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Just
after Deir el Qamar and overlooking a terraced hill appears
the palace of Beit Eddine. A delightful example of early 19th
Century oriental architecture, the palace was built by Emir
Bechir el Chehabi II (1788 -1840) who was for over fifty years
not only the most independent and self-willed of sovereigns
but whose reign was equally characterised by both justice
and prosperity. Under his rule there was a boom in public
works; roads were laid down or enlarged while new bridges
were built and others repaired. His most spectacular achievement,
however, remains the aqueduct of the Safa, a spring whose
waters are regularly swollen by the melting snows. This 14-kilometer
aqueduct was designed to ensure a water supply for the new
capital, Beit Eddine, and for its construction Emir Bechir
drafted his highlanders, each one being obliged to provide
two day's unpaid labour. The resulting eighty thousand working
days enabled the project to be completed in two years without
putting undue strain on the Treasury.

From the Middle Ages on, the Lebanon was divided up into fiefs
governed by Emirs or by hereditary Cheikhs. In the early years
of the 17th Century, the Emir Fakhred-Dine II Maan (1572 -
1634) extended his power throughout these princedoms thus
coming to rule an area corresponding to the present-day Lebanon.
He transferred his capital from Baaqline to Deir El Qamar,
but also had his seat of government in Sidon and Beirut, particularly
after the Sultan extended his power from the north of Syria
to central Palestine.
At the end of the 17th Century, the Maan dynasty died out
and their lands were inherited by the Chehab family, Emirs
of Waditaim. Following the usual customs which at the time
served as the basis for government in the Lebanon, the feudal
lords recognised the Chehabs and the Sultan accorded their
investiture. Their palaces were situated around the central
square of Deir el Qamar throughout the 18th Century.
At the end of the 18th Century, Emir Youssef found himself
in difficulties with the Sultan's representatives, the neighbouring
pachas. He preferred to retire, and abdicated in favour of
Emir Bechir II since his own children were not yet of age.
Due to family disagreements, the positioning of the palaces
at Deir el Qamar, and the extension of his power, Emir Bechir
II decided to construct his own palace at Beit Eddine some
five kilometres from Deir el Qamar.
Ideally situated on a massive rocky spur overlooking picturesque
valleys, the new palace was to extend over nearly three hundred
meters in length in order to match the increasing power of
the Emir and the glory of his reign.
Following the traditional style, its external appearance has
the stark simplicity of a fortress and indeed it dominates
the road that crosses the hills and the valley linking Deir
el Qamar to Beit Eddine. Terrace gardens surrounded the palace
while more gardens planted with cypress and other trees decorated
the interior park and encircled the various buildings.
Begun at the end of the 18th Century, the completed palace
remained the Emir's residence until the day of his exile in
1840.
After the suppression of the Emirate in 1842, the palace continued
for some time to be the possession of his heirs until in 1861
it was purchased by the State to become the residence of the
Mutasarrif government up until 1914.
The original access route for horses and pedestrians, being
no longer suited as the means of locomotion available at the
end of the 19th Century, the Mutasarrifs let it fall into
disuse and built a new road following the hillside. As a result
the palace lost something of the dominant position for which
it had been designed, and henceforth the present access road
winds round and round the palace to provide a truly panoramic
view.
After the 1914 war, the palace was used for local administration
but in 1930 it was declared a Historic Monument and the"
Direction des Antiquités" energetically undertook
the work of restoration. In 1943, Cheikh Bechara El Khoury,
the President of the Republic, decided to make it his symbolic
summer residence and brought back in pomp and ceremony from
Constantinople the remains of the Emir Bechir who had died
there in 1850.
The restoration work thereby received a new impulse, since
it was continued by both the executive and parliamentary authorities.
After the restoration had been carried out, the palace once
again took on its former rhythm of life in the three main
sections:
Dar
el Baranié, the exterior lodging.
Dar
el Wousta, the middle lodging.
Dar
el Harem, the private quarters.
Dar el Baranié
This
part of the palace, composed of a vaulted zig-zag passage
with rooms on both side for the entry guards, was open to
all comers.
