Baalbeck is a city in eastern Lebanon famous chiefly for its magnificent, excellently preserved Roman temple ruins. It was a flourishing Phoenician town when
the Greeks occupied it in 331 B.C. They renamed it "Heliopolis" (City of the Sun).
It became a Roman colony under the Emperor Augustus in 16 B.C..On its acropolis, over the course of the next three centuries, the Romans constructed a monumental ensemble of three temples, three coutyards, and an enclosing wall built of some of the most gigantic stones ever crafted by man. Some tourists believe that the construction can only be attributed to extra-terrestial artwork.
At the southern entrance of Baalbeck is a quarry where the stones used in the temples were cut. A huge block, considered the largest hewn stone in the world, still sits where it was cut almost 2,000 years ago. Called the "Stone of the Pregnant Woman", it is 21.5m x 4.8m x 4.2meters in size and weighs an estimated 1,000 tons.
During the Hellenistic period (333-64 B.C.) the
Greeks identified the god of Baalbeck with the sun god and the city was called
Heliopolis or City of the Sun. At this time the ancient enclosed
court was enlarged and a podium was erected on its western side to support a
temple of classical form. Although the temple was never built, some huge construction from
the Hellenistic project can still be seen. And it was over the ancient court
that the Romans placed the present Great Court of the Temple of
Jupiter.
At the southern entrance of Baalbeck is a quarry where the stones used in the temples were cut. A huge block, considered the largest hewn stone in the world, still sits where it was cut almost 2,000 years ago. Called the "Stone of the Pregnant Woman", it is 21.5m x 4.8m x 4.2meters in size and weighs an estimated 1,000 tons.
The Temples In History
For centuries the temples of Baalbeck lay under meters of
rubble, obscured by medieval fortifications. But even in ruin the site
attracted the admiration of visitors and its historical importance was
recognized.
The first survey and restoration work at Baalbeck was begun
by the German Archaeological Mission in 1898. In 1922 French scholars undertook
extensive research and restoration of the temples, work which was continued by
the Lebanese Directorate General of Antiquities.
Baalbeck's temples were built on an ancient tell that goes
back at least to the end of the third millennium B.C. Little is known about the
site during this period, but there is evidence that in the course of the 1rst
millennium B.C. an enclosed court was built on the ancient tell. An
altar was set in the center of this court in the tradition of the biblical
Semitic high places.
Aerial view of the Acropolis
The temple was begun in the last quarter of the 1rst century
B.C., and was nearing completion in the final years of Nero's reign (37-68
A.D.). the Great Court Complex of the temple of Jupiter, with its porticoes,
exedrae, altars and basins, was built in the 2nd century
A.D. Construction of the so-called temple of Bacchus was also started
about this time. (more)