, which dried up in 1994 The area has a rich history of human habitation, with evidence of Paleolithic settlements. Habitation in the area of Tell ez-Zor, dates as far back as the
Prepottery Neolithic A period, with a three-unit architectural complex dating to the
Prepottery Neolithic B period. In the
Efqa Spring site, not far from the Tell, a
Neolithic settlement existed, with
stone tools dated to 7500 BC.
Archaeological sounding in the tell beneath the Temple of Bel uncovered a mud-brick structure built around 2500 BC, followed by structures built during the Middle Bronze Age and Iron Age.
Early Bronze Age Early Bronze IIIB A mud-brick structure built around 2500 BC.
Middle Bronze Age Middle Bronze I The city entered the historical record during the
Bronze Age around 2000 BC, when Puzur-Ishtar the Tadmorean (Palmyrene) agreed to a contract at an
Assyrian trading colony in
Kultepe.
Middle Bronze II It was mentioned next in the
Mari tablets as a stop for trade caravans and nomadic tribes, such as the
Suteans, and was conquered along with its region by
Yahdun-Lim of Mari. King
Shamshi-Adad I of Assyria passed through the area on his way to the
Mediterranean at the beginning of the 18th century BC; by then, Palmyra was the easternmost point of the kingdom of
Qatna, and it was attacked by the Suteans who paralyzed the traffic along the trade routes. • Contested trade hub/caravan stop between Qatna (west) and Mari (east).
Late Bronze Age Late Bronze II Palmyra was mentioned in a 13th-century BC tablet discovered at
Emar, which recorded the names of two "Tadmorean" witnesses.
Iron Age Iron I At the beginning of the 11th century BC, King
Tiglath-Pileser I of Assyria recorded his defeat of the "Arameans" of "Tadmar"; according to the king, Palmyra was part of the land of Amurru.
Iron II The city became the eastern border of
Aram-Damascus which was conquered by the
Neo-Assyrian Empire in 732 BC. The
Hebrew Bible (
Second Book of Chronicles 8:4) records a city by the name "Tadmor" as a desert city built (or fortified) by King
Solomon of
Israel; Flavius
Josephus mentions the Greek name "Palmyra", attributing its founding to Solomon in Book VIII of his
Antiquities of the Jews. Later Arabic traditions attribute the city's founding to Solomon's
Jinn. The association of Palmyra with Solomon is a conflation of "Tadmor" and a city built by Solomon in
Judea and known as "Tamar" in the
Books of Kings (1 Kings 9:18). The biblical description of "Tadmor" and its buildings does not fit archaeological findings in Palmyra, which was a small settlement during Solomon's reign in the 10th century BC. The
Elephantine Jews, a diaspora community established between 650 and 550 BC in Egypt, might have come from Palmyra.
Papyrus Amherst 63 indicates that the ancestors of the Elephantine Jews were
Samarians. The historian
Karel van der Toorn suggested that these ancestors took refuge in
Judea after the destruction of their kingdom by
Sargon II of Assyria in 721 BC, then had to leave Judea after
Sennacherib devastated the land in 701 BC and headed to Palmyra. This scenario can explain the usage of Aramaic by the Elephantine Jews, and Papyrus Amherst 63, while not mentioning Palmyra, refers to a "fortress of palms" that is located near a spring on a trade route in the fringes of the desert, making Palmyra a plausible candidate.
Hellenistic and Roman periods During the
Hellenistic period under the
Seleucids (between 312 and 64 BC), Palmyra became a prosperous settlement owing allegiance to the Seleucid king. Evidence for Palmyra's urbanisation in the Hellenistic period is rare; an important piece is the
Laghman II inscription found in
Laghman, modern
Afghanistan, and commissioned by the Indian emperor
Ashoka c. 250 BC. The reading is contested, but according to semitologist
André Dupont-Sommer, the inscription records the distance to "Tdmr" (Palmyra). In 217 BC, a Palmyrene force led by Zabdibel joined the army of King
Antiochus III in the
Battle of Raphia which ended in a Seleucid defeat by
Ptolemaic Egypt. In the middle of the Hellenistic era, Palmyra, formerly south of the al-Qubur wadi, began to expand beyond its northern bank. By the late second century BC, the tower tombs in the Palmyrene Valley of Tombs and the city temples (most notably, the temples of
Baalshamin, Al-lāt and the Hellenistic temple) began to be built. A fragmentary inscription in Greek from the Temple of Bel's foundations mentions a king titled Epiphanes, a title used by the Seleucid kings. In 64 BC, the
Roman Republic conquered the Seleucid kingdom, and the Roman general
Pompey established the
province of Syria. Palmyra was left independent, trading with Rome and
Parthia but belonging to neither. The earliest known inscription in Palmyrene is dated to around 44 BC; Palmyra was still a minor
sheikhdom, offering water to caravans which occasionally took the desert route on which it was located. However, according to
Appian, Palmyra was wealthy enough for
Mark Antony to send a force to conquer it in 41 BC. The Palmyrenes evacuated to Parthian lands beyond the eastern bank of the
Euphrates, which they prepared to defend.
