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** Prime Minister: Hassan Diab

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** Prime Minister: Hassan DiabNajib Mikati
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One of the few nations (the [[UsefulNotes/TheIrishDiaspora other famous example]] being UsefulNotes/{{Ireland}}) in which the people who live outside the country far outnumber those who live inside it. Not counting residents, refugees, and the like, the total population of Lebanon is (as of 2018) slightly more than 4 million. The diaspora? ''14 million''. And this is all made very, very, recently, so you can bet that the country's population would be much higher if there were no wars.

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One of the few nations (the [[UsefulNotes/TheIrishDiaspora other famous example]] being UsefulNotes/{{Ireland}}) UsefulNotes/{{Ireland}}[[note]]UsefulNotes/{{Armenia}} falls in the same category, though they are often forgotten. Ironically, Lebanon itself is home to a substantial Armenian community, and a not insignificant number of Lebanese Armenians themselves emigrated around the world. This makes for a sizeable population who are part of both the Lebanese ''and'' the Armenian Diaspora.[[/note]]) in which the people who live outside the country far outnumber those who live inside it. Not counting residents, refugees, and the like, the total population of Lebanon is (as of 2018) slightly more than 4 million. The diaspora? ''14 million''. And this is all made very, very, recently, so you can bet that the country's population would be much higher if there were no wars.
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* '''Area:''' 10,452 sq km (4,036 sq mi) (161st)

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* '''Area:''' 10,452 sq km km² (4,036 sq mi) (161st)
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* '''Area:''' 10,452 km (4,036 sq mi) (161st)

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* '''Area:''' 10,452 sq km (4,036 sq mi) (161st)

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[[AC:The Lebanese national anthem]]

->كلنا للوطن للعلى للعلم
->ملء عين الزّمن سيفنا والقلم
->سهلنا والجبل منبت للرجال
->قولنا والعمل في سبيل الكمال

->كلنا للوطن للعلى للعلم
->كلّنا للوطن

->شيخنا والفتى عند صوت الوطن
->أسد غاب متى ساورتنا الفتن
->شرقنا قلبه أبداً لبنان
->صانه ربه لمدى الأزمان

->كلنا للوطن للعلى للعلم
->كلنا للوطن

->بحره برّه درّة الشرقين
->رِفدُه برّهُ مالئ القطبين
->إسمه عزّه منذ كان الجدود
->مجدُهُ أرزُهُ رمزُهُ للخلود

->كلّنا للوطن للعلى للعلم
->كلّنا للوطن
[[note]]
->Kullunā li-l-waṭan, li-l-ʿulā li-l-ʿalam
->Milʾu ʿayn iz-zaman, sayfunā wa-l-qalam
->Sahlunā wa-l-jabal, manbitun li-r-rijāl
->Qawlunā wa-l-ʿamal fī sabīli l-kamāl

->Kullunā li-l-waṭan, li-l-ʿulā li-l-ʿalam
->Kullunā li-l-waṭan

->Šayxunā wa-l-fatā, ʿinda ṣawti l-waṭan
->ʾUsdu ġābin matā, sāwaratnā l-fitan
->Šarqunā qalbuhu, ʾabadan Lubnān
->Ṣānahu rabbuhu, li-madā l-ʾazmān

->Kullunā li-l-waṭan, li-l-ʿulā li-l-ʿalam
->Kullunā li-l-waṭan

->Baḥruhu barruhu, durratu š-šarqayn
->Rifduhu birruhu, māliʾu l-quṭbayn
->ʾIsmuhu ʿizzuhu, munḏu kāna l-judūd
->Majduhu ʾarzuhu, ramzuhu li-l-xulūd

->Kullunā li-l-waṭan, li-l-ʿulā li-l-ʿalam
->Kullunā li-l-waṭan
[[/note]]

--

->All of us! For our Country, for our Glory and Flag!
->Our valor and our writings are the envy of the ages.
->Our mountain and our valley, they bring forth stalwart men.
->And to Perfection we devote our words and labor.

->All of us! For our Country, for our Glory and Flag!
->All of us! For our Country!

->Our Elders and our children, they await our Country's call,
->And on the Day of Crisis they are as Lions of the Jungle.
->The heart of our East is ever Lebanon,
->God has preserved her until the end of time.

