufacturing— textiles, fertilizer, petro­leum products, cement, glass, processed foods. Mining— pe­troleum, phosphates.
National anthem: "Homat El Diyar" ("Guardians of the Home­land").
Money: Currency unit— Syrian pound. One pound = 100 pias­tres

Important dates in Syria
2300's B.C. The Akkadians conquered northern and eastern Syria.
c. 1500 B.C. The Arameans arrived in Syria.
732 B.C. The Assyrians conquered most of Syria.
539 B.C. Syria became part of the Persian Empire.
331 B.C. Alexander the Great gained control of Syria.
64 B.C. Syria fell to the Romans.
A.D. 637 Muslim Arabs invaded and took control of Syria.
1516 The Ottoman Turks added Syria to their empire.
1914-1918 Syrians and other Arabs revolted against Turkish rule during World War I.
1914-1919 France received Syria as a League of Nations mandate.
1946 Syria gained complete independence from France.
1947 Syrian and other Arab troops invaded Israel. The United Nations (UNI eventually arranged a cease-fire.
1967 Israel defeated Syria, Egypt, and Jordan in a six-day war, and Israel occupied Syria's Golan Heights.
1973 Syria joined several other Arab nations in another war against Israel. Cease-fires ended the fighting.
1976 Syria sent troops into Lebanon in an effort to stop a civil war there.
1981 Israel claimed legal and political authority in the Golan Heights. Syria denounced this action.
1991 Syrian troops joined the allied forces and helped end the Iraqi occupation of Kuwait.

The Syrian countryside consists of rolling plains, fertile valleys, and barren deserts. About half of all the Syrian people live in rural villages. On the plains of northwestern Syria, rural villagers build beehive-shaped houses of stone or sun-dried mud bricks.
Damascus is Syria's capital and largest city. Much of Damascus is modern, like the section shown above. But the city is thou­sands of years old, and some ancient sections still exist.
Syria's flag, which was adopted in 1980, bears traditional Arab colours. Two green stars appear on the flag.
The coat of arms shows a hawk. This bird was the emblem of the tribe of Muhammad, the founder of Islam.
Syria is a country in southwestern Asia. It lies at the eastern end of the Mediterranean Sea and borders on five other countries.
A Syrian villager wearing traditional clothing sits at her door­step and prepares vegetables for her family's dinner.
Tabka Dam is the largest in Syria. Completed in 1973, it created a large lake, Lake Assad, which provides irriga­tion water for crops such as cotton, cereals, and fruit. The associated hydroelectric power station was completed in 1977 and is Syria's main source of electricity.
The Orontes River Valley is one of Syria's main farming re­gions. It has a dry climate, and farmers rely on irrigation. The water wheel is part of an ancient irrigation system.
Ruins of Palmyra stand in central Syria. This ancient city thrived more than 2,000 years ago as a major stop for caravans.

Syria is an Arab country at the eastern end of the Med­iterranean Sea. It is a land of rolling plains, fertile river valleys, and barren deserts. Damascus is Syria's capital and largest city.
Syria is an extremely ancient land with a rich cultural heritage. Some of the oldest known civilizations grew up there. The first alphabet was developed in Syria, and Syrian artists and scholars greatly influenced the cul­tures of ancient Greece and Rome.
Syria lies along major trade routes linking Africa, Asia, and Europe. Camel caravans followed these routes more than 4,000 years ago carrying goods between Asia and Mediterranean ports. Such Syrian cities as Damas­cus and Aleppo grew up along the caravan routes and became centres of world trade as early as 2000 B.C.
Syrians have also profited from agriculture. The coun­try is located at the western end of a rich farmland that is called the Fertile Crescent (see Fertile Crescent). Farmers grow chiefly cotton and wheat on the rich Syr­ian plains.
Most Syrians are Muslim Arabs, but the population also includes several ethnic and religious minorities. About a fourth of all workers are farmers. Syrian indus­tries are expanding, and many rural people have moved to the cities to seek industrial jobs.
Government
Syria is a republic. Its Constitution, adopted in 1973, calls the nation a socialist popular democracy. Syrians 18 years or older may vote.
National government. A president is Syria's head of state and most powerful government official. The peo­ple elect the president to a seven-year term. A 250- member People's Council makes the laws in Syria. Vot­ers elect members of the People's Council to four-year terms.
