Damascus in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
            da-mas'-kus:
1. The Name
2. Situation and Natural Features
3. The City Itself
4. Its History
(1) The Early Period (to circa 950 BC)
(2) The Aramean Kingdom (circa 950-732 BC)
(3) The Middle Period (732 BC-650 AD)
(4) Under Islam
1. Name:
The English name is the same as the Greek Damaskos. The 
Hebrew name is Dammeseq, but the Aramaic form Darmeseq, 
occurs in 1 Ch 18:5; 2 Ch 28:5. The name appears in Egyptian 
inscriptions as Ti-mas-ku (16th century BC), and Sa-ra-mas-
ki (13th century BC), which W. M. Muller, Asien u. Europa, 
227, regards as representing Ti-ra-mas-ki, concluding from 
the "ra" in this form that Damascus had by that time passed 
under Aramaic influence. In the Tell el-Amarna Letters the 
forms Ti-ma-as-gi and Di-mas-ka occur. The Arabic name is 
Dimashk esh-Sham ("Damascus of Syria") usually contrasted to 
Esh-Sham simply. The meaning of the name Damascus is 
unknown. Esh-Sham (Syria) means "the left," in contrast to 
the Yemen (Arabia) = "the right."
2. Situation and Natural Features:
Damascus is situated (33 degrees 30' North latitude, 36 
degrees 18' East longitude) in the Northwest corner of the 
Ghuta, a fertile plain about 2,300 ft. above sea level, West 
of Mt. Hermon. The part of the Ghuta East of the city is 
called el-Merj, the "meadow-land" of Damascus. The river 
Barada (see ASANA) flows through Damascus and waters the 
plain, through which the Nahr el-Awaj (see PHARPAR) also 
flows, a few miles South of the city. Surrounded on three 
sides by bare hills, and bordered on the East, its open 
side, by the desert, its well-watered and fertile Ghuta, 
with its streams and fountains, its fields and orchards, 
makes a vivid impression on the Arab of the desert. Arabic 
literature is rich in praises of Damascus, which is 
described as an earthly paradise. The European or American 
traveler is apt to feel that these praises are exaggerated, 
and it is perhaps only in early summer that the beauty of 
the innumerable fruit trees--apricots, pomegranates, walnuts 
and many others--justifies enthusiasm. To see Damascus as 
the Arab sees it, we must approach it, as he does, from the 
desert. The Barada (Abana) is the life blood of Damascus. 
Confined in a narrow gorge until close to the city, where it 
spreads itself in many channels over the plain, only to lose 
itself a few miles away in the marshes that fringe the 
desert, its whole strength is expended in making a small 
area between the hills and the desert really fertile. That 
is why a city on this site is inevitable and permanent. 
Damascus, almost defenseless from a military point of view, 
is the natural mart and factory of inland Syria. In the 
course of its long history it has more than once enjoyed and 
lost political supremacy, but in all the vicissitudes of 
political fortune it has remained the natural harbor of the 
Syrian desert.
3. The City Itself:
Damascus lies along the main stream of the Barada, almost 
entirely on its south bank. The city is about a mile long 
(East to West) and about half a mile broad (North to South). 
On the south side a long suburb, consisting for the most 
part of a single street, called the Meidan, stretches...
                          
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