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Jisr ash-Shughur

City in Syria

Jisr ash-Shughur

Summary

City in Syria

FieldValue
nameJisr ash-Shughūr
other_nameSeleucobelus
native_nameجِسْرُ ٱلشُّغُورِ
native_name_langar
settlement_typeCity
motto
image_skylineJisrShugur1.jpg
imagesize250px
image_captionCovered market in the old town of Jisr ash-Shughūr (2009)
pushpin_mapSyria
pushpin_label_positionbottom
pushpin_mapsize250
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Syria
<ref nameedit
<!-- Location ------------------>subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_name
subdivision_type1Governorate
subdivision_name1Idlib Governorate
subdivision_type2District
subdivision_name2Jisr ash-Shugur District
subdivision_type3Subdistrict
subdivision_name3Jist al-Shughur Subdistrict
leader_title1
established_title
established_title2
established_title3
established_date3
unit_prefMetric
area_total_km2
area_land_km2
area_blank1_sq_mi
population_total39,917 (2004)
population_blank1_titleEthnicities
population_blank2_titleReligions
population_density_blank1_sq_mi
coordinates
elevation_footnotes
elevation_m170
elevation_ft
postal_code_type

Jisr ash-Shughūr (, , also rendered as Jisser ash-Shughour and other spellings), known in antiquity as Seleucobelus (), is a city in the Idlib Governorate in northwestern Syria. Situated at an altitude of 170 m above sea level on the Orontes river. The city was the headquarters of the Turkistan Islamic Party in Syria during the civil war.

History

Jisr ash-Shughūr has long been an important stopping point on trade routes. It is situated on the main route between Latakia, which is 75 km to the west, and Aleppo, which is 104 km to the east. Located in the rich alluvial plain of the Ghab Plain on the eastern side of the Syrian Coastal Mountain Range, the area has been continuously inhabited for over 10,000 years.

The ancient city of Qarqar is thought to have been situated some 7 km south of the modern town, which was established in Hellenistic times as the city of Seleucia ad Belum. The Romans called it Niaccuba and built a stone bridge there across the Orontes. During the Crusader era, Chastel Rugia was to the east, and another two castles formed the complex of ash-Shughr and Bakās to the northwest of Jisr ash-Shughūr to defend the region, until they were captured by Saladin in 1188.

View of &quot;Isser-Sjoor&quot; (top) and view of the river and the bridge (bottom), by [[Corneille le Brun]] (''Voyage au Levant'', 1714)

Little remains of the ancient city other than portions of the much-repaired Roman bridge, which is now incorporated into a 15th-century Mamluk construction that still serves as one of the city's two bridges over the river. The bridge's V-shaped design was intended to enable it to withstand the force of the river's current. Although Jisr ash-Shughūr is mostly of modern construction, a number of old Ottoman-era buildings still survive, including a caravanserai built in the centre of the old town between 1660–75 and later restored in 1826–27. The town is referred to in 18th-century European sources as Choug, Shogle or Shoggle (the latter in the Encyclopédie).

During the Ottoman period, the town was often vulnerable to attack from the Kurdish tribes from the Sahyun district. For much of the 18th century, however, the town itself was controlled by the Kurdish agha (title) Muhammad ibn Rustum and his sons, first as kaymakam (deputy governor), then as mütevelli (manager) of the religious foundation of Köprülü Mehmed Pasha in Jisr ash-Shughūr. After the end of World War I, Jisr al-Shughur was the site of sustained resistance against the French occupation forces. In December 1920, the local rebel leader Ibrahim Hananu together with Kurdish bands from the Sahyun and with support of Kemalist insurgency forces from Turkey managed to seize the town from the French.

The city has been described as conservative and predominantly Sunni Muslim, with a history of unrest against the government of the ruling Alawite-dominated secular Arab nationalist Baathist party. It was the scene of a mass killing by Syrian security forces in 1980 that prefigured the later and more notorious Hama massacre during the nationwide Islamist uprising in Syria. On 9 March 1980, against a background of anti-government protests across Syria, inhabitants of Jisr ash-Shughūr marched on the local Bath headquarters and set it on fire. The police were unable to restore order and fled. Some demonstrators seized weapons and ammunition from a nearby army barracks. Later that day, units of the Syrian Arab Army Special Forces were helicoptered in from Aleppo to regain control, which they did after pounding the town with rockets and mortars, destroying homes and shops and killing and wounding dozens of people. At least two hundred people were arrested. The following day a military tribunal ordered the execution of more than a hundred of the detainees. In all, about 150–200 people were said to have been killed in a matter of hours.

Syrian civil war

The Mujahideen Battalion, a unit of the [[Free Syrian Army]], announces its formation in Jisr ash-Shughūr, March 2012.

