The Limited Times

Now you can see non-English news...

Survivor of the crusades, the fortress of Saladin, in Latakia, threatens to collapse

2023-03-18T05:19:49.186Z


The medieval fortified site, listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site, was severely damaged by the February 6 earthquake. In a Syria still divided by civil war, many historic sites need urgent help.


The proud ramparts of the citadel have survived Ayyubid trebuchets and Mamluk assaults.

They now look pale.

More than a month after the February 6 earthquake, Syria's Saladin fortress, located in the country's northwestern province of Latakia, is collapsing, weakened by the natural disaster that damaged many other historic sites. .

From a nearby hill, Zouhair Hassoun observes with concern the towers of this fortress built in the 10th century, during the Byzantine period.

“All the towers of the fortress are in danger, one of them even collapsed after the earthquake

,” says the guardian of the monument.

Spared by the civil war that has ravaged the country since 2011, the Saladin fortress remained open to visitors until the earthquake that killed nearly 46,000 people in Turkey and at least 6,000 in Syria.

Read alsoIn Mosul, the bells are starting to ring again

“There will inevitably be landslides”

As he passes under three cracked arches, Zouhair Hassoun walks cautiously, and shows the facade of the huge fortress listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2006, before joining its list of World Heritage in Danger in 2023.

“Each block of stone weighs at least a ton,”

he points out.

Any part of the fortress that rolls into the valley can never be salvaged.

And, he predicts,

"there will inevitably be landslides in the event of heavy rains or a new tremor, it's a matter of time

"

.

“All the towers of the fortress are in danger, one of them even collapsed after the earthquake,”

said Zouhair Hassoun, one of the guardians of the Saladin fortress.

Louai Beshara, AFP

The earthquake damaged 40 archaeological and historical sites across Syria, according to the Directorate General of Antiquities and Museums (DGAM).

Walls, ceilings or even towers of historic castles now have cracks or have partially or even completely collapsed, according to the DGAM, which indicates that churches, mosques and museums - several of which date from the Middle Ages - have also affected by the earthquake.

At the national museum in Damascus, the director of the DGAM Nazir Awad circles on a map the six provinces most affected by the earthquake, including that of Latakia.

"We have counted more than forty damaged sites

," he said, adding that the citadel of Aleppo and its Old City were the most affected by the earthquake.

Some damage requires

“an emergency response so that these priceless treasures are not lost

,” he adds.

Read alsoAleppo, Antakya, Sanliurfa: historic sites hit by the earthquake

Threat to classified sites

According to Nazir Awad, a UNESCO delegation visited Aleppo shortly after the earthquake to inspect the damage caused to its citadel and its Old City, classified in 2018 by UNESCO, in its list of world heritage in danger .

The city's madrassas, Muslim religious schools, were also reviewed.

The earthquake of February 6 notably damaged parts of the Ottoman mill and the fortifications in the northeast of the citadel of Aleppo.

Large parts of the lighthouse dome of the Ayyubid Mosque also collapsed.

"We urgently need international seismic experts to assess the situation

," insists Nazir Awad.

The sites will not last long if we do not intervene immediately.”

It's normal for a building to collapse.

But for a citadel that has withstood assaults for hundreds of years, it is strange and sad.

Firas Mansour, Syrian teacher.

In areas beyond the control of government forces, sites in Idleb province and northern Aleppo suffered

"serious damage"

, he said, based on the testimony of local interlocutors.

Among these sites is the Byzantine church of Saint Simeon the Stylite, in the northwest of the province of Aleppo.

The western part of this church - also listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site - was damaged and the vault of its eastern facade destroyed, as were certain columns and decorations, according to Syrian archaeologist Fayez Qawsara.

Near the Turkish border, in Harem, one of the towns among the hardest hit by the earthquake in Syria, a century-old citadel has suffered serious damage: a few walls and arcades of shops adjoining it are no more than ruins.

“For a building to collapse is normal.

But for a citadel that has withstood assaults for hundreds of years, it's strange and sad”

, regrets Firas Mansour, teacher at Harem and passionate about ancient architecture.

Source: lefigaro

All news articles on 2023-03-18

You may like

News/Politics 2024-04-08T14:24:18.691Z

Trends 24h

Latest

© Communities 2019 - Privacy

The information on this site is from external sources that are not under our control.
The inclusion of any links does not necessarily imply a recommendation or endorse the views expressed within them.