Aleppo : A History, Paperback / softback Book

Aleppo : A History Paperback / softback

Part of the Cities of the Ancient World series

Paperback / softback

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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.

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