Al-Sukhnah

al-Sukhnah
السخنة
al-Sukhnah
Location in Syria
Coordinates:
Country  Syria
Governorate Homs Governorate
District Palmyra District
Elevation 1,512 ft (460 m)
Population (1989)
 • Total 15,000 (together with al-Kawm and Tayyibah)

Al-Sukhnah (Arabic: السخنة‎, translation: "the Hot [Springs]") is a town in eastern Syria under the administration of the Homs Governorate, located between Palmyra and ar-Raqqah. Together with its satellite villages of al-Kawm and Tayyibah, al-Sukhnah had a population of 15,000 in 1989. It has attracted hundreds of residents from nearby villages in the past century.[1]

Contents

History

In 1225, al-Sukhnah was described by Arab geographer Yaqut al-Hamawi as "a small town in the Syrian Desert, lying between Tadmur and Urd and Arak. Beside its spring are palm trees. It is on the road of one going to Damascus from ar-Raqqah, and you come to it before reaching Arak." In the mid-14th century, Ibn Batuta wrote that al-Sukhnah was "a pretty town", with a mostly Christian population. He noted that the al-Sukhnah received its name from the heat of its water, and that there were bathhouses in the town.[2]

Throughout the 17th and 18th centuries, al-Sukhnah served as an important trade center in the Syrian Desert among the inhabitants of nearby villages and various Bedouin tribes. By the mid-19th-century, however, its role decreased with the rise of Deir ez-Zor. In the 20th-century until the present day, Sukhnah continues to function as a trading center between its residents and the tribes in its vicinity, such as the 'Umur and the Sba'a.[1]

Economy

The residents of Sukhnah were linked to these different tribes through various hierarchical economic ties. They paid the levy on the their grain harvest to the Sba'a, who in return protected their trade. They also consigated their sheep flocks to the 'Umur and the Hadidiyin. To all these tribes, al-Sukhnah's residents supplied grain, cloth, clothing, and various household items and foodstuffs, while purchasing from them pastoral products for resale to Syria's large cities.[1]

Bibliography

References

  1. ^ a b c Mundy and Musallam, 2000, pp.126-129.
  2. ^ le Strange, 1890, p.539.