Autonomous Palmyrene region Palmyra became part of the
Roman Empire when it was conquered and paid tribute early in the reign of
Tiberius, around 14 AD. The Romans included Palmyra in the province of Syria, and defined the region's boundaries.
Pliny the Elder asserted that both the Palmyrene and
Emesene regions were contiguous; a marker at the Palmyrene's southwestern border was found in 1936 by
Daniel Schlumberger at
Qasr al-Hayr al-Gharbi, dating from the reign of
Hadrian or one of his successors, which marked the boundary between the two regions. This boundary probably ran northwards to Khirbet al-Bilaas on
Jabal al-Bilas where another marker, laid by the Roman governor
Silanus, has been found, northwest of Palmyra, probably marking a boundary with the territory of
Epiphania. Meanwhile, Palmyra's eastern border extended to the Euphrates valley. This region included numerous villages subordinate to the center, including large settlements such as
al-Qaryatayn. The Roman imperial period brought great prosperity to the city, which enjoyed a privileged status under the empire—retaining much of its internal autonomy, being ruled by a council, and incorporating many Greek city-state (
polis) institutions into its government. The earliest Palmyrene text attesting a Roman presence in the city dates to 18 AD, when the Roman general
Germanicus tried to develop a friendly relationship with Parthia; he sent the Palmyrene Alexandros to
Mesene, a Parthian vassal kingdom. This was followed by the arrival of the Roman legion
Legio X Fretensis the following year. Roman authority was minimal during the first century AD, although tax collectors were resident, and a road connecting Palmyra and
Sura was built in AD 75. The Romans used Palmyrene soldiers, but (unlike typical Roman cities) no local
magistrates or
prefects are recorded in the city. Palmyra saw intensive construction during the first century, including the city's first walled fortifications, and the Temple of Bel (completed and dedicated in 32 AD). During the first century Palmyra developed from a minor desert caravan station into a leading trading center, with Palmyrene merchants establishing colonies in surrounding trade centers. Palmyrene trade reached its acme during the second century, aided by two factors; the first was a trade route built by Palmyrenes, and protected by garrisons at major locations, including a garrison in
Dura-Europos manned in 117 AD. The second was the
Roman conquest of the
Nabataean capital
Petra in 106, shifting control over southern trade routes of the
Arabian Peninsula from the Nabataeans to Palmyra. In 129 Palmyra was visited by
Hadrian, who named it "Hadriane Palmyra" and made it a
free city. Hadrian promoted
Hellenism throughout the empire, and Palmyra's urban expansion was modeled on that of Greece. This led to new projects, including the theatre, the colonnade and the Temple of Nabu. Roman garrisons are first attested in Palmyra in 167, when the cavalry
Ala I Thracum Herculiana was moved to the city. By the end of the second century, urban development diminished after the city's building projects peaked. In the 190s, Palmyra was assigned to the province of
Phoenice, newly created by the
Severan dynasty. Toward the end of the second century, Palmyra began a steady transition from a traditional Greek city-state to a monarchy due to the increasing militarization of the city and the deteriorating economic situation; the Severan ascension to the imperial throne in Rome played a major role in Palmyra's transition: • The Severan-led
Roman–Parthian War, from 194 to 217, influenced regional security and affected the city's trade.
Bandits began attacking caravans by 199, leading Palmyra to strengthen its military presence. • The new dynasty favored the city, stationing the
Cohors I Flavia Chalcidenorum garrison there by 206.
Caracalla made Palmyra a
colonia between 213 and 216, replacing many Greek institutions with Roman constitutional ones.
Severus Alexander, emperor from 222 to 235, visited Palmyra in 229.
