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See also: town of the Buka'a (Coelesyria), altitude 3850 ft., situated E. of the Litani and near the parting
between its See also: waters and those of the Asi
.
Pop. about 5000,
including 2000 Metawali and loco Christians (Maronite and
Orthodox)
.
Since 1902 See also: Baalbek has been connected by railway with Rayak (Rejak) on the See also: Beirut-See also: Damascus See also: line, and since 1907 with See also: Aleppo
.
It is famous for its See also: temple ruins of the See also: Roman See also: period, before which we have no record of it, certain though it be that See also: Heliopolis is a See also: translation of an earlier native name, in which See also: Baal was an See also: element
.
It has been suggested, but without See also: good reason, that this name was the Baalgad of Josh. xi
.
17
.
Heliopolis was made a colonic probably by Octavian (coins of 1st century A.D.), and there must have been a Baal temple there in which Trajan consulted the See also: oracle
.
The foundation of the See also: present buildings, however, See also: dates from See also: Antoninus See also: Pius, and their dedication from Septimius Severus, whose coins first show the two temples
.
The See also: great courts of approach were not finished before the reigns of Caracalla and See also: Philip
.
In
See also: commemoration, no doubt, of the dedication of the new sanctuaries, Severus conferred the See also: jus Italicum on the city
.
The greater of the two temples was sacred to See also: Jupiter (Baal), identified with the See also: Sun, with whom were associated See also: Venus and Mercury as abugwyot Beef- The lesser temple was built in honour of Bacchus (not the Sun, as formerly believed)
.
Jupiter-Baal was represented locally as a beardless See also: god in long scaly drapery, holding a See also: whip in his right See also: hand and See also: lightning and ears of corn in his See also: left
.
Two bulls supported him . In this See also: guise he passed into See also: European worship in the 3rd and 4th centuries A.D
.
The extreme licence of the Heliopolitan worship is often animadverted upon by early Christian writers, and See also: Constantine, making an effort to curb the Venus cult, built a See also: basilica
.
See also: Theodosius erected another, with western apse, in the See also: main See also: court of the Jupiter temple
.
When See also: Abu Ubaida (or Obaida) attacked the place after the Moslem capture of Damascus (A.D
.
635), it was still an opulent city and yielded a See also: rich booty
.
It became a See also: bone of contention between the various Syrian dynasties and the caliphs first of Damascus, then of See also: Egypt, and in 748 was sacked with great slaughter
.
In 1090 it passed to the See also: Seljuks, and in 1134 to Jenghiz Khan; but after 1145 it remained attached to Damascus and was captured by Saladin in 1175
.
The Crusaders raided its valley more than once, but never took the city
.
Three times shaken by See also: earthquake in the 12th century, it was dismantled by Hulagu in 126o
.
But it revived, and most of its See also: fine Moslem mosque and fortress architecture, still extant, belongs to the
reign of Sultan Kahan (1282) and the succeeding century, during which Abulfeda describes it as a very strong place
.
In 1400 Timur pillaged it, and in 1517 it passed, with the rest of See also: Syria, to the See also: Ottoman dominion
.
But Ottoman jurisdiction was merely nominal in theSee also: Lebanon See also: district, and Baalbek was really in the hands of the 1VIetawali (see LEBANON), who retained it against other Lebanon tribes, until " Jezzar " See also: Pasha, the See also: rebel governor of the See also: Acre province, broke their power in the last See also: half of the 18th century
.
The anarchy which succeeded his See also: death in 1804 was only ended by the See also: Egyptian occupation (1832)
.
With the treaty of See also: London (184o) Baalbek became really Ottoman, and since the See also: settlement of the Lebanon (1864) has attracted great numbers of tourists
.
After Puchstein, with permission of Georg Reimer See also: Emery See also: Walker sc
.
The ruins were brought to European
See also: notice by See also: Pierre See also: Belon in 1555, though previously visited, in 1507, by See also: Martin von Baumgarten
.
Much damaged by the earthquake of 1759, they remained a
See also: wilderness of fallen blocks till 1901, when their clearance was undertaken by the See also: German Archaeological Institute and entrusted to the direction of Prof
.
O
.
Puchstein
.
