Bedias, Lebanon

Bedias
بدياس
Village
Bedias
Coordinates: 33°18′54″N 35°17′41″E / 33.31500°N 35.29472°E / 33.31500; 35.29472
Grid position 109/153 L
Country  Lebanon
Governorate South Governorate
District Tyre
Elevation 620 ft (190 m)
Time zone GMT +3

Bedias, Bidias, (Arabic: بدياس) is a village in the Tyre District in South Lebanon.

Name

According to E. H. Palmer in 1881, the name Bidias comes from personal name.[1]

History


In 1875, Victor Guérin found here a village with 450 Metawileh inhabitants.[2]

He further noted: "'This village has replaced an ancient one, as is proved by the cut stones which are built up in some of the Arab constructions. Five minutes north of this place, and over above the southern bank of the Kasimiyeh, which flows here in a deep ravine, I met with many ancient millstones, broken, and an ancient tomb cut in the rock, having the form of a simple grave, but covered with a great curved block of stone. Thirty minutes west of Bidias is the ruin called Khurbet ed Dar, on a hill overlooking the ravine. It consists of the interior of an enclosure formed of numerous stones roughly squared, with those of a few houses. At a short distance west of this place there are the ruins called Kh. el Meshatah, on a northern hill. They are those of an abandoned Mohammedan village, in which are older ruins, especially those of a building twenty-seven paces in length from west to east, the door of which is still standing. It is surmounted by a magnificent lintel, in the centre of which was once sculptured an ornament, now defaced, which occupied the middle of a sort of rectangular frame, terminating to right and left in the usual dove-tail. This building, which had been afterwards divided into several houses, was built of cut stones very regularly put together."[3]

In 1881, the Palestine Exploration Fund's Survey of Western Palestine (SWP) described it as: "a village built of stone, on the top of a ridge, surrounded by olive trees and arable land. There is an olive-prcss near the village. The water supply is derived from a large birket and cisterns."[4]

References

  1. Palmer, 1881, p. 3
  2. Guérin, 1880, pp. 251-252; as given in Conder and Kitchener, 1881, SWP I, p. 48
  3. Guérin, 1880, pp. 251-253; as given in Conder and Kitchener, 1881, SWP I, p. 56
  4. Conder and Kitchener, 1881, SWP I, p. 48

Bibliography

External links

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