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From 2012 to 2015: The Beginning of the War in Palmyra and the First Destruction From 2012 to 2015: The Beginning of the War in Palmyra and the First Destruction
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The Period 2015 to 2016: The Massive Destruction of Palmyra Perpetrated by Da‘esh The Period 2015 to 2016: The Massive Destruction of Palmyra Perpetrated by Da‘esh
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From 2016 to 2017: Recapture of Palmyra and New Damages From 2016 to 2017: Recapture of Palmyra and New Damages
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Should Palmyra Be Rebuilt? Should Palmyra Be Rebuilt?
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Bibliography Bibliography
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37 Postludium: Palmyra and the Civil War in Syria
Get accessAnnie Sartre-Fauriat is Emeritus Professor of Ancient History at Artois University (France). She has published many books and articles about Syria, especially on architecture, society, and culture in Syria (first century BC–seventeenth century AD); she edited and commented a volume on William John Bankes’s account of his journeys in Syria (1816 and 1818). She works on the corpus of Greek and Latin inscriptions in the Hawran (south Syria), and she has also published many books and articles about Palmyra. She is associated with the Center for Research and Study of History and Society (CREHS), in Artois, France, and the Histoire et Sources des Mondes antiques (HiSoMa), Maison de l’Orient et de la Méditerranée Université Lyon-2, Lyon.
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Published:23 January 2024
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Abstract
Since the beginning of the war in 2011, Syria has suffered much damage and looting. The site of Palmyra, one of the most beautiful antique sites in the country, was largely destroyed during the fighting from 2012 to 2017 between various groups of combatants and by the massive and deliberate destruction wrought by the Da‘esh horde. Because of this, humanity has lost the traces of many very important historical buildings and artefacts that stood as testimony to the glorious past and civilization of the site in antiquity. Now, many questions arise concerning opportunities for restoration or reconstruction. But before this is contemplated, it is necessary to analyse the situation and consider other methods by which to reconstitute the monuments using the reliable documentation already gathered.
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