Maarrat al-Ikhwan

Ma'arrat al-Ikhwan (Arabic: معارة الاخوان, also spelled Ma'arrat al-Akwan, Maaret Ikhwan or Martahwan) is a village in northwestern Syria, administratively part of Idlib Governorate located north of Idlib. Nearby localities include Maarrat Misrin to the south, Zardana to the southeast, Kafr Yahmul to the east, Hizano to the northeast, Kaftin to the north, Qurqania to the northwest and Haranabush to the west. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Ma'arrat al-Ikhwan had a population of 1,831 in the 2004 census.[1] It has a significant population of Druze, who inhabit several small villages in the A'la Mountain and its vicinity.[2]

Marthwan

مرتحوان

Maaret al-Ikhwan
Village
Marthwan
Location in Syria
Coordinates: 36°3′51″N 36°40′18″E
Country Syria
GovernorateIdlib
DistrictIdlib
SubdistrictMaarrat Misrin
Elevation
315 m (1,033 ft)
Population
 (2004)
  Total1,831

History

During the Muslim conquest of Syria in the 630s, Abu Ubaidah ibn al-Jarrah and his army destroyed Maarrat al-Ikhwan and Sarmin after capturing Maarrat Misrin and Aleppo.[3] Ma'arat al-Ikhwan was one of the major towns, along with Maarrat Misrin and Zardana, of the al-Jazr district of Aleppo during the medieval period.[4]

Ma'arrat al-Ikhwan is the birthplace of Shaykh Jabir al-Halabi, a renowned religious leader and a leading scholar of the Qur'an during the 17th-century. He was honored with the title Shaykh al-Islam for the District of Aleppo by Ottoman sultan Murad IV. Following his death in 1640, Sultan Murad ordered the construction of a shrine over his tomb in Ma'arrat al-Ikhwan where it is still visited by both Muslims and Druze to receive blessings.[5][6]

In the mid-19th-century, Dutch merchant and author Thomas Hope visited Maarrat al-Ikhwan and noted that it was inhabited by members of the Alawite community.[7] In the late 19th-century Ma'arrat al-Ikhwan was described as a large village situated on an open plain and distinguished by roofs that resembled "sugar-cones."[8] In another 19th-century account Western traveler Albert Socin described the place as an impoverished village.[9]

During the ongoing Syrian civil war that began in 2011, opposition rebels from the Free Syrian Army set up a headquarters and military training camp in Ma'arrat al-Ikhwan.[10][11]

gollark: ... yes, should I be worried?
gollark: The closest thing is the LAN command daemon, for administration on local networks, which Tau *gained* a while ago, but it only allows shutdown, reboot and update or something like that.
gollark: Nope! Tau dropped that ages ago.
gollark: Interesting fact: there is a dedicated PotatOS backup bunker in case of all life on the surface of the overworld being wiped out. It's a solid sphere of bedrock buried in some location somewhere with storage, dedicated melon machines, a trilaterator, and a copy of the potatOS DSK.
gollark: Yep!

See also

References

  1. General Census of Population and Housing 2004. Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS). Idlib Governorate. Archived at . (in Arabic)
  2. Salibi, 2005, p. 179.
  3. "Columbia Studies in the Social Sciences". 68. Columbia University Press. 1916: 229. Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  4. Dussaud, 1927, p. 213.
  5. Swayd, 2006, pp. 103-104.
  6. Swayd, 2006, p. 68.
  7. Hope, 1831, p. 154.
  8. Gibb, 1960, p. 59.
  9. Socin, 1876, p. 559.
  10. Fighting subsides at Palestinian refugee camp in Damascus, some who fled trickle back. 2012-12-20.
  11. Laub, Karin.In Syrian Rebel Training, Motivation Trumps Skill. Associated Press. 2012-12-18.

Bibliography

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