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ANAH , or ` See also: ANA, a See also: town on the See also: Euphrates, about See also: mid-way between the Gulf of Alexandretta and the Persian Gulf
.
It is called Ijanat in a Babylonian letter (about 2200 B.c.), and An-at by the scribe of See also: Assur-nasir-See also: pal (879 B.C.), 'AvaOw (Isidore Charax), Anatha (See also: Ammianus See also: Marcellinus) by See also: Greek and Latin writers in the early Christian centuries, `ANA (sometimes, as if plural, 'Anat) by Arabic writers
.
The name has been connected with that of the deity Anat
.
Whilst 'Ana has thus retained its name for See also: forty-one centuries the site is variously described
.
Most early writers concur in placing it on an See also: island; so Assurnasir-pal, Isidore, Ammianus Marcellinus, See also: Ibn See also: Serapion, al-Istakri, Abulfeda and al-Karamani
.
Ammianus (See also: lib
.
24, c
.
2) calls it a munimentum, Theophylactus See also: Simocatta (iv. ro, v
.
1, 2) ro'AvaOwv ¢pobpeov, See also: Zosimus (iii
.
14) a 4pobptov, opp
.
4aOu?al, which may be the Be6(0)tva of See also: Ptolemy (v
.
19).1 Leonhart Rauwolff, in A.D
.
1574, found it " divided . . . into two towns," the one " See also: Turkish," " so surrounded by the See also: river, that you cannot go into it but by boats," the other, much larger, on the Arabian See also: side of the river .2 G
.
A
.
See also: Olivier in the beginning of the 19th century describes it as a long street (5 or 6 m. long), parallel to the right See also: bank of the Euphrates—some 100 yards from the See also: water's edge and 300 to 400 paces from the rocky barrier of the Arabian desert—with, over against its See also: lower See also: part, an island bearing at its See also: north end the ruins of a fortress (p
.
451)
.
This southernmost town of See also: Mesopotamia proper (Gezira) must have shared the chequered See also: history of that See also: land (see MESOPOTAMIA)
.
Of 'Ana's fortunes under the early Babylonian See also: empire the records have not yet been unearthed; but in a letter dating from the third millennium B.C., six men of Hanat (Ha-na-atIi1) are mentioned in a statement as to certain disturbances which had occurred in the sphere of the Babylonian See also: Resident of Subi, which would include the See also: district of 'Ana
.
How 'Ana fared at the hands of the Mitanni and others is unknown
.
The See also: suggestion that Amenophis (Amenbotep) I
.
(16th century B.C.) refers to it is improbable; but we seem to be justified in holding 'Ana to be the town " in the See also: middle of the Euphrates " opposite (ina put) to which Assur-nasir-pal halted in his See also: campaign of 879 B.C
.
The supposed reference to 'Ana in the speech put into the mouth of Sennacherib's messengers to Hezekiah (2 See also: Kings xix
.
13, s. See also: xxxvii
.
13) is exceedingly improbable . The town may be mentioned, however, in four 7th century documents edited by C . H . W . Johns ? It was at 'Ana that the emperor Julian met the first opposition on his disastrous expedition againstSee also: Persia (363), when he got possession of the place and transported the See also: people; and there that Ziyad and Shureib with the advanced guard of 'See also: Ali's army were refused passage across the Euphrates (36/657) to join 'Ali in Mesopotamia (Tabari i
.
3261)
.
Later 'Ana was the place of exile of the See also: caliph Qaim (al-Qairn bi-amr-illah) when Basisiri was in power (450/1058)
.
In the 14th century 'Ana was the seat of a Catholicos, primate of the Persians (Marin Sanuto)
.
In 1610 Della See also: Valle found a See also: Scot, See also: George Strachau, resident at 'Ana (to study Arabic) as physician to the amir (i
.
671-681)
.
In 1835 the steamer " Tigris " of the See also: English Euphrates expedition went down in a See also: hurricane just above 'Ana, near where Julian's force had`suffered from a similar See also: storm
.
Della Valle described 'Ana as the chief Arab town on the Euphrates, an importance which it owes to its position on one of the routes from The west toSee also: Bagdad; Texeira said that the power of its amir extended to See also: Palmyra (early 17th century); but Olivier found the ruling See also: prince with only twenty-five men in his service, the town becoming more depopulated every See also: day from lack of See also: protection from the See also: Arabs of the See also: desert
.
Von See also: Oppenheim (1893) reported that Turkish troops having been recently stationed at the place, it had no longer to pay See also: blackmail (huwwa)
Steph
.
Byz
.
(sub Tbpor) says that See also: Arrian calls Anatha Tippos
.
s Texeira (161o) says that "Anna" See also: lay on both See also: banks of the river, and so Della Valle (i
.
671)
.
' Ass
.
Deeds and Doc. nos
.
23, 168, 228, 385
.
The characters used are DIS TU, which may mean Ana-tu.to the Arabs
.
F
.
R
.
See also: Chesney reported some 1800 houses, 2 mosques and 16 water-wheels; W
.
F
.
See also: Ainsworth (1835) reported the Arabs as inhabiting the N.W. part of the town, the Christians the centre, and the Jews the S.E.; Della Valle (161o) found some See also: sun-worshippers still there
.
See also: Modern `Ana lies from W. to E. on the right bank along a See also: bend of the river just before it turns S. towards See also: Hit, and presents an attractive appearance
.
It extends, chiefly as a single street, for several See also: miles along a narrow See also: strip of land between the river and a See also: ridge of rocky hills._ The houses are separated from one another by fruit gardens
.
`na marks the boundary between the See also: olive (N.) and the date (S.)
.
Arab poets celebrated its See also: wine (Yaqut, iii
.
593 f.), and Mustaufi (8/14th century) tells of the fame of its palm-groves
.
In the river, facing the town, is a succession of equally productive islands
.
The most easterly contains the ruins of the old See also: castle, whilst the remains of the See also: ancient Anatho extend from this island for about 2 M. down the See also: left bank
.
Coarse See also: cloth is almost the only manufacture
.
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