->All of us! For our Country, for our Glory and Flag!
->All of us! For our Country!

->The Gems of the East are her land and sea.
->Throughout the world her good deeds flow from pole to pole.
->And her name is her glory since time began.
->The cedars are her pride, her immortality's symbol.

->All of us! For our Country, for our Glory and Flag!
->All of us! For our Country!
----



* Unitary parliamentary constitutional republic

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* Unitary parliamentary confessionalist constitutional republic



** Speaker of Parliament: Nabih Berri

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** Speaker of the Parliament: Nabih BerriBerri
----
[[AC:Miscellaneous]]
* '''Capital and largest city:''' Beirut
* '''Population:''' 6,859,408
* '''Area:''' 10,452 km (4,036 sq mi) (161st)
* '''Currency''': Lebanese pound (ل.ل.) (LBP)
* '''ISO-3166-1 Code:''' LB
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Lebanon's history since independence in TheForties has been checkered at best. A major reason for this is that its independence was not really accepted by Syria, who held that Lebanon was more or less a(n autonomous at best) part of Syria proper. This even went as far as to show in the maps produced, showing the border between the two countries as being internal, like you would get between American states. Being a fairly small and weak country that had sizable ties with Israel and the West, it didn't contribute very much to the UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict, even in the initial invasion of Israel in 1948. However, thousands of Palestinians fled to Lebanon, whose government refused to allow the Palestinians to integrate. They've been living in permanent refugee camps in the countryside ever since, a major problem that would come back to haunt the country in its times of trouble. Particularly since the camps soon became instruments of the Palestine Liberation Organization, serving and political and military strongholds that they would later use to pressure and eventually intervene in internal Lebanese politics. Following the Six-day War, a lot of pro-Israeli pundits use Lebanon's restrictions on Palestinian refugees as a tactic to deflect attention from Israel's own occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, and [[Administrivia/RuleOfCautiousEditingJudgment that's all that will be said on the matter.]][[/note]]\\\

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Lebanon's history since independence in TheForties has been checkered at best. A major reason for this is that its independence was not really accepted by Syria, who held that Lebanon was more or less a(n autonomous at best) part of Syria proper. This even went as far as to show in the maps produced, showing the border between the two countries as being internal, like you would get between American states. Being a fairly small and weak country that had sizable ties with Israel and the West, it didn't contribute very much to the UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict, even in the initial invasion of Israel in 1948. However, thousands of Palestinians fled to Lebanon, whose government refused to allow the Palestinians to integrate. They've been living in permanent refugee camps in the countryside ever since, a major problem that would come back to haunt the country in its times of trouble. Particularly since the camps soon became instruments of the Palestine Liberation Organization, serving and political and military strongholds that they would later use to pressure and eventually intervene in internal Lebanese politics. Following the Six-day War, a lot of pro-Israeli pundits use Lebanon's restrictions on Palestinian refugees as a tactic to deflect attention from Israel's own occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, and [[Administrivia/RuleOfCautiousEditingJudgment that's all that will be said on the matter.]][[/note]]\\\
]]\\\
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Lebanon's history since independence in TheForties has been checkered at best. A major reason for this is that its independence was not really accepted by Syria, who held that Lebanon was more or less a(n autonomous at best) part of Syria proper. This even went as far as to show in the maps produced, showing the border between the two countries as being internal, like you would get between American states. Being a fairly small and weak country that had sizable ties with Israel and the West, it didn't contribute very much to the UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict, even in the initial invasion of Israel in 1948. However, thousands of Palestinians fled to Lebanon, whose government refused to allow the Palestinians to integrate. They've been living in permanent refugee camps in the countryside ever since, a major problem that would come back to haunt the country in its times of trouble. Particularly since the camps soon became instruments of the Palestine Liberation Organization, serving and political and military strongholds that they would later use to pressure and eventually intervene in internal Lebanese politics.\\\

to:

