Trivia through Damascene Street Signs
So amongst the (probably very few) cool things the Syrian regime, or at least the Damascene municipality has done is to put smart-looking shiny blue captions under street signs named after historical figures, poets, or places that explain who or what they were and what their significance is. I have decided to photograph as many of these as I can and post each one on Kabob with a translation of the caption (for those who cannot read god’s language). What I’d really love is for commenters to add or correct me on the information provided about the person/place/event to see what the authorities here consider “fit to print”, so I will translate the captions exactly as they’re written even if my own information may be different. The first sign is the one above about…
…al-Mutanabbi, Ahmad ibn il-Husayn, a pride of arab poets, born in 303 A.H./915 A.D., grew up in the Levant, gained his fame at the court of Saif al-Daula al-Hamadani and was killed in 354 A.H./965 A.D
Shar`ia Ishbiliya (Seville St.) near my current apartment:
Seville, an Andalusian city conquered by the Arab Muslims in 712 A.H. whose fame became widespread during the reign of the Bani `Imad dynasty, and was famous for its fruit and olive trees.









Sevilla looks right to me, but putting olives before oranges? I don’t know about that…
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