Ashrafieh
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Achrafieh ( ar, الأشرفية) is an
upper-class Upper class in modern societies is the social class composed of people who hold the highest social status, usually are the wealthiest members of class society, and wield the greatest political power. According to this view, the upper class is gen ...
area in eastern
Beirut Beirut, french: Beyrouth is the capital and largest city of Lebanon. , Greater Beirut has a population of 2.5 million, which makes it the third-largest city in the Levant region. The city is situated on a peninsula at the midpoint o ...
,
Lebanon Lebanon ( , ar, لُبْنَان, translit=lubnān, ), officially the Republic of Lebanon () or the Lebanese Republic, is a country in Western Asia. It is located between Syria to Lebanon–Syria border, the north and east and Israel to Blue ...
. In strictly administrative terms, the name refers to a sector (''secteur'') centred on Sassine Square, the highest point in the city, as well as a broader quarter (''quartier''). In popular parlance, however, Achrafieh refers to the whole hill that rises above Gemmayze in the north and extends to Badaro in the south, and includes the Rmeil quarter. Although there are traces of human activity dating back to the neolithic era, the modern suburb was heavily settled by
Greek Orthodox The term Greek Orthodox Church ( Greek: Ἑλληνορθόδοξη Ἐκκλησία, ''Ellinorthódoxi Ekklisía'', ) has two meanings. The broader meaning designates "the entire body of Orthodox (Chalcedonian) Christianity, sometimes also cal ...
merchant families from Beirut's old city in the mid-nineteenth century. The area contains a high concentration of Beirut's Ottoman and French Mandate era architectural heritage. During the civil war, when Beirut was separated into eastern and western halves by the Green Line, Achrafieh changed from a mostly Christian residential area (compared to bustling, cosmopolitan Hamra, in
Ras Beirut Ras Beirut ("Tip of Beirut") is an upscale residential neighborhood of Beirut. It has a mixed population of Christians, Muslims, Druze, and secular individuals. Ras Beirut is home to some of Beirut's historically prominent families, such as th ...
) to a commercial hub in its own right. In the early 2000s, the area became a focal point of the city's real estate boom.


Overview

The etymology of Achrafieh most likely relates to the steep hill that defines the area, although this is contested. The area centers on Beirut's highest point, the hill of Saint Dimitrios, and comprises neighbourhoods that slope towards the port in the north, and to what was once a vast pine forest, to the south. The name long predates the present administrative divisions of the
Municipality of Beirut Beirut City Hall, also known as the Municipality of Beirut, is a landmark building built in downtown Beirut, Lebanon in 1924,A Global History of Architecture By Francis D. K. Ching, Mark M. Jarzombek, Vikramaditya Prakas page 712 and has become ...
, and first appears to designate a suburb in Salih bin Yahya's ''History of Beirut'', in the early 1400s. The writer
Elias Khoury Elias Khoury ( ar, إلياس خوري; born 12 July 1948) is a Lebanon, Lebanese novelist, and prominent public intellectual. Accordingly, he has published myriad novels related to literary criticism, which have been translated into several fore ...
recalls how the area was called the "little mountain" (''al-jabal as-saghir'') by locals, as if it were a small outpost of nearby Mount Lebanon on the coast. Administratively, Achrafieh today designates a quarter of the city, made up of 9 sectors (Achrafieh, Adlieh, Corniche el-Nahr, Furn el-Hayek, Ghabi, Hotel Dieu, Mar Mitr, Nasra, Sioufi). However, Saint Nicolas and Sursock Street, which are strictly within the quarter of Rmeil, have always been considered part of Achrafieh by local residents and real estate developers alik

