Heliopolis temple in 1895
Baalbek
[a]
(
;
[5]
Arabic
:
??????????
,
romanized:
Ba?labakk
;
Syriac-Aramaic
: ?????) is a city located east of the
Litani River
in
Lebanon
's
Beqaa Valley
. It is about 67 km (42 mi) northeast of
Beirut
. It is the capital of
Baalbek-Hermel Governorate
.
[6]
In 1998, Baalbek had a population of 82,608, mostly
Shia Muslims
, followed by
Sunni Muslims
and
Christians
.
[7]
The town is known for its historical sites and tourist attractions, including several
ancient Roman temples
, a Great Mosque from the
Umayyad period
, and a Roman quarry site named
Hajar al-Hibla
.
[8]
Before it was a city, it was known as
Heliopolis of Phoenicia
. It was a colony of the
Roman Empire
. The name was
Colonia Julia Augusta Felix Heliopolitana
. It is a
Unesco
world heritage site
[9]
Ancient Baalbek (under its Hellenic name
Heliopolis
) formed part of the kingdoms of
Egypt
&
Syria
. It was annexed by the
Romans
during their eastern wars. The
Italic
settlers of the Roman colony "Colonia Julia Augusta Felix Heliopolitana" may have arrived as early as the time of
Caesar
but were more probably the veterans of two Roman Legions under
Augustus
, during which time it hosted a Roman garrison.
The famous
Trilithon
of Heliopolis
(Heliopolis) consists primarily of the complex of the great sanctuary of Heliopolitan Jupiter and the so-called Temple of Bacchus which adjoins it to the S. They were built on imperial initiative, perhaps begun by Augustus himself. Enlargements and improvements were carried out over three centuries. The dimensions are vast and the decoration sumptuous. The architectural and decorative forms belong largely to the repertory of Roman art, but the plan (with its successive enclosures and the importance given to the courts), the cult installations, and the arrangement of the cellas conform to ancient Oriental traditions.On a single E-W axis almost 400 m long, the sanctuary of Heliopolitan Jupiter includes monumental propylaea, a hexagonal court, a large rectangular court, and the temple proper, where the cult idol was enthroned under a canopy in the cella.The sanctuary occupies an ancient tell, artificially enlarged by enormous works of terracing and masonry. At the W end near the N corner, the supporting walls contain three colossal quadrangular stones, called the "Trilithoi", each one nearly 20 by 4.5 by 3.6 m. Another even larger stone was left in a quarry at the foot of the hill W of the town. Two long vaulted galleries running E-W correspond at the basement level to the peristyle of the central court. They are open at the ends and joined by a transverse gallery. Some of their keystones carry Latin inscriptions.
J.Rey-Coquais
Indeed the veterans of two
Roman legions
were established in the city (and region) of Berytus (actual Beyrut) by emperor
Augustus
: the "Legio V Macedonica" and the "Legio III Gallica".,
[10]
and Heliopolis from 15 BC to 193 AD formed part of the territory of Berytus. The population was mainly local in the second century under
Hadrian
with a few descendants of the Roman colonists and likely varied seasonally with market fairs and the schedules of the Camel caravans to the coast and interior.
The present "Temple of Jupiter" presumably replaced an earlier one using the same foundation.
The presence of a huge quarry was one of the reasons for the Roman decision to create a huge "Great Court" of a big pagan temple complex in this mountain site, located at nearly 1100 meters of
altitude
and on the eastern borders of the Roman Empire: it took three centuries to create this colossal Roman paganism's temple complex, called
Sanctuary
of Heliopolis.
[11]
Heliopolis was a noted
oracle
and
pilgrimage
site, whence the cult spread far afield, with inscriptions to the Heliopolitan god discovered in
Athens
,
Rome
, Pannonia,
Venetia
,
Gaul
, and near the
Wall
in
Britain
.
[12]
The Roman
temple complex grew up from the early part of the reign of
Augustus
in the late 1st century until the rise of Christianity in the 4th century. The 6th-century chronicles of John Malalas of
Antioch
, which claimed Baalbek as a "wonder of the world"
[13]
credited most of the complex to the 2nd-century
Antoninus Pius
. By that time, the complex housed three temples on Tell Baalbek: one to Jupiter Heliopolitanus (Ba?al), one to Venus Heliopolitana (Ashtart), and a third to
Bacchus
. On a nearby hill, a fourth temple was dedicated to the third figure of the Heliopolitan Triad,
Mercury
(Adon).
[14]
Ultimately, the site vied with Praeneste in
Italy
as the two largest sanctuaries in the
Western world
.
The emperor
Trajan
consulted the site's
oracle
twice. In 193 AD,
Septimius Severus
granted the city the famous
ius Italicum
rights
[15]
and the city grew in importance in all the Roman Levant.
