South Shuna is the location of the cultural heritage site known as Shunet Nimrin / Shunat Nimrin.[2] The Tell Nimrin archaeological site is within South Shuna.[3][4]
Shunah means "barn",[5]janub is Arabic for "south",[6] and al-janubiyah means "southern". Therefore, Ash-Shunah al-Janubiyah is often rendered in English as "South Shuna",[7] or "Southern Shuna"[8] with another Shunah town at the opposite, northern end of the Jordan Valley being known as North Shuna.[7]
Shunah is also spelled Shuneh and Shuna.[2] The article al undergoes assimilation to the following consonant in specific cases, when al is sounded ash, also spelled esh,[9]al-Shunah becoming ash-Shunah/esh-Shuneh. For convenience, the definite article at the beginning of place-names may be dropped, yielding here simply Shunah al-Janubiyah.[2]
South Shuna is also historically known as Shunat Nimrin.[2] Nimrin is the name of nearby Tell Nimrin and the lower section of a wadi called Wadi Nimrin downstream from Tell Nimrin and Wadi Shu'eib upstream from the tell.
See also
Al-Shunah al-Shamalyah (North Shuna), town at the northern end of Jordan's Jordan Valley