Monday, Nov 11, 2024
logo
Update At 14:00    USD/EUR 0,00  ↑+0        USD/JPY 0,00  ↑+0        USD/KRW 0,00  ↑+0        EUR/JPY 0,00  ↑+0        Crude Oil 0,00  ↑+0        Asia Dow 0,00  ↑+0        TSE 0,00  ↑+0        Japan: Nikkei 225 0,00  ↑+0        S. Korea: KOSPI 0,00  ↑+0        China: Shanghai Composite 0,00  ↑+0        Hong Kong: Hang Seng 0,00  ↑+0        Singapore: Straits Times 0,00  ↑+0        DJIA 0,00  ↑+0        Nasdaq Composite 0,00  ↑+0        S&P 500 0,00  ↑+0        Russell 2000 0,00  ↑+0        Stoxx Euro 50 0,00  ↑+0        Stoxx Europe 600 0,00  ↑+0        Germany: DAX 0,00  ↑+0        UK: FTSE 100 0,00  ↑+0        Spain: IBEX 35 0,00  ↑+0        France: CAC 40 0,00  ↑+0        

UNESCO sites preserved for posterity

Article - September 27, 2011
As part of its cultural preservation efforts, Syria currently has six places inscribed on UNESCO’s World Heritage List for their cultural or physical significance: the three ancient cities of Aleppo, Bosra, and Damascus; the monumental ruins of the caravan oasis of Palmyra; and the two castles at Crac des Chevaliers and Qal’at Salah El-Din.

Both outstanding examples of fortification architecture during the time of the Crusades (11th to 13th centuries), Crac des Chevaliers is considered one of the world’s best-preserved medieval military castles. The Qal’at Salah El-Din affords visitors a sampling of Byzantine, Frankish, and Ayyubid architectural styles.

Although much of Europe, northern Africa and the Near East are riddled with Roman ruins, few of these are as significant as the ruins of the great city of Palmyra. What was once one of the most important cultural centers of the ancient world, Palmyra sat at the crossroads of several civilizations and was a first and second century meeting point for knowledge and culture from the East and the West.


Dozens of millennia of habitation in this region has left Syria with mesmerizing old cities. Losing oneself in Damascus’ nearly incomprehensible antiquity, meandering through the isolated columns of a magnificent Roman theater in Bosra, or strolling amidst the hubbub of Aleppo’s streets lined with a 13th century citadel, a 12th century mosque, and various 17th century madrasas, palaces, caravanserais, and hammams, one can feel transported back to a time so foreign and exotic to our own. UNESCO recognized the historical and cultural importance of the totality of these three cities – their parks, their souks, their fortresses, and religious monuments.

Six UNESCO sites in a country roughly the size of Washington State is quite impressive. However, it doesn’t end there: Syria is about to register the largest archeological park in the world, with more than 700 different sites all in the same area around Ebla, located between Aleppo and Idlib.

  0 COMMENTS