Lebanon's history since independence in TheForties has been checkered at best. A major reason for this is that its independence was not really accepted by Syria, who held that Lebanon was more or less a(n autonomous at best) part of Syria proper. This even went as far as to show in the maps produced, showing the border between the two countries as being internal, like you would get between American states. Being a fairly small and weak country that had sizable ties with Israel and the West, it didn't contribute very much to the UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict, even in the initial invasion of Israel in 1948. However, thousands of Palestinians fled to Lebanon, whose government refused to allow the Palestinians to integrate. They've been living in permanent refugee camps in the countryside ever since, a major problem that would come back to haunt the country in its times of trouble. Particularly since the camps soon became instruments of the Palestine Liberation Organization, serving and political and military strongholds that they would later use to pressure and eventually intervene in internal Lebanese politics.\\\
Following the Six-day War, a lot of pro-Israeli pundits use Lebanon's restrictions on Palestinian refugees as a tactic to deflect attention from Israel's own occupation of the West Bank and Gaza, and [[Administrivia/RuleOfCautiousEditingJudgment that's all that will be said on the matter.]][[/note]]\\\
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Lebanon ('''Arabic:''' لبنان‎ Libnān or Lubnān), officially known as the Lebanese Republic ('''Arabic:''' الجمهورية اللبنانية‎ Al-Jumhūrīyah Al-Libnānīyah) is a Western Asian country and one of the world's only two multiconfessional countries, with 18 official religions made up of various sects of the three monotheist faiths[[note]]To wit: Alawite, Armenian Catholic, Armenian Orthodox, Assyrian Church, Chaldean Catholic, Copts, Druze, Greek Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Ismaili, Jewish, Latin Catholic, Maronite Catholic, Protestant, Sunni, Shia, Syriac Catholic, and Syriac Orthodox[[/note]]. However, it's unclear how many people follow what religion in the country; a full census has not been conducted since 1932. This is because the Lebanese Constitution divvies up power along religious lines to (barely) hold together the extremely sectarian nature of the population. The three highest posts in the country are reserved for each members of the religious: a Maronite Catholic President, a Sunni Muslim Prime Minister, and a Shia Muslim Speaker of Parliament. ''No exceptions''.

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Lebanon ('''Arabic:''' لبنان‎ Libnān or Lubnān), officially known as the Lebanese Republic '''Lebanese Republic''' ('''Arabic:''' الجمهورية اللبنانية‎ Al-Jumhūrīyah Al-Libnānīyah) is a Western Asian country and one of the world's only two multiconfessional countries, with 18 official religions made up of various sects of the three monotheist faiths[[note]]To wit: Alawite, Armenian Catholic, Armenian Orthodox, Assyrian Church, Chaldean Catholic, Copts, Druze, Greek Catholic, Greek Orthodox, Ismaili, Jewish, Latin Catholic, Maronite Catholic, Protestant, Sunni, Shia, Syriac Catholic, and Syriac Orthodox[[/note]]. However, it's unclear how many people follow what religion in the country; a full census has not been conducted since 1932. This is because the Lebanese Constitution divvies up power along religious lines to (barely) hold together the extremely sectarian nature of the population. The three highest posts in the country are reserved for each members of the religious: a Maronite Catholic President, a Sunni Muslim Prime Minister, and a Shia Muslim Speaker of Parliament. ''No exceptions''.
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Other than the above, Lebanon also hosts an unusually diverse array of ethnic and religious minorities for such a small country, most of which are displayed in the 18 recognized confessionals (see above). The town of Bourj Hammound a few kilometers from the capital is heavily Armenian. Turks settled during colonial times and continue to live there today. Refugees from other Arab countries set up residences whenever their countries flare up in chaos, including Palestinians (from 1948), Iraqis (from 2003), and Syrians (from 2011). The last one has been a very contentious issue among civilians, the military, and politicians alike; with 920,000 people as of 2019, Lebanon is the world's second biggest host of Syrian refugees, making up 15% of the country's population. Other than putting more pressure into the already exhausted resources, non-Sunnis are especially worried that their arrivals would jolt the fragile confessional balance and bring it crashing down, like it did when the second wave of Palestinians arrived in the 1970s.

to:

