To The Left, In The Mountain, Are Six Chambers
Cut In The Rock; Said To Be The Work Of Christians, To Whom The Greater
Part Of The Ancient Structures In Syria Are Ascribed.
The river was not
fordable here; and it would have taken me at least two hours to reach,
by a circuitous route, the opposite mountains.
A little way higher up is
the Djissr el Souk, at the termination of the Wady; this bridge was
built last year, as appears by an Arabic inscription on the rock near
it. From the bridge the road leads up the side of the mountain, and
enters, after half an hour's ride, upon a plain country. The river has a
pretty cascade, near which are
ZEBDENI
[p.3] the remains of a bridge. The above mentioned plain is about three-
quarters of an hour in breadth, and three hours in length; it is called
Ard Zebdeni, or the district of Zebdeni; it is watered by the Barrada,
one of whose sources is in the midst of it; and by the rivulet called
Moiet[Moye--Water.] Zebdeni [Arabic], whose source is in the mountain,
behind the village of the same name. The latter river, which empties
itself into the Barrada, has, besides the source in the Ard Zebdeni,
another of an equal size near Fidji, in a side branch of the Wady
Barrada, half an hour from the village Husseine. The fall of the river
is very rapid. We followed the plain of Zebdeni from one end to the
other:
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 31 of 870
Words from 8485 to 8741
of 236498