Al-Taybah is an Arabic name meaning 'the Good'. In the early 13th-century Syrian geographer
Yaqut al-Hamawi noted al-Taybah was a "village in the district of 'Urd, lying between
Palmyra and
Aleppo". He noted that the village marked the western boundary of the
Taghlib's tribal territory. Al-Taybah was visited in 1616, during
Ottoman rule (1517–1918) by Italian explorer
Pietro Della Valle, who noted that the presence of several "old relics" in the village. The
mosque was well-maintained and appeared to have previously served as a church tower. Residences consisted of mud huts, many of which were reinforced by ancient stone columns.
Modern period The village was abandoned sometime in the 18th century with its inhabitants migrating to nearby al-Sukhnah. In 1838 al-Taybah was classified as an abandoned village by English scholar
Eli Smith. The modern settlement was founded in 1870 after one of the descendants of the 17th-century emigrants from al-Taybah and a resident of al-Sukhnah obtained permission by the governor of the
Sanjak of Zor (
Deir ez-Zor). He established the new village with ten or twelve other families. The Ottomans set up a
gendarmerie post there afterward. At some point between 1914 and 1918, during
World War I when Ottoman authority in Syria was being challenged, al-Taybah was raided and looted by
Bedouin tribesmen from the area, resulting in a second exodus of the village's residents. It was resettled during
French Mandate rule which restored a level of security in al-Taybah. In the 1960 Syrian census, the village had a population of 220. During the
Syrian Civil war, the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) captured the village. On 20 August 2017, the
Syrian Army assaulted the al-Taybah area from their positions at the
al-Kawm axis, pushing through ISIL's front-lines. Unable to maintain their positions, ISIL retreated from al-Taybah, enabling the Syrian Army to gain control after a short battle. ==References==