In the third century Heliopolis had a population of nearly 20000 inhabitants and there was an hippodrome with even a theater, just outside the "Great Court" area of the temples. Additionally a temple of
Mercury
stood on top of the hill outside the ramparts. A long staircase led up to it from the town, as is shown on coins of Heliopolis struck under emperor
Philip the Arab
. Remains of the temple, the line of the staircase, and parts of its parapet have been found. Still remain some sections of the Roman walls, with square forts around the old city
[16]
The town became a battleground upon the rise of Christianity,
[14]
because it was an important center of Roman paganism.
The largest stone at Heliopolis
, uncovered in 2014
Early Christian writers such as Eusebius (from nearby
Caesarea
) repeatedly execrated the practices of the local pagans in their worship of the Heliopolitan Venus. In the early 4th century, the deacon Cyril defaced many of the
idols
in Heliopolis; he was killed and (allegedly)
cannibalised
[14]
Around the same time,
Constantine
, though not yet a Christian, demolished the goddess's temple, raised a basilica in its place, and outlawed the locals' ancient custom of prostituting women before marriage. The enraged locals responded by raping and torturing Christian virgins.
[14]
The city was so noted for its hostility to the Christians, that
Alexandrians
were banished to it as a special punishment.
The Temple of Jupiter, already greatly damaged by earthquakes, was partially demolished under
Theodosius
in 379 AD and replaced by another basilica (now lost), using stones scavenged from the pagan complex. The
Easter Chronicles
states he was also responsible for destroying nearly all the lesser temples and shrines of the city.
[17]
Around the year 400 AD, Rabbula, the future bishop of the diocese of Edessa, attempted to have himself martyred by disrupting the pagans of Baalbek but was only thrown down the temple stairs along with his companion. It became the seat of its own bishop as well. Under the reign of
Justinian
, eight of the complex's
Corinthian columns
were disassembled and shipped to
Constantinople
for incorporation in the rebuilt
Hagia Sophia
sometime between 532 and 537 AD.
Michael the Syrian claimed the golden idol of Heliopolitan Jupiter was still to be seen during the reign of
Justin II
(560s & 570s),and, up to the time of its conquest by the Muslims in 637 AD, it was renowned for its palaces, monuments, and gardens. The Arabs under Abu Ubaidah -who conquered the city after a damaging siege- renamed the city as "Baalbeck" (that in ancient Lebanese Arab language probably meaned "Bacchus ruins"). The Christians left the city, that lost importance in the next centuries (even because of the growth of nearby
Damascus
, that was chosen as the capital of the
Umayyad Caliphate
from 661 AD) and in the tenth century was reduced to be just a small village.
In 1170 AD the arab city of Baalbeck was hit by a terrible earthquake that fully destroyed the Temple of Jupiter, leaving only a few columns standing, and heavily damaged the "Great Court" of ancient Heliopolis's temple complex.
The "Great Court" of Roman Heliopolis's temple complex
- ↑
????? ?????? ???? ?????
[West Baalbeck Municipalities Union] (in Arabic). 2013. Archived from
the original
on 23 July 2021
. Retrieved
8 September
2015
.
- ↑
- Olausson, Lena (2 August 2006).
"How to Say: Baalbek"
. London:
BBC
. Retrieved
8 September
2015
.
- "Baalbek"
.
Merriam?Webster
. 2020.
- "Baalbek"
.
American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language
. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. 2020.
- ↑
"Mohafazah de Baalbek-Hermel"
. Localiban. Archived from
the original
on 21 February 2017
. Retrieved
20 February
2017
.
- ↑
Wolfgang Gockel; Helga Bruns (1998).
Syria ? Lebanon
(illustrated ed.). Hunter Publishing, Inc. p.
202
.
ISBN
9783886181056
.
- ↑
Najem, Tom; Amore, Roy C.; Abu Khalil, As'ad (2021).
Historical Dictionary of Lebanon
. Historical Dictionaries of Asia, Oceania, and the Middle East (2nd ed.). Lanham Boulder New York London: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 45?46.
ISBN
978-1-5381-2043-9
.
- ↑
UNESCO: Heliopolis/Baalbeck
- ↑
Roman Berytus: a colony of legionaries
- ↑
Video-Panoramas of the Sanctuary temples at
Discover Lebanon: Heliopolis temples
- ↑
Cook Arthur
552
- ↑
Cook Arthur
471
- ↑
14.0
14.1
14.2
14.3
Cook Arthur
554
- ↑
Ulpian
,
De Censibus
, Bk. I.
- ↑
Treccani: Heliopolis (in Italian)
- ↑
Chron. Pasch.
, CCLXXXIX.
- Idejian, Nina (1975). Baalbek: Heliopolis: "City of the Sun". Beirut: Dar el-Machreq Publishers.
ISBN 978-2-7214-5884-1
- ↑
Also spelled
Ba'labek
,
Balbec
,
Baalbec
and
Baalbeck
.
[4]