The historic region of
Syria (
Hieroglyphic Luwian:
Sura/i; ; in modern literature called
Greater Syria,
Syria-Palestine, or the
Levant) is an area located east of the Mediterranean sea. The oldest attestation of the name Syria is from the 8th century BC in a bilingual inscription in
Hieroglyphic Luwian and
Phoenician. In this inscription the Luwian word
Sura/i was translated to Phoenician
ʔšr "
Assyria." For
Herodotus in the 5th century BC, Syria extended as far north as the
Halys river and as far south as Arabia and Egypt. For
Pliny the Elder and
Pomponius Mela, Syria covered the entire
Fertile Crescent. In
Late Antiquity Syria meant a region located to the East of the
Mediterranean Sea, West of the
Euphrates River, North of the
Arabian Desert and South of the
Taurus Mountains, thereby including modern
Syria,
Lebanon,
Jordan,
Israel, the
State of Palestine and parts of Southern Turkey namely the
Hatay Province and the Western half of the
Southeastern Anatolia Region. This late definition is equivalent to the region known in
Classical Arabic by the name
ash-Shām الشام , which means
the north [country] (from the root
šʔm شأم "left, north"). After the
Islamic conquest of Byzantine Syria in the 7th century AD, the name
Syria fell out of primary use in the region itself, being superseded by the Arabic equivalent
Shām, but survived in its original sense in Byzantine and Western European usage, and in Syriac Christian literature. In the 19th century the name Syria was revived in its modem Arabic form to denote the whole of Bilad al-Sham, either as
Suriyah or the modern form
Suriyya, which eventually replaced the Arabic name of Bilad al-Sham. After
World War I, the name Syria was applied to the
French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon and the contemporaneous but short-lived
Arab Kingdom of Syria.