Bab Tuma (Arabic: بَابُ تُومَا, romanizedBāb Tūmā, meaning: "Gate of Thomas") is a neighborhood located in the Old city of Damascus in Syria. It is one of the seven gates of Damascus, a geographic landmark of Christianity.

Bab Tuma
باب توما
Map
33°30′48″N 36°18′54″E / 33.51333°N 36.31500°E / 33.51333; 36.31500
LocationOld Damascus, Syria

Etymology

The gate was named by the Byzantines to commemorate Thomas the Apostle, one of the Twelve Apostles of Jesus Christ.

History

Ancient

The Romans first built the seven gates of Damascus, the gate was dedicated to Venus around 2,000 years ago.

Middle Ages

The Ayyubid dynasty reconstructed it in the 13th century.

Late modern period

 
Wilhelm II and Augusta Victoria of Schleswig-Holstein visiting Bab tuma, 1898

The Damascus affair happened in 1840, near Bab Tuma, when an Italian monk & his servant disappeared. The Christians accused the Jews of their disappearance, saying they extracted their blood to bake matzo.

The neighborhood was the site of the 1860 massacre of Christians by a local interfaith mob, during the larger conflict between the Druze and Christians in Mount Lebanon.

French noble, Alphonse de Lamartine visited Bab Tuma in 1832. It was also visited by German emperor Wilhelm II and his wife, Augusta Victoria of Schleswig-Holstein in 1898.

Tourism

It is a famous geographic landmark in Damascus. It has a hotel in the area called "Bab Touma Hotel".

Geography

It is located in Old Damascus, near Bab Sharqi and the Umayyad Mosque. Beit Shameea is located there, it was converted to Besançon school. Patriarch Dimitrios I, opened the St. Paul school in 1925.

Notable people

Religion and culture

In the 16th century, it was entirely Syriac Catholic and Greek Orthodox. Easter and Christmas are celebrated every year in the area. Kahk is prepared every year on Easter.

References

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