Areas of interest: Levantine subaltern history, the Ancient and Roman Near East, Carthage, local flora and architectural heritage.
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  1. Tolstraat
  2. Charles Burton Gulick
  3. Asperula libanotica
  4. Gingras (instrument) 5 June 2024
  5. Style (botany)‎
  6. Morimene
  7. Sopater of Paphos
  8. Bajo la Campana Phoenician shipwreck 15 April 2024
  9. Hippolyte Triat 30 January 2024
  10. List of mountains in Lebanon ‎
  11. Hélène Benichou-Safar
  12. Royal necropolis of Ayaa 5 October 2023
  13. Kharayeb
  14. Phoenician sanctuary of Kharayeb
  15. Favissa
  16. Successor culture
  17. Marsala Punic shipwreck
  18. Bibliothèque Orientale
  19. Paul Mouterde
  20. Peter Boysen Jensen
  21. Abdamon
  22. Youssef Boulos
  23. Farah (film)
  24. Chekri Ganem
  25. Central Syrian Committee
  26. The Snap Elect
  27. Le Liban
  28. Handy Tables
  29. Radu Dan Constantinescu
  30. Hipparchus star catalog
  31. Aziz Abdo
  32. Ali Mansour (basketball)
  33. Jeanne Arcache
  34. Ziad Raphael Nassar
  35. Dan Haddad
  36. Marc Reaidy
  37. Sandra Melhem
  38. Jouar el-Haouz ‎
  39. Carolina López-Ruiz
  40. Roula Hamadeh
  41. Haifa Charbel
  42. Shukri Anis Fakhoury
  43. Takla Chamoun
  44. Sleiman Damien
  45. Maria Giulia Amadasi Guzzo
  46. José Ángel Zamora López
  47. Phoenix Raei
  48. Librairie orientaliste Paul Geuthner
  49. Baalshillem I
  50. Baalshillem II
  51. Eshmunazar I
  52. Bernardo Falcone
  53. Phoenician joints
  54. Monzer Hourani
  55. Gorgerin
  56. Maha Bayrakdar
  57. Usaid Bin Hudair
  58. Herharaya
  59. Philippe Ziade
  60. Royal necropolis of Byblos
  61. Giovanni Garbini
  62. Giuseppe Furlani
  63. Yatonmilk
  64. Gozo Phoenician shipwreck
  65. Alexandre Lézine
  66. WikiProject Phoenicia
  67. Josette Elayi
  68. Sahar (singer)
  69. Debbane Palace
  70. Aubrieta libanotica
  71. Alireza Shojaian
  72. National Patient Safety Goals
  73. International Patient Safety Goals
  74. Roman law school of Beirut Professors
  75. Gaianus of Tyre
  76. Students at the Roman law school of Beirut
  77. George Francis Taylor
  78. Roman temple of Bziza‎
  79. Arenaria libanotica‎
  80. Vicia canescens
  81. Eprinomectin
  82. Astragalus cedreti
  83. Serratula pusilla
  84. Hormuzakia aggregata
  85. Adonis flammea
  86. Johrenia
  87. Wishes (Rhodes album)
  88. Ornithogalum libanoticum
  89. Myopordon pulchellum
  90. Parthenote‎
  91. Sorbus graeca
  92. Scorzonera libanotica
  93. Patricius (jurist)
  94. Dianthus libanotis
  95. Dianthus pendulus
  96. Alchemilla diademata
  97. Lathyrus libani
  98. Cotoneaster nummularius
  99. YInMn blue
  100. Maronitism
  101. Naoum Mokarzel
  102. Great Famine of Mount Lebanon
  103. Acantholimon libanoticum
  104. Ernest Christophe
  105. Ghosta, Lebanon
  106. Aldrete's scoring system
  107. Mazraat Es Siyad
  108. Ziziphopra capitata
  109. Ziziphora
  110. Daoud Corm
  111. Mechitharine
  112. Davis-Beirut reaction
  113. Mandaloun
  114. Nazira Jumblatt
  115. Prunus microcarpa
  116. Prunus ursina
  117. List of plants of Lebanon
  118. Salix libani
  119. Allium libani
  120. Rhamnus libanotica
  121. Origanum libanoticum
  122. Arceuthobium oxycedri
  123. Ferial Karim
  124. Geranium libani
  125. Manouk Avedisian
  126. Petit Serail
  127. Ajaltoun
  128. Puits d'amour
  129. John Rufus
  130. Triphyllius
  131. Scholia Sinaitica
  132. Law School of Beirut
  133. St. George Gr. Ort. Cathedral
  134. Orthodox Archdiocese of Beirut
  135. Zuqaq al-Blat
  136. Ziade Palace
  137. Saint Louis Des Capucins
  138. Myriam Klink
  139. Pine Residence
  140. List of rivers of Lebanon
  141. Marco Augusto Dueñas
  142. Robert Mouawad Private Museum
  143. Fritillaria acmopetala
  144. Viola libanotica
  145. Shmuel Moreh
  146. Bodashtart
  147. Elias Abu Shabaki
  148. Cheers, to Those Who Stay
  149. Bellevue Medical Center
  150. Mashrou' Leila
  151. Cross of All Nations
  152. St. George Maronite Cathedral
  153. Palm Islands Nature Reserve
  154. Lion Tower
  155. Eulamius
  156. Yanouh_(disambiguation)
  157. Awali (river)
  158. Beit Beirut
  159. Rafik Hariri University Hospital
  160. Pierre Zalloua
  161. Marie-Alphonsine Danil Ghattas
  162. Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate
  163. Green Party of Lebanon
  164. Beirut Souks
  165. Murex d'or
  166. Atheltics at the 2009 Francophone Games
  167. Judo at the 2009 Francophone Games
  168. Quercus libani
  169. Orchis tridentata
  170. List of caves in Lebanon
  171. Ministry of Justice (Lebanon)
  172. Mseilha Fort
  173. Usekh collar
  174. Ecole Supérieure des Affaires
  175. Archaeology in Lebanon
  176. Micrite
  177. Henry Seyrig
  178. Elie Mitri
  179. Sæthryth
  180. NOOTDT (Lebanon)
  181. Maronite mummies
  182. Youssef Aftimus

