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A History of Syria

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About this book:

A History of Syria From the earliest hunter‑gatherer camps of the Paleolithic to the bustling streets of modern Damascus, this book offers a sweeping narrative that places Syria at the very heart of world history. Readers will discover how the Fertile Crescent’s unique geography turned the region into a cradle of agriculture, the birthplace of the first alphabets, and a stage for the rise and fall of mighty kingdoms such as Ebla, Mari, and the Amorite states that rivaled Mesopotamia in wealth and sophistication.

The journey continues through the ages as Syria becomes the contested crossroads of empires—Hittite, Egyptian, Assyrian, Babylonian, Persian, Hellenistic, Roman, and Byzantine—each leaving indelible marks on its cities, religions, and cultures. Chapters illuminate the golden age of Palmyra, the flowering of early Christianity under desert monks and stylites, the Arab conquest that made Damascus the capital of the Umayyad Caliphate, and the vibrant intellectual and artistic flourishing of the Abbasid era, revealing how Syria repeatedly absorbed, transformed, and transmitted ideas that shaped civilization.

Moving into the medieval and early modern periods, the book traces the shifting tides of Crusader states, the heroic leadership of Saladin and the Ayyubids, the slave‑soldier Mamluk sultanate, and four centuries of Ottoman administration that blended imperial authority with local notables and the millet system. Readers will gain insight into the nineteenth‑century reforms, sectarian strife, the birth of Arab nationalism, and the tumultuous birth of the modern Syrian state after World War I, including the French Mandate, the short‑lived Arab Kingdom, and the struggle for independence that culminated in 1946.

The latter half of the work examines the turbulent post‑independence decades marked by coups, the rise of the Ba’ath Party, the union with Egypt, and the long, authoritarian rule of Hafez al‑Assad, followed by the promise and limits of Bashar al‑Assad’s early reforms. It provides a detailed, balanced account of the 2011 uprising, its descent into a multifaceted civil war, the involvement of regional and global powers, the rise of extremist groups, and the humanitarian catastrophe that has reshaped the nation’s social and economic fabric.

Finally, the book brings the story to the present, chronicling the sudden collapse of the Assad regime in late 2024, the challenges faced by the transitional government, and the monumental tasks of security, geopolitics, economic reconstruction, and societal reconciliation. By the end, readers will not only have learned the full sweep of Syria’s past but will also understand the deep historical forces that continue to influence its uncertain future, offering a profound context for one of the world’s most enduring and contested lands.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • Syria's geographic position as a crossroads between Africa, Asia, and Europe made it a perpetual stage for empires—from Ebla and Mari to the Ottomans—shaping its cycles of prosperity and conquest.
  • The Aramaic language, born in Syria, spread across the Near East becoming the administrative lingua franca of empires and the spoken language of Jesus, leaving a lasting cultural legacy.
  • Islamic rule transformed Syria: Damascus flourished as the Umayyad capital, while later Abbasid neglect and local dynasties (Hamdanids, Mamluks) created a fragmented yet intellectually vibrant landscape.
  • The 20th century brought independence, chronic coups, Ba’athist authoritarianism, and the four‑decade Assad dynasty, which combined stability with brutal repression and foreign dependence.
  • The 2011 uprising ignited a civil war that evolved into a multinational proxy conflict, culminating in the regime’s collapse in 2024 and leaving Syria partitioned, impoverished, and facing massive reconstruction challenges.
Who's It For:

This book is ideal for undergraduate and graduate students of Middle Eastern history, political science, and international relations who need a deep, chronological understanding of Syria’s role in world events. It also serves policymakers, analysts, and journalists seeking historical context for the contemporary Syrian crisis, as well as general readers interested in the rise and fall of civilizations in one of the world’s oldest continuously inhabited regions.

Author:

Khaled Darwish

Published By:

Ephyia Publishing


Date Published:

May 23, 2026

Word Count:

53,152 words

Reading Time:

3 hours 43 minutes

Sample:

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