Similarly, certain southern parts of the administrative quarter, such as Adlieh, are generally not considered to be part of the area. Achrafieh is therefore defined somewhat nebulously and synonymously with East Beirut. Achrafieh comprises residential areas characterized by narrow winding streets and cafes along with more commercial areas, with large apartment and office buildings and major arteries between central Beirut and the north-eastern suburbs. The following neighbourhoods are counted within Achrafieh: * Accaoui, a hill leading from Gemmayze up to the Sursock neighbourhood * Furn el-Hayek * Karm el-Zeitoun, a densely populated settlement that was established by Armenian refugees in the 1920s, who were later joined by Syriac Christians, Syrian refugees and migrant workers * Mar Mitr, named after the Saint Demetrios Church, hosts one of the city's main Greek Orthodox cemeteries * Mar Naqoula or Saint Nicolas, named after the parish church; includes Sursock Street with its old palatial villas, the St Nicolas Stairs ( Escalier de l'Art) and many office buildings (Sofil Center, Ivory Building) *Nasra, named after the Dames de Nazareth girls school * Rue Monot *
Rue Huvelin Rue Huvelin ( ar, شارع هوفلين), is a street located east of Beirut Central District in the neighborhood of Achrafieh. The street is named after Paul Huvelin, a French legal historian who founded the law school of the Université Saint-Jose ...
* Sassine Square, a busy road intersection atop the Saint Dimitrios hill, roughly coterminous with the Achrafieh sector, named after the Sassine family, the original landowners * Sodeco Square * Sioufi, a residential area on the southern slopes of the hill, built on land that was used for hunting in the mid twentieth century; named for the Sioufi family, which established a furniture factory here * Tabaris Square and Abdel Wahab Street


History

There are traces of human activity on the slopes of Achrafieh in antiquity. The area included a necropolis, with archeological findings now in the National Museum of Beirut, and a possible shrine around a water spring at what is today Saint Demetrios Church.


Ottoman period

After several centuries of being a small, walled city, Beirut expanded rapidly in the mid-nineteenth century, as a result of increased trade and immigration, including refugees from inter-communal conflicts in Mount Lebanon and inland Syria. As the old city became increasingly cramped and overpopulated, many Greek Orthodox trading families relocated from the port into semi-rural eastern areas, where they built spacious villas on the slopes of the hill, with large gardens and views commanding the port. These Orthodox families (including the Bustros, Gebeily, Trad, Tueni, and Sursock) made their money through the silk trade as well as money exchanging and tax collection, and were some of the largest property owners and tax payers in the city in the 1860s and 70s. The Orthodox community's communal institutions followed them. The Greek Orthodox Archbishop's palace was also relocated from the Saint George Cathedral complex in downtown Beirut to the Sursock's neighbourhood overlooking the port. The Ecole des Trois Docteurs, founded in 1835 in the Orthodox Cathedral complex in central Beirut, moved eastward until it found its present location at the bottom of the Accaoui hill. The first palace was built by Nicolas Sursock, probably on what is now the St Nicolas Stairs, and hosted Russia's Grand Duke Nicholas when he visited Beirut in 1872. Other villas included: Taswinat al-Tueni, a palace built by Georges Tueni in the early 1860s and named for the fence that ringed the extensive grounds; the Fadlallah Bustros Palace, completed around 1863 and now housing the Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Moussa Sursock's palace, completed around 1870; and Elias Sursock's palace, which hosted General Gouraud during the French Mandate and was demolished in the 1960s. The last major villa was built for Nicolas Ibrahim Sursock in 1912, and upon his death, he left the palace to the Municipality of Beirut as a land grant or waqf, to become what is now the
Sursock Museum The Sursock Museum ( ar, قصر سرسق), which is officially known as the Nicolas Ibrahim Sursock Museum, is a modern art and contemporary art museum in Beirut, Lebanon. History In 1912, the wealthy and prominent Lebanese aristocrat Nicolas I ...
. These palatial villas remain emblematic of Achrafieh, with one such palace, built for Abdullah Bustros, being sold for $22 million in 2018. File:Sursock Palace in Beirut.jpg, Moussa Sursock's palace, completed around 1870 File:Alexandre Sursock's house on Sursock Street, Beirut.jpg, Alexandre Sursock's villa, now known as Villa Mokbel File:Youssef Sursock's villa in Beirut.jpg, Youssef Sursock's palace, now known as the Feghali House File:Ibrahim Sursock villa in Beirut.jpg, Ibrahim Sursock's villa, completed around 1875 File:Sursock Museum, Beirut, Lebanon, 1970.jpg, Nicolas Sursock's villa, completed in 1912 Besides the bourgeois families, many Christian refugees came to settle in the expanding suburbs, starting with the 1860 inter-communal conflict in Mount Lebanon, between Maronites and Druze, and in Damascus, between Orthodox Christians and Muslims. Dimitri Youssef Debbas was one such refugee from the Damascus conflict, who settled in Achrafieh and wrote a memoir of the conflict. Historian
Leila Fawaz Leila Fawaz is a Lebanese historian and academician. She is the founding director of The Fares Center for Eastern Mediterranean Studies from 2001 to 2012. Fawaz was born in Sudan to Greek-Orthodox Lebanese parents and raised in Lebanon. She too ...
describes how Dimitri Debbas was part of the first caravan fleeing Damascus, and placed into quarantine outside the city. The Bustros family persuaded the Mutessarif to allow the refugees into the town, and they were housed in the Ecole des Trois Docteurs, near the St George Cathedral. As the school became overcrowded, some were given shelter in Khalil Sursock's house, with families staying in the cellar, and men (including Dimitri Debbas) sleeping in the open. Dimitri Debbas, who had been part of a successful business family in Damascus, rebuilt his wealth from Beirut and built a residence of his own in Achrafieh, on what is now known as Montee Debbas.


