"Islamic State" extremists have gained control over the northern part of Syria's ancient city of Palmyra. Authorities are worried the terror group may destroy the city's historical legacy, as it has at other sites.
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Palmyra: Destruction of an oasis of cultural history
Palmyra, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, is considered one of the most beautiful ruined cities in the Middle East. Now the "Islamic State" has seized the area and started destroying these ancient structures.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Scholz
Ancient temple destroyed
This part of the World Heritage site in the ancient city of Palmyra in Syria no longer exists: "Islamic State" militants have blown up the 2,000-year-old temple of Baal Shamin. The inner area of the temple and the columns collapsed through the explosion. The rest of the ancient city remains strongly at risk.
Image: by-sa-Longbow4u
Ruins in a desert oasis
The ruins of Palmyra lie right in the middle of the Syrian desert. The once prosperous metropolis was surrounded by palms - hence its name - and for centuries was a stop for caravans traveling to the Silk Road. The settlement was a center of wealth and trade. But, gradually, the golden age faded, and sand blew over the city. The ruins were later excavated, and given World Heritage status in 1980.
Image: Fotolia/bbbar
Temple of Baal
In the 1st century AD, the Palmyrenes built a grand Roman-style temple for the deity Baal. It formed the center of religious life in Palmyra, which joined the Roman Empire under Emperor Tiberius some time after 14 AD. It is scarred with bullet holes - stark reminders of the ongoing Syrian civil war.
Image: picture-alliance/blickwinkel/F. Neukirchen
Avenue of treasures
Created in the 2nd century, the Great Colonnade stretches on for more than a kilometer (0.6 miles). Spices, perfumes, precious stones and other treasures once passed down this magnificent colonnaded boulevard. The avenue's entrance is marked by Hadrian's Arch, built in honor of the Roman Emperor Hadrian. It's a fine example of the Greco-Roman style, extremely popular at the time.
Image: Louai Beshara/AFP/Getty Images
Roman monument
The Tetrapylon of Palmyra was built on a crossroads. The four groups of slender pillars, each supporting an alcove, were made of red granite brought in from the quarries of Aswan. Each one used to house statues. Today, almost all the columns are replicas. Only one is an original.
Image: Fotolia/waj
Oriental drama
Palmyra bore many characteristics of a Greco-Roman city. It had a portico, thermal baths and an amphitheater. Many oriental dramas were performed on this stage. Unfortunately, the plays, written in Aramaic, haven't survived. In addition to being a theater, the arena was also used for battles between gladiators and animals.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/M. Marczok
Forum of high society
Some 200 statues of important individuals once stood here, taking up honored positions in the porticoes of the agora, or main square. In the agora's southwestern corner the remains of a building where the city council likely held its meetings can be seen. The council was made up of representatives from influential merchant families, responsible for shaping the fortunes of the desert city.
Image: picture-alliance/Robert Harding World Imagery/C. Rennie
Ornate burial
There are a number of burial grounds just outside the city gates. Large families built tall towers housing ornate sarcophagi and tombs big enough for several generations. There are also many underground gravesites decorated with rich architectural flourishes and frescoes that hint at the daily life and wealth of that period.
Image: Imago/A. Schmidhuber
Impending destruction?
In 300 AD, Palmyra became a military base, and came under the power of a string of different rulers. The golden age faded, and the city's splendor was covered up by the desert sand. The city's ruins survived the civil war raging in the country since 2011, but now, the ancient city is under threat from "Islamic State" militants, and UNESCO fears it could face a tragic fate.
Image: picture-alliance/dpa/Scholz
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"Islamic State" (IS) militants on Saturday seized control over the northern part of Palmyra, Syria's ancient desert city and a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
"IS advanced and took control of most of northern Palmyra, and there are fierce clashes happening now," Rami Abdel Rahman, director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. There were no details of any government soldiers dying, but Rahman said 13 extremists had been killed in the fighting.
The "Islamic State" began its offensive on Palmyra, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, three days ago and has executed nearly 50 civilians in the past two days. The Syrian Observatory, also said the jihadists had executed 23 people, including five women and nine children.
Regime forces were meanwhile trying to keep IS from advancing further, but authorities were worried about potential damage to historic monuments, colonnades and elaborate tombs that were located in Palmyra's southwest.
"I am living in a state of terror," Mamoum Abdulkarim, the head of Syria's antiquities department, told the AFP news agency.
"If they enter the ancient ruins, it will be worse than when Palmyra was defeated in the time of Zenobia," Abdulkarim said, referring to the third century, when Palmyra's Queen Zenobia was defeated by the Romans.
Abdulkarim lamented the perceived inactivity of the international community, asking whether all countries were "waiting to weep and despair" as they did when the extremists destroyed ancient heritage sites in northern Iraq.
Palmyra, founded in the first century, could suffer the same fate as the Iraq's Nimrud and Nineveh. Ancient tombs, statues and graves in the cities, both thousands of years old, were physically destroyed by IS militants earlier this year.