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AlSham

Al-Sham, also transliterated ash-Sham or al-Shām, is the Arabic term for the Levant, the eastern Mediterranean region. The name is closely linked to Damascus, historically the region’s political and cultural center, and it has long functioned as a label for the broader area west of the Arabian Desert.

Geographically, Bilad al-Sham traditionally refers to the Levant and roughly corresponds to present-day Syria, Lebanon, Jordan,

Historically, Sham was one of the principal regions of Bilad al-Sham in early Islamic and medieval geography,

and
Palestine
(including
Israel).
In
some
historical
and
cartographic
uses,
it
extends
to
portions
of
southern
Turkey
and
the
surrounding
frontier
zones.
The
precise
boundaries
vary
by
era
and
speaker,
but
Sham
is
consistently
used
to
denote
the
Levant's
core
lands.
and
it
remained
a
cultural
and
political
reference
through
the
Ottoman
period
under
various
administrative
arrangements.
In
contemporary
Arabic,
ash-Shām
commonly
denotes
Syria
or
the
Levant
in
general
and
can
carry
political
or
cultural
connotations
depending
on
context.
The
idea
of
a
broader
Greater
Syria
has
appeared
in
political
discourse,
referring
to
a
larger
territorial
and
cultural
concept
linking
Syria,
Lebanon,
Jordan,
and
Palestine.