Aleppo
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Aleppo
Aleppo
(also Halab; ancient Beroea), a city in northwestern Syria and capital of the administrative district of Aleppo. Population, 639,000 (1970). After Damascus, Aleppo is Syria’s most important economic and cultural center. It is a railroad junction and the trade and transportation center of an agricultural region specializing in the raising of livestock and the cultivation of grain, cotton, olives, pistachios, and grapes. It has enterprises for silk winding, cotton ginning, and wool processing, as well as enterprises of the leather and footwear, metalworking, cement, and spice industries. The city has a university.
In ancient times, Aleppo was called Halap. The earliest information about the city dates from the 20th century B.C., when it was the capital of the Yamkhad state. In the late 17th century B.C., it was captured by the Hittites, and it later came under Mitannian control. In the 14th and 13th centuries B.C., it was again ruled by the Hittites. After the fall of the Hittite Empire circa 1200 B.C., Aleppo was the capital of the small Aleppo state. It became part of the Achaemenian Empire and the Seleucid state. It came under the control of Rome in 64 B.C. and was later under the rule of Byzantium. In A.D. 636 the city was conquered by the Arabs.
Aleppo flourished in the 12th and 13th centuries, becoming a center of trade, crafts, and culture. In 1260 it was conquered by the Mongols, and in the late 13th century it became part of the Mameluke Empire. It became part of the Ottoman Empire in 1516. In 1822, Aleppo was destroyed by an earthquake. Since the last quarter of the 19th century the economy of the city has been improving, and its cultural and social life has been revived. During the period of the French mandate of Syria, from the 1920’s to the 1940’s, the city was a center of the national liberation movement.
Aleppo’s architectural remains include fragments of medieval walls and five gates dating from 1390 to the early 16th century. Of special note is the strong citadel, which has an oval layout. The structure dates from the 12th and early 13th centuries; sections were completed in 1292 and the 15th and 16th centuries, and the lower part was built in Byzantine times. Other interesting buildings include the Great Mosque (c. 715, 12th—13th centuries), which has a minaret with a square layout (1090 or 1095, architect Hasan ibn Mukri al-Sarmani); the madrasa Hallawiyah (12th century), rebuilt from a Byzantine cathedral of the fifth century; and the madrasa al-Firdaus (1235). There are also 16th-century trade complexes; khans, including as-Sabun (early 16th century); and traditional homes with rich decor.
Modern Aleppo grew to the north and west of the old city and features regular residential blocks. Examples of modern architecture in the city include the university (1968–69, architect S. Mudarris and others) and the Aleppo National Museum (founded 1960), which houses works of ancient Syrian art.