List of castles in Syria
Key
Key | |
Name | Name of the surviving building, either how it is popularly known in English, its medieval name or its Arabic name |
Type | Usually the type of castle represented by the predominant surviving fortified remains |
Date | Usually the dates of the principal building works relating to the surviving remains |
Condition | An indication as to what remains of the original castle structure |
Image | Building or site as it currently exists |
Coordinates | Location of the castle |
Governorate | Governorate in which the castle is located |
Notes | Brief description or information of note |
List of castles
Name |
Type |
Date |
Condition |
Image | Coordinates | Governorate | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Citadel of Aleppo | Castle | 12–13th centuries | Partially restored | 36°11′57″N 37°09′45″E | Aleppo | Covers an ancient tell with remains dating back to the 3rd millennium BCE. | |
Qal'at Najm | Hilltop castle | 12–13th centuries | Partially restored | 36°33′18″N 38°15′42″E | Aleppo | Besieged in 1820 by Ottoman forces after a local warlord had sought refuge in the castle.[1] | |
Citadel of Damascus | Castle | 11–13th centuries | Partially restored | 33°30′42″N 36°18′7″E | Damascus | Part of the Ancient City of Damascus World Heritage Site.[2] | |
Citadel of Bosra | Castle | Partially restored | 32°31′04″N 36°28′54″E | Daraa | Built around a Roman theatre. Part of the Ancient City of Bosra World Heritage Site.[3] | ||
Halabiye | Hilltop castle | 6th century | Ruins | 35°41′22″N 39°49′08″E | Deir ez-Zor | Originally fortified by Queen Zenobia of Palmyra, refortified under the Byzantine Emperor Justinian I and partially re-used after the Muslim conquest of Syria.[4] | |
Qal'at Rahbeh | Hilltop castle | Ruins | 35°00′18″N 40°25′24″E | Deir ez-Zor | Much of the current structure dates back to its construction by the Ayyubid lord, Shirkuh II, in 1207. | ||
Qal'at Sukkara | Hilltop castle | Ruins | 36°25′38″N 40°23′56″E | Al Hasakah | Located in the Jebel Abd al-Aziz. | ||
Qalʿat Abū Qubais | Hilltop castle | Partially restored | 35°14′05.9″N 36°19′50.8″E | Hama | |||
Citadel of Hama | Castle | Ruins | 35°08′10″N 36°44′58″E | Hama | Excavated by a Danish expedition between 1931 and 1938.[5] | ||
Qalaat al-Madiq | Hilltop castle | Residential area | 35°25′12″N 36°23′33″E | Hama | |||
Qal'at al-Rahiyya | Castle | Ruins | 35°16′45″N 37°6′30″E | Hama | The castle dates back to the second millennium BC.[6] | ||
Masyaf Castle | Spur castle | Partially restored | 35°03′58″N 36°20′36″E | Hama | |||
Shaizar | Spur castle | Partially restored | 35°15′55″N 36°33′59″E | Hama | |||
Shmemis | Hilltop castle | Ruins | 35°02′13″N 37°00′49″E | Hama | |||
Citadel of Homs | Castle | Ruins | 34°43′25″N 36°42′52″E | Homs | Built on top of an ancient tell with remains dating back to the 3rd millennium BCE.[7] | ||
Fakhr-al-Din al-Maani Castle | Hilltop castle | Partially restored | 34°33′46″N 38°15′25″E | Homs | |||
Qasr al-Hayr al-Gharbi | Desert castle | Ruins | 34°22′28″N 37°36′21″E | Homs | |||
Qasr al-Hayr al-Sharqi | Desert castle | Ruins | 35°4′26″N 39°4′16″E | Homs | |||
Krak des Chevaliers | Hilltop castle | Partially restored | 34°45′25″N 36°17′4″E | Homs | Part of the Crac des Chevaliers and Qal'at Salah El-Din World Heritage Site.[8] | ||
Harem Castle | Hilltop castle | Ruins | 36°12′27″N 36°31′09″E | Idlib | |||
Bani Qahtan Castle | Hilltop castle | Ruins | 35°23′44″N 36°09′15″E | Latakia | |||
Bourzey castle | Hilltop castle | Ruins | 35°39′29″N 36°15′39″E | Latakia | |||
Mahalibeh Castle | Hilltop castle | Partially restored | 35°30′28″N 36°05′14″E | Latakia | |||
Qal'at Salah ed-Din | Spur castle | Partially restored | 35°35′45″N 36°03′26″E | Latakia | Part of the Crac des Chevaliers and Qal'at Salah El-Din World Heritage Site.[8] | ||
Nimrod Fortress | Hilltop castle | 13th century | 33°15′10″N 35°42′53″E | Quneitra | Located in the Golan Heights, which is currently under Israeli occupation. | ||
Citadel of Raqqa | Castle | 13th century | Destroyed | 35°56′4″N 39°00′5″E | Raqqa | The citadel was completely removed and built over in the 1950s.[9] | |
Qal'at Ja'bar | Hilltop castle | 12th century | Partially restored | 35°53′51″N 38°28′51″E | Raqqa | Originally situated on a hilltop overlooking the Euphrates Valley but now turned into an island by the flooding of Lake Assad.[10] | |
Salkhad Castle | Hilltop castle | Ruins | 32°29′38″N 36°42′36″E | Suwayda | |||
Chastel Blanc | Hilltop castle | Partially restored | 34°49′14″N 36°07′01″E | Tartus | |||
Chastel Rouge | Partially restored | 34°48′44″N 35°58′14″E | Tartus | ||||
Al-Kahf Castle | Spur castle | 12th century | Ruins | 35°02′27″N 36°04′58″E | Tartus | In 1192, Rashid ad-Din Sinan, also known as the Old Man of the Mountain, died in Al-Kahf Castle, which was an Ismaili stronghold during the 12th century.[11] | |
Qala'at Khawabi | Spur castle | Residential area | 34°58′22″N 36°00′06″E | Tartus | |||
Margat | Spur castle | 11–12th centuries | Partially restored | 35°09′08″N 35°57′0″E | Tartus | Headquarters of the Knights Hospitaller in Syria. | |
al-Sheikh Deeb Castle | Hilltop castle | Ruins | Tartus | ||||
Citadel of Tartus | Castle | Residential area | 34°53′36″N 35°52′35″E | Tartus | |||
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Castles in Syria. |
References
- Sourdel 2010
- Ancient City of Damascus, UNESCO World Heritage Centre, retrieved 16 March 2011
- Ancient City of Bosra, UNESCO World Heritage Centre, retrieved 23 August 2011
- Burns 2009
- Shaw & Jameson 1999, p. 167
- "Discovery of a 4,000-year-old military network in northern Syria". cnrs.fr. 19 December 2017.
- King 2002, p. 42
- Crac des Chevaliers and Qal'at Salah El-Din, UNESCO World Heritage Centre, retrieved 24 August 2011
- Heidemann 2006, p. 122
- Bounni 1977
- Willey 2005, p. 234
Sources
- Bounni, Adnan (1977), "Campaign and exhibition from the Euphrates in Syria", The Annual of the American Schools of Oriental Research, 44: 1–7, JSTOR 3768538
- Burns, R. (2009), The monuments of Syria. A guide, London: I.B. Tauris, pp. 160–161, ISBN 9781845119478
- Heidemann, Stefan (2006), "The Citadel of al-Raqqa and Fortifications in the Middle Euphrates Area", in Kennedy, Hugh (ed.), Muslim Military Architecture in Greater Syria: From the Coming of Islam to the Ottoman Period, History of Warfare, 35, Leiden: Brill, pp. 122–150, ISBN 9004147136
- King, G.R.D. (2002), "Archaeological Fieldwork at the Citadel of Homs, Syria: 1995–1999", Levant, 34: 39–58, doi:10.1179/007589102790217336
- Shaw, Ian; Jameson, Robert (1999), A Dictionary of Archaeology, Oxford: Blackwell, ISBN 978-0631174233
- Sourdel, D. (2010), "Ķalat Nadjm", in Bearman, P.; Bianquis, Th.; Bosworth, C.E.; van Donzel, E.; Heinrichs, W.P. (eds.), Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition, Leiden: Brill Online, OCLC 624382576
- Willey, Peter (2005), Eagle's Nest: Ismaili Castles in Iran and Syria, Institute of Ismaili Studies, I.B.Tauris, ISBN 9781850434641
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