Jump to content

Bourzey castle

Coordinates: 35°39′29″N 36°15′39″E / 35.65806°N 36.26083°E / 35.65806; 36.26083
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Aemilius 04 (talk | contribs) at 22:47, 23 October 2017. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Bourzey castle is called also Mirza castle, (Template:Lang-ar). It is located at the border of Syria coastal mountains and Ghab valley, 25 km away from Jisr al-Shughur, at altitude 450 m. The inscriptions and mentioning of the castle relate it to the Byzantine era in 11th century. Architecturally it has triangle shape, the western façade is 175 m, the eastern is 50 m. The southern and eastern façades are adjacent to deep gorges, but the western façade is the least steep. There is 21 towers and a small church on the surface.


After Byzantine rule the castle passed to Ayyubids, who built additional towers in Arabic style. Mamelouks came later to fortify the southern towers.

The castle has several arrow bastions, underground rooms, water reservoirs.

The road to the castle ends at the western slope. One needs climbing the mountain (~100 m) to reach the castle.

Resources

Official site of Hama governorate - Syria

Pictures

See also

35°39′29″N 36°15′39″E / 35.65806°N 36.26083°E / 35.65806; 36.26083