Sakib Explained

32.2854°N 35.8113°W

Official Name:Sakib
Native Name:Arabic: ساكب
Settlement Type:City
Pushpin Map:Jordan
Pushpin Mapsize:300
Subdivision Type:Country
Subdivision Name: Jordan
Subdivision Type1:Governorate
Subdivision Name1:Jerash Governorate
Established Title:Founded
Established Date:5th century CE
Area Total Km2:8
Area Metro Km2:16
Population As Of:2015
Population Footnotes:[1]
Population Total:11,586
Coordinates:32.2854°N 35.8113°W
Elevation M:900-1200
Elevation Ft:2952-3937
Timezone:GMT +2
Utc Offset:226/188
Timezone Dst:+3
Postal Code Type:Postal code
Postal Code:26710
Area Code:+962(2)

Sakib (; Arabic: ساكب pronounced as /ar/), is a city in northwestern Jordan, administratively part of Jerash Governorate. The 2015 census recorded its population as 11,586. The town is situated approximately 6miles west of the city of Jerash and 34miles from Amman city centre.[2]

Etymology

Sakib was known as "Seecip" during the Crusades. The Arabic place-name means "flowing water".

History

Roman and Byzantine periods

Archaeological remains such as Trapetum olive presses and ancient aqueducts indicate that Sakib was inhabited during the Roman era. In 2008, archaeologists have found a cemetery dating back to the Byzantine period, and It is considered to have a notable historical value.

Early Islamic era

Sakib was captured by forces of the Rashidun Caliphate in 629. During the time of the Umayyad Empire, A hamlet and a mosque were built in the southwestern part of the town.

Crusader rule

Sakib (Seecip) was acquired by the Crusaders in 1100.[3] Later, it became the eastern border of the Kingdom of Jerusalem with the Seljuk Empire.[4] [5] In the year 1120, a garrison of forty men stationed in Jerash by Zahir ad-Din Toghtekin, atabeg of Damascus converted the Temple of Artemis into a fortress. It was captured in 1121 by Baldwin II, King of Jerusalem, and demolished.[6] [7] Then, the Crusaders immediately abandoned Jerash, and withdrew to Sakib; the eastern border of the settlement.[8]

Ottoman period

Sakib, like the rest of the Levant, was incorporated into the Ottoman Empire in 1517. According to the Ottoman census in the 16th century, Sakib was two contiguous villages named Sakib and Aysra (عيصره). Aysra now is part of present-day Sakib and forms its northern part. In the census of 1538, it was located in the nahiyah (subdistrict) of Ajlun of the liwa (district) of Ajlun. It had a population of 13 Muslim households and 1 mosque's imam, while Aysra had a population of 7 households and 1 mosque's imam. The census from 1596 indicates that Sakib had a population of 12 households, all Muslim.

In 1868, the missionary Frederick Augustus Klein visited the region, and illustrated that it is beautiful and there are twenty inhabited villages in the district including Sakib. He also added there was one Greek priest to look to the spiritual affairs of the Christian families in the district.

On April 14, 1882, Prince Albert Victor, Duke of Clarence and Avondale and his brother Prince George of Wales (later King George V) visited the area, and they said: "Next we passed Sakib village at 9.10, and entered the Wady Hamur (roebuck) at 9.30 ; long stretches of corn were growing at the bottom, and the cliffs were wooded at the side with pines and oaks intermixed. A most enjoyable English-like morning as we ride along by the stream which goes gurgling over its pebble bed down the valley ; we cross it ever and anon, and dip in and out of the copses which cling to the hill-side and remind some of us much of Wales, and others of Scotland."

The English soldier Claude Reignier Conder visited the country north of Amman as far as Jerash in April, 1882, when he attended Prince Albert Victor and Prince George of Wales on their visit to the country beyond Jordan. He said: "And by Sakib, on its cliff down which a stream falls in a long cascade, we gain the beautiful glens which run down from the rugged Ajlun to the green valley of Jordan. With exception of the woods of Tabor (now sadly thinned), the copses of Carmel, the oaks of Harosheth, and the groves of Banias, there is nothing in western Palestine which can at all compare with the beauty of the ravines of Gilead between Wady Hesban on the south and the Hieromax on the north. Beside clear mountain brooks the horseman wanders through glades of oak and terebinth, with dark pines above. The valleys green with corn, the streams fringed with oleander, the magnificent screens of yellow, green, and russet foliage, which cover the steep slopes, present a scene of quiet beauty, of chequered light and shade."

