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Al-Qurayya

Town in Suwayda, Syria


Town in Suwayda, Syria

FieldValue
official_nameal-Qurayya
native_nameالقريا
native_name_langar
other_nameal-Qrayya
image_skylineضريح سلطان باشا الأطرش.jpg
imagesize250
image_captionMausoleum of Sultan Pasha Al-Atrash
pushpin_mapSyria
pushpin_mapsize250
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameDe facto:
Supreme Legal Committee in Suwayda
subdivision_type1Governorate
subdivision_name1Suwayda
subdivision_type2District
subdivision_name2Salkhad
subdivision_type3Subdistrict
subdivision_name3Qurayya
settlement_typeTown
established_title
established_title2
unit_prefMetric
population_as_of2004 census
population_total6789
population_footnotes
timezoneEET
utc_offset+2
timezone_DSTEEST
utc_offset_DST+3
coordinates
grid_namePAL
grid_position299/217
elevation_footnotes
postal_code_type
Note

the town in southern Syria

Supreme Legal Committee in Suwayda Al-Qurayya (; also spelled al-Qrayya or Kureiyeh) is a town in southern Syria, administratively part of the Suwayda Governorate, located south of Suwayda. Nearby localities include Bosra to the southwest, Hout to the south, Salkhad to the southeast, al-Kafr, Hibran and Sahwet al-Khudr to the northeast, Sahwet Blatah and Rasas to the north and Ira and al-Mujaymer to the northwest. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), al-Qurayya had a population of 6,789 in the 2004 census. The town is also the administrative center of the al-Qurayya nahiyah which consists of four towns with a combined population of 9,892. In Al-Qurayya, Druze make up the predominant population, while Christians and Sunni Muslim Bedouins represent a minority.

History

Western scholar Josias Leslie Porter identified al-Qurayya with biblical "Kerioth" mentioned by Jeremiah as one of the cities in the plain of Moab. The prophet Amos wrote that he would "devour the palaces of Kerioth." The city is later mentioned in the 4th-century CE as "Koreath," a village belonging to Bosra in the Roman province Arabia Petraea. However, this "Koreath" has also been identified with the nearby palace of Ein Qarata to the south of the Lejat plain. On streets and alleyways throughout the village were the remains of several columns. A Greek inscription was found on one of the stones and dated back to 296 CE.

Ottoman period

In 1596 al-Qurayya appeared in the Ottoman tax registers being part of the nahiya of Bani Nasiyya in the Qada of Hauran. It had an entirely Muslim population consisting of 65 households and 36 bachelors. Taxes were paid on wheat, barley, summer crops, fruit- or other trees.

In 1810 al-Qurayya contained a few Druze families and was the chief village in the areas south and southwest of Ira in Jabal al-Arab. Between the 1830s and 1840s, the prominent al-Atrash clan chose the village as their principal residence. It was still subject to raids by Bedouin nomads at that time. In April 1838, while young Druze fighters from al-Qurayya were confronting the Egyptian army of Ibrahim Pasha, the village was looted and several of its inhabitants were killed in a raid by Sheikh Ibn Sumayr and his 'Anza Bedouin tribe. Further major raids against al-Qurayya occurred in 1842 and 1846.

In 1838 al-Qurayya was reported to be populated with Druze and Christians.

Only in the 1850s did relative stability take root. According to Porter, who visited al-Qurayya in 1853, the village had shrunk from one of the major towns of the Hauran plain to a small village. Many of its houses were built from ancient materials. Its chief in the 1850s was Sami Faruq Pasha al-Atrash, the most powerful Druze sheikh in the Hauran. In 1856-57 al-Qurayya served as the base for the Druze in their offensive against the Muslim villages of the Hauran.

French Mandate period

The French Mandate authorities bombed al-Qurayya and destroyed the home of its sheikh Sultan Pasha al-Atrash in a clash in 1921. During the Great Syrian Revolt of 1925-27, which was spearheaded by Sultan Pasha, al-Qurayya served as the chief meeting place for the sheikhs of local rebel clans.

Demographics

In 2011, the Melkite Greek Catholic Church had approximately 1,500 believers.

Religious buildings

  • St. Ayyub (St. Job) Greek Orthodox Church
  • St. Mikhael (St. Michael) Melkite Greek Catholic Church
  • Maqam Balkhi (Druze Shrine)

Notable people

  • Sultan al-Atrash
  • Mansur al-Atrash
  • Farid al-Atrash

References

Bibliography

  • {{cite book

References

  1. [https://archive.today/20130112200824/http://www.cbssyr.org/new%20web%20site/General_census/census_2004/NH/TAB13-5-2004.htm General Census of Population and Housing 2004]. [[Central Bureau of Statistics (Syria). Syria Central Bureau of Statistics]] (CBS). Al-Suwayda Governorate. {{in lang. ar
  2. "Druze communities in the Middle East". British Druze Society.
  3. Porter, 1858, p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=AwSatmeOEUgC&pg=PA524 524]
  4. Porter, 1858, p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=AwSatmeOEUgC&pg=PA523 523]
  5. Hütteroth and Abdulfattah, 1977, p. 219.
  6. It was granted to them by the initial Druze rulers of the village, the [[al-Hamdan]] clan.Batatu, 2012, p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=Mbr-ZfU_uCoC&pg=PA113 113]
  7. Firro, 1992, p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=usEUXYnYWxAC&pg=PA152 152]
  8. [[Eli Smith. Smith]], in Robinson and Smith, 1841, vol 3, 2nd appendix, p. [https://archive.org/stream/biblicalresearch03robiuoft#page/158/mode/1up 158]
  9. Dana, p. [https://books.google.com/books?id=2nCWIsyZJxUC&pg=PA9 9].
  10. https://www.melkitepat.org/melkite_greek_catholic_church/Metropole-of-Bosra-and-Hauran
  11. https://albishara.net/church/details/3123
  12. https://albishara.net/church/details/3132
  13. https://www.melkitepat.org/melkite_greek_catholic_church/Metropole-of-Bosra-and-Hauran
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