Other than the above, Lebanon also hosts an unusually diverse array of ethnic and religious minorities for such a small country, most of which are displayed in the 18 recognized confessionals (see above). The town of Bourj Hammound a few kilometers from the capital is heavily Armenian. Turks settled during colonial times and continue to live there today. Refugees from other Arab countries set up residences whenever their countries flare up in chaos, including Palestinians (from 1948), Iraqis (from 2003), and Syrians (from 2011). The last one has been a very contentious issue among civilians, the military, and politicians alike; with 920,000 people as of 2019, Lebanon is the world's second biggest host of Syrian refugees, refugees (after UsefulNotes/{{Turkey}} and ahead of UsefulNotes/{{Jordan}}[[note]]Note that Jordan's bureaucracy was rather overwhelmed by the Syrian influx, and there might actually be ''more'' Syrians in Jordan than in Lebanon, with some estimates going up to 1.5 million[[/note]]), making up 15% of the country's population. Other than putting more pressure into the already exhausted resources, non-Sunnis are especially worried that their arrivals would jolt the fragile confessional balance and bring it crashing down, like it did when the second wave of Palestinians arrived in the 1970s.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Updated.


''Economically'', on the other hand, Lebanon has been suffering big time. Since TheNewTens the country has been experiencing from another kind of war: a financial crisis. There are many factors to this, the biggest being decades of state corruption and waste but also the impact of the Syrian Civil War. Syria is among Lebanon's important trade partners, so for a long time trade with Syria was off-limits as Syria was blockaded for most of the civil war (it's only until 2018 that UsefulNotes/{{Jordan}} finally reopened its borders, followed by Iraq in 2019. UsefulNotes/{{Turkey}}, meanwhile, remains Assad's archenemy), while Lebanon has no diplomatic or economic relations with Israel since the end of the Lebanese Civil War. The increasing influence of the Iran-allied Hezbollah, which has been designated a terrorist group by the Arab League, the US, and the UK, also made the Gulf Arab nations, long aid donors for Lebanon, largely stay away, as do the West (albeit to a much lesser extent). Foreign reserves and donor money rapidly dried up, causing a currency crisis that saw the Lebanese pound being depreciated as much as ''[[RidiculousExchangeRates 5 times]]'' to the dollar in the black market. This eventually triggered a protest movement in the late 2019 that continues to this day. However, the protests have yet to see tangible results (Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri decided to step down, but only because he is a critic of Hezbollah) and in fact seem to [[FromBadToWorse grow worse every day]]. Lebanon declared a debt default in March 2020, when it announced that it could not meet payments to foreign bondholders. And if that's not enough, on August 4, 2020, massive explosions in the Port of Beirut devastated much of a city already suffering from everything mentioned before and the UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic, killing over 135 people, injuring over 5,000, and possibly displacing at least 300,000.

to:

''Economically'', on the other hand, Lebanon has been suffering big time. Since TheNewTens the country has been experiencing from another kind of war: a financial crisis. There are many factors to this, the biggest being decades of state corruption and waste but also the impact of the Syrian Civil War. Syria is among Lebanon's important trade partners, so for a long time trade with Syria was off-limits as Syria was blockaded for most of the civil war (it's only until 2018 that UsefulNotes/{{Jordan}} finally reopened its borders, followed by Iraq in 2019. UsefulNotes/{{Turkey}}, meanwhile, remains Assad's archenemy), while Lebanon has no diplomatic or economic relations with Israel since the end of the Lebanese Civil War. The increasing influence of the Iran-allied Hezbollah, which has been designated a terrorist group by the Arab League, the US, and the UK, also made the Gulf Arab nations, long aid donors for Lebanon, largely stay away, as do the West (albeit to a much lesser extent). Foreign reserves and donor money rapidly dried up, causing a currency crisis that saw the Lebanese pound being depreciated as much as ''[[RidiculousExchangeRates 5 times]]'' to the dollar in the black market. This eventually triggered a protest movement in the late 2019 that continues to this day. However, the protests have yet to see tangible results (Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri decided to step down, but only because he is a critic of Hezbollah) and in fact seem to [[FromBadToWorse grow worse every day]]. Lebanon declared a debt default in March 2020, when it announced that it could not meet payments to foreign bondholders. And if that's not enough, on 4 August 4, 2020, [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2020_Beirut_explosions massive explosions in the Port of Beirut Beirut]] devastated much of a city already suffering from everything mentioned before and the UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic, killing over 135 220 people, injuring over 5,000, 6,000, and possibly displacing at least 300,000.up to 300,000 from the homes.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Some edits.


