Syria Historical Setting
Fragment of relief plaque, ca. 2500 B.C., Tall
Hariri
PRESENT-DAY SYRIA constitutes only a small portion of the
ancient geographical Syria. Until the twentieth century, when
Western powers began to carve out the rough contours of the
contemporary states of Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Israel, the
whole of the settled region at the eastern end of the
Mediterranean Sea was called Syria, the name given by the ancient
Greeks to the land bridge that links three continents. For this
reason, historians and political scientists usually use the term
Greater Syria (see Glossary)
to denote the area in the prestate
period.
Historically, Greater Syria rarely ruled itself, primarily
because of its vulnerable position between the Mediterranean Sea
and the desert. As a marchland between frequently powerful
empires on the north, east, and south, Syria was often a
battlefield for the political destinies of dynasties and empires.
Unlike other parts of the Middle East, Greater Syria was prized
as a fertile cereal-growing oasis. It was even more critical as a
source of the lumber needed for building imperial fleets in the
preindustrial period.
Even though it was exploited politically, Greater Syria
benefited immeasurably from the cultural diversity of the peoples
who came to claim parts or all of it and who remained to
contribute and participate in the remarkable spiritual and
intellectual flowering that characterized Greater Syria's
cultures in the ancient and medieval periods. Incorporating some
of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in the world, Greater
Syria was in a unique position to foster intellectual activities.
By 1400 B.C., Damascus (Dimashq), Aleppo (Halab), Hamah (Hamath),
Byblos (Gubla), Joffa (Joppa), Homs, Gaza, Tyre (Sur), and Sidon
already had been established; some of these cities had flourished
for many centuries. Because Greater Syria was usually ruled by
foreigners, the inhabitants traditionally identified themselves
with their cities, and in contemporary Syria each city continues
to have a unique sociopolitical character.
A recurrent theme of Greater Syria's history has been the
encounters between Eastern and Western powers on its soil. Even
in the ancient period, it was the focus of a continual dialectic,
both intellectual and bellicose, between the Middle East and the
West. During the medieval period this dialectic was intensified
as it became colored by diametrically opposed religious points of
view regarding rights to the land. The Christian Byzantines
contended with Arabs, and later the Christian Crusaders competed
with Muslim Arabs, for land they all held sacred.
The advent of Arab Muslim rule in A.D. 636 provided the two
major themes of Syrian history: the Islamic religion and the
world community of Arabs. According to traditionalist Muslims,
the greatest period of Islamic history was the time of the brief
rule of Muhammad--the prototype for the perfect temporal ruler--
and the time of the first four caliphs (known as rashidun,
rightly guided), when man presumably behaved as God commanded and
established a society on earth unequaled before or after. During
this period religion and state were one and Muslims ruled Muslims
according to Muslim law. The succeeding Umayyad (661-750) and
Abbasid (750-1258) caliphates were extensions of the first period
and proved the military and intellectual might of Muslims. The
history of Greater Syria in the early medieval period is
essentially the history of political Islam at one of its most
glorious moments--the period of the Umayyad caliphate when the
Islamic empire, with its capital at Damascus, stretched from the
Oxus River to southern France.
A different view of Syrian history denies that the greatness
of the Arab past was a purely Islamic manifestation. The history
of the Arabs began before the coming of Muhammad, and what Arabs
achieved during the Umayyad and Abbasid empires was evidence not
only of the rich inheritance from Greek and Roman days but also
of the vitality of Arab culture.
Since independence in 1946, Syria's history has been
dominated by four overriding factors. First is the deeply felt
desire among Syrian Arabs--Christian and Muslim alike--to achieve
some kind of unity with the other Arabs of the Middle East in
fulfillment of their aspirations for regional leadership. Second
is a desire for economic and social prosperity.
Third is a universal dislike of Israel, which Syrians
feel was forcibly imposed by the West and which they view as a
threat to Arab unity
(see Foreign Policy
, ch. 4). The fourth
issue is the dominant political role of the military.
Data as of April 1987
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