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Al-Midan

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Al-Midan

33°29′N 36°17′E / 33.483°N 36.283°E / 33.483; 36.283 Al-Midan (Arabic: حي الميدان) is a neighbourhood and municipality in Damascus, Syria, south of the old walled city and near the modern city centre. In the 2004 census, it had a population of 177,456. Today, the neighbourhood is often considered to be one of the most conservative in Damascus.

The name Midan is derived from Midan Al Hassa (Arabic: ميدان الحصى) or the field of gravel. The neighbourhood was located between two sub Barada streams and when it rained heavily, the land gravel deposits filled the streams and consequently, the neighbourhood.

Al-Midan started during the Mamluk rule over Damascus. It took its final form about 400 years ago during the Ottoman empire and has not experienced any major changes since. It is considered the Southern Gate of Damascus and was created as a trading center by the people of Damascus for them to be closer to the people of the Hauran and to improve trade and economic relations between them.

During the French occupation, the people of Midan revolted aggressively against the French and thus suffered heavy bombing during the Great Syrian Revolt of 1925–1927.[failed verification] Their actions were driven in part by the extensive commercial links connecting the grain merchants of the neighborhood with Druze notables in the Hawran, among whom the revolt had begun.

Michel Aflaq and Salah al-Din al-Bitar, the founders of the Ba'th Party, were both born in the Midan as sons of grain merchants.

The neighborhood was and still is (compared to other neighbourhoods in Damascus) very conservative.

Some of the sweets for which Midan is famous for include baklava, barazek, kanafeh, namorah, and awameh.

The people of the neighborhood were known for their courage and bravery, and they had witnessed prominent positions when they rose up with their brothers in the Al-Shaghour neighborhood and the rest of the neighborhoods of Damascus and Syrian cities against the French occupation with ferocity, and they defended their country with valor, to the point that the French bombed this neighborhood repeatedly, perhaps most ferociously in the 1920s during the Great Syrian Revolution.

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