They lie mainly on the See also: ancient Acropolis, which has been shored up with huge walls to See also: form a terrace raised on vaults and measuring about 1100 ft. from E. to W
.
The See also: Propylaea lie at the E. end, and were approached by a See also: flight of steps now quarried away
.
These propylaea formed a covered See also: hall, or
See also: vestibule, about 35 ft. deep, flanked with towers richly decorated within and without (much damaged by Arab reconstruction)
.
Columns stood in front, whose bases still exist and bear the names of Antoninus Pius and Julia Domna
.
Hence, through a triple gateway in a richly ornamented screen,See also: access is gained to the first or Hexagonal Court, which See also: measures about 250 ft. from angle to angle
.
It is now razed almost to foundation level; but it can be seen that it was flanked with halls each having four columns in front
.
Aportal on the W., 5o ft. wide, flanked by lesser ones to ft. wide (that on the N. is alone preserved), admitted to the Main Court, in whose centre was the High Altar of Burnt Sacrifice
.
This altar and a great tank on the N. were covered by the See also: foundations of Theodosius' basilica and not seen till the See also: recent German clearance
.
The Main Court measures about 440 ft. from E.'to W. and 370 ft, from N. to S., thus covering about 31 acres
.
It had a continuous fringe of covered halls of various dimensions and shapes, once richly adorned with statues and columnar screens
.
Some of these halls are in See also: fair preservation
.
Stairs on the W. led up to the temple of Jupiter-Baal, now much ruined, having only 6 of the 54 columns of its peristyle erect
.
Three See also: fell in the earthquake of 1759
.
Those still See also: standing are Nos
.
11' to 16 in the See also: southern See also: rank
.
Their bases and shafts are not finished, though the capitals and rich entablature seem completely worked
.
They have . a height of 6o ft. and diameter of 71 ft., and are mostly formed of three blocks . The architrave is threefold and bears aSee also: frieze with See also: lion-heads, on which rest a moulding and cornice
.
The temple of Bacchus stood on a platform of its own formed by a southern See also: projection of the Acropolis
.
It was much smaller than the Jupiter temple, but is better preserved
.
The steps of the E. approach were intact up to 1688
.
The temple was peripteral with 46 columns in its peristyle
.
These were over 52 ft. in height and of the Corinthian See also: order, and supported an entablature 7 ft. high with See also: double frieze, connected with the See also: cella walls by a coffered ceiling, which contained slabs with heads of gods and emperors
.
See also: Richard See also: Burton, when See also: consul-general at Damascus in 187o, cleared an Arab screen out of the vestibule, and in consequence the exquisite doorway leading into the cella can now be well seen
.
On either See also: side of it staircases constructed within columns See also: lead to the roof
.
The cracked door-lintel, which shows an eagle on the soffit, was propped up first by Burton, and lately, more securely, by the Germans
.
The cella, now ruinous, had inner See also: wall-reliefs and engaged columns, which supported rich entablatures
.
The vaults below the Great Court of the Jupiter Temple, together with the supporting walls of the terrace, are noticeable
.
In the W. wall of the latter occur the three famous megaliths, which gave the name Trilithon to the Jupiter temple in See also: Byzantine times
.
These measure from 63 to 64 ft. in length and 13 ft. in height and breadth; and have been raised 20 ft. above the ground
.
They are the largest blocks known to have been used in actual construction, but are excelled by another See also: block still attached to its See also: bed in the quarries half a mile S.W
.
This is 68 ft. long by 14 ft. high and weighs about t500 tons
.
For long these blocks were supposed, even by European visitors, to be See also: relics of a primeval See also: race of giant builders
.
In the town, below the Acropolis, on the S.E. is a small temple of the See also: late imperial age, consisting of a semicircular cella with a peristyle of eight Corinthian columns, supporting a projecting entablature
.
The cella is decorated without with a frieze, and within with pillars and arcading
.
This temple owes its preservation to its use as a See also: church of St
See also: Barbara, a See also: local See also: martyr, also claimed by the Egyptian Heliopolis
.
Hence the See also: building is known as Barbarat al-atika
.
Considerable remains of the N. See also: gate of the city have also been exposed
.
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