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BEIRUT or BEYROUT . (I) A vilayet of See also: Syria, constituted as recently as 1888, which stretches along the See also: sea-See also: coast from See also: Jebel el-Akra, See also: south of the See also: Orontes, to the Nahr Zerka, south of See also: Mount See also: Carmel, and towards the south extends from the Mediterranean to the See also: Jordan
.
It includes five sanjaks, See also: Latakia,
See also: Tripoli, Beirut, See also: Acre and Buka'a
.
(2) The chief See also: town of the vilayet (anc
.
Berytus), the most important seaport town in Syria, situated on the south See also: side of St See also: George's See also: Bay, on rising ground at the See also: foot of See also: Lebanon
.
Pop
.
120,000 (Moslems, 36,000; Christians, 77,000; Jews, 2500; See also: Druses, 400; foreigners, 4100)
.
Berytus, whether it is to be identified with See also: Hebrew Berothai or not (2 Sam. viii
.
8; Ezek. xlvii
.
16), was one of the most See also: ancient settlements on the Phoenician coast; but nothing more than the name is known of. it till B.C
.
140, when the town was taken and destroyed by Tryphon in his contest with See also: Antiochus VII. for the See also: throne of the Seleucids
.
It duly passed under See also: Rome, was much favoured by the Herods and became a colonia
.
It was famous for its See also: schools, especially that of See also: law, from the 4th century A.D. onwards
.
Justinian recognized it as one of the three official law schools of the See also: empire (A.D
.
533), but within a few years, as the result of a disastrous See also: earthquake (551), the students were transferred to Sidon
.
In the following century it passed to the See also: Arabs (635), and was not again a Christian city till 1111, when Baldwin captured it
.
Saladin retook it in 1187, and thenceforward, for six centuries and a See also: half, whoever its nominal lords may have been, Saracen, Crusader, Mameluke or (from the 16th century) Turk, the Druse emirs of Lebanon dominated it (see DRUSES)
.
One of these, Fakr ed-Din Maan II., fortified it early in the 17th century; but the See also: Turks asserted themselves in 1763 and occupied the place
.
During the succeeding epoch of See also: rebellion at Acre under Jezzar and Abdullah pashas, Beirut declined to a small town of about Io,000 souls, in dispute between the Druses, the Turks and the pashas,—a See also: state of things which lasted till See also: Ibrahim See also: Pasha captured Acre in 1832
.
When the See also: powers moved against the Egyptians in 1840, Beirut had recently been occupied in force by Ibrahim as a menace to the Druses; but he was easily driven out after a destructive See also: bombardment by See also: Admiral See also: Sir Robert Stopford (1768-1847)
.
Since the pacification of the Lebanon after the See also: massacre of the Christians in 186o (for later See also: history, see LEBANON), Beirut has greatly increased in extent, and has become the centre of the transit See also: trade for all See also: southern Syria
.
In 1894 a harbour, constructed by a French See also: company, was opened, but the insecurity of the See also: outer roadstead militates against its success
.
Nevertheless trade is on the increase
.
In 1895 a French company completed a railway across the Lebanon to See also: Damascus, and connected it with Mezerib in the Hauran, whence now starts the See also: line to the See also: Hejaz
.
Since 1907 it has also had railway communication with See also: Aleppo; and a narrow-gauge line runs up the coast to Tripoli
.
The steepness of the Lebanon railway, and the break of gauge at Rayak, the junction for Aleppo, have prevented the diversion of much of the trade of See also: North Syria to Beirut
.
The town has been supplied with See also: water, since 1875, by an See also: English company, and with See also: gas, since 1888, by a French company
.
There are many See also: American and See also: European institutions in the city: the American Presbyterian See also: mission, with a girls' school and a printing office, which published the Arabic See also: translation of the See also: Bible, and now issues a weekly paper and See also: standard See also: works in Arabic; the Syrian See also: Protestant See also: college with its theological seminary, medical faculty, training college and astronomical See also: observatory; the Scottish mission, and St George's institute for Moslem and Druse girls; the See also: British Syrian mission schools; the See also: German hospital, orphanage and boarding school; the French hospital and schools, and the Jesuit " Universite de St See also: Joseph " with a printing office
.
In summer most of the richer residents reside on the Lebanon, and in winter the governor of the Lebanon and many Lebanon notables inhabit houses in Beirut
.
The town has many See also: fine houses, but the streets are unpaved and the bazaars mean
.
The Moslem inhabitants, being in a minority, have often shown themselves fanatical and turbulent
.
There are several fairly See also: good hotels for tourists
.
(C.W
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W
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; D
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G
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