The president heads the Baath Party, which controls
Syrian politics. The party's power rests on its control of the nation's armed forces. The Baath Party is committed to socialism and to the political union of all the Arab countries. Syria has four other legal political parties. They and the Baath Party form a socialist organization known as the National Progressive Front.
Local government. Syria is divided into 13 prov­inces and the city of Damascus, which is considered a separate unit. The national government appoints all pro­vincial governors and other chief local officials. Each province also has a people's council made up of elected and appointed members.
Courts. The Court of Cassation is Syria's highest court of appeals for civil, commercial, and criminal cases. Each of Syria's religious communities has its own courts for such matters as marriage, divorce, and inheri­tance.
Armed forces. About 400,000 people serve in Syria's armed forces. All eligible males may be conscripted for 30 months of military service. Women may volunteer for service.
People
Population and ancestry. For Syria's total popula­tion, see the Facts in brief table with this article. Most of the people live in the western part of the country. More than 1 million people live in Damascus. Syria has four other cities with more than 150,000 people. They are, in order of size, Aleppo, Horns, Latakia, and Hama.
About 90 per cent of all Syrians speak Arabic, Syria's official language, and consider themselves to be Arabs. Most of them are descended from people called Sem­ites who settled in ancient Syria. Non-Arab Syrians in­clude Armenians and Kurds. Their ancestors came from the north. Most of these Syrians still speak Armenian or Kurdish in everyday life.
Way of life. About half of all Syrians live in rural areas, mostly in small villages. A few rural people, called Bedouins, are nomads. The rest of the population lives in cities or towns.
Some of Syria's cities are among the oldest in the world. They have narrow, winding streets and ancient market places. But the cities also have newer sections where life resembles that in most Western cities. The people live in modern houses or apartments and work in such fields as government and industry.
Many villagers live much as their ancestors did hun­dreds of years ago. They farm small plots and build houses of stone or of sun-dried mud bricks. Bedouins live in tents and move about the countryside grazing their livestock.
Some Syrians, especially in rural areas, wear tradi­tional clothing, such as billowy trousers and a large cloth head covering. In the cities and towns, most peo­ple wear Western-style clothing. Syrians eat bread as their main food. Most also eat cheese and fresh fruit and vegetables. Lamb dishes are commonly served, and they are always prepared for special occasions. Syrians, like other Arabs, enjoy strong black coffee. They also drink milk, tea, beer, and arak (a strong spirit made from dates).
Family ties are close among most Syrians. Many par­ents share their home with their sons and the sons' fami­lies. As in most Islamic cultures, women in Syria tradi­tionally have had little freedom. However, increasing educational opportunities and exposure to Western ideas are gradually improving their position.
Religion. Muslims make up about 90 per cent of Syria's population. Most of them belong to the Sunni branch of Islam. Syria also has smaller groups of Mus­lims, including Alawites and Shiites. Christians account for most of the rest of the people. The Armenian Ortho­dox, Creek Catholic, Creek Orthodox, and Syrian Ortho­dox churches have the most members. Some Syrians are Druses. They practise a secret religion related to Islam. Syria also has a small number of Jews.
Religion, especially Islam, is a powerful political and social force in Syria. Many Syrians feel strong ties to their religious group, and these ties have often hindered national unity.
Education. Syrian law requires all children from 6 to 11 years old to go to school. However, many children do not attend school because of a shortage of classrooms and teachers. About half of all adult Syrians cannot read or write. Universities operate in Aleppo, Damascus, Horns, and Latakia.
Arts. Syria's cultural heritage goes back thousands of years. Since ancient times, Syrian craftworkers have been famous for their beautiful glassware, metalwork, and textiles. Semites who lived in Syria and Palestine de­veloped the first alphabet about 1500 B.C Basic ideas in architecture, shipbuilding, and ironwork also originated in Syria.
Syria's greatest contribution to the arts has been in lit­erature, the Arabs' supreme art. Two of Syria's finest poets were al-Mutanabbi, who lived in the 900's, and al- Maarri, who lived in the 1000's. During the 90ffs, the Syr­
ian al-Farabi became one of Islam's leading philoso­phers. Important Syrian writers of the 1900's include Omar Abu-Rishe, Ahmad Arnaut, Shafiq Jabri, Nizar Kab- bani, and Ali Ahmad Said.