Lebanese Civil War

Given its large Christian population, Achrafieh was a focal point of conflict during the
Lebanese Civil War The Lebanese Civil War ( ar, الحرب الأهلية اللبنانية, translit=Al-Ḥarb al-Ahliyyah al-Libnāniyyah) was a multifaceted armed conflict that took place from 1975 to 1990. It resulted in an estimated 120,000 fatalities a ...
. The area was the Beirut heartland of the Christian militias under the Lebanese Front. The
Hundred Days' War The Hundred Days War ( ar, حرب المئة يوم, ''Harb Al-Mia'at Yaoum,'' French: La Guerre des Cent Jours) was a subconflict within the 1977–82 phase of the Lebanese Civil War which occurred in the Lebanese capital Beirut. It was foug ...
in 1978 saw the Christian militias of the Lebanese Front fight the Syrian deterrent forces. In 1982, Lebanon's president-elect
Bachir Gemayel Bachir Pierre Gemayel ( ; 10 November 1947 – 14 September 1982) was a Lebanese militia commander who led the Lebanese Forces, the military wing of the Kataeb Party in the Lebanese Civil War and was elected President of Lebanon in 1982 ...
was assassinated by a bomb explosion at the Kataeb office on Sassine Street. The documentary ''Beirut: The Last Home Movie'' (1987) by Jennifer Fox shows the day-to-day life of the Bustros family, inside the Tueni-Bustros palace during the early 1980s. Mouna Bustros, who features in the film, was killed in 1989 when a rocket was fired from the nearby Rizk Tower at the palace. The Achrafieh experience of the war is also chronicled by Elias Khoury in his novel ''The Little Mountain'' (1989).


Contemporary Achrafieh

In 2005, journalist Samir Kassir was assassinated by a bomb placed under his car at his residence in Achrafieh. In 2006, as part of the unrest surrounding the Danish cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, protestors torched the Danish embassy building in Tabaris and damaged the nearby Mar Maroun Church in Saifi. In October 2012, Wissam al-Hassan, head of the Intelligence Branch of Lebanon's Internal Security Force, was killed along with 8 others by a bomb on Sassine Street.


