The Street Called Straight in the New Testament, or Damascus Straight Street ([τήν ῥύμην τήν καλουμένην εὐθείαν] error: {{lang-xx}}: text has italic markup (help), Latin: Via Recta, Arabic: الشارع المستقيم Al-Shāri‘ al-Mustaqīm) is the Roman street (Decumanus Maximus) which runs from east to west in the old city of Damascus, Syria. It was visited by Paul the Apostle as recorded in the Acts of the Apostles (Acts 9:11).
According to the King James Version of the English bible:
During the Greek period in Damascus, the city was re-designed by Hippodamus, who gave the city a grid structure. The longest of these streets, 1,500 metres in length across the city, was called Straight Street.
The western half of the street, including the Midhat Pasha Souq, is now named "Midhat Pasha Street", while the eastern half, leading to the Bab Sharqi gate is named "Bab Sharqi Street".
Midhat Pasha Street
Bab Sharqi Street
Roman triumphal arch on Damascus Straight Street
Coordinates: 33°30′33″N 36°18′41″E / 33.50917°N 36.31139°E