Ras al-Bassit (Arabic: رأس البسيط), the classicalPosidium or Posideium (Ancient Greek: Ποσιδήιον and Ποσείδιον[1], Posidḗion), is a small town in Syria named for a nearby cape. It has been occupied since at least the late Bronze Age and was a fortified port under Greek and Roman rule. Herodotus—although not later classical geographers—made it the northwestern point of Syria. Its beaches have a distinctive black sand and are a popular resort destination within Syria.[2]
The Syrian municipality is also known as simply Al-Bassit.[6]
Geography
Ras al-Bassit is a small cape on the Syrian coast of the Mediterranean Sea. It is located about 10 km (6.2 mi) south of Mount Aqra, the highest mountain on the Mediterranean's eastern coast, and about 53 km (33 mi) north of Latakia, modern Syria's principal port. As Mount Aqra—the Phoenician Sapan, Biblical Zaphon, and classical Casius—marked the coastal border between the regions of Cilicia and Syria under the Persians,[4] Ras al-Bassit functioned as a kind of border town at times. Ras al-Bassit is located, however, about 80 kilometres (50 mi) south of the later Syrio-Cilician border at the line between the Syrian Gates in the Nur Mountains and Myriandrus on the coast.[7]
The oldest known settlement at Ras al-Bassit was a Bronze-Age outpost with a fortified citadel established by Ugarit between 1550 and 1200BC.[3][9] It traded extensively with Cyprus and Phoenicia and survived Ugarit's destruction by the Sea Peoples.[10] It was eventually abandoned or destroyed in the early Iron Age.[3]
Greeklegends credited the establishment of Posideion to the wandering Argive king and seerAmphilochus[4][11] or his identically-named nephew. Both supposedly lived during the generations that fought in the Trojan War; the actual Greek colony at the site seems to have been established during the 7thcenturyBC.[3] It marked the northern border of the 5th Satrapy of the Persian Empire at the time of Herodotus,[7] but archaeologists have found that the town was destroyed at some point in the 5th or 4thcenturiesBC.[3] Because of the discrepancy between Herodotus's account and other classical descriptions of the Syrio-Cilician border, some historians have disputed the identity of Herodotus's Posideion with the later Roman Posidium and present Ras al-Bassit.[12]
Under Roman rule, it appeared in Strabo's Geography. The Roman emperorsHadrian and Julian may have used Posidium's port, as they are recording having climbing the nearby Mount Aqra to perform sacrifices. The town thrived during the late imperial and early Byzantine periods, after the city was refortified in the 3rd century.[3] Several other building projects, including an expansion of the port and erection of several large villas, were subsequently undertaken.[3] In the 6th century, a church complex was built at the foot of the acropolis.[14]
The site was largely abandoned following the Muslim conquest of the area in the 630s.[14] The First Crusade led to the establishment of the Principality of Antioch in the area in the 1090s. At some point in the 12th or 13th century, a new, smaller chapel was erected within the Byzantine church's ruins.[14] The Egyptian sultanBaibars reconquered the area in the 1260s. The port was still used by Venetian ships as late as the 16th century but was abandoned by all but the local fishermen by the 19th.[3]
A French excavation led by Paul Courbin between 1971 and 1984 revealed the former Ugarit and Greek ruins.[3]Quebecois excavations conducted by Montreal University and the Rimouski's provincial university since 2000 focused on the late classical and medieval ruins at the site.[14] Ruins uncovered by the expeditions have been left uncovered and unprotected between seasons, mixing with the modern marina and countryside.[3]
In the early 1970s, the Ministry of Tourismseized ownership of the entire Syrian coast to a distance of 3 km (1.9 mi), offering only nominal compensation. Little was done by the ministry to develop most of the coast for tourists but, although most people still claimed ownership of their land, the murky legal status hindered any other development whatsoever into the 21stcentury. A side effect was the relative conservation of Syria's Mediterranean forests.[15] Ras al-Bassit, however, was a model area that saw construction of several hundred chalets and, in 1991, a small hotel run by the Syrian Workers Union. That hotel began operating year-round in 2001, and a second hotel run by the Farmers Union began operation in 2005.[16]
As part of the trend towards limiting and improving tourist and conservation areas while permitting more development elsewhere, 3,000 hectares (7,400 acres) around Ras al-Bassit were declared a protected forestry area by the Ministry of Agriculture on 29 May 1999.[17] Annual tourist visits to the area reached 150,000 by 2004; most were Syrians from Aleppo or Damascus, some were Jordanians, and very few were from non-Arab states.[16]
Religion
Apart from the ruins of the medieval church, there is a shrine to StGeorge (Al-Khuder) just north of the town.[18] Most of the population are conservative Alawite Muslims.[19]
Beaudry, Nicolas (2007), "Ras el Bassit et l'Antiquité Tardive sur la Côte Nord-Syrienne", Revue d'Études des Civilisations Anciennes du Proche-Orient, vol. 13, pp. 19–28.