''Economically'', on the other hand, Lebanon has been suffering big time. Since TheNewTens the country has been experiencing from another kind of war: a financial crisis. There are many factors to this, the biggest being decades of state corruption and waste but also the impact of the Syrian Civil War. Syria is among Lebanon's important trade partners, so for a long time trade with Syria was off-limits as Syria was blockaded for most of the civil war (it's only until 2018 that UsefulNotes/{{Jordan}} finally reopened its borders, followed by Iraq in 2019. UsefulNotes/{{Turkey}}, meanwhile, remains Assad's archenemy), while Lebanon has no diplomatic or economic relations with Israel since the end of the Lebanese Civil War. The increasing influence of the Iran-allied Hezbollah, which has been designated a terrorist group by the Arab League, the US, and the UK, also made the Gulf Arab nations, long aid donors for Lebanon, largely stay away, as do the West (albeit to a much lesser extent). Foreign reserves and donor money rapidly dried up, causing a currency crisis that saw the Lebanese pound being depreciated as much as ''[[RidiculousExchangeRates 5 times]]'' to the dollar in the black market. This eventually triggered a protest movement in the late 2019 that continues to this day. However, the protests have yet to see tangible results (Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri decided to step down, but only because he is a critic of Hezbollah) and in fact seem to [[FromBadToWorse grow worse every day]]. Lebanon declared a debt default in March 2020, when it announced that it could not meet payments to foreign bondholders.

to:

''Economically'', on the other hand, Lebanon has been suffering big time. Since TheNewTens the country has been experiencing from another kind of war: a financial crisis. There are many factors to this, the biggest being decades of state corruption and waste but also the impact of the Syrian Civil War. Syria is among Lebanon's important trade partners, so for a long time trade with Syria was off-limits as Syria was blockaded for most of the civil war (it's only until 2018 that UsefulNotes/{{Jordan}} finally reopened its borders, followed by Iraq in 2019. UsefulNotes/{{Turkey}}, meanwhile, remains Assad's archenemy), while Lebanon has no diplomatic or economic relations with Israel since the end of the Lebanese Civil War. The increasing influence of the Iran-allied Hezbollah, which has been designated a terrorist group by the Arab League, the US, and the UK, also made the Gulf Arab nations, long aid donors for Lebanon, largely stay away, as do the West (albeit to a much lesser extent). Foreign reserves and donor money rapidly dried up, causing a currency crisis that saw the Lebanese pound being depreciated as much as ''[[RidiculousExchangeRates 5 times]]'' to the dollar in the black market. This eventually triggered a protest movement in the late 2019 that continues to this day. However, the protests have yet to see tangible results (Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri decided to step down, but only because he is a critic of Hezbollah) and in fact seem to [[FromBadToWorse grow worse every day]]. Lebanon declared a debt default in March 2020, when it announced that it could not meet payments to foreign bondholders.
bondholders. And if that's not enough, on August 4, 2020, massive explosions in the Port of Beirut devastated much of a city already suffering from everything mentioned before and the UsefulNotes/COVID19Pandemic, killing over 135 people, injuring over 5,000, and possibly displacing at least 300,000.

Added: 156

Changed: 2

Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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''Economically'', on the other hand, Lebanon has been suffering big time. Since TheNewTens the country has been experiencing from another kind of war: a financial crisis. There are many factors to this, the biggest being decades of state corruption and waste but also the impact of the Syrian Civil War. Syria is among Lebanon's important trade partners, so for a long time trade with Syria was off-limits as Syria was blockaded for most of the civil war (it's only until 2018 that UsefulNotes/{{Jordan}} finally reopened its borders, followed by Iraq in 2019. UsefulNotes/{{Turkey}}, meanwhile, remains Assad's archenemy), while Lebanon has no diplomatic or economic relations with Israel since the end of the Lebanese Civil War. The increasing influence of the Iran-allied Hezbollah, which has been designated a terrorist group by the Arab League, the US, and the UK, also made the Gulf Arab nations, long aid donors for Lebanon, largely stay away, as do the West (albeit to a much lesser extent). Foreign reserves and donor money rapidly dried up, causing a currency crisis that saw the Lebanese pound being depreciated as much as ''[[RidiculousExchangeRates 3 times]]'' to the dollar in the black market. This eventually triggered a protest movement in the late 2019 that continues to this day. However, the protests have yet to see tangible results (Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri decided to step down, but only because he is a critic of Hezbollah) and in fact seem to [[FromBadToWorse grow worse every day]]. Lebanon declared a debt default in March 2020, when it announced that it could not meet payments to foreign bondholders.