The passage opens out onto a 60-meter courtyard where the
people would meet for various gatherings such as dancing,
contests and other festivities. From here, too, the Emir would
leave with his retinue in solemn procession either for war
or for the hunting.
Along one side of this court rises a two-storey building designed
for receiving guests. It was then the custom in Lebanon that
anyone of rank should keep his house open for any passer-by.
The administrators of this lodging did not have the right
to ask any visitor his identity or the purpose of his journey
before the end of the third day of his stay.
The restored upper floor of this building has been transformed
into a museum illustrating the daily life of the epoch, and
particularly that of the palace.
Engravings, models, weapons, documents and jewels can be seen
here, dating from the beginning of the 17th Century up until
the First World War.
Other exhibition rooms are under preparation on the ground
floor. The entry to this block is from the middle of the courtyard
wing.
Dar
el Wousta
This
and the remaining part of the palace are built over vast rooms
with handsome vaulting that give onto the courtyard called
Dar el Kheil, the stables, which used to accommodate five
hundred horses and their riders, and the six hundred foot-soldiers
of the Emir's guard.
This middle lodging above the stables is reached by a huge
double flight of stairs and an entrance decorated with multicoloured
marble and an inscription of welcome.
The entrance door gives onto a vaulted passage that opens
out into a delightful courtyard whose sparkling fountains
add their charm to the elegant arcades on the three sides
of the court.
Following a tradition dear of Lebanese architecture, the fourth
side of the court remains completely open in order to provide
full enjoyment of the beauty of the countryside.
The apartments on either side of the entrance door and on
one side of the court served as offices and reception rooms
for the Emir's minister, his secretaries, and the members
of his court.
Opposite the entrance are the private quarters, Dar el Harem.
Dar
el Harem
The
Dar el Harim apartments consist of a ground floor and a smaller
first floor.
At one of the corners of the ground floor is the main reception
room, with the other rooms on all four sides of a courtyard
where the music of fountains adds a lively note.
An elegant arcade leads to a terrace with a view embracing
the whole valley and reaching far down to the sea.
The harem was prolonged by a complex of rooms and arcades
that must have been a hive of activity where the servants
prepared the daily meals for more than five hundred people.
The food was taken from these kitchens to the reception and
living rooms to be placed on trays set before the divans and
sofas of the notables and their visitors.
Other important part of Dar el Harem are the numerous bathrooms,
each under its small dome and lit by multicoloured ventilation
windows.
Following a tradition dating back to Roman times, the paving-stones
of these baths were supported on brick pillars and vaults
with heated air passing underneath, so that one could choose
rooms with a temperature varying from cold through warm to
very hot.
The main reception room was used - before or after the bath
- as a place for conversation where one could discuss literature
or politics or simply listen to the stories told.
When the winter was particularly hard in these mountain regions,
it became impossible to live on the ground floor. For this
reason, a complete first floor was built above the kitchens
along the sides of an interior court covered by a finely-carved
and brightly-coloured panelled ceiling.
The Emir would smoke his long pipe or his narghile on a raised
platform in one corner of this covered court, surrounded by
his relatives and closest friends. Later generations believed
that it was from here that he gave justice or ''Mahkamé''
on account of the height of the dais. In fact, the Emir being
the first and last resort in matters of law, he meted out
justice wherever he might be.
The Dar el Harem building overlooks the middle court. Its
facade is the richest in the palace both for the beauty of
its arcades, the delicacy of its sculptures, the harmony of
its colours and the carving of its marble and alcoves.
A large and very richly decorated entry-door gives access
to both the reception room and to Dar el Harim. In this highly-decorated
reception room the Emir would hold court and carry out the
business of his Emirate. This room is on two levels, the first
having a fine mosaic floor and the walls covered with marble,
sculptures and inscriptions. One of these inscriptions retains
the attention by the wisdom it contains:
''The
homage of a governor towards god is to observe justice, for
an hour of justice is worth more than a thousand months of
prayer."
And
indeed , however severe he may have been, the Emir was renowned
for his justice.
