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Aleppo is one of the longest-surviving cities of the ancient and
Islamic Middle East. Until recently it enjoyed a thriving urban
life-in particular an active traditional suq, whose origins can be
traced across many centuries. Its tangle of streets still follow
the Hellenistic grid and above it looms the great Citadel, which
contains recently-uncovered remains of a Bronze/Iron Age temple
complex, suggesting an even earlier role as a 'high place' in the
Canaanite tradition. In the Arab Middle Ages, Aleppo was a
strongpoint of the Islamic resistance to the Crusader presence. Its
medieval Citadel is one of the most dramatic examples of a
fortified enclosure in the Islamic tradition. In Mamluk and Ottoman
times, the city took on a thriving commercial role and provided a
base for the first European commercial factories and consulates in
the Levant. Its commercial life funded a remarkable building
tradition with some hundreds of the 600 or so officially-declared
monuments dating from these eras, and its diverse ethnic mixture,
with significant Kurdish, Turkish, Christian and Armenian
communities provide a richer layering of influences on the city's
life. In this volume, Ross Burns explores the rich history of this
important city, from its earliest history through to the modern
era, providing a thorough treatment of this fascinating city
history, accessible both to scholarly readers as well as to the
general public interested in a factual and comprehensive survey of
the city's past.
Damascus, first published in 2005, was the first account in English
of the history of the city, bringing out the crucial role it has
played at many points in the region's past. It traces the story of
this colourful, significant and complex city through its physical
development, from the its emergence in around 7000 BC through the
changing cavalcade of Aramaean, Persian, Greek, Roman, Byzantine,
Arab, Turkish and French rulers to independence in 1946. This new
edition has been thoroughly updated using recent scholarship and
includes an additional chapter placing the events of the Syrian
post-2011 conflict in the context of the city's tumultuous
experiences over the last century. This volume is a must-read for
anyone interested in the sweep of Syrian history and archaeology,
and is an ideal partner to Burns' Aleppo (2016). Lavishly
illustrated, Damascus: A History remains a unique and compelling
exploration of this fascinating city.
Shortlisted for the 2018 British-Kuwait Friendship Society Book
Prize Aleppo is one of the longest-surviving cities of the ancient
and Islamic Middle East. Until recently it enjoyed a thriving urban
life-in particular an active traditional suq, with a continuous
tradition going back centuries. Its tangle of streets still follow
the Hellenistic grid and above it looms the great Citadel, which
contains recently-uncovered remains of a Bronze/Iron Age temple
complex, suggesting an even earlier role as a 'high place' in the
Canaanite tradition. In the Arab Middle Ages, Aleppo was a
strongpoint of the Islamic resistance to the Crusader presence. Its
medieval Citadel is one of the most dramatic examples of a
fortified enclosure in the Islamic tradition. In Mamluk and Ottoman
times, the city took on a thriving commercial role and provided a
base for the first European commercial factories and consulates in
the Levant. Its commercial life funded a remarkable building
tradition with some hundreds of the 600 or so officially-declared
monuments dating from these eras. Its diverse ethnic mixture, with
significant Kurdish, Turkish, Christian and Armenian communities,
provide a richer layering of influences on the city's life. In this
volume, Ross Burns explores Aleppo's rich history from its earliest
history through to the modern era, providing a thorough treatment
of this fascinating city history, accessible both to scholarly
readers and to the general public interested in a factual and
comprehensive survey of the city's past.
Damascus, first published in 2005, was the first account in English
of the history of the city, bringing out the crucial role it has
played at many points in the region's past. It traces the story of
this colourful, significant and complex city through its physical
development, from the its emergence in around 7000 BC through the
changing cavalcade of Aramaean, Persian, Greek, Roman, Byzantine,
Arab, Turkish and French rulers to independence in 1946. This new
edition has been thoroughly updated using recent scholarship and
includes an additional chapter placing the events of the Syrian
post-2011 conflict in the context of the city's tumultuous
experiences over the last century. This volume is a must-read for
anyone interested in the sweep of Syrian history and archaeology,
and is an ideal partner to Burns' Aleppo (2016). Lavishly
illustrated, Damascus: A History remains a unique and compelling
exploration of this fascinating city.
The colonnaded axes define the visitor's experience of many of the
great cities of the Roman East. How did this extraordinarily bold
tool of urban planning evolve? The street, instead of remaining a
mundane passage, a convenient means of passing from one place to
another, was in the course of little more than a century
transformed in the Eastern provinces into a monumental landscape
which could in one sweeping vision encompass the entire city. The
colonnaded axes became the touchstone by which cities competed for
status in the Eastern Empire. Though adopted as a sign of cities'
prosperity under the Pax Romana, they were not particularly 'Roman'
in their origin. Rather, they reflected the inventiveness,
fertility of ideas and the dynamic role of civic patronage in the
Eastern provinces in the first two centuries under Rome. This study
will concentrate on the convergence of ideas behind these great
avenues, examining over fifty sites in an attempt to work out the
sequence in which ideas developed across a variety of regions-from
North Africa around to Asia Minor. It will look at the phenomenon
in the context of the consolidation of Roman rule.
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