Hazmieh Explained

33.8511°N 35.5414°WHazmieh (also Romanized as Hazmiyé, Hazmie, Hazmiyeh, Hasmiyeh, Al Ḩāzimīyah, and El Hâzmîyé) is a city in Mount Lebanon Governorate of Lebanon, and a suburb of Beirut, part of Greater Beirut.

Geography

Hazmieh covers an area of 2.73 square kilometers directly southeast of Beirut, at an elevation of between 50–200 meters above sea level. Its borders are defined by the Beirut River and Sin El Fil Boulevard to the north, Camille Chamoun Boulevard to the west, by El Sayad Roundabout and Rihaniyya Junction to the south, and a military school to the east.[1]

History

Hazmieh, along with other suburbs to the east of Beirut, has historically been a predominantly Christian area.[2]

For eighty-six years Hazmieh was the location of the Ashfuriyyeh mental hospital. Founded in 1896 by Theophilus Waldmeier, Ashfuriyeh was the first hospital in the Near East dedicated to the treatment of mentally ill patients. Waldmeier was influenced by the thinking of Daniel Tuke and the example of The Retreat hospital in York.[3] [4]

In 2002, warlord Elie Hobeika was assassinated along with three bodyguards in an explosion in Hazmieh. Hobeika had commanded troops in the Sabra and Shatila massacre in 1982.[5] Another bombing in 2008 killed a Lebanese intelligence official who had been investigating militant groups in the country.[6]

Name

According to Anis Fraiha in his book Names of Lebanese Cities and Villages, the name Hazmieh comes from two Aramaic words: "haza" which translates as "watch," "monitor," or "observe"; and "mayya," which translates to "water" - he speculates the name refers to a guardian of water.[7] Less credited resources attributed the name to other sources:[8]

Notable people

Élias Sarkis, former Lebanese president

Sabah, singer and actress

Samira Tewfik, singer

Wadih El Safi, singer and actor

Walid Toufic, singer[9]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: About Hazmieh . Municipality of Hazmieh . 2022-12-21.
  2. Web site: Areas of Beirut . Lebanese Arabic Institute . 22 January 2018 . 2022-12-21.
  3. Abi-Rached, Joelle M. (2020) Asfuriyyeh A History of Madness, Modernity, and War in the Middle East. MIT Press. pp. 4,129,203 n7
  4. https://www.arabicbible.com/for-christians/the-bible/148-fifty-three-years-in-syria/1467-mission-schools.html?start=5 1908 report
  5. News: Schneider . Howard . Blast Kills Ex-Commander Tied to Lebanon Massacre . 2002-12-21 . Washington Post . 2002-01-25.
  6. News: Bakri . Nada . Nada Bakri . Bomb kills Lebanese intelligence officer . 2002-12-21 . New York Times . 2008-02-05.
  7. Fraiha, A. "معجم أسماء قرى ومدن لبنان وتفسير معانيه، دراسة لغوية" (The dictionary of the names of Lebanese cities and Villages and their meaning. Linguistic study. In Arabic). Beirut: Librarie Du Liban. 6th Edition. p.51.
  8. http://www.hazmieh.gov.lb/en/about/3 The official web site for the Municipality of Hazmieh.
  9. Web site: Hazmieh History . Municipality of Hazmieh . 2022-12-21.