Aaiha Explained

Official Name:Aaiha
Native Name:عيحا
Settlement Type:Village
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Type1:Governorate
Subdivision Name1:Beqaa Governorate
Subdivision Type2:District
Subdivision Name2:Rashaya District
Unit Pref:Imperial
Aaiha
Map Type:Lebanon
Map Alt:3750feet
Map Size:200
Location:2km (01miles) northeast of Rashaya
Region:Bekaa Valley
Coordinates:33.4997°N 35.8733°W
Cultures:Roman, Greek
Condition:Ruins
Public Access:Yes

Aaiha (or Aiha) (Arabic: عيحا) is a village, plain, lake, and temporary wetland situated in the Rashaya District and south of the Beqaa Governorate in Lebanon.[1] [2] It is located in an intermontane basin near Mount Hermon and the Syrian border, approximately halfway between Rashaya and Kfar Qouq.[3]

The village sits c. 3750feet above sea level and the small population is predominantly Druze.[3] [4] Wild wheats Triticum boeoticum and T. urartu grow in this area, also used for farming goats.[5] [6] There is a nearby tomb of a Muslim saint and a Roman ruins thought to be a temple or citadel that is now totally destroyed[3] [7] [8] [9]

Aaiha plain, Aaiha lake and Aaiha intermittent lake

The village is situated on a ridge next to Aaiha plain, an intermittent lake that forms a near perfect circular shape, approximately 2miles in diameter and enclosed by mountains and the ridge on the west.[3] [10] The plain is completely level with no particularly visible outlet for water, which occasionally floods the basin to a depth of several feet to form a lake. The creation of the lake is assisted by fountains that well up through a large chasm in the northwest and a smaller fissure in the southeast. It has also been noted that when the waters subside, they drain down these fissures. Investigative potholers have claimed a permanent stream flows underneath these fissures.

The Chaff of Phiala

The smaller southeastern fissure was investigated and found to be 15feet in diameter, 8feet to 10feet deep with no sign of water at the bottom. Robinson did not record any investigation of the larger one to the northwest of the plain, which was not flooded at the time, during the summer.[3] The villagers suggest the underground stream leads to and is the original source and fountain of the Hasbani river, the most northern source of the Jordan River. This is notably similar to that described in the tale of "The Chaff of Phiala" in The Jewish War by Flavius Josephus.[3] Josephus tells a geographically inaccurate tale of a cavern in an ancient place called Phiala or Phiale (modern Birkat Ram), discovered to be the initial source of the Jordan by Philip the Tetrarch of Trachonitis.[11] He threw chaff into Phiala and found it was carried by the waters to Panium (modern Banias), previously thought to be the origin of the Jordan river.[12] Josephus writes:

Edward Robinson commented that this story would appear still current in respect to this chasm and underground stream leading to the Hasbani.[3] Some neolithic flints have been recovered in this area, in the hills 3km (02miles) north of Rashaya.[13]

Roman temple

Edward Robinson and Eli Smith visited in 1852 and noted a massive Roman temple had once been located near the village that has been grouped by George Taylor amongst the Temples of Mount Hermon.[14]

Robinson suggested the temple was bigger than Nebi Safa and spoke of it having been constructed of stones that were "tolerably large, well hewn, but not bevelled". Fragments of architrave, mouldings and blocks from the temple had been re-used by the villagers making their homes and farmsteads and had been left lying all over the fields, covered in rubbish.[3] [15]

Sir Charles Warren also later visited and documented the area as part of an archaeological survey in 1869. He noted a long wall leading off into the east away from the village and temple. He also noted some vaults and rock-cut features and took a copy of an Ancient Greek inscription from one of the blocks.[16]

The temple was completed in 92 AD but only the western part remained when visited, located on the top of a hill overlooking the plain.[17]

