Thought to be the summer home of Caliph Walid I, Aanjar survived only a few
decades before the Umayyads were defeated by their rivals, the Abbasids (who
founded the second Arab Islamic dynasty). Aanjar later fell into disrepair
and was abandoned.
The
city of Aanjar was a major trading and commercial center for the entire
region. It was built at a strategic location on the main caravan routes
between the inland Umayyad capital of Damascus (Syria) and the coast, close
to the abundant spring of Ain Gerrha and near the rich agricultural land of
the Bekaa. Visitors can still see the remains of over 600 small shops,
running along colonnaded boulevards—the ancient equivalent of a modern-day
shopping arcade. The city’s wide avenues are also lined with mosques,
palaces, baths, storehouses, and residences. The city ruins cover 114,000
square meters and are surrounded by large, fortified stone walls, over two
meters thick and seven meters high.The rectangular city design is based on
Roman city planning and architecture, with stonework and other features
borrowed from the Byzantines. Two large avenues – the 20-meter-wide Cardo
Maximus, running north to south, and the Decumanus Maximus, running east to
west – divide the city into four quadrants. At the crossroads in the center
of the city, four great tetrapylons mark the four corners of the
intersection..
As
you walk through the ruins of this stone city, marvel at the beautiful stone
archways of the city’s palace facades… Explore the elaborate Roman-style
baths… Duck inside the small residential quarters of the city residents…
Search for intricate Greco-Roman-style stone carvings or Umayyad-era graffiti
on the stone walls…And imagine yourself transported to this short period in
history when the Umayyad Caliphs ruled the region and the city bustled with
traders en route to the four corners of the globe!
Lebanese Ministry of Tourism
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