Land and climate
Syria can be divided into three main land regions. They are, from west to east: (1) the coast, (2) the moun­tains, and (3) the valleys and plains.
The coast is a narrow strip of land that extends along the Mediterranean Sea from Turkey to Lebanon. Moist sea winds give the region a mild, humid climate. Tem­peratures average about 9° C in January and about 27° C in July. About 100 centimetres of rain falls yearly. The coast is one of the few areas where crops do not have to be irrigated, and most of the land is cultivated.
The mountains run mostly from north to south. The region includes the Jabal an Nusayriyah range east of the coast; the Anti-Lebanon Mountains along the border with Lebanon; and the Jabal ad Duruz, a mountain south­east of the Anti-Lebanon range. The western slopes of the Jabal an Nusayriyah and Jabal ad Duruz are well pop­ulated, and most of the land is cultivated. The Anti-Lebanon Mountains have a dry, stony surface and are thinly populated.
The mountains catch sea winds blowing inland and force them to drop their moisture on the western side of the mountains. Thus, the western slopes have up to 100 centimetres of rain yearly, but the land to the east remains dry. Temperatures average about 5° C in Janu­ary and about 22° C in July.
The valleys and plains include fertile river valleys, grassy plains, and sandy deserts. The Orontes River and mountain streams water the plains along the eastern edge of the mountains. These plains have rich, produc­tive farmlands and are the home of most of Syria's peo­ple. The Euphrates River and its tributaries provide water for a developing agricultural area in the northeast. Most of the rest of Syria is covered by deserts and by dry grasslands where Bedouins graze their livestock.
Little rain falls in the valleys and plains region. Tem­peratures average about 5° C in January and about 31 ° C in July.
Economy
Syria is a developing country with good potential for economic growth. The government controls most of the economy, but the majority of farms, small businesses, and small industries are privately owned.
Natural resources. Syria's most valuable natural re­sources are agricultural land and petroleum. The Eu­phrates and Orontes rivers provide irrigation water for farmlands. In addition, hydroelectric power is produced at Syria's huge Tabka Dam on the Euphrates River.
Service industries account for 60 per cent of the total value of Syria's economic production. They employ about 40 per cent of the country's workers. The leading service industries in Syria are wholesale and retail trade, and government services. Aleppo, Damascus, and Lata­kia are the leading centres of trade. Much of the money spent on government services in Syria goes to military activities. Other service industries include education, fi­nance, health care, and utilities.
Agriculture. Cotton and wheat are Syria's main crops. Farmers also grow barley, sugar beet, tobacco, and such fruit and vegetables as grapes, olives, and to­matoes. Bedouins raise cattle, goats, and sheep.
Most Syrian farmers work small plots of land. Some use old-fashioned wooden ploughs and do many tasks by hand. However, government funds for agricultural development have helped provide modern machinery for many small farms. Syria also has a few large, state- owned farms. On about 90 per cent of Syria's land, the rainfall is too light and irregular for growing many kinds of crops. Irrigation thus plays a vital role in Syrian agri­culture.
Mining makes up 7 per cent of Syria's production value. Petroleum is Syria's chief mineral product. Most of the petroleum comes from fields in the northeastern part of the country. Phosphate rock is another important source of mining income. Phosphate, which is used to make fertilizer, is mined in the Palmyra area of central Syria. The country's other mineral products include gyp­sum, limestone, and natural gas.
Manufacturing accounts for 6 per cent of the value of Syria's production. The manufacture of cotton fabrics and other textiles is one of Syria's most important indus­tries. Other chief products include beverages, cement, fertilizer, glass, processed foods, and sugar. Syria also has a growing oil-refining industry. The main industrial centres are Damascus, Aleppo, Homs, and Latakia.
Foreign trade. Syria's chief exports are petroleum, raw cotton, and woollens and other textiles. Other ex­ports include food products, phosphates, and tobacco. Major imports include fuels, grain, machinery, metals and metal products, and motor vehicles. Syria's main trading partners include France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, the United States, Lebanon and other nearby coun­tries, and countries in Eastern Europe.
Transportation and communication. Few Syrians own a car, and most people travel by bus. Damascus has an international airport. The port of Latakia on the Medi­terranean Sea handles most of Syria's foreign trade. About 20 per cent of all Syrians own a radio, and about 6 per cent own a television set The country has 10 major daily newspapers.