to:

''Economically'', on the other hand, Lebanon has been suffering big time. Since TheNewTens the country has been experiencing from another kind of war: a financial crisis. There are many factors to this, the biggest being decades of state corruption and waste but also the impact of the Syrian Civil War. Syria is among Lebanon's important trade partners, so for a long time trade with Syria was off-limits as Syria was blockaded for most of the civil war (it's only until 2018 that UsefulNotes/{{Jordan}} finally reopened its borders, followed by Iraq in 2019. UsefulNotes/{{Turkey}}, meanwhile, remains Assad's archenemy), while Lebanon has no diplomatic or economic relations with Israel since the end of the Lebanese Civil War. The increasing influence of the Iran-allied Hezbollah, which has been designated a terrorist group by the Arab League, the US, and the UK, also made the Gulf Arab nations, long aid donors for Lebanon, largely stay away, as do the West (albeit to a much lesser extent). Foreign reserves and donor money rapidly dried up, causing a currency crisis that saw the Lebanese pound being depreciated as much as ''[[RidiculousExchangeRates 3 5 times]]'' to the dollar in the black market. This eventually triggered a protest movement in the late 2019 that continues to this day. However, the protests have yet to see tangible results (Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri decided to step down, but only because he is a critic of Hezbollah) and in fact seem to [[FromBadToWorse grow worse every day]]. Lebanon declared a debt default in March 2020, when it announced that it could not meet payments to foreign bondholders.



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[[AC:Government]]
* Unitary parliamentary constitutional republic
** President: Michel Aoun
** Prime Minister: Hassan Diab
** Speaker of Parliament: Nabih Berri
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Other than the above, Lebanon also hosts an unusually diverse array of ethnic and religious minorities for such a small country, most of which are displayed in the 18 recognized confessionals (see above). The town of Bourj Hammound a few kilometers from the capital is heavily Armenian. Turks settled during colonial times and continue to live there today. Refugees from other Arab countries set up residences whenever their countries flare up in chaos, including Palestinians (from 1948), Iraqis (from 2003), and Syrians (from 2011). The last one has been a very contentious issue among civilians, the military, and politicians alike; with 920,000 people as of 2019, making it the second biggest host of Syrian refugees in the world. Other than putting more pressure into the already exhausted resources, non-Sunnis are especially worried that their arrivals would jolt the fragile confessional balance and bring it crashing down, like it did when the second wave of Palestinians arrived in the 1970s.

to:

Other than the above, Lebanon also hosts an unusually diverse array of ethnic and religious minorities for such a small country, most of which are displayed in the 18 recognized confessionals (see above). The town of Bourj Hammound a few kilometers from the capital is heavily Armenian. Turks settled during colonial times and continue to live there today. Refugees from other Arab countries set up residences whenever their countries flare up in chaos, including Palestinians (from 1948), Iraqis (from 2003), and Syrians (from 2011). The last one has been a very contentious issue among civilians, the military, and politicians alike; with 920,000 people as of 2019, making it Lebanon is the world's second biggest host of Syrian refugees in refugees, making up 15% of the world.country's population. Other than putting more pressure into the already exhausted resources, non-Sunnis are especially worried that their arrivals would jolt the fragile confessional balance and bring it crashing down, like it did when the second wave of Palestinians arrived in the 1970s.



During the truly ancient era, Lebanon, like its neighbor UsefulNotes/{{Israel}}, was known as the land of Canaan. Its indigenous people, the Phoenicians, rose as an important power after the Late Bronze Age collapse circa 1200 BCE destroyed its previous overlords, the Egyptians and Hittites. They established a loose thalassocracy spanning the entire Mediterranean and became precursors of the Punic, a branch of the