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ARWAD

Arwad fortress

Harbor in Arwad

Arwad viewed from the air

'Arwad' () – formerly known as 'Arado' (), 'Arados' (Greek: 'Άραδος'), 'Arvad', 'Arpad', 'Arphad', and 'Antiochia in Pieria' (Greek: 'Αντιόχεια της Πιερίας'), also called 'Ruad Island' – located in the Mediterranean Sea, is the only island in Syria. The town of Arwad takes up the entire island. It is located 3 km from Tartous, Syria's second-largest port. Today, it is mainly a fishing town. It is also believed that Arados was an old name for Bahrain.

Contents
History
References
External links

History


The island was settled in the early 2nd millennium BC by the Phoenicians. Under Phoenician control, it became an independent kingdom called ''Arvad'' or ''Jazirat'' (the latter term meaning "island"). The city has been cited as one of the first known examples of a republic in the world, in which the people, rather than a monarch, are described as sovereign. In Greek it was known as ''Arado'' or ''Arados''. The city also appears in ancient sources as ''Arpad'' and ''Arphad''. The city was renamed ''Antiochia in Pieria'' by Antiochus I Soter. The island was important as a base for commercial ventures into the Orontes valley.
The Island was mentioned twice in The Holy Bible, The Prophet Ezekiel on the Phoenician City of Tyre, ch. 27:

"The inhabitants of Sidon and Arvad were thy rowers: thy wise men, O Tyre, were in thee, they were thy pilots"

 

"The men of Arvad with thine army, were upon thy walls round about, and valorous men were in thy towers; they hanged their shields upon thy walls round about; they have perfected thy beauty."

During the time of the crusades, the Knights Templar built an island fortress. After their departure from Tartous in 1291, the Templars kept on to this fortress until 1303 as their last foothold in the Middle East before retreating to Cyprus.

References


# Martin Bernal, ''Black Athena Writes Back'' (Durham: Duke University Press, 2001), 359.
# Hazlitt, ''The Classical Gazetteer'', p. 53.

External links



Hazlitt's Classical Gazetteer

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