History
Until 1918, Syria included much of what are now Is­rael, Jordan, and Lebanon and parts of Turkey. This re­gion, often called Greater Syria, has a long, colourful past. Throughout history, Syria's rich soil and location
on major trade routes have made the country a valuable prize. As a result, Syria was a constant battleground and became part of many empires.
Semitic settlement Unidentified peoples lived in northern Syria before 4500 B.C. The first known settlers in Syria were Semites who probably arrived about 3500 B.C They established independent city-states through­out the region. One city-state, Ebla, flourished in north­ern Syria sometime between 2700 and 2200 B.C Ebla was a powerful kingdom with a highly advanced civiliza­tion. See Ebla.
Various Semitic groups ruled parts of Syria until 539 B.C For example, the Akkadians conquered much of northern and eastern Syria during the 2300's B.C About 2000 B.C, the Canaanites moved into the southwest, and the Phoenicians settled along the Mediterranean coast. Phoenician sailors carried Syrian culture throughout the Mediterranean world.
By 1700 B.C, the Amorites ruled much of eastern Syria. The Arameans arrived in Syria about 1500 B.C Their culture gradually spread through most of Syria. By 1200 B.C, Damascus was a prosperous Aramean city.
The Hebrews entered southern Syria during the late 1200's B.C and introduced the belief in one God into Syrian culture. In 732 B.C, the Assyrians conquered most of Syria. They ruled until 612 B.C, when the Baby­lonians took control.
The age of non-Semitic rule. Persian forces de­feated the Babylonians in 539 B.C and made Syria part of the Persian Empire. Greek and Macedonian armies under Alexander the Great conquered the Persians in 333 B.C Alexander and his successors, the Seleucids, spread Greek culture throughout the Middle East. The Seleucid emperors ruled from 312 to 64 B.C. During their reign, trade flourished, and many agricultural ad­vances were made.
Syria fell to the Romans in 64 B.C Syrians then lived under the Roman system of law for nearly 700 years, first as part of the Roman Empire, then of the East Roman Empire, and finally of the Byzantine Empire. During this period, Christianity was born and developed in a part of Greater Syria called Palestine. It became the state reli­gion of Syria in the A.D. 300’s.
The Muslim Arabs. Muslims from the Arabian Pen­insula invaded Syria and drove out the Byzantine forces in 636. Islam gradually replaced Christianity, and Arabic became the common language. Beginning in 661, a vast Muslim empire was governed from Damascus by the Umayyad dynasty. In 750, the Umayyads were over­thrown. The Abbasid dynasty gained control of the em­pire and ruled it from Baghdad.
Christian crusaders from Europe invaded Syria dur­ing the late 1000's. They hoped to regain the Holy Land (Palestine) from the Muslims. Saladin, ruler of Egypt, swept into Syria to fight the crusaders. By the late 1100's, Saladin had become the ruler of most of Syria.
The Mamelukes and Ottomans. From 1260 to 1516, Syria was governed by the Mameluke dynasty of Egypt. In 1516, Ottoman Turks conquered Syria and made it part of their huge empire. Ottoman rule lasted about 400 years. During the late ISOffs, European explorers discov­ered sea routes to India. Syria's position as a trade cen­tre then declined. By the 1700's, the power of the Otto­man Empire was growing weak. Western ideas began to influence many areas of Syrian life. By 1900, many Syri­ans were demanding independence.
World War 1 to independence. During World War I (1914-1918), Syrians and other Arabs revolted against the Turks and helped the United Kingdom (UK) fight the Ot­toman Empire. The Arabs had agreed to aid the UK in re­turn for its support of Arab independence. But after the war, the League of Nations divided Greater Syria into four states: Syria, Lebanon, Palestine, and Transjordan. It also gave France a mandate to manage Syrian affairs (see Mandated territory). Most Syrians resented French control, the presence of French troops, and the division of their land. The French encouraged economic growth and brought many improvements to Syria, but the Syri­ans demanded independence.
Independence. France withdrew all its troops from Syria in 1946, and Syria gained independence. Many Syrians then wanted to reunite Greater Syria. In 1947,
however, the United Nations (UN) divided Palestine into a Jewish state (Israel) and an Arab state. Israel became independent in 1948. Syrian and other Arab forces then invaded Israel, but the UN finally arranged a cease-fire. About 700,000 Palestinian Arabs fled the new Jewish state and became refugees in Arab countries.
