During Antiquity, a road that ran parallel to the sea existed, which made it possible to circumvent Cape Lithoprosopon and to connect Batroun to Tripoli. Historians report that the
earthquake of 551 A.D. caused a landslide, causing the road to sink into the sea permanently, and thus isolating Tripoli from Batroun and
Byblos. The name of the cape changed throughout history. The oldest mention of the promontory appears in the writings of the
Greek historian,
Polybius who named it “Theou Prosopon” or “Face of God.” The Greek geographers, Ptolemy and Strabon, also mentioned it under the name of
Theouprosopon. Pomponius, the Roman geographer, called it “Promontorium Euprosopon” or “Cape of the Good Face.” The name, Lithoprosopon, did not come to usage until the time of the
Byzantine Empire when the area was completely Christianized and the name of the cape was changed from “Face of God”, to Lithoprosopon or “Face of Stone.”
Aramaic and
Syriac historians translated it to “Parsuph Kipa” and later on Arab historians translated it to “Anf Al-Hajar” and “Wajh Al-Hajar" or “Nose or Face of Stone.” The historians of the
Crusades called it
Puy du Connétable “Pew of the Constable” and “Mount of the General.” At the times of the
Mamluks and
Ottomans, the cape's named reverted to its Arabic name of “Wajh Al-Hajar.” The French historian,
Laurent d'Arvieux, wrote in 1660 that the Franks named it
Cape Rouge, a corruption of the
Lebanese Arabic word
wež, which means “face.” Jean de La Roque, in 1688, gave the cape two additional names,
Capo Pagro and
Cappouge. Cappouge was probably a corruption of "Cap Rouge". Cappouge could also come from “Capo poggio” or “Cape of the Hill or of the Monticule”, which matches the current name of the cape, ''Râs ech-Chaq'a''', which means “Cape of the Stone Monticule.” The stone monticule probably referred to the
Greek Orthodox monastery of
Our Lady of the Light that was built at that time. ==Modern tourist attraction==