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Ahmad Wasfi Zakariyya — An Archaeological Tour of Some Levantine Lands

Damascus · 1934 — one of the earliest references describing Rastan and its antiquities

The renowned archaeological tour of the Levant by the scholar Ahmad Wasfi Zakariyya (1889–1964) devotes pages to Rastan: its paved street, its columns and its old twelve-arched bridge — the very account this site quotes. The work is in the public domain; the digital copy comes from the Internet Archive.

Excerpts on Rastan from the book

«Rastan is an ancient little town halfway between Hama and Homs; remains surviving to this day attest to its former grandeur, and it sits on a height overlooking the Orontes.»

After Yaqut al-Hamawi · p. 313

«In its southern quarter I saw the traces of a straight, broad, paved street like the straight streets of Damascus, Palmyra and Apamea; the bases of its massive columns still stand in plain sight, running for some three hundred metres.»

The author's account · p. 313

«The lands of Rastan are broad and fertile, with red soil yielding the finest grain; its houses on the hill still look down from on high upon the Orontes — finely built, most of them of black stone.»

Rastan in 1934 · p. 314

«This bridge is mighty, stretching from west to east, its deck level and its arches twelve; at its side are weirs over which the waters of the Orontes pour.»

The Rastan bridge · p. 315

The full Rastan chapter is on pages 313–316 of the book — open the chapter directly ↗

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