Palmyrene kingdom The rise of the
Sasanian Empire in Persia considerably damaged Palmyrene trade. The Sasanians disbanded Palmyrene colonies in their lands, and began a war against the Roman Empire. In an inscription dated to 252
Odaenathus appears bearing the title of
exarchos (lord) of Palmyra. The weakness of the Roman Empire and the constant Persian danger were probably the reasons behind the Palmyrene council's decision to elect a lord for the city in order for him to lead a strengthened army. Odaenathus approached
Shapur I of Persia to request him to guarantee Palmyrene interests in Persia, but was rebuffed. In 260 the Emperor
Valerian fought Shapur at the
Battle of Edessa, but was defeated and captured. One of Valerian's officers,
Macrianus Major, his sons
Quietus and
Macrianus, and the
prefect Balista rebelled against Valerian's son
Gallienus, usurping imperial power in Syria.
Persian wars Odaenathus formed an army of Palmyrenes and Syrian peasants against Shapur. According to the
Augustan History, Odaenathus declared himself king prior to the battle. The Palmyrene leader won a decisive victory near the banks of the Euphrates later in 260 forcing the Persians to retreat. In 261 Odaenathus marched against the remaining usurpers in Syria, defeating and killing Quietus and Balista. As a reward, he received the title
Imperator Totius Orientis ("Governor of the East") from Gallienus, and ruled Syria,
Mesopotamia,
Arabia and
Anatolia's eastern regions as the imperial representative. Palmyra itself remained officially part of the empire but Palmyrene inscriptions started to describe it as a "metrocolonia", indicating that the city's status was higher than normal Roman colonias. In practice, Palmyra shifted from a provincial city to a de facto allied kingdom. In 262 Odaenathus launched a new campaign against Shapur, reclaiming the rest of Roman Mesopotamia (most importantly, the cities of
Nisibis and
Carrhae), sacking the Jewish city of
Nehardea, and
besieging the Persian capital
Ctesiphon. Following his victory, the Palmyrene monarch assumed the title
King of Kings. Later, Odaenathus crowned his son
Hairan I as co-King of Kings near Antioch in 263. Although he did not take the Persian capital, Odaenathus drove the Persians out of all Roman lands conquered since the beginning of Shapur's
wars in 252. In a second campaign that took place in 266, the Palmyrene king reached Ctesiphon again; however, he had to leave the siege and move north, accompanied by Hairan I, to repel
Gothic attacks on
Asia Minor. The king and his son were assassinated during their return in 267; according to the
Augustan History and
Joannes Zonaras, Odaenathus was killed by a cousin (Zonaras says nephew) named in the
History as
Maeonius. The
Augustan History also says that Maeonius was proclaimed emperor for a brief period before being killed by the soldiers. However, no inscriptions or other evidence exist for Maeonius' reign. Odaenathus was succeeded by his son; the ten-year-old
Vaballathus.
Zenobia, the mother of the new king, was the
de facto ruler and Vaballathus remained in her shadow while she consolidated her power. Gallienus dispatched his prefect
Heraclian to command military operations against the Persians, but he was marginalized by Zenobia and returned to the West. The queen was careful not to provoke Rome, claiming for herself and her son the titles held by her husband while guaranteeing the safety of the borders with Persia and pacifying the
Tanukhids in
Hauran. To protect the borders with Persia, Zenobia fortified different settlements on the Euphrates including the citadels of
Halabiye and
Zalabiye. Circumstantial evidence exist for confrontations with the Sasanians; probably in 269 Vaballathus took the title
Persicus Maximus ("The great victor in Persia") and the title might be linked with an unrecorded battle against a Persian army trying to regain control of Northern Mesopotamia.
Palmyrene empire Zenobia began her military career in the spring of 270, during the reign of
Claudius Gothicus. Under the pretext of attacking the Tanukhids, she conquered Roman Arabia. This was followed in October by an
invasion of Egypt, ending with a Palmyrene victory and Zenobia's proclamation as queen of Egypt. Palmyra invaded Anatolia the following year, reaching
Ankara and the pinnacle of its expansion. The conquests were made behind a mask of subordination to Rome. Zenobia issued coins in the name of Claudius' successor
Aurelian, with Vaballathus depicted as king; since Aurelian was occupied with repelling insurgencies in Europe, he tolerated the Palmyrene coinage and encroachments. In late 271, Vaballathus and his mother assumed the titles of
Augustus (emperor) and
Augusta. The following year, Aurelian crossed the
Bosphorus and advanced quickly through Anatolia. According to one account, Roman general
Marcus Aurelius Probus regained Egypt from Palmyra; Aurelian entered
Issus and headed to
Antioch, where he defeated Zenobia in the
Battle of Immae. Zenobia was defeated again at the
Battle of Emesa, taking refuge in
Homs before quickly returning to her capital. When the Romans besieged Palmyra, Zenobia refused their order to surrender in person to the emperor. She escaped east to ask the Persians for help, but was captured by the Romans; the city capitulated soon afterwards.