Articles I did not start:
  1. 2009 Jeux de la Francophonie
  2. Jeita Grotto
  3. National Museum of Beirut
  4. Temple of Eshmun
  5. Eshmunazar II sarcophagus
  6. Eshmunazar II

# Feature date Role Did you know ...
46 5 June 2024 Created ... that according to second-century AD Greek rhetorician Athenaeus, the Phoenicians played a flute-like instrument called the gingras in their mourning rituals?
45 15 April 2024 Created ... that alongside a 7th-century BC Phoenician shipwreck, two additional wrecks from various historical periods were unearthed in Bajo de la Campana, situated off the coast of Cartagena, Spain?
44 30 January 2024 Created ... that pioneering bodybuilder Hippolyte Triat was kidnapped by vagabonds at the age of six and sold to a troupe of Italian acrobats?
43 19_December_2023 GA ... that the sarcophagus of Eshmunazar II (pictured), the Phoenician king of Sidon, is one of only three ancient Egyptian sarcophagi unearthed outside Egypt?
42 5 October 2023 Created ... that the royal necropolis of Ayaa in Sidon, Lebanon, was accidentally discovered in the late 19th century by a workman who stumbled upon a shaft and chamber tomb while quarrying for stone?
41 16 September 2023 Created ... that archaeological excavations in the historic town of Kharayeb revealed a rural settlement with a complex system of cisterns and a Phoenician temple?
40 3 September 2023 Created ... that the deity of the Phoenician sanctuary of Kharayeb remains unidentified due to the absence of names of specific gods in unearthed inscriptions?
39 23 August 2023 Created ... that favissae were underground pits dedicated to the disposal of votive offerings that were no longer in use?
38 30 June 2023 Created ... that parts of the Marsala Punic shipwreck were marked with alphabetical signs intended to facilitate and speed up assembly?
37 24 January 2023 Created ... that the work of Danish plant physiologist Peter Boysen Jensen paved the way to the discovery of the plant growth hormone, auxin?
36 17 January 2023 Created ... that Chekri Ganem's play Antar was described as the most significant display of Arab nationalism organized outside the Arab world?
35 10 January 2023 Created ... that the first day of filming of the psychological thriller Farah coincided with the beginning of the 2019 Lebanese protests?
34 9_April_2022 Created ... that the royal necropolis of Byblos was discovered in 1922 due to a heavy rain-triggered landslide, which uncovered an unspoiled royal tomb in the seaside cliff of Byblos?
33 7_April_2022 Created ... that Lebanese actress Takla Chamoun stoically refused to cancel a play showing after being informed that her mother had died?
32 30_August_2021 Created ... that coins issued by Baalshillem II, the Phoenician king of Sidon, were the first Sidonian coins to bear minting dates corresponding to the king's year of reign?
31 4 August 2021 Created ... that Eshmunazar I, Phoenician king of Sidon, participated in the Neo-Babylonian campaigns against Egypt, where he seized stone sarcophagi belonging to members of the Egyptian elite?
30 19 May 2021 Created ... that the Romans copied the Phoenician joints technique from a Punic warship that ran aground in 264 BC?
29 24 April 2021 Created ... that Syrian-Lebanese poet Maha Bayrakdar won the Miss Syria beauty pageant in 1967?
28 25 December 2020 Created ... that Giovanni Garbini's studies helped scholars interpret the biblical narrative in the larger context of the history of the ancient Near East?
27 10 December 2020 Created ... that orientalist Giuseppe Furlani organized the first and only Italian archaeological excavation in Mesopotamia?
26 6 December 2020 Created ... that despite ample epigraphic evidence mentioning his name, nothing is known about Phoenician king Yatonmilk's reign?
25 1 December 2020 Created

