Khan Dannun
Village in Rif Dimashq, Syria
Khan Dannun (Arabic : خان دنون , also spelled Khan Danun , Khan Dunnun or Khan Dhul-Nun ) is a town in southern Syria , administratively part of the Markaz Rif Dimashq District of the Rif Dimashq Governorate . Located south of Damascus , nearby localities include al-Taybah to the west, Muqaylibah to the northwest, al-Kiswah 5 kilometers to the north and Khiyarat Dannun to the east. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics , Khan Dannun had a population of 8,727 in the 2004 census.[ 1]
Khan Dannun also contains a refugee camp, the Khan Dannun camp , and is one of ten Palestinian refugee camps in Syria recognized by UNRWA . According to UNRWA statistics the camp had a population of 7,841 in 1998.[ 2] According to UNRWA the population of the camp in June 2008 was 9,479 persons and 2,192 families.[ 3]
History
Khan Dannun was originally a large khan ("caravansary ") completed in 1376 by the Mamluk governor of Damascus , Manjak al-Yusufi,[ 4] during the reign of the Bahri Mamluk sultan al-Ashraf Sha'ban .[ 5] The khan was designed by Ali ibn al-Badri, known as muhandis ash-Sham ("engineer of Damascus.")[ 6] The name "Dan nun" is the colloquial version of "Dhul-Nun ,"[ 7] [ 8] a highly venerated 9th-century Muslim figure. He is considered to be the early patriarch of the Sufis .[ 7] Khan Dannun became a stopping point on the hajj ("pilgrimage to Mecca ") caravan route after al-Kiswah, and before Ghabaghib .[ 9]
The khan , with exception of its vaults, was built in the traditional basalt masonry typically found in the old structures in Hauran .[ 4] It consisted of an open, square-shaped courtyard, the center of which had been occupied by livestock. Surrounding the courtyard were arcades built atop lodging apartments which served as accommodation for visitors.[ 10] The courtyard was flanked by circular basalt towers.[ 7] Inside the khan was a small prayer room with mihrab niche which indicated the direction of Mecca .[ 11] A marsh was formed in front of the khan's gate as a result of an eastern-flowing rivulet.[ 7]
When traveler John Lewis Burckhardt visited the site in the early 19th-century, the khan was in ruins.[ 10] Khan Dannun was one of the stops on the Damascus -Hauran line of the Hejaz Railway .[ 12]
In 1949, following the 1948 Arab-Israeli War , a Palestinian refugee camp called Khan Dannun was set up in the town.[ 13] In 2009 a new sewage project for Khan Dannun, funded by the European Commission , was finished.[ 14]
References
^ General Census of Population and Housing 2004 . Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS). Rif Dimashq Governorate. (in Arabic)
^ Mahmoud as-Sahly, Nabil. Profiles: Palestinian Refugees in Syria Archived 2014-08-11 at the Wayback Machine . BADIL. Winter 1999.
^ Total Registered Camp Population-Summary . UNRWA . 2008-06-30.
^ a b Meinecke, 1996, p. 46
^ Bosworth, 1989, p. 548
^ Meinecke, 1996, p. 53
^ a b c d Newbold, 1846, p. 334
^ Ed. Popper, 1955, p. 51. Translated work of Ibn Taghribirdi .
^ Museums With No Frontiers, 2000, p. 202
^ a b Burckhardt, 1822, p. 54
^ Constable, 2004, p. 99
^ Masterman, 1897, p. 200
^ Khan Danoun Refugee Camp . Jerusalem Media and Communications Center (JMCC). 2007-01-01.
^ UNRWA Commissioner-General Visits Syria . UNRWA . 2009-04-23.
Bibliography
Bosworth, Clifford Edmund (1989). Encyclopaedia of Islam, Fascicle 107, Parts 107-108 . Brill Archive. ISBN 9004090827 .
Burckhardt, Johann Ludwig (1822). Travels in Syria and the Holy Land . J. Murray.
Constable, Olivia Remia (2004). Housing the Stranger in the Mediterranean World: Lodging, Trade, and Travel in Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages . Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521819180 .
