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- Palmyra - Wikipedia
Before 273 CE, Palmyra enjoyed autonomy and was attached to the Roman province of Syria, having its political organization influenced by the Greek city-state model during the first two centuries CE
- Palmyra | Syria, Ruins, Tadmor, Map, Conflict | Britannica
Palmyra, ancient city in south-central Syria, 130 miles (210 km) northeast of Damascus The site was continuously inhabited from the Neolithic Period until the 1930s, when a modern city by the same name was built less than a half-mile (and less than a kilometer) east of the ancient city
- Palmyra | Whose Culture? - Harvard University
Originally an oasis settlement in the Northern Syrian Desert, Palmyra quickly rose to prominence due to its location at a transitory locus point between critical trade routes, profiting from caravan routes and fertile land
- Palmyra - Syria, City Destroyed | HISTORY
Located more than 100 miles northeast of Damascus, the present-day capital of Syria, Palmyra began during the Stone Age as a small settlement near an oasis in the desert
- Photos show the ruins of Palmyra, a UNESCO World Heritage site in Syria . . .
Once the capital of a Roman client state under Queen Zenobia, Palmyra stood as a key hub on the Silk Road linking Rome and Asia The UNESCO World Heritage site, ravaged during Syria’s civil war and heavily damaged by Islamic State group militants, still endures
- Palmyra: the modern destruction of an ancient city - Smarthistory
City of Palms Built around an oasis in the Syrian desert, Tadmur or Palmyra, “city of palms,” was one of the most important trade and cultural centers of the ancient world Palmyra had a distinctive local culture that was incorporated into the Roman Empire in the first century C E
- Site of Palmyra - UNESCO World Heritage Centre
An oasis in the Syrian desert, north-east of Damascus, Palmyra contains the monumental ruins of a great city that was one of the most important cultural centres of the ancient world
- Palmyra History: The Desert Bride That United Ancient Civilizations
Palmyra, known as the "Desert Bride," was a vital trade hub in ancient Syria, connecting East and West Its strategic location facilitated cultural and economic exchanges, making it a melting pot of diverse civilizations
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