5x expanded

... that Bodashtart, King of Sidon, left some 30 dedicatory inscriptions at the Temple of Eshmun?
24 20 November 2020 Created ... that the Gozo Phoenician shipwreck excavation is the first maritime archaeological survey to explore sunken vessels beyond a depth of 100 metres (330 ft)?
23 12 October 2020 Created ... that French historian Josette Elayi was made a knight of the Legion of Honour by the French government for her works on Phoenician history?
22 7 August 2020 Created ... that after being squatted by hundreds of refugees, the 18th-century Debbane Palace was restored to its former state and turned into a private museum?
21 3 January 2020 Created ... that professors at the Roman law school of Beirut drafted parts of the Corpus Juris Civilis, a fundamental work in Roman jurisprudence?
20 18 September 2019 Created ... that the Roman temple of Bziza (pictured), dedicated to the Semitic god Azizos, was converted to a church by the Byzantines?
19 14 January 2017 Created ... that an extract of Alchemilla diademata, a plant endemic to Lebanon, shows antimicrobial activity against Staphylococcus aureus?
18 11 March 2016 Created ... that Al-Hoda, established by Naoum Mokarzel in 1898, was the longest-running Arabic newspaper in the United States?
17 2 March 2016 Created ... that the Great Famine of Mount Lebanon led to the highest death toll by population of the First World War?
16 9 January 2016 Created ... that The Human Comedy (pictured) by French sculptor Ernest Christophe inspired Baudelaire's poem "The Mask"?
15 23 April 2013 Created ... that the jurists of the ancient Law School of Beirut played a major part in drafting the Justinian body of civil law?
14 23 April 2013 Created ... that to finance the completion of the Petit Serail, the Wāli of Syria had to take a loan, mortgage public buildings and impose new taxes?
13 15 April 2013 Created ... that the Puits d'amour pastry caused scandal in 18th century France because of the erotic connotation of its name?
12 11 April 2013 Created ... that Beirut's Saint George Greek Orthodox Cathedral sits on the vestiges of three earlier church structures dating back as early as the 5th century AD?
11 7 March 2013 Created ... that the residence of the French ambassador to Lebanon was originally intended to serve as a casino?
10 12 October 2010 Created ... that the controversial Lebanese rock band Mashrou' Leila started out as a music workshop at a local university?
9 27 September 2010 Created ... that the 73.8-metre (242 ft) tall Cross of All Nations located near the Lebanese town of Baskinta is the largest lit cross in the world?
8 19 September 2010 Created ... that the cathedra at Beirut's Saint George Maronite Cathedral is the armchair used by Pope John Paul II during his 1997 visit to Lebanon?
7 16 September 2010 Created ... that Alice of Champagne the widowed Queen Consort of Cyprus married Bohemond V of Antioch on the Palm Island offshore of Tripoli in 1224?
6 9 August 2010 Created ... that before becoming a museum, Beit Beirut (pictured) was a vantage point for sniping and a combat zone during the Lebanese Civil War?
5 10 October 2009 5x expanded ... that the Cypriot women's basketball team was disqualified at the 2009 Jeux de la Francophonie for exceeding the permitted number of naturalized players?
4 23 November 2009 Created ... that the Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate, a precursor of the modern state of Lebanon, was created in the aftermath of the 1860 massacre where thousands of Christians were killed by the Druze?
3 17 June 2008 5x expanded