Masterman, E. W. G. (1897). "The Damascus Railways" . Quarterly Statement - Palestine Exploration Fund . 29 (3): 198–200. doi :10.1179/peq.1897.29.3.198 .
Meinecke, Michael (1996). Patterns of Stylistic Changes in Islamic Architecture: Local Traditions Versus Migrating Artists . New York University Press. ISBN 9780814754924 .
Museum With No Frontiers (2000). The Umayyads: The Rise of Islamic Art . AIRP. ISBN 187404435X .
Newbold, Captain (1846). "On the site of Ashtaroth" . The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society . 16 . Murray: 331–338. doi :10.2307/1798240 . JSTOR 1798240 .
Ibn Taghribirdi (1955). William Popper (ed.). University of California publications in Semitic philology . Vol. 15–17. The University of California Press.
External links
Kiswah Subdistrict Babbila Subdistrict Jaramana Subdistrict Malihah Subdistrict Kafr Batna Subdistrict Arbin Subdistrict
Douma Subdistrict Harasta Subdistrict Sabe Biyar Subdistrict Dumayr Subdistrict Nashabiyeh Subdistrict Ghazlaniyeh Subdistrict Harran al-Awamid Subdistrict
Qutayfah Subdistrict Jayrud Subdistrict Maloula Subdistrict Raheiba Subdistrict
Al-Tall Subdistrict Sednaya Subdistrict Rankous Subdistrict
Yabroud Subdistrict Assal al-Ward Subdistrict
An-Nabek Subdistrict Deir Atiyeh Subdistrict Qara Subdistrict
Al-Zabadani Subdistrict Madaya Subdistrict Serghaya Subdistrict
Qatana Subdistrict Beit Jann Subdistrict Sa'sa Subdistrict
Darayya Subdistrict Sahnaya Subdistrict Hajar al-Aswad Subdistrict
Qudsaya Subdistrict ad-Dimas Subdistrict Ein al-Fijeh Subdistrict
Gaza Strip 518,000 UNRWA refugees West Bank 188,150 UNRWA refugees Syria 319,958 UNRWA refugees Lebanon 188,850 UNRWA refugees Jordan 355,500 UNRWA refugees
Aqabat Jaber 6,400
Ein as-Sultan 1,900
Far'a 7,600
Fawwar 8,000
Jalazone 11,000
Qalandia 11,000
Am'ari 10,500
Deir 'Ammar 2,400
Dheisheh 13,000
Aida 4,700
Al-Arroub 10,400
Askar 15,900
Balata 23,600
'Azza (Beit Jibrin) 1,000
Ein Beit al-Ma' (Camp No. 1) 6,750
Tulkarm 18,000
Nur Shams 9,000
Jenin 16,000
Shu'fat 11,000
Silwad
Birzeit
Sabinah 22,600
Khan al-Shih 20,000
Nayrab 20,500
Homs 22,000
Jaramana 18,658
Daraa 10,000
Hama 8,000
Khan Danoun 10,000
Qabr Essit 23,700
Unofficial camps
Ein Al-Tal 6,000
Latakia 10,000
Yarmouk 148,500
Bourj el-Barajneh 17,945
Ain al-Hilweh 54,116
El Buss 11,254
Nahr al-Bared 5,857
Shatila 9,842
Wavel 8,806
Mar Elias 662
Mieh Mieh 5,250
Beddawi 16,500
Burj el-Shemali 22,789
Dbayeh 4,351
Rashidieh 31,478
Former camps
Tel al-Zaatar ?
Nabatieh ?
Zarqa 20,000
Jabal el-Hussein 29,000
Amman New (Wihdat) 51,500
Souf 20,000
Baqa'a 104,000
Husn (Martyr Azmi el-Mufti camp) 22,000
Irbid 25,000
Jerash 24,000
Marka 53,000
Talbieh 8,000
Al-Hassan ?
Madaba ?
Sokhna ?
References
^ "Camp Profiles" . unrwa.org . United Nations Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in the Near East. Retrieved 2 July 2015 .