Urbanism

] Achrafieh contains some of Beirut's largest remaining clusters of historic buildings from the late Ottoman and French Mandate period

However, much of this heritage was destroyed during the Civil War (1975-1990), with many structures undergoing reconstruction in the following decades. The area also saw several construction booms (including during the Civil War, in the mid-1990s, and the 2000s), during which much of the built heritage including gardens was replaced with tower blocks to maximize land value. Heritage buildings have been torn down for inheritance reasons, as a way of evicting tenants on so-called "old rents", or because of lack of maintenance. The area now contains the tallest towers in Beirut, including Sama Beirut near Sodeco, and SkyGate near Sassine Square. The area around Sursock Street has been rebranded by developers as a "golden triangle" (''triangle d'or''), as it has a balance between permissible population density and development rights (e.g., height of buildings). The built environment was badly affected by the explosion at Beirut's port in 2020, particularly in the northern parts of Achrafieh. An emergency law was promulgated in the immediate aftermath to stop the sale of land and evictions from houses around the port for the following two years. Several civil society organizations, most notably the Beirut Heritage Initiative, have been working to restore groups of houses affected by the disaster. Very few of the remaining heritage buildings have any official protection, despite lobbying from civil society group

A new bill was passed in 2017 by the Lebanese government to protect heritage sites around the city, marking a historical turning point for activists who have pressed for legislative action since the end of the war, but has not been ratified.


Timeline

* 1st century AD - Roman necropolis established on hill of St Dimitrios * 1839 - Reform under Egyptian administration allows expansion of city beyond walls * 1842 - Beirut takes over from Acre as seat of
vilayet A vilayet ( ota, , "province"), also known by various other names, was a first-order administrative division of the later Ottoman Empire. It was introduced in the Vilayet Law of 21 January 1867, part of the Tanzimat reform movement initiated ...
* 1860 - Inter-communal conflict in Mount Lebanon and Damascus leads to influx of Christian refugees, many of whom settle in Achrafieh * 1862 - Greek Orthodox Archbishop's residence moved from central Beirut to Achrafieh's Sursock Street * 1870 - Moussa Sursock's palace completed * 1885 - Zahrat al-Ihsan school constructed * 1909 - Grand Lycee Francophone established by Mission Laique Francaise, near what is now Sodeco * 1910 - Ilyas Sioufi establishes the Sioufi Furniture Factory along with Sioufi Gardens * 1912 - Nicolas Sursock's villa constructed * 1920 - Karm el-Zeitoun established as settlement for Armenian refugees * 1927 - Church of the Annunciation, demolished during the construction of Place de l'Etoile, rebuilt in Achrafieh * 1931 - Danger Plan aims to make Beirut into a garden city, never put into effect * 1952 - Nicolas Sursock dies and leaves his villa to the city as a
waqf A waqf ( ar, وَقْف; ), also known as hubous () or '' mortmain'' property is an inalienable charitable endowment under Islamic law. It typically involves donating a building, plot of land or other assets for Muslim religious or charitab ...
, stipulating that it will become a
public museum A museum ( ; plural museums or, rarely, musea) is a building or institution that cares for and displays a collection of artifacts and other objects of artistic, cultural, historical, or scientific importance. Many public museums make these ...
* 1978 -
Hundred Days' War The Hundred Days War ( ar, حرب المئة يوم, ''Harb Al-Mia'at Yaoum,'' French: La Guerre des Cent Jours) was a subconflict within the 1977–82 phase of the Lebanese Civil War which occurred in the Lebanese capital Beirut. It was foug ...
centers on Achrafieh * 1982 -
Bachir Gemayel Bachir Pierre Gemayel ( ; 10 November 1947 – 14 September 1982) was a Lebanese militia commander who led the Lebanese Forces, the military wing of the Kataeb Party in the Lebanese Civil War and was elected President of Lebanon in 1982 ...
assassinated at Beit al-Kataeb on Sassine Street * 2003 - ABC Achrafieh built on what was Salam football field * 2020 - Beirut's port explosion devastates the city, especially northern areas of Achrafieh


