Of the scores of medieval guard towers that once
formed an unbroken chain of line-of-sight observation posts along the
Lebanese coast from Ras Nakura in the south to the Nahr el-Kebir in
the north, nine still remain in more or less recognizable form today.
These nine are so evenly distributed that Beirut
residents making a Sunday trip to any point above Junie (20 km. north
of Beirut), or 14 km. below Sidon can visit at least one of the lonely
watchtowers in the course of a trip to other places of greater scenic
or historic. interest.
What is the significance of these towers ? Why were
they built? Who built them?
In general it is safe to say that the remaining ones
were built or adapted by the Mamluk sultans of Egypt, vanquishers of
the Crusaders in the late 13th Century, to guard the Lebanese coast
against future landings of Crusader fleets from, Cyprus or Europe bent
on regaining their lost Kingdom of Jerusalem.
But this does not exclude the possibility that some of
the missing ones and the foundations - of some of the nine extant
towers are of earlier origin.
Nakura Farthest South
The one farthest south, Bourj an-Nakura, a bare 4 km.
above the Palestinian frontier, certainly includes antique blocks of
classic masonry, although whether the stones came from an earlier
tower on the spot or a non-military Greco-Roman ruin in the vicinity
is hard to say.
Wadi Fidar's Bourj al-Muhaij, a few kilometers south
of Jebail (Byblos) has certain features, including a zigzag and
rosette decoration over the east window, which many antiquarians have
ascribed to the Crusaders.
Byzantine work appears to be incorporated into the
foundations of the "Tower of Empress Helena" on the north point of
Junie bay, while the tower on Tell Ayat, north of Tripoli - the
farthest north in Lebanon, only 8 km. below the U.A.R. border so
baffled French archaeologists that they merely assigned it to the
"Middle Ages", either Crusader or Mamluk.
Line-of-Sight Relay
In general, the present form of most of the coastal
guard towers is square and they are all located on rocky points,
hills, or headlands overlooking the sea and within line-of-sight relay
of similar towers, or sites of fallen towers to the north and south.
This line-of-sight feature and the persistence of
ancient names connecting many of them either with fire, torches, or
with the Empress St. Helena herself, lends substance to the legend or
tradition which tells us that in the 4th Century A.D. the mother of
Emperor Constantine caused to be flashed from Jerusalem to
Constantinople, by means of prepared signal fires on coastal
watchtowers, the news of the discovery of the True Cross.
Anyone who has observed the fires lit on the rooftops
of Mount Lebanon's Christian villages today, during the annual
celebration which still commemorates this memorable event, cannot
doubt the distinct possibility and even probability of the fire tower
tradition.
Byzantine Towers Gone
Byzantine construction being what it was, however,
there is no reason to doubt that very little indeed remained of the
Empress' towers a thousand years later when the Mamluks were obliged
to provide this coast with security against a surprise Crusader
landing.
The Crusaders, with their series of strong coastal and
inland castles, linked in line-of-sight groups, in control of the
seas, and fearing only incursions of the Arab princes of Damascus,
Homs, Hama and Aleppo through the mountain passes, certainly had no
use for such a series of towers.
Most Are Mamluk
This brings us back to the Mamluks, on whom we will have to fix more
than 90 percent of the credit for Lebanon's coastal towers, mostly of
14th Century construction or restoration.
Since there is a great deal of similarity between these structures we
will only discuss three or four of the outstanding ones in detail
together with a running list of the entire chain, in two groups, going
south and north from Beirut, respectively.
From Beirut South: (62 km.) Bourj el-Khader, in
ruins, on a promontory on south bank of Wadi al-Akhbiyeh overlooking
the sea; (88 km.) Bourj el-Mogharibe ("the Moroccan Tower", ruins of a
tower which originally formed part of the Crusader town walls of Tyre
near their southeast corner, overlooking the south, "Egyptian"
port. Now in a suburban orchard - Tyre having receeded far within its
now-buried medieval walls - the ruined tower probably derives its name
from the stationing of a Moorish guard detachment in the reconstructed
tower in late medieval or early modern times; (108 km.) Bourj
an-Nakura, a rectangular building partly of antique stone blocks, its
upper story half - ruined, built on a great rock overlooking the
sea.
