Latakia - traduction vers français
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Latakia - traduction vers français

PRINCIPAL PORT CITY OF SYRIA
Postage stamps and postal history of Latakia; Al Ladhiqiyah; Lattakia; Al-Ladhiqiyah; State of Latakia; Latakiyah; Lattakieh; Al Lādhiqīyah; Lattakiah; Ramitha; Province of Lattakia; Ras Ziyarah; Ras Ziyara; Lazikiyye; Latakia, Syria; Al-Lathaqiya; History of Latakia; Tourism in Latakia
  • The National Private High School, built in the [[Bauhaus]] style.
  • The Al-Ziraa roundabout is one of the city's most important roundabouts and links various streets of the city
  • Latakia Sports City during al-Mahaba Festival.
  • The railway linking between Latakia and Aleppo
  • Port of Latakia, painted by [[Luigi Mayer]] (1810)
  • One of the oldest schools in Latakia was previous mandatory-era barracks, and later school. It was subsequently named after [[Jules Jammal]] and known ever since as the 'Jules Jammal School'
  • A Roman period funerary tomb, located in the city's museum
  • Latakia Sports City stadium
  • [[Latakia Tetraporticus]], built by [[Septimius Severus]] in AD 193
  • Ruins of the Temple of Bacchus in Latakia
  • Church of the Sacred Heart of Jesus]]
  • Latakia in 1970.
  • A modern neighborhood.
  • khan]]
  • The [[Bassel Al-Assad International Airport]], located in Jableh, near Latakia, is the main airport serving the city
  • A [[Russia]]n military aircraft in [[Khmeimim Air Base]], one of Russia's main bases of operation in Syria
  • [[Slinfah]]
  • A 10-piastre stamp of Syria used in the Alawite State
  • Wadi al-Kandel beach, near Latakia

Latakia      
Latakia, port city in Syria; type of Turkish tobacco

Définition

Latakia
·noun A superior quality of Turkish smoking tobacco, so called from the place where produced, the ancient Laodicea.

Wikipédia

Latakia

Latakia or Lattakia (Arabic: ٱللَّاذْقِيَّة/ ٱللَّاذِقِيَّة, al-Lāḏqīyah / al-Lāḏiqīyah; Syrian pronunciation: [el.laːdˈʔɪjje, -laːðˈqɪjja]) is the principal port city of Syria and capital city of the Latakia Governorate located on the Mediterranean coast. Historically, it has also been known as Laodicea in Syria or Laodicea ad Mare. In addition to serving as a port, the city is a significant manufacturing center for surrounding agricultural towns and villages. According to 2023 estimate, the population of the city is 709,000, its population greatly increased as a result of the ongoing Syrian Civil War, which led to an influx of internally displaced persons from rebel held areas. It is the 4th-largest city in Syria after Aleppo, Damascus, and Homs. It borders Tartus to the south, Hama to the east, and Idlib to the north, and Cape Apostolos Andreas, the north-eastern tip of Cyprus, is about 109 kilometres (68 mi) away.

Although the site of the city has been inhabited since the 2nd millennium BC, the city was founded in the 4th century BC under the rule of the Seleucid Empire. Latakia was subsequently ruled by the Romans, followed by the Ummayads and Abbasids during the 8th–10th centuries AD. Byzantines ruling groups frequently attacked the city, periodically recapturing it before losing it again to Arab powers, particularly the Fatimids. Afterward, Latakia was ruled successively by the Seljuk Turks, Crusaders, Ayyubids, Mamluks, and the Ottomans. Following World War I, Latakia was assigned to the French mandate of Syria, in which it served as the capital of the autonomous territory of the Alawites. This autonomous territory became the Alawite State in 1922, proclaiming its independence a number of times until reintegrating into Syria in 1944.