Usually the Emir would be seated at the end of one of the
divans set along the series of windows, but for great events
he would place himself in the great bay window opposite the
main entrance, from which one can see the whole countryside.
Thus the Emir would be separated from his court and his visitors
without, however, being seated on a throne, in keeping with
the spirit of democracy of the orient.
The
Other Palaces
The
Emir had three sons by his first wife Sitt Shams, who was
also a Chehab but from the elder branch of the family. She
died in 1818 and was buried in a domed sepulchre surrounded
by cypress trees in a corner of the gardens. When the ashes
of the Emir were brought back from Constantinople, they were
placed in the same sepulchre.
Shortly after the death of Sitt Shams, Emir Bechir aimed to
consolidate as much power as possible in his own hands and
so wished to avoid giving importance to any other branch of
his family by contracting a second marriage with one of his
cousins. Consequently, he had four Circassian women sent from
Constantinople and married one of them, who bore him two daughters.
For this reason, there were three other palaces and a country
residence called "El Maqsaf", in addition to the
great palace of Beit Eddine.
The eldest son, Emir Qacem, who was responsible for the Bekaa,
built himself a palace on a nearby promontory parallel to
the great palace. All that remains of this palace are the
stables, which will be restored when the Direction Generale
des Antiquites has completed the purchase of neighbouring
properties in order to create an open-air museum.
The second palace was for the younger son, Emir Khalil, who
was usually in charge of military operations. This was constructed
on the side of the promontory on which the great palace stands.
At the end of the 19th Century, the Mutasarrif eya government
completed its demolition and transformed it into a public
building now employed as the seat of regional government.
The third palace stands on the heights above the village of
Beit Eddine. This belonged to the youngest son, Emir Amine,
who was responsible for delicate political missions and who
would replace his father during any of his absences. This
palace was in rather poor condition when the National Council
of Tourism first took an interest in it, with the aim of creating
a first-class luxury hotel. The completed hotel has twenty-four
rooms, seven with private lounges; most of the rooms are on
the first floor and open onto private terraces and hanging
garden. With the agreement and technical collaboration of
the Direction des Antiquites, the National Council of Tourism
undertook the restoration work and has thus given new life
to a whole architectural complex that forms the finest and
most elegant of all the palaces of Beit Eddine.
A stone throw from this palace is the arch bishopric that
was formerly Emir Bechir's country house. There are still
some remains of the original building, the most interesting
being a beautiful stone doorway onto a roof shaped like a
Chinese pagoda. This elegant doorway is reached by a high
circular staircase whose steps make it stand out vividly from
the surrounding countryside.
Lamartine,
who was the Emir's guest, gave the following description of
the palace:
"
Magnificently dressed black slaves armed with silver-plated
pistols and glittering finely-chased gold Damascus sabres
stood on either side of a door carved in woods of various
colours with marble all around and Arabic inscriptions above.
The vast courtyards facing the palace swarmed with a host
of servants, courtiers, priests and soldiers wearing all the
variety of picturesque costumes characteristic of the five
peoples of the Lebanon... Five or six hundred Arab steeds
were ... saddled and bridled, covered in brilliant drapery
of every hue..."
ON
THE WAY BACK
To
get the most out of this tour, you should return by the inland
route that passes through Barouk and rejoins the main Beirut-Damascus
road at Mdeirij just above the summer resort of Sofar.
After leaving Beit Eddine, you can admire the cedars of Barouk
which form an ever-expanding forest with trees of all ages.
The road then winds across colourful hills covered with pine
trees to arrive at Ain Zhalta, a summer resort greatly appreciated
by those in search of peace and tranquillity. Further on,
down the road, one can see the spring of Nab'es Safa, the
stream that provides the water supply of Beit Eddine. All
this region is famous for its fruit, particularly its apples,
peaches and cherries.
Between Nab'es Safa and Mdeirij, the road passes through two
of the most beautiful valleys in Lebanon. In Mdeirej you can
either go left to return to Beirut, or turn right to reach
the Bakaa valley, Baalbeck and Damascus.
Source:
Ministry of Tourism |