Modern period

The Jordanian census of 1961 found 1,552 inhabitants in Sakib.[9]

Geography

Sakib is situated on the East Bank Plateau. Originally, the city had been built on Mountains. Sakib's terrain is typified by its mountains, and the area's elevation ranges from 900 to 1,200 m.[10] Jerash is located to the east, Irbid io the north, Zarqa to the southeast and the capital Amman is to Sakib's south.

CityDistance km (mi)Site
Jerash10 (6)East
Irbid37 (23)North
Zarqa54 (33)Southeast
Amman55 (34)South

Climate

Sakib has a Mediterranean climate; cool winter and warm to hot summer. The average annual rainfall is about 422 mm (16.6 inches) per year. Its average annual temperature is 23.5 °C (74.3 °F) during the day and 13 °C (55.4 °F) at night.[11] Snow falls once or twice a year.

Fauna and flora

The entire forest reserves in the region extends over an area of 60 km2. The forest is a home to many endemic Mammals, including the wild boar, the jackal, the red fox, the Persian squirrel and the hedgehog. The notable birds are the Eurasian hoopoe, the common blackbird, the bee-eater, the Jay, the tit, the goldfinch, the nightingale and the roller.

The most common plants present in the area are oak, Aleppo pine, Greek strawberry tree, Tabor oak (national tree), Mediterranean cypress, carob, terebinth and cedar.[12] The ground flora includes numerous kinds of species such as windflower, black iris (national flower), oxeye daisy, orchids, Clover, ragged-robin, Tagetes, Cyclamen and tulip.

Population

Population of Sakib
YearPopulation
1538 13 households
1596 12 households
1922 800
1961 1552
1994 8237
2004 10233
2015 11586
The population of Sakib at the 2015 census was 11,586.

Education

There are ten governmental schools for all educational stages. There are also some private schools.

Nearby universities include Jerash University (14 km), Philadelphia University (26 km), Yarmouk University (35 km), Jordan University of Science and Technology (36 km), and The University of Jordan (50 km).

Income and economy

The townspeople are mostly knowledge workers (doctors, academics, engineers, teachers, military officers, diplomats, bankers, etc.). Trade and tourism are also aspects in the town's economy.

Cultural events and festivals

Sakib hosts a number of successful annual cultural events. In addition, Sakib International Culture & Art Festival is an annual festival held in the town. Several Jordanian/foreign poets and formative artists participate. The festival features poetry, literature and scientific sessions, as well as plein air painting.

Sport

The town has a handball team that takes part in the national competitions. It also has some sport facilities such as gyms and five-a-side football pitches.

Bibliography

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The General Census of Population and Housing result 2015. Department of Population Statistics. 20 February 2017. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20170122214212/http://census.dos.gov.jo/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/2016/04/No_of_pop_depand_on_GOV.pdf. 22 January 2017.
  2. Web site: Sakib, Jordan - List of All Places. placebeam.com. 2017-05-11.
  3. Book: Tibble, Steven. Monarchy and lordships in the Latin Kingdom of Jerusalem, 1099-1291. 1989. Clarendon. 978-0198227311. Oxford. en. 185539059. p. 156
  4. Brooker. Colin H.. Knauf. Ernst Axel. 1988. Review of Crusader Institutions. 27931345. Zeitschrift des Deutschen Palästina-Vereins. 104. 184–188.
  5. Book: Riley-Smith, Jonathan. The Knights of St. John in Jerusalem and Cyprus, c. 1050–1310. 1967. 978-1-4039-0615-1. 10.1007/978-1-349-15241-4. p. 482 (Map 2)
  6. Book: Boulanger, Robert. The Middle East: Lebanon, Syria, Jordan, Iraq, Iran. 1965. Hachette. Paris. 541, 542. en. 1601668.
  7. Book: Heath, Ian. A wargamers' guide to the Crusades.. 1980. 133. en. 641902238.
  8. Book: Schryver, James G. Studies in the archaeology of the medieval Mediterranean. 2010. Brill. 9789004181755. Leiden [Netherlands]; Boston. 86. en. 643081873.
  9. Government of Jordan, Department of Statistics, 1964, p. 19
  10. Web site: Google Maps. Google Maps. 2017-03-21.
  11. Web site: Sakib Weather Forecast. WorldWeatherOnline.com. 2018-01-11.
  12. AL-Eisawi. Dawud. Conservation of Natural Ecosystems in Jordan. Pakistan Journal of Botany . 44 . 95–99 . Special issue . May 2012.