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Nablus

Nablus
Other transcription(s)
 • Arabic نابلس
 • Also spelled Nabulus (official)
Nablus, 2014
Nablus, 2014
Official logo of Nablus
Municipal Seal of Nablus
Nablus is located in the Palestinian territories
Nablus
Nablus
Location of Nablus within the Palestinian territories
Coordinates: 32°13′13″N 35°16′44″E / 32.22028°N 35.27889°E / 32.22028; 35.27889Coordinates: 32°13′13″N 35°16′44″E / 32.22028°N 35.27889°E / 32.22028; 35.27889
Governorate Nablus
Founded 72 CE
Government
 • Type City (from 1995)
 • Head of Municipality Ghassan Shakaa
Area
 • Jurisdiction 28,564 dunams (28.6 km2 or 11.0 sq mi)
Population (2014)
 • Jurisdiction 146,493
Website www.nablus.org

Nablus (Arabic: نابلس‎‎ Nāblus [næːblʊs], Hebrew: שכםŠəḵem, Biblical Shechem ISO 259-3 Škem, Greek: Νεάπολις Νeapolis) is a city in the northern West Bank, approximately 49 kilometers (30 mi) north of Jerusalem, (approximately 63 kilometers (39 mi) by road), with a population of 126,132. Located between Mount Ebal and Mount Gerizim, it is the capital of the Nablus Governorate and a Palestinian commercial and cultural center, containing the An-Najah National University, one of the largest Palestinian institutions of higher learning, and the Palestinian stock-exchange.

Founded by the Roman Emperor Vespasian in 72 CE as Flavia Neapolis, Nablus has been ruled by many empires over the course of its almost 2,000-year-long history. In the 5th and 6th centuries, conflict between the city's Christian and Samaritan inhabitants climaxed in a series of Samaritan revolts against Byzantine rule, before their violent quelling in 529 CE drastically dwindled that community's numbers in the city. In 636, Neapolis, along with most of Palestine, came under the rule of the Islamic Arab Caliphate of Umar ibn al-Khattab; its name Arabicized to Nablus. In 1099, the Crusaders took control of the city for less than a century, leaving its mixed Muslim, Christian and Samaritan population relatively undisturbed. After Saladin's Ayyubid forces took control of the interior of Palestine in 1187, Islamic rule was reestablished, and continued under the Mamluk and Ottoman empires to follow.


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