INCIDENT REPORT FEATURE: DEIR SUNBUL (DER SAMBIL) VILLAGE
U. S. DEPT. COOPERATION AGREEMENT NUMBER: S-IZ-100-17-CA021
Video footage shows a gunman destroying the remains of Deir Sunbul.
* This report is based on research conducted by the “Safeguarding the Heritage of the Near East Initiative,” funded by the US Department of State. Monthly reports reflect reporting from a variety of sources and may contain unverified material. As such, they should be treated as preliminary and subject to change.
One of The Dead Cities in Idlib (Getty Images)
Deir Sunbul is one of the Byzantine-era “Dead Cities” located on the Jebel Zawiya, which contains dozens of ruins dating to the 4th–8th century CE. Other Dead City sites in the area include Serjilla, Dalloza, Kokaba, Baude, and Sinsharah, all within 10 kilometers of Deir Sunbul. The ruins at Deir Sunbul are scattered among modern houses, and include several villas, dozens of tombs, and a badly ruined church. Many of these structures bear inscriptions, usually of a Christian nature. The few dated inscriptions at Deir Sunbul are from the early 5th century [1].
The two-storied villa in question was described by archaeologist Howard Butler Crosby in 1900 as “the most beautiful of all the residences in the region. [2]” He writes, “The composition of the facade of this house—its pleasing proportions, its large and richly ornamented openings, symmetrically grouped—makes it an imposing and beautiful monument even without its colonnade. [3]” This villa bears no dated inscription, but its style suggests it was built in the 5th or 6th century [4].