Education

Schools and universities: * Universite Saint Joseph de Beyrouth *
Grand Lycée Franco-Libanais The Grand Lycée Franco-Libanais (GLFL) is a prestigious French lycée in the Achrafieh district of Beirut, founded in 1909 by the Mission laïque française. The institution leads as the flagship of the French lycées operating in Lebanon. It is ...
*
Collège de la Sagesse The Collège de la Sagesse ( ar, کلیة الحکمة) is a Lebanese major national and Catholic school founded in 1875 by the Maronite archbishop of Beirut at the time, Joseph Debs who laid the first stone of the original building. The school ...
*
Greater Beirut Evangelical School Greater may refer to: *Greatness, the state of being great *Greater than, in inequality * ''Greater'' (film), a 2016 American film *Greater (flamingo), the oldest flamingo on record * "Greater" (song), by MercyMe, 2014 *Greater Bank Greater Ban ...
Home page
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American University of Science and Technology The American University of Science and Technology (AUST) (french: link=no, Université américaine de sciences et technologie; ar, link=no, الجامعة الأميركية للعلوم والتكنولوجيا) is a private, non-sectarian, an ...
*
University of Balamand The University of Balamand (UOB; ar, جامعة البلمند) is a private institution, secular in its policies and approach to education. It welcomes faculty, students, and staff from all faiths and national or ethnic origins. The university i ...
, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences *Zahrat al-Ihsan *Ecole des Trois Docteurs


Places of worship

Catholic churches: * St Youhanna Maronite Church, on Adib Ishak Street Greek Orthodox churches: * Notre Dame de l'Annonciation, historic church on Lebanon Street * Saydet el Doukhoul Church * St Dimitrios Church, hosting the Greek Orthodox cemetery for eastern Beirut * St George Church, attached to the St George Hospital * St Nicolas Church, an important parish church that was rebuilt in Byzantine style in the mid-twentieth century Mosques: * Beydoun Mosque Syriac Orthodox churches: * St Ephraim Church


Notable people

* Michel Sassine, Prominent Lebanese politician, MP for the district of Beirut for 24 years (1968-1992) * Gebran Tueini, former editor and publisher of the daily paper ''
An-Nahar ''An-Nahar'' ( ar, النهار, lit=The Day or The Morning) is a leading Arabic-language daily newspaper published in Lebanon. In the 1980s, ''An-Nahar'' was described by the ''New York Times'' and ''Time Magazine'' as the newspaper of record ...
'' *
Khaled Mouzanar Khaled Mouzanar (born September 27, 1974) is a Lebanese music composer, songwriter, writer and film producer. He has composed music scores for several films, including ''After Shave'', ''Caramel'', ''Where Do We Go Now?'' and '' Capernaum (film)' ...
, world renowned composer *
Joe Kodeih Joe Kodeih (born September 3, 1967 in Ashrafieh, Beirut) is a writer, actor and director. He wrote and directed dozens of plays and was the first writer and director from the Arab world to perform on an Off-Broadway stage at Lamama ETC in 2003 with ...
, writer, actor and director *
Nancy Ajram Nancy Nabil Ajram ( ar, نانسي نبيل عجرم, born May 16, 1983) is a Lebanese singer, television personality and businesswoman. Dubbed by Spotify as the " Queen of Arab Pop". With the support of her father, she began performing as ...
, singer *
Samir Assaf Samir Assaf (Arabic: سمير عساف; born 20 June 1960) is a Lebanese Businessman. He is a senior advisor to HSBC's Group Chairman, Group CEO and the tank's business, and non-executive chairman of the boards of HSBC Bank Middle East Limited an ...
, CEO of HSBC Global Banking & Markets * Paula Yacoubian, Parliament member


