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Qarnayel


FieldValue
nameQornayel Village
other_nameQernayel, Qornayel, Qarnayel, Kernayel, Karnayel
native_nameقرنايل
native_name_langar
pushpin_mapLebanon
pushpin_map_captionLocation in Lebanon
coordinates
subdivision_typeCountry
subdivision_nameLebanon
subdivision_type1Governorate
subdivision_name1Mount Lebanon
subdivision_type2District
subdivision_name2Baabda
unit_prefMetric
area_urban_footnotes
area_rural_footnotes
area_metro_footnotes
area_magnitude
area_blank2_title
area_total_km28.38
area_land_km28.38
area_blank2_km2
area_total_ha838
area_land_ha838
elevation_m1160
population_total5,500
population_density_km2auto
official_nameQornayel Village

tags --| area_footnotes = Qornayel () is the 8th largest village and municipality in the Baabda District of the Mount Lebanon Governorate in Lebanon. The village is located between 1100 and 1600 meters above sea level in the western steep slopes of Mount Lebanon, in the Matn al-A'la area, 36 kilometers to the east of Beirut. The village has a population of nearly 5,500, including a significant Druze community.

Services

With one public high school, one public elementary junior high school, and one private school (Al Ishraq), Qornayel attracts students from neighboring villages. Qornayel also has a hospital (Al Jabal Hospital) making it a health center in the region.

Many grottoes are located in the steep pine-clad slopes above the town.

The village is a major source of pine nuts due to stone pine (Pinus pinea) woods covering the area. Qornayel also produces a variety of fruits and vegetables.

Coal and iron were mined during the 19th century. The coal mine was owned by a British company, Brattle & Hornhill. It closed in 1841 following Ibrahim Pasha’s retreat from Lebanon.

Qornayel is considered one of the most prominent summer villages in Lebanon, in the pre-war years a large number of residents of coastal villages intended to spend the summer in Qornayel.  After the war, Qornayel attracted a large number of Gulf tourists who came to Qarnayel to spend the summer vacation, and many of them had owned residential apartments in the village. Qornayel (Qornayel) is a touristic area where you can find pine trees and natural lakes on its top. Qornayel is a famous area for camping in Lebanon.

Families

Among the Druze of Qarnayel, the Hilal are Jumblatti and the Awar are Yazbaki.

Origin of Name

The name is said to have an Aramaic origin QARNA ـ D ـ ILA which translates to " The Summit of God ". The presence of temple ruins in its lands, such as sarcophagi and huge stones in addition to pieces of pottery suggests that the ancient Semites built a temple there. Researchers have considered that the name Qornayel is still preserved in the world heritage, in the name “Cronus”, the Greek god that the Greeks quoted from the Phoenician god: El, who was called the father of the centuries. Thus the name Qornayel, contrary to any jurisprudence, is the full name of the god, in its original Phoenician language, and it became in Greek “Kronos”. On the ruins of the Phoenician temple, the Romans built a temple for their god Jupiter, the ruins of which are still at the southern entrance to the town, in the place known as “Al-Muhawatah,” meaning “the Walled One.” There is no doubt that this name has a connection to its relics.

Interesting landmarks

  • Qornayel- Falougha lakes which are a great natural touristic area.
  • Qornayel Forest

References

References

  1. "Qornayel {{!}} Drupal".
  2. "موسوعة قرى ومدن لبنان {{!}} قرنايل".
  3. "Druze communities in the Middle East". British Druze Society.
  4. "موسوعة قرى ومدن لبنان {{!}} قرنايل".
  5. [https://archive.org/details/theophiluswaldme00walduoft/page/2/mode/2up Ten Years in Abyssinia and Sixteen Years in Syria being the Autobiography of Theophilus Waldmeier] p.157
  6. "Al Salam Village · Unnamed Road, Lebanon".
  7. (2019-08-30). "À Falougha, une escapade estivale riche en aventures".
  8. Harik, Judith P.. (July 1993). "Change and continuity among the Lebanese Druze community: the civil administration of the mountains, 1983–90". Middle Eastern Studies.
  9. "موسوعة قرى ومدن لبنان {{!}} قرنايل".
  10. "موسوعة قرى ومدن لبنان {{!}} قرنايل".
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This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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