GA

... that Jeita Grotto (statue pictured) in Lebanon has the world's longest stalactite, at 8.2 m (27 ft)?
2 23 April 2008 5x expanded

GA

...that the inscription on King Ahiram's sarcophagus housed in the National Museum of Beirut is the earliest known example of alphabetical writing?
1 1 March 2008 Created ... that eight well preserved Maronite mummies dating back to the 13th century were uncovered by speleologists in the Qadisha Valley, Lebanon?

DYK since AUG 18

drft
Recognition
== Precious ==

culture of Lebanon
Thank you, proud Kafir, for quality articles on Lebanese culture, history and people, such as Law school of Beirut and Temple of Eshmun, National Museum of Beirut and Elias Abu Shabaki, for gnomish work in categories, assessment and page moves, - you are an awesome Wikipedian!

siyne mi pozt: --Gerda Arendt (talk) 11:08, 6 December 2013 (UTC)

The Good Article Barnstar
For your contributions to bring Law School of Beirut to Good Article status. Thanks, and keep up the good work! -- Khazar2 (talk) 11:38, 1 July 2013 (UTC)
Lebanese Barnstar of National Merit
From article writing to leadership and community organizing. Your contributions are invaluable to WikiProject Lebanon. Mnation2 (talk) 03:29, 28 November 2009 (UTC)
The Original Barnstar
For all your hard work getting Eshmun Temple up to FA - well done! Simon Burchell (talk) 23:26, 15 September 2010 (UTC)

Main page appearance

edit
Astarte's throne at the Eshmun temple

The Temple of Eshmun is an ancient place of worship dedicated to Eshmun, the Phoenecian god of healing. It is located near the Awali river, 2 kilometres (1.2 mi) northeast of Sidon in southwestern Lebanon. The site was occupied from the 7th century BCE to the 8th century CE, suggesting an integrated relationship with the nearby city of Sidon. Although originally constructed by Sidonian king Eshmunazar II in the Achaemenid era(c. 529–333 BCE) to celebrate the city's recovered wealth and stature, the temple complex was greatly expanded by Bodashtart, Yatan-milk and later monarchs. The sanctuary consists of an esplanade and a grand court limited by a hugelimestone terrace wall that supports a monumental podium which was once topped by Eshmun's Graeco-Persian stylemarble temple. The Eshmun Temple declined and fell into oblivion as paganism was overrun by Christianity and its large limestone blocks were used to build later structures. The temple site was rediscovered in 1900 by local treasure hunters who stirred the curiosity of international scholars. Maurice Dunand, a French archaeologist, thoroughly excavated the site from 1963 until the beginning of the Lebanese Civil War in 1975. After the end of the hostilities and the retreat of Israel from South Lebanon, the site was rehabilitated and inscribed to the World Heritage Site tentative list. (more...)


The Civility Barnstar
Thanks chief! :) JAR (talk) 23:30, 5 October 2011 (UTC)

The Real Life Barnstar
i appreciate your contribution in wikipedia as a lebanese volunteer. i am a new member here, i love to have you as a friend and to cooperate with you for the best of our country.

thank you for your work... Johnny 9 0 (talk) 14:17, 21 December 2011 (UTC)


The Writer's Barnstar
you deserve it Fidel 22:49, 8 January 2012 (UTC)
The Geography Barnstar
Thanks for creating the new List of rivers of Lebanonarticle, and for working to improve Wikipedia. It is appreciated. Northamerica1000(talk) 06:31, 12 February 2012 (UTC)