Many Syrians blamed their government for failing to prevent the division of Palestine. In 1949, army officers overthrew the government. During the next 20 years, control of the government changed hands many times through military revolts.
In an effort toward establishing Arab unity, Syria joined Egypt in 1958 in a political union called the United Arab Republic (U.A.R.). But Egypt threatened to take complete control, and Syria left the U.A.R. in 1961.
During the early 1960's, Syria's Baath Party rose to power. The government took over most industry and all international trade in Syria. In 1971, Hafez al-Assad, a Baathist leader and airforce general, became president of Syria. Assad is a member of the Alawite sect of Islam.
The continuing Arab-lsraeli conflict. During the early 1960's, border clashes between Syrian and Israeli troops occurred frequently. On June 5,1967, war broke out between Israel and the Arab states of Syria, Jordan, and Egypt. After six days of fighting, Israel had won the war and occupied much Arab land. This included an area called the Golan Heights, in the southwestern cor­ner of Syria. Thousands of Arabs then fled from territory occupied by Israel to neighbouring Arab countries.
Fighting between Syria and Israel continued to erupt from time to time in the Golan Heights. Tension was in­creased by the presence in Syria of Arab refugees from Palestine and the Golan Heights.
In October 1973, Syria joined other Arab states in an­other war with Israel. Cease-fires ended most of the fighting by November 1973. But Syrian and Israeli forces continued fighting each other until May 1974. In 1981, Is­rael claimed legal and political authority in the Golan Heights. Syria and many other nations denounced this action. Arab-lsraeli peace talks began in 1991.
Recent developments. Today, Syria plays a key role in the Middle East. In 1976, Syria sent troops into Leba­non with the approval of the Lebanese government in an effort to stop a civil war there. The Syrian forces have periodically engaged in fighting against participants in the Lebanese conflict. Most of the fighting in Lebanon ended in 1991. But the Syrian forces remained.
In August 1990, Iraq invaded and occupied Kuwait. Syria was part of the alliance formed to oppose the oc­cupation. War broke out in January 1991, and the allies defeated Iraq in February. About 20,000 Syrian troops took part in the war effort. See Persian Gulf War.
In September 1993, a peace agreement was signed by the Palestine Liberation Organization and Israel. It al­lowed limited Palestinian self-rule in some Israeli- occupied territories. The agreement jeopardized the Syrian-lsraeli peace talks but, in 1994, talks continued about sovereignty of the Golan Heights.
Related articles in World Book include:
Aleppo
Arabs
Hafez al-Assad,
Bedouins Clothing
Damascus
Druses
Euphrates River
Golan Heights
Latakia
Middle East
Palestine
Palmyra
Phoenicia
Treaty of Sevres

Outline
Government
National government
Local government
Courts
Armed forces
People
Population and ancestry
Way of life
Land and climate
The coast
The mountains
The valleys and plains
Economy
Natural resources
Service industries
Agriculture
Mining
History

Questions
What are Syria's main agricultural products?
When did Syria gain full independence from France?
What is the chief religion in Syria?
Who were the first known settlers in Syria?
For what products have Syrian craftworkers been famous since ancient times?
Who is Syria's most powerful government official?
Why was ancient Syria a major trade centre?
What is Syria's largest industry?
What are the goals of Syria's Baath Party?
How do Syria's mountains affect the distribution of rainfall in the country?

Syrian Desert is a triangular desert plateau that ex­tends northward from the An Nafud Desert of northern Arabia. For location, see Saudi Arabia (terrain map). It lies roughly between 30 and 36 degrees north latitude. The plateau is from 610 to 910 metres above sea level on the west. It slopes downward to the Euphrates River, its eastern boundary. The southern two-thirds of the pla­teau is rocky. A volcanic zone on the west is dotted with huge boulders of black basalt. The Jabal Unayzah, a mountainous area about 910 metres high, stands above the central part of the plateau. Deeply cut wadis (dry wa­tercourses) wind down from it to the Euphrates.
The northern third of this triangular plateau is a flat sandy plain that forms the natural bridge between Syria and Iraq. A chain of limestone hills rises along the west­ern edge of the plain. The desert contains historic ruins and several towns that have grown up around oases.
The famous caravan city of Palmyra is the best known of these towns. Two roads have been built across the de­sert.

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