An archaeologist working in Syria has solved the mystery of why one of Islam’s earliest fortresses dropped out of the historical record around 1,100 years ago.
Senior Lecturer Dr Emma
Loosley from The University of Manchester was one of an international
team of experts invited into the world-renowned Khanuqa Gap by the
Syrian Department of Antiquities before its secrets - and 11,000 years
of human history – may be lost to a controversial dam project.
Dr
Loosley, who has been unable to return to Syria because of the current
conflict, found that 1,100 years ago a fire raged through what was
regarded as an impregnable fortress.
Her work has also helped
show that, contrary to popular understanding, the earliest Muslim
expansion across the Middle East was largely peaceful and typified by
coexistence with Christians.
Like Jerusalem’s Dome of the Rock,
the citadel - called Zalabiyeh – was one of the first buildings to be
inhabited by Muslims as they spread across the Syrian desert.
It
was constructed during the Byzantine Empire before being renovated
under the Umayyad Dynasty during Islam’s first period of expansion from
Mecca in the early seventh century.
The first of four Arab
caliphates following the death of Muhammed, the Umayyad dynasty left
Mecca to establish one of the largest empires the world had yet seen.
Zalabiyeh,
its sister citadel Halabiyeh and dozens of other crucially important
sites may be flooded as part of a major HEP project.
Dr Loosley’s
undergraduate student Joshua Bryant, who worked with her, was able to
date the citadel to c.500 AD by analysing the way its walls were
constructed.
He received a University award for his dissertation which he hopes to publish in a journal – a rare feat for an undergraduate.
Dr
Loosley excavated burned beams and roof tiles - alongside other finds
-including a fully functioning barracks, a human tooth, copper belt
buckle, plaster spinning wheel, fragments of an alabaster mirror, and
painted wall plaster.
She also found some ovens still crammed with charred chicken bones and ash.
The
evidence points to a fire which forced the soldiers to leave but also a
peaceful takeover of the previously Byzantine controlled citadel by
Umayyad soldiers.
The artefacts are in Syria awaiting further analysis by Dr Loosley once - or if - she is able to return.
She
said: “There is little evidence of any violence in the years before the
citadel burned down, but there is intriguingly so much more to learn.
“We
don’t even know if the soldiers who took over control from the
Byzantines were Muslims or Christians even though they were subjects of
the Umayadd caliph.
“Coexistence typified those times: some even
argue that one reason why so many Christians converted to Islam is
because the major sources of tension and conflict were between Christian
factions themselves.”
She added: “The Khanuqa Gap is a major
crossing point on the River Euphrates and so has been politically,
economically and socially important to human beings for 11,000 years.
“It
contains evidence of continuous human settlement through many
civilisations including Assyrian, Roman, Arab – an astonishing area to
work in and one of the most important in the world.
“So our work
to understand as much as we can before it disappears is hugely
important and I hope to be able go back as soon as it is safe to do
so.”
The work was funded by the British Academy and the Osmane Aidi foundation.
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