Akkar District
District in Akkar, Lebanon From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
District in Akkar, Lebanon From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Akkar District (Arabic: قضاء عكار) is the only district in Akkar Governorate, Lebanon. It is coextensive with the governorate and covers an area of 788 km2 (304 sq mi). The UNHCR estimated the population of the district to be 389,899 in 2015, including 106,935 registered refugees of the Syrian Civil War and 19,404 Palestinian refugees.[1] The capital is at Halba.
The district is characterized by the presence of a relatively large coastal plain, with high mountains to the east. The largest cities in Akkar are Halba, Bire Akkar and Al-Qoubaiyat.
Akkar has many important Roman and Arabic archaeological sites. One of the most famous archaeological sites and the birthplace of the Roman emperor Severus Alexander (d.235) is the Tell of Arqa near the town of Miniara. Several prehistoric sites were found in the Akkar plain foothills that were suggested to have been used by the Heavy Neolithic Qaraoun culture at the dawn of the Neolithic Revolution.[3][4]
Akkar can be divided into 7 parts: Qaitea (القيطع), Jouma (الجومة), Dreib (الدريب), Jabal Akroum (جبل أكروم), Wadi Khaled (وادي خالد), Cheft (الشفت) and As-Sahel (السهل).[5]
The Akkar area is strategically importent as it is the northen gateway into Syria. this is why several castles were built in that area and in Syria. The most notable one is probebly Krak des Chevaliers in Syria. During the 19th century the Mir‘abi families of beys and pashas bought many lands in the area, which France found it helpfull with their Mandate over Lebanon. Up to the 1958 Syrian land reforms, the local population of Akkar could move freely in and out of Syria.[6]
During the 1970's the peasants of Akkar formed an alliance to fight the land owners and the system of which 3% of the population held about 73% of the land. They were led by Khalid Saghiya, a Syrian Baathist lawyer from Baynu. Following Black September in Jordan, firearms were accessible to all. A fact that escalated the revolt. The involvement of Syria in the area as well as the diverse population led to many rivalries. Franjieh and the Phalange were rivals. Peasant laborers clashed with landlords, while Jurd clans, though occasionally in conflict with one another, had formed an alliance against the beys. Eventualy the discovey of oil in the gulf led to mass imigration, sparing the region and its population from the fate that came to many other parts of Lebanon.[6]
Akkar is divided into the following regions:
As of 2022, the religious make-up of the District's 309,517 voters were roughly 69% Sunni, 13% Greek Orthodox, 10% Maronite Catholics, 5% Alawite, 1% Shia, and 2% others.[7]
This region is home to the second-largest population of Alawites in Lebanon. Turkish people form a majority in Kouachra and Aydamun.
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