Beirut's Own Tower
The reader will by now have recognized in "Bourj" the
Arabic word for "Tower", and if this causes him or her to wonder why
"service" taxi drivers refer to Beirut's central square - officially
"Martyrs Square", - as the "Bourj" it is only fair to point out that
they are joining other native Beirutis in perpetuating the square's
oldest surviving placename, dating from the 17th Century.
During that century the square formed part of the
famous gardens of the Emir Fakhreddin II el-Maani, Prince of the
Druzes and paramount Arab Prince of Lebanon, Syria and Galilee. These
gardens and the mighty prince's classic Italian-style palace, just
outside the east walls of Beirut of those days, were overlooked by a
60 foot guard tower, which stood in the general vicinity of the Empire
and Metropole cinemas of today.
Long after the Turks overthrew the Druze prince in 1634, sacked his
palace, smashed the statuary and destroyed the luxuriant gardens, the
old Tower of Fakhreddin - the "Bourj" remained standing, well down
into the 19th Century.
No government, Turkish, French, or Lebanese, seems able to make any
other official name of the square strong enough to stick in place of
the name of Beirut's last guard tower - a fond memory of the tolerant,
prosperous, happy days of Lebanon's most beloved ruler.
Empress Helena's Tower
From Beirut north: (25 km.) Bourj Qadiset Hilena
- ("Tower of Empress Helena" (described below); (38 km.) Bour al-Muhaij
- (described below); (67 km.) Bourj es-Selaa ("The Fire Tower"). This
is reached by going a little over a kilometer to the west, on a rocky
point over the sea, from the village of Qubba, which is to the left of
the highway and up the hillside just after crossing the Jaouze River
bridge 3 km. north of Batroun; (99 km.) Bourj es-Saba ("The Lion
Tower") near el-Mina, Tripoli, and (100 km.) Bourj Ras en-Nahr (both
of these having been described in an earlier article), and (120 km.)
Bourj Tell Ayat.
This farthest north of the towers is about a kilometer
back from the sea and between it and the small hilltop castle of
Qulai'aat, for whose defenders it watched the coastal road to Tripoli
and the road junction to Homs as well as being able to surveil the
coast itself. This is the structure whose type of construction and
location farther back from the beach than the definitely Mamluk guard
towers has caused some archaeologists to list is -as "possibly"
Crusader.
Back at the Wadi Fidar, a few kilometers south of
Byblos, is the best preserved, although small, tower, Bourj al Muhaij,
or "alMuhaish". Save for a small breach in the second story of its
north wall, this square structure, set in the midst of luxuriant
banana groves on a rocky cliff over the sea, is completely intact and
preserves, as most of the other towers do not, most of the corbels of
its machicolated battlements.
Possibly Crusader-Work?
Its walls and arrow slits, as well as the zig-zag and rosette
decorations over the east window, above the doorway, are not easily
distinguishable from Crusader work in nearby Byblos. As it is probably
an early 14th Century tower, perhaps the same masons worked for both
the last Crusader Lord of Jebail and the first Mamluk emir who
succeeded him in 1299.
Finally, the picturesque, half -ruined Tower of
Empress Helena on the north point of Junie bay comes to our attention.
Nearest of the surviving guard towers to Beirut (25 km.) and seated on
a grassy shelf over some low limestone cliffs, with an incomparable
view of the bay, it makes an ideal picnic spot, for cars may be parked
on an unused side road just off the main highway across the gulley to
the east, near a "cold drinks" concession.
This tower's Byzantine foundations are only of
academic interest, but the Mamluk arched and circular windows,
surrounded with white and yellow stone bands and other features of
interior construction, make good photographic studies, as does the
whole tower in its attractive setting.
From this tower, Beirut, far to the south, almost
appears as an island, but one strains one's eyes in vain for a signal
fire on top of Beirut's vanished guard tower, which once flashed the
news of the discovery of the True Cross in 4th Century Jerusalem.
From See Lebanon, Bruce Condè, second edition, Harb Bijjani Press, Beirut, 1960
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