Bodyclass: | geography |
Above: | Mashriq Arabic: المشرق |
Label1: | Countries and territories |
Data1: |
The Mashriq (; Arabic: ْاَلْمَشْرِق|al-Mashriq|lit=the east), also known as the Arab Mashriq (Arabic: اَلْمَشْرِقُ الْعَرَبِيُّ), sometimes spelled Mashreq or Mashrek, is a term used by Arabs to refer to the eastern part of the Arab world, as opposed to the Maghreb (western) region, and located in Western Asia and eastern North Africa.[1] It is the Arabic equivalent for the term Middle East.[2] Poetically the "Place of Sunrise", the name is derived from the verb sharaqa (Arabic: َشَرَق, "to shine, illuminate, radiate" and "to rise"), from the sh-r-q root (Arabic: ش-ر-ق), referring to the east, where the sun rises.[3] [4]
The region includes the Arab-majority states of Bahrain, Egypt, Iraq, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Libya, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Sudan, the State of Palestine, Syria, the United Arab Emirates and Yemen, as well as Israel.[5] [2]
As the word Mashriq refers to Arab countries located between the Mediterranean Sea and Iran, it is the companion term to Maghreb (Arabic: المغرب), the western half of the Arab world comprising Algeria, Morocco, Tunisia and western Libya. Libya may be regarded as straddling the two regions. Cyrenaica in eastern Libya is considered part of the Mashriq, whereas Tripolitania in western Libya is considered part of the Maghreb. Therefore Sirtica or the Gulf of Sidra is considered the dividing point between the Maghreb and Mashreq within the Arab world.[6] [7]
These geographical terms date from the early Islamic expansion. The Mashriq corresponds to the Bilad al-Sham and Mesopotamian regions combined.[8], the Mashriq is home to 1.7% of the global population.[9] [10] [11] [12] [13] [14]
All of the countries located in the Arab Mashreq area are members of the Arab League, the Greater Arab Free Trade Area, and the United Nations. The region cooperates in several projects including the Arab Mashreq International Road Network and the Arab Mashreq International Railway. Several nations are also members of the GCC and others have tried to achieve political unity in the past, such as the United Arab Republic in the 1960s and 1970s, which originally included both Egypt and Syria.