Skip to content
Category

19th-century establishments in the Ottoman Empire

page 1
Alexandroupolis Municipality
Alexandroupolis (, ) or Alexandroupoli (, ), is a port city in Greece and the capital of the Evros regional unit, in Greek Thrace. It is the largest city in Eastern Macedonia and Thrace, with a population of 71,751 and is an important port and commercial center for Northern Greece.
Musrara
thumb|Home in Musrara Musrara (, , also known by its Hebrew name, Morasha, ) is a formerly Ottoman neighborhood in what is now West Jerusalem. It is bordered by the Israeli neighborhoods of Mea Shearim and Beit Yisrael to the north, by the Russian Compound and Kikar Safra to the west, and by Mamilla mall to the south, and the Old City to the east.
Wadi al-Joz
Palestinian neighborhood in East Jerusalem
Ira
village in Syria
Umm Haratayn, al-Suwayda
village in Syria
As-Saan
'''Al-Sa'an' (, also spelled as-Si'in and also known as 'Sa'n al-Shajara''') is a Syrian town located in the al-Sa'an Subdistrict in Salamiyah District, located in the Syrian Desert, 50 kilometers northeast of Salamiyah and northeast of Hama. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), al-Sa'an had a population of 3,360 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Ismailis.
Lubayn
Lubayn (, also spelled Lubbein) is a village in the Suwayda Governorate in southwestern Syria. It is situated in the southern part of the Lejah plateau, northwest of the city of Suwayda. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Lubayn had a population of 1,730 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are predominantly Druze.
mutasarrifate of Karak
mutasarrifate of the Ottoman Empire
Sahwat al-Khudr
village in Syria
Dhibin
Dhibin (; also spelled Dhaybin or Thibin) is a town in southern Syria, administratively part of the Salkhad District of the Suwayda Governorate. It is located south of Suwayda, near the southern border with Jordan. Nearby localities include Bakka to the north, Salkhad to the northeast, Umm ar-Rumman to the east, Samaj to the west and Samad to the northwest. In the 2004 census it had a population of 2,562. It is the administrative center of the Dhibin Nahiyah, which consisted of three villages with a collective population of 6,900 in 2004. Its inhabitants are predominantly Druze, with a Sunni M
Baka
neighborhood of Jerusalem
Harran, as-Suwayda
village in Syria