Page:Syria, the land of Lebanon (1914).djvu/28

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CHAPTER II


THE LEFT-HAND LAND


THE Arab geographer always faces towards the east. So the southernmost portion of the Arabian peninsula is to him the Yemen or "Right," and this northern district of ours is called esh-Shâm or the "Left-hand Land." The name Surîya or "Syria," an ancient corruption of "Assyria," is also, however, frequently employed, especially by the Turks.

As this territory is not a modern political unit, its limits are variously defined, both by natives and foreigners. The whole country between Asia Minor and Egypt is often called Syria, and its inhabitants, who have the same language and customs and are of practically the same—very mixed—blood, are known as Syrians. But from the historical viewpoint it is perhaps more exact to distinguish between Palestine and Syria, and confine the latter name to the territory which lies to the north of the Hebrew boundary-town of Dan.

Syria then, as we shall use the word, extends from the southern slopes of Mount Hermon to the Bay of Alexandretta, a distance of about two hundred and

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