See also

* Badaro *
Beirut Central District The Beirut Central District (BCD) or ''Centre Ville'' is the historical and geographical core of Beirut, the capital of Lebanon. Also called downtown Beirut, it has been described the “vibrant financial, commercial, and administrative hu ...
*
Grand Lycée Franco-Libanais The Grand Lycée Franco-Libanais (GLFL) is a prestigious French lycée in the Achrafieh district of Beirut, founded in 1909 by the Mission laïque française. The institution leads as the flagship of the French lycées operating in Lebanon. It is ...
*
Hekmeh BC Sagesse Sports Club (), known as Hekmeh ( ar, الحكمة) in Arabic, is a Lebanese sports club based in Beirut. The basketball team was established in 1992, as part of the Club Sagesse established in 1943 with mainly the football (soccer) te ...
*
Collège de la Sagesse The Collège de la Sagesse ( ar, کلیة الحکمة) is a Lebanese major national and Catholic school founded in 1875 by the Maronite archbishop of Beirut at the time, Joseph Debs who laid the first stone of the original building. The school ...
*
Racing Beirut Racing Club (), known as Racing Beirut or simply Racing, is a football club based in Achrafieh, a district in Beirut, Lebanon, that competes in the . They play their home matches at the Fouad Chehab Stadium and are primarily supported by the ...
*
Hekmeh FC Hikma ( ar, حكمة), or other romanisations such as Hikmah and Hekme, may refer to: Education * Al-Hikmah University, a private university in Ilorin, Nigeria * Al-Hikma University (Baghdad), a former university in Baghdad, Iraq * Dar Al-Hekma U ...


Further reading

* Eddé, Carla. 2009. ''Beyrouth, naissance d’une capitale: 1918-1924''. Paris: Actes Sud. * Davie, May. 1993. ''La'' millat ''grecque-orthodoxe de Beyrouth, 1800-1940: Structuration interne et rapport a la cite''. Doctoral thesis, Universite de Paris IV – Sorbonne. * Davie, May. 1996. ''Beyrouth et ses faubourgs (1840-1940) : Une intégration inachevée''. Beirut: Les Cahiers du Cermoc. * Fawaz, Leila Tarazi. 1983. ''Merchants and migrants in nineteenth-century Beirut''. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. * Hanssen, Jens. 2005. ''Fin de siècle Beirut: The making of an Ottoman provincial capital''. Oxford Historical Monographs. Oxford: Oxford University Press. * Kamel, Leila Salameh. 1998. ''Un quartier de Beyrouth, Saint-Nicolas : structures familiales et structures foncières''. Beirut: Dar el-Machreq. * Kassir, Samir. 2010. ''Beirut''. Berkeley: University of California Press. * Khoury, Elias. 1989. ''Little mountain''. New York: Picador. * Traboulsi, Fawwaz. 2007. ''A History of Modern Lebanon''. London: Pluto Press. * Trombetta, Lorenzo. 2009. “The private archive of the Sursuqs, a Beirut family of Christian notables: An early investigation.” ''Rivista degli Studi Orientali'' 82(1). * Verdeil, Éric. 2012. ''Beyrouth et ses urbanistes : Une ville en plans (1946-1975)''. Beyrouth: Presses de l’Ifpo.
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References


External links


SOUWAR.com




* Article on the history of Ashrafieh and how it evolved through time - Interview with Former Ashrafieh MP Michel Sassine (December 2011): https://www.scribd.com/doc/77669439/Interview-on-the-History-of-Achrafieh-with-HE-Michel-Sassine-Dec-2011 {{coord, 33, 53, 15.21, N, 35, 31, 14.72, E, region:LB_type:city, display=title Eastern Orthodox Christian communities in Lebanon Maronite Christian communities in Lebanon
Achrafieh Achrafieh ( ar, الأشرفية) is an upper-class area in eastern Beirut, Lebanon. In strictly administrative terms, the name refers to a sector (''secteur'') centred on Sassine Square, the highest point in the city, as well as a broader quarter ...
Armenian communities in Lebanon Melkite Christian communities in Lebanon