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Aabey


FieldValue
official_nameAabey
other_nameAbey
native_nameعبيه
settlement_type
image_skylineFile:2.Abeyh, village dans le Liban.jpg
imagesize300px
image_captionAabey, ca 1851, by van de Velde
dot_xdot_y =
pushpin_mapLebanon
pushpin_label_positionbottom
pushpin_mapsize300
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Lebanon
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameLebanon
subdivision_type1Governorate
subdivision_name1Mount Lebanon Governorate
subdivision_type2District
subdivision_name2Aley District
leader_title1
established_title
established_title2
established_title3
unit_prefImperial
area_total_km2
area_land_km2
population_total4000
population_blank1_titleEthnicities
population_blank2_titleReligions
timezoneEET
utc_offset+2
timezone_DST+3
coordinates
elevation_footnotes
elevation_m800
postal_code_type

Aabey, also spelled Abey (), is a village located in Mount Lebanon, in Aley District of Mount Lebanon Governorate. It is located 22 km from Beirut and has an altitude of 800 m (2,600 feet). It is bordered by Kfarmatta (South), Al Bennay (East), Damour (West), and Ain Ksour (North). It overlooks Damour and the capital Beirut and the sea can be seen from virtually any point in the village. Aabey contains the Dawdye college, Aabey Vocational School (Mihanye) etc.

Etymology

The name Aabey () comes from the Aramaic word meaning “abundant."

History

During the Fatimid and the Mamluk periods, Tanukh settled in Aabey. The Tanukh emirs (Buhturids) were cavalry officers in a special regiment of the Mamluk army that conquered Beirut in 1291, led by Sultan al-Ashraf Khalil. The emirs established their summer residence in Aabey, where the remains of several buildings can still be seen today. Among the monuments left by this feudal dynasty is the Fountain of Emirs, the residence of Emir Qa'an At-Tannoukhi (17th-18th centuries), the residence of Sheikh Riad Amine Eddine, and the restored Druze tomb (Maqam) of the revered Druze theologian Sayid Abdallah at-Tannukhi (died 1479), who is credited with uniting the Druze of the Chouf mountains.

Notable churches include the Church of as-Saydeh, Church of Mar Sarkis and Bakhos, Church of Mar Maroun, and the Evangelical Church founded by European missionaries in the 17th century. During the early 19th century, American Protestant missionaries began arriving in Beirut. The Druze, unlike their Maronite and Greek Orthodox contemporaries, welcomed the establishment of schools in their villages. In 1839 the missionaries established a medical centre in Aabey. in 1843 W.M. Thomson and Cornelius Van Alen Van Dyck came to live in the village and set up a boys seminary. In his The Land and the Book, Thomson gives a vivid account of the village being overrun by an invasion of locusts which lasted four days. In 1838, Eli Smith noted the village, called '*Abeih *, located in El-Ghurb el-Fokany, upper el-Ghurb.

Notables

Melkite Archbishop Grégoire Haddad, later known as the "Red Bishop of Beirut", was born in Aabey. Surgeon Sami Ibrahim Haddad (born in Jaffa, Palestine) was originally from Aabey; he returned and founded the Orient Hospital which was later run by his sons Dr Farid Haddad and Dr Fuad Haddad who were both born in the village. Gregory IV of Antioch (born Ghantus Haddad) patriarch of the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch, was born in Aabey in 1859. Presbyterian missionary Layyah Barakat was born in Aabey, and returned in 1922 to open an orphanage for girls there.

Aabey is the seat of the house of Al Nakadi, a Druze feudal family in Mount Lebanon. Ιn 1845 part of the Nakadi family, namely sheikh Qasim and his brothers Salim and Said, left Deir al-Qamar and relocated to Aabey.

Aabey is the birthplace of Fuad Hamza who served as the personal adviser of King Abdulaziz, the founder of Saudi Arabia. He was granted Saudi nationality and was appointed as a Saudi ambassador to France and the United States, as well as Saudi deputy minister for foreign affairs. One of his famous books is "Al-Bilad Al-Arabia Al-Saudia".

Families of Aabey

The main families in Aabey are: Hamza, Halabi, Haddad, Hassan, Abdel Wili, Amaneldine, Ataya, Faraj, Jamal, Jaber, Nakadi, Nasr, Kuntar, Ghrayeb, Khoury, Kanaan, Raydan, Shreety, Timani and Wehbe.

References

Bibliography

References

  1. [[Kamal Salibi. Salibi, Kamal]] (2019, 1st edition 1988) ''A House of Many Mansions. The history of Lebanon reconsidered.'' [[I.B. Tauris]]. {{ISBN. 978-1-8606-4912-7 p.13
  2. Dana, Nissim. (1980). "The Druse, a Religious Community in Transition". Turtledove Pub..
  3. Salibi p.144
  4. Salibi p.162
  5. [[William McClure Thomson. Thomson, W.M.]] (1872) ''The Land and the Book; or Biblical Illustrations drawn from the manners and customs, the scenes and scenery of The Holy Land.'' T. Nelson & son. pp. 196,197 1883 edition
  6. (1841). "Biblical researches in Palestine, Mount Sinai and Arabia Petraea : a journal of travels in the year 1838". Crocker.
  7. (1922-07-03). "Barakat Orphanage (1922)". Evening Public Ledger.
  8. (17 May 2021). "Lebanon–Saudi Arabia: The story of a family rupture". BBC.
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