Violence broke out in Jisr ash-Shughūr on 4 June 2011, three months into the Syrian civil war. Armed groups attacked local security forces, killed 120 members of the security forces, and seized control of the city, with many civilians fleeing to Latakia. Activists speaking to the BBC denied the government's version of these events, claiming that the cause of these deaths was unclear and may have been an internal mutiny. The Syrian Arab Army launched an operation in a crackdown against the allegedly guilty armed groups. The operation lasted until 12 June 2011. The city was reported to have been largely abandoned by its inhabitants, many of whom fled to neighbouring Turkey, as Syrian Arab Army units massed outside to retake it. Over December 2011–January 2012, the FSA took control, establishing a key rebel center. As of June 2012, the FSA was still in control, but by October 2012, the Syrian government was reported by Al Jazeera to be in control of the town. However, on 25 April 2015, the city was captured by a military alliance of Salafist insurgents, including al-Qaeda's al-Nusra Front, Ahrar al-Sham, and the Turkistan Islamic Party (TIP). The city has become a stronghold of the TIP, and reportedly 3,500 militant Uyghurs have since settled in the city.

By July 2017, the city was under joint control of Tahrir al-Sham and the Turkistan Islamic Party.

Demographics

In 1933, the town was home to 2,328 people, 2,181 Muslims and 147 Christians. According to the 2004 census, the city was home to 39,917 inhabitants. Most of the population are Sunni Muslims, with a significant Christian minority (estimated at 3,000 people in 2010), mostly Greek Orthodox.

Climate

| access-date = 21 December 2024}}

References

References

  1. (16 July 2017). ""Tahrir al-Sham" denies that "Turkistan" controls Jisr al-Shughur". [[Enab Baladi]].
  2. Ross Burns. (1999). "Monuments of Syria: A Guide". Bloomsbury Academic.
  3. "Is Moscow Set to Target Russians Fighting Against Assad in Syria?".
  4. Yamada, Shigeo. (2000). "The construction of the Assyrian empire: a historical study of the inscriptions of Shalmanesar III relating to his campaigns in the West". BRILL.
  5. "Jisr ash-Shughur, Qalʿat Shugr wa Bekas from the inside".
  6. "Qal{{ayn}}at al-Shaghur".
  7. Burns, Ross. (1999). "Monuments of Syria: an historical guide". I.B. Tauris.
  8. Mannheim, Ivan. (2001). "Syria & Lebanon handbook: the travel guide". Footprint Travel Guides.
  9. Winter, Stefan. (2005). "Sociétés rurales ottomanes / Ottoman Rural Societies". IFAO.
  10. Winter, Stefan. (2016). "A History of the 'Alawis: From Medieval Syria to the Turkish Republic". Princeton University Press.
  11. [https://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2011/0609/Has-Syria-s-peaceful-uprising-turned-into-an-insurrection/(page)/2 Has Syria's peaceful uprising turned into an insurrection?], By Nicholas Blanford, / csmonitor.com June 9, 2011
  12. Dagher, Sam. (2019). "Assad or we burn the country : how one family's lust for power destroyed Syria".
  13. (1990). "Human rights in Syria". Human Rights Watch.
  14. (7 June 2011). "Syria town of Jisr al-Shughour braces for army assault". BBC News.
  15. (2011-06-05). "Syria unrest: 'Deadly clashes' in Jisr al-Shughour". Bbc.co.uk.
  16. (7 June 2011). "Syrian town empties as government tanks mass outside". The Guardian.
  17. Martin Chulov. (18 May 2012). "Syrian security forces set off Damascus bombs blamed on al-Qaida – defectors". Guardian.
  18. (13 October 2012). "Rebel fighters 'capture' Syrian soldiers". Al Jazeera.
  19. "AFP news agency on Twitter".
  20. (27 April 2015). "Second Idlib Stronghold Falls to Jabhat al-Nusra and Rebel Forces". [[Institute for the Study of War]].
  21. (30 April 2015). "Turkistan Islamic Party had significant role in recent Idlib offensive - FDD's Long War Journal".
  22. "If Assad asks, China can deploy troops to Syria".
  23. Ba'athist Syrian and [[Russia]]n troops bombing of the city resumed in September 2017.Suleiman Al-Khalidi [https://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-idlib/russia-syria-intensify-bombing-of-rebel-held-idlib-witnesses-say-idUSKCN1BZ0NX Russia, Syria intensify bombing of rebel-held Idlib, witnesses say], Reuters, 24 September 2017
  24. (12 August 2017). "jisralshugour: القرى المحيطة بجسر الشغور".
  25. "Syrian Arab Republic - Population Statistics - syr_pop_2004_sycensus_0.xls - Humanitarian Data Exchange".
  26. (15 April 2010). "تقرير الطائفة المسيحية في إدلب".
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