Later Roman and Byzantine periods Aurelian spared the city and stationed a garrison of 600 archers, led by
Sandarion, as a peacekeeping force. In 273 Palmyra rebelled under the leadership of
Septimius Apsaios, declaring
Antiochus (a relative of Zenobia) as Augustus. Aurelian marched against Palmyra, razing it to the ground and seizing the most valuable monuments to decorate his
Temple of Sol. Palmyrene buildings were smashed, residents massacred and the Temple of Bel pillaged. Palmyra was significantly reduced and it largely disappeared from historical records of that period. After its sacking, Aurelian repaired the Temple of Bel, and the
Legio I Illyricorum was stationed in the city. Shortly before 303 the Camp of Diocletian, a
castrum in the western part of the city, was built. The camp was a base for the Legio I Illyricorum, which guarded the trade routes around the city. Though some of the city would not be rebuilt, Palmyra would become a major stronghold and fortress in the East. Thanks in part to this, in the following years Palmyra began to regain importance, becoming a Christian city in the decades following its destruction by Aurelian. In late 527,
Justinian I further strengthened the city, ordering the restoration of Palmyra's churches and public buildings to protect the empire against raids by
Lakhmid king
Al-Mundhir III ibn al-Nu'man.
Arab caliphates Palmyra was conquered by the
Rashidun Caliphate after its 634 capture by the
Muslim general
Khalid ibn al-Walid, who took the city on his way to
Damascus; an 18-day march by his
army through the
Syrian Desert from
Mesopotamia. By then Palmyra was limited to the Diocletian camp. After the conquest, the city became part of
Homs Province.
Umayyad and early Abbasid periods Palmyra prospered as part of the Umayyad Caliphate, and its population grew. It was a key stop on the East-West trade route, with a large
souq (market), built by the Umayyads, who also commissioned part of the Temple of Bel as a
mosque. During this period, Palmyra was a stronghold of the
Banu Kalb tribe, which began to take abode in and around the city after the conquest. After being defeated by
Marwan II during a
civil war in the caliphate, Umayyad contender
Sulayman ibn Hisham fled to the Banu Kalb in Palmyra, but eventually pledged allegiance to Marwan in 744; Palmyra continued to oppose Marwan until the surrender of the Banu Kalb chief
al-Asbagh ibn Dhu'ala in 745. That year, Marwan ordered the city's walls demolished. In 750 a revolt, led by
Majza'a ibn al-Kawthar and Umayyad pretender
Abu Muhammad al-Sufyani, against the new
Abbasid Caliphate swept across Syria; the tribes in Palmyra supported the rebels. After his defeat Abu Muhammad took refuge in the city, which withstood an Abbasid assault long enough to allow him to escape.
