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Citadel of Damascus information


Citadel of Damascus
قلعة دمشق
Damascus, Syria
A stone wall intersected by three square towers with the ruins of another building in the foreground
Courtyard and south wall of the Citadel of Damascus
Map
Coordinates33°30′42″N 36°18′07″E / 33.511667°N 36.301944°E / 33.511667; 36.301944
TypeCastle
Site information
OwnerDirectorate-General of Antiquities and Museums (DGAM)
Controlled byAtsiz bin Uvak (1076–1078)
Seljuq dynasty (1078–1104)
Burid dynasty (1104–1154)
Zengid dynasty (1154–1174)
Ayyubid dynasty (1174–1260)
Mamluk Sultanate (1260–1516)
Ottoman Empire (1516–1918)
French Mandate of Syria (1920–1946)
Syrian Republic (1946–1958)
United Arab Republic (1958–1961)
Syrian Arab Republic (1961–)
Open to
the public
Yes
ConditionPartially ruined
Site history
Built1076–1078 and 1203–1216
Built byAtsiz bin Uvak and Al-Adil I
In useUntil 1986
MaterialsCarbonate rock, basalt
Battles/warsSiege of Damascus (1148)
Siege by Kitbuqa (1260)
Siege by Timur (1401)
Events
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Official nameAncient City of Damascus
TypeCultural
Criteriai, ii, iii, iv, vi
Designated1979 (3rd session)
Reference no.20
RegionArab States
Garrison information
Past
commanders
Nur ad-Din Zangi
Saladin
Al-Adil I
Baibars

The Citadel of Damascus (Arabic: قلعة دمشق, romanized: Qalʿat Dimašq) is a large medieval fortified palace and citadel in Damascus, Syria. It is part of the Ancient City of Damascus, which was listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1979.

The location of the current citadel was first fortified in 1076 by the Turkman warlord Atsiz bin Uvak, although it is possible but not proven that a citadel stood on this place in the Hellenistic and Roman periods. After the assassination of Atsiz bin Uvak, the project was finished by the Seljuq ruler Tutush I. The emirs of the subsequent Burid and Zengid dynasties carried out modifications and added new structures to it. During this period, the citadel and the city were besieged several times by Crusader and Muslim armies. In 1174, the citadel was captured by Saladin, the Ayyubid sultan of Egypt, who made it his residence and had the defences and residential buildings modified.

Saladin's brother Al-Adil rebuilt the citadel completely between 1203 and 1216 in response to the development of the counterweight trebuchet. After his death, power struggles broke out between the other Ayyubid princes and although Damascus switched hands several times, the citadel was taken by force only once, in 1239. The citadel remained in Ayyubid hands until the Mongols under their general Kitbuqa captured Damascus in 1260, thereby ending Ayyubid rule in Syria. After an unsuccessful revolt broke out in the citadel, the Mongols had most of it dismantled. After the defeat of the Mongols in 1260 by the Mamluks, who had succeeded the Ayyubids as rulers of Egypt, Damascus came under Mamluk rule. Except for brief periods in 1300 and 1401, when the Mongols conquered Damascus, the Mamluks controlled the citadel until 1516. In that year, Syria fell into the hands of the Ottoman Empire. Damascus surrendered without a fight and from the 17th century onward the citadel functioned as barracks for the Janissaries—Ottoman infantry units. The citadel started to fall into disrepair in the 19th century and its last military use was in 1925, when French soldiers shelled the old city from the citadel in response to the Great Syrian Revolt against the French Mandate of Syria. The citadel continued to serve as a barracks and prison until 1986, when excavations and restorations started. As of 2011, excavation and restoration efforts are still ongoing.

The citadel is located in the northwest corner of the city walls, between the Bab al-Faradis and the Bab al-Jabiyah. The citadel consists of a more or less rectangular curtain wall enclosing an area of 230 by 150 metres (750 by 490 ft). The walls were originally protected by 14 massive towers, but today only 12 remain. The citadel has gates on its northern, western and eastern flanks. The current citadel dates primarily to the Ayyubid period while incorporating parts of the older Seljuq fortress. Extensive repairs in response to sieges and earthquakes were carried out in the Mamluk and Ottoman periods.

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