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Al-Shaghur, Damascus

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Municipality in Damascus Governorate, Syria
Al-Shaghour
ٱلشَّاغُور
aš-Šāḡūr
Municipality
Al-Shaghour on the district map of Damascus
Al-Shaghour on the district map of Damascus
Coordinates: 33°28′27′′N 36°18′11′′E / 33.47417°N 36.30306°E / 33.47417; 36.30306
Country Syria
Governorate Damascus Governorate
CityDamascus
Population
 (2004)[1]
 • Total
119,569
Time zone UTC+3 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (EEST)
Climate BSk

Al-Shaghour (Arabic: ٱلشَّاغُور, romanizedaš-Šāḡūr) is a municipality and a neighborhood located in the old walled city of Damascus, Syria, south and east of the Old City, and east of al-Midan. Al-Shaghour is one of the oldest recorded neighborhoods in the city.[2] The traditional neighborhood is divided into the part located within the Old City walls, known as Shaghour al-Juwani, and the much larger part located outside the walls. The latter part has become a municipality known as al-Shaghour.

Old al-Shaghour is separated from al-Midan to the west by Al-Beit Street[3] and from Harat al-Yahud (Jewish Quarter) by Al-Ameen Street.[4] The latter, named after a prominent Shiite figure, is the main road in the neighborhood and accommodates the market place and the main shops.[2] Al-Shaghour is also home to many of the prominent Shia Muslim families of Damascus.[2]

History

[edit ]
Shaghour in 1910

During the French mandate, part of the neighborhood, known as "Shaghour al-Juwani" was located within the Old City walls, while most of the neighborhood was located outside the city walls and is known as "Shaghour al-Barrani". The total population of al-Shaghour was 18,715 in 1936, with 34% living in Shaghour al-Juwani and 66% living al-Shaghour al-Barrani. The entire population was Muslim.[5]

Al-Shaghour was a major center of resistance to French rule. Many of its inhabitants were involved in political activism and in the development of Syria's national political thought is the 1930s. Al-Shaghour was the home to several prominent intellectuals and political figures including the famous poet Nizar Qabbani, the minister of defense of the Kingdom of Syria, Yusuf al-Azma,[2] and Hasan al-Kharrat, the most prominent rebel leader in Damascus during the 1925 Great Syrian Revolt.[6]

Districts

[edit ]

By the 21st century, Shaghour al-Barrani evolved to become the larger al-Shaghour Municipality, which in 2004 consisted of the city districts (hayy) of Shaghour al-Barrani (pop. 13,169), al-Bilal (pop. 21,408), al-Zuhur (pop. 37,367), Bab Sharqi (pop. 12,318), al-Wihdah (pop. 29,953), Rawdat al-Midan (pop. 4,887), al-Nidal (pop. 15,588) and Ibn al-Asakir (pop. 4,539).[7] [8] Shaghour al-Juwani is located in the Old City municipality and had a population of 2,506 in 2004.[7] [8]

References

[edit ]
  1. ^ "Damascus governorate population 2004 census". Archived from the original on 2017年10月11日. Retrieved 2016年12月04日.
  2. ^ a b c d Miller, Catherine (2007). Arabic in the City: Issues in Dialect Contact and Language Variation. Vol. 5. Routledge. p. 192. ISBN 978-0-415-77311-9.
  3. ^ Stoddart, Brian (2012). A House In Damascus - Before The Fall. Syracuse University Press. p. 129. ISBN 9781614173564.
  4. ^ Totah, p. 45.
  5. ^ Khoury, Philip S. (November 1984). "Syrian Urban Politics in Transition: The Quarters of Damascus during the French Mandate" (PDF). International Journal of Middle East Studies. 16 (4): 510. doi:10.1017/S0020743800028543.
  6. ^ Neep, 2012, pp. 79-80.
  7. ^ a b "Syrian Arab Republic Damascus Governorate Reference map" (PDF). ReliefWeb. United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. 2015年03月16日. Retrieved 2016年04月08日.
  8. ^ a b "The Results of Population and Housing of the 2004 Census: Damascus City". Syria Central Bureau of Statistics. Archived from the original on 2012年08月01日. Retrieved 2016年04月08日.

Bibliography

[edit ]
Historic and
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Culture and
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Nature
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Municipal districts
Timeline
(List of rulers)
Districts:
Districts:
  • Al-Abbas
  • Barza al-Balad
  • Ish al-Warwar
  • Al-Manara
  • Masakin Barzeh
  • An-Nuzha
Districts:
  • Al-Arin
  • Dahiyet Dummar
  • Dummar al-Gharbiyah
  • Dummar al-Sharqiyah
  • Al-Wuroud
Districts:
  • Jobar Gharbi
  • Jobar Sharqi
  • Al-Istiqlal
  • Al-Ma'muniyah
Districts:
  • Fardos
  • Al-Ikhlas
  • Kafr Souseh al-Balad
  • Al-Liwan
  • Mezzeh al-Basatin
  • Al-Waha
Districts:
  • Al-Jalaa
  • Fe'alat al-Gharbiyah
  • Fe'alat al-Sharqiyah
  • Mezzeh 86
  • Mezzeh al-Qadimeh
  • Mezzeh Jabal
  • Al-Rabwa
  • Al-Sumariyah
Districts:
Districts:
  • Abu Rummaneh
  • A-Haboubi
  • Al-Maliki
  • Al-Marabit
  • Al-Mastaba
  • Al-Rawda
  • Shura
Districts:
  • Al-Masaneh'
  • Qaboun
  • Tishrin
Districts:
  • Al-Asali
  • Dahadil
  • Jouret al-Shreibati
  • Al-Mustafa
  • Al-Qadam
  • Qadam Sharqi
  • Al-Sayyidah Aisha
Districts:
Districts:
  • Asad ad-Din
  • Ayyubiyah
  • Al-Fayhaa
  • Al-Naqshabandi
Districts:
  • Abu Jarash
  • Al-Madaris
  • Al-Mazra'a
  • Qasyoun
  • Shaykh Muhyi ad-Din
  • Ash-Shuhada
Districts:
Districts:
Districts:
  • Al-Faluja
  • Hittin
  • Al-Karmil
  • An-Naseriyah
  • March 8th
  • Al-Taqqadum

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