Decentralization Abbasid power dwindled during the 10th century, when the empire disintegrated and was divided among a number of vassals. Most of the new rulers acknowledged the caliph as their nominal sovereign, a situation which continued until the
Mongol destruction of the Abbasid Caliphate in 1258. The population of the city started to decrease in the ninth century and the process continued in the tenth century. In 955
Sayf al-Dawla, the
Hamdanid prince of
Aleppo, defeated the nomads near the city, and built a
kasbah (fortress) in response to
campaigns by the Byzantine emperors
Nikephoros II Phokas and
John I Tzimiskes. With the advent of
Fatimid rule in the late 10th century, Palmyra remained a stronghold of the Kalb and taxes on the oasis' crops was a major source of the tribe's income. Toward the end of the century, the Kalb around Palmyra migrated from the area. Earthquakes devastated Palmyra in 1068 and 1089. In the 1070s Syria was conquered by the
Seljuk Empire, and in 1082, the district of Homs came under the control of the Arab lord
Khalaf ibn Mula'ib. The latter was a brigand and was removed and imprisoned in 1090 by the Seljuq sultan
Malik-Shah I. Khalaf's lands were given to Malik-Shah's brother,
Tutush I, who gained his independence after his brother's 1092 death and established a
cadet branch of the Seljuk dynasty in Syria. By the twelfth century, the population moved into the courtyard of the Temple of Bel which was fortified; Palmyra was then ruled by
Toghtekin, the
Burid atabeg of Damascus, who appointed his nephew governor. Toghtekin's nephew was killed by rebels, and the atabeg retook the city in 1126. Palmyra was given to Toghtekin's grandson,
Shihab-ud-din Mahmud, who was replaced by governor
Yusuf ibn Firuz when Shihab-ud-din Mahmud returned to Damascus after his father
Taj al-Muluk Buri succeeded Toghtekin. The Burids transformed the Temple of Bel into a citadel in 1132, fortifying the city, and transferring it to the
Bin Qaraja family three years later in exchange for Homs. During the mid-twelfth century, Palmyra was ruled by the
Zengid king
Nur ad-Din Mahmud. It became part of the district of Homs, which was given as a fiefdom to the Ayyubid general
Shirkuh in 1168 and confiscated after his death in 1169. Homs region was conquered by the
Ayyubid sultanate in 1174; the following year,
Saladin gave Homs (including Palmyra) to his cousin
Nasir al-Din Muhammad as a fiefdom. After Saladin's death, the Ayyubid realm was divided and Palmyra was given to Nasir al-Din Muhammad's son
Al-Mujahid Shirkuh II (who built the castle of Palmyra known as
Fakhr-al-Din al-Maani Castle around 1230). Five years earlier, Syrian geographer
Yaqut al-Hamawi described Palmyra's residents as living in "a castle surrounded by a stone wall".
Mamluk period Palmyra was used as a refuge by Shirkuh II's grandson,
al-Ashraf Musa, who allied himself with the
Mongol king
Hulagu Khan and fled after the Mongol defeat in the 1260
Battle of Ain Jalut against the
Mamluks. Al-Ashraf Musa asked the Mamluk sultan
Qutuz for pardon and was accepted as a vassal. Al-Ashraf Musa died in 1263 without an heir, bringing the Homs district under direct Mamluk rule.
Al Fadl principality The
Al Fadl clan (a branch of the
Tayy tribe) were loyal to the Mamluks, and in 1281, Prince
Issa bin Muhanna of the Al Fadl was appointed lord of Palmyra by sultan
Qalawun. Issa was succeeded in 1284 by his son
Muhanna bin Issa who was imprisoned by sultan
al-Ashraf Khalil in 1293, and restored two years later by sultan
al-Adil Kitbugha. Muhanna declared his loyalty to
Öljaitü of the
Ilkhanate in 1312 and was dismissed and replaced with his brother
Fadl by sultan
an-Nasir Muhammad. Although Muhanna was forgiven by an-Nasir and restored in 1317, he and his tribe were expelled in 1320 for his continued relations with the Ilkhanate, and he was replaced by tribal chief
Muhammad ibn Abi Bakr. Muhanna was forgiven and restored by an-Nasir in 1330; he remained loyal to the sultan until his death in 1335, when he was succeeded by his son. Contemporary historian
Ibn Fadlallah al-Omari described the city as having "vast gardens, flourishing trades and bizarre monuments". The Al Fadl clan protected the trade routes and villages from
Bedouin raids, raiding other cities and fighting among themselves. The Mamluks intervened militarily several times, dismissing, imprisoning or expelling its leaders. In 1400 Palmyra was attacked by
Timur; the Fadl prince
Nu'air escaped the battle and later fought
Jakam, the sultan of Aleppo. Nu'air was captured, taken to Aleppo and executed in 1406; this, according to
Ibn Hajar al-Asqalani, ended the Al Fadl clan's power.
Ottoman era {{Panorama While most of Syria came under
Ottoman rule in 1516, Palmyra (Tadmur) does not appear to have been incorporated into the Empire before the conquest of
Iraq in 1534–1535. It first appears as the centre of an administrative district (
sanjak) around 1560. The region was important to the Ottomans above all for its salt deposits. In 1568, the governor of the sancak restored the medieval citadel. After 1568 the Ottomans appointed the
Lebanese emir
Ali bin Musa Harfush as governor of Palmyra's sanjak, dismissing him in 1584 for insubordination. In 1630 Palmyra came under the tax authority of another Lebanese emir,
Fakhr-al-Din II, who renovated Shirkuh II's castle (which became known as Fakhr-al-Din al-Maani Castle). The prince fell from grace with the Ottomans in 1633 and lost control of the village, which remained a separate sanjak until it was absorbed by
Zor Sanjak in 1857. The Ottoman governor of
Syria,
Mehmed Rashid Pasha, established a garrison in the village to control the Bedouin in 1867.