The temple was constructed of blue limestone with an entrance opening facing east and a sideways bearing of 78°30'. The base of the temples was described as Attic and was positioned on top of an 18inches socle. There were four courses of stones layered above a 5.7feet high, corniced stylobate, measuring 18inches, 2.2feet, 2.3feet and 2.2feet. Houses and a stable were built over the temple. Robinson also found a Corinthian frieze and judged the style of many of the blocks to be Corinthian in appearance. A stone with a Greek inscription was found built into the western wall. The structure measures 37.6feet wide by at least 47.15feet long with an entrance to vaults underneath. A column found nearby measured 3.2feet in diameter.[18]

Wildlife

The white-eyed pochard was noted at the Aaiha lake (then called the Rashaya lake) by Nevins in 1955, but not in 1956 as the lake had reverted to being a plain that year. The duck is thought to have been driven off by frequent shooting. Nevins also noted the Eurasian teal as a resident in the winter, when the lake was present and the waters hadn't drained down the chasm to the Hasbani.[19]

Bibliography

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Lebanon kfardenis, rachaya, kfar qouq, aaiha. www.discoverlebanon.com.
  2. Web site: Wild Lebanon - Powered by A Rocha Lebanon. www.wildlebanon.org. 10 April 2011. 1 September 2016. https://web.archive.org/web/20160901044329/http://www.wildlebanon.org/en/pages/hab/wetlands.html. dead.
  3. Book: Edward Robinson. Eli Smith. Biblical researches in Palestine, Mount Sinai and Arabia Petraea: A journal of travels in the year 1838. 10 April 2011. 1856. J. Murray. 433–.
  4. http://www.britishdruze.org.uk/popups/detailed_druzes.html British Druze Society - Druze communities in the Middle East
  5. Book: Anthony Elmit Hall. Glen H. Cannell. Agriculture in semi-arid environments. 1979. Springer. 978-3-540-09414-2.
  6. Book: Sean Sheehan. Lebanon. registration. 11 April 2011. January 1997. Marshall Cavendish. 978-0-7614-0283-1.
  7. http://tourism.leb961.com/brochures/rachaya.pdf Qada' (Caza) Rachaya - Promenade Tourist Brochure, published by The Lebanese Ministry of Tourism
  8. Munir Said Mhanna (Photos by Kamal el Sahili), Rashaya el Wadi Tourist Brochure, p. 10, Lebanon Ministry of Tourism, Beirut, 2006
  9. Book: George Taylor. The Roman temples of Lebanon: a pictorial guide. Les temples romains au Liban; guide illustré. 1971. Dar el-Machreq Publishers.
  10. Book: Fadi Georges Comair. Water management and hydrodiplomacy of river basins: Litani, Hasbani-Wazzani, Orontes, Nahr El Kebir. 2009. Notre Dame University - Louaize. 978-9953-457-74-1.
  11. Book: John Francis Wilson. Caesarea Philippi: Banias, the lost city of Pan. 2004. I.B.Tauris. 978-1-85043-440-5. 23.
  12. Book: Flavius Josephus. William Whiston. The genuine works of Flavius Josephus: containing five books of the Antiquities of the Jews : to which are prefixed three dissertations. 1810. Printed for Evert Duyckinck, John Tiebout, and M. & W. Ward. 306.
  13. Book: Moore, A.M.T.. The Neolithic of the Levant. Oxford University, Unpublished PhD Thesis. 1978. 436–442.
  14. Book: George Taylor. The Roman temples of Lebanon: a pictorial guide. registration. 16 November 2012. 1967. Dar el-Machreq Publishers.
  15. Book: Université Saint-Joseph (Beirut. Lebanon). Mélanges de l'Université Saint-Joseph. 2007. Impr. catholique.
  16. Book: Sir Charles Warren. Claude Reignier Conder. The survey of western Palestine: Jerusalem. 1889. The Committee of the Palestine Exploration Fund.
  17. Book: Ted Kaizer. The variety of local religious life in the Near East in the Hellenistic and Roman periods. 2008. BRILL. 978-90-04-16735-3. 79.
  18. Book: Palestine Exploration Fund. Quarterly Statement - Palestine Exploration Fund. 11 April 2011. 1869. Published at the Fund's Office.. 197–.
  19. Book: Publication. 1957. The Museum.