E. Marty and R. Scott Appleby, 531–586 (Chicago: Uni-
since 1946. It is densely populated,
slopes of the Anti-Lebanon. The Barada River
Byzantine Empire up
until the Muslim conquest
in 635
c
.
e
. During the rule of the U
mayyad
c
aliph
-
ate
(662–750), Damascus became the capital of
this, the first Islamic dynasty, and an important
cultural and economic center of the region. They
built the beautiful congregational
mosqUe
that
still stands in the heart of the old city. In 750, the
Abbasids defeated the Umayyads and installed
their capital in b
aghdad
. Damascus then became
a provincial town subject to the rule of different
Islamic dynasties that conquered the area. Only in
the 12th century did Damascus regain its splendor
under the rule of the Zenkid Turkish prince Nur
al-Din (d. 1174) and his Ayyubid successor, s
ala
-
din
(r. 1174–93). It became a center of religious
learning and literary production. In 1260, the city
was devastated by the same Mongol invasion that
had obliterated the a
bbasid
c
aliphate
oF
b
aghdad
in 1258.
By 1517, the
Ottoman Turks had conquered
all the territory from s
yria
to e
gypt
. Under the
Turkish dynasty, the city of Aleppo, in the north
of Syria, became the most important economic
center of the region. Nonetheless, Damascus still
played an important economic and religious role,
as is attested to by the numerous khans (trade
centers and rest houses) and the proliferation of
religious sites. Along with c
airo
and Baghdad,
it was used as one of the main staging points for
caravans that conveyed pilgrims to Mecca for the
annual
haJJ
.
During World War I, under the British prom-
ise of the creation of an Arab Syrian state, British
troops commanded by General Allenby entered
the city in October 1918 and established the Syr-
ian Kingdom of Amir Faysal ibn Husayn ibn Ali
(r. 1918–20), whom the British would later make
king of Iraq. The British occupation violated the
terms of the Sykes-Picot agreement signed with
France in 1916, according to which Syria and
Lebanon were to remain under French influence.
On July 25, 1920, France entered Damascus and
occupied Syria and Lebanon, establishing a colo-
nial mandate system in the area. In 1925, Damas-
cus became the capital of the federal state of Syria
under French mandate, and it remained the capi-
tal after Syria’s independence in 1946.
See also
cities
; o
ttoman
dynasty
.
Maria del Mar Logrono
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