20th century In 1918, as
World War I was ending, the
Royal Air Force built an airfield for two planes, and in November the Ottomans retreated from Zor Sanjak without a fight. The
Syrian Emirate's army entered
Deir ez-Zor on 4 December, and Zor Sanjak became part of Syria. In 1919, as the British and French argued over the borders of the planned
mandates, the British permanent military representative to the
Supreme War Council Henry Wilson suggested adding Palmyra to the
British mandate. However, the British general
Edmund Allenby persuaded his government to abandon this plan. Syria (including Palmyra) became part of the
French Mandate after Syria's defeat in the
Battle of Maysalun on 24 July 1920. With Palmyra gaining importance in the French efforts to pacify the
Syrian Desert, a base was constructed in the village near the Temple of Bel in 1921. In 1929, Henri Seyrig, began excavating the ruins and convinced the villagers to move to a new, French-built village next to the site. The relocation was completed in 1932; ancient Palmyra was ready for excavation as its villagers settled into the new village of
Tadmur. During
World War II, the Mandate came under the authority of
Vichy France, who gave permission to
Nazi Germany to use the airfield at Palmyra; forces of
Free France, backed by British forces, invaded Syria in June 1941, and on 3 July 1941, the British took control over the city in the aftermath of a
battle.
Syrian civil war As a result of the
Syrian civil war, Palmyra experienced widespread looting and damage by combatants. In 2013, the façade of the Temple of Bel sustained a large hole from
mortar fire, and colonnade columns have been damaged by
shrapnel. According to Maamoun Abdulkarim, the
Syrian Army positioned its troops in some archaeological-site areas, while
Syrian opposition fighters positioned themselves in gardens around the city. On 13 May 2015, ISIL launched an attack on the modern town of Tadmur, sparking fears that the
iconoclastic group would destroy the adjacent ancient site of Palmyra. On 21 May, some artifacts were transported from the Palmyra museum to Damascus for safekeeping; a number of Greco-Roman busts, jewelry, and other objects looted from the museum have been found on the international market. ISIL forces entered Palmyra the same day. Local residents reported that the
Syrian Air Force bombed the site on 13 June, damaging the northern wall close to the Temple of Baalshamin. During ISIL's occupation of the site, Palmyra's theatre was used as a place of public executions of their opponents and captives; videos were released by ISIL showing the killing of Syrian prisoners in front of crowds at the theatre. On 18 August, Palmyra's retired antiquities chief
Khaled al-Asaad was beheaded by ISIL after being tortured for a month to extract information about the city and its treasures; al-Asaad refused to give any information to his captors. Syrian government forces supported by
Russian airstrikes recaptured Palmyra on 27 March 2016 after intense fighting against ISIL fighters. According to initial reports, the damage to the archaeological site was less extensive than anticipated, with numerous structures still standing. Following the recapture of the city, Russian de-mining teams began clearing mines planted by ISIL prior to their retreat. Following heavy fighting, ISIL briefly reoccupied the city on 11 December 2016, prompting an offensive by the Syrian Army which retook the city on 2 March 2017. On 7 December 2024, Palmyra was
retaken by the
Syrian Free Army. Damage to the city was heavy. Since the
fall of Assad various plans and initiatives were disclosed in order to revitalize the area by numerous entities within Syria. One of such entities, the
Syrian Liberal Party, currently led by
Fahad al-Masri, advocated to turn Palmyra in an economic hub by connecting it by railways to major Syrian cities such as Damascus,
Homs and
Deir Ez-Zor and turn it into the main regional economic center. The SLP plan is to also construct
oil refineries and networks of
oil pipelines reaching
Arabia, the
Gulf States,
Anatolia,
Europe and
Northern Africa. The
Syrian transitional government stationed guards as to protect the area from further damage and has hinted at reconstruction programs in the following years, however, it has yet to give permission to license non-governmental organizations to send in experts to assess the damage to the ancient site and maybe act on it. Even foreign entities showcased their interest in investing in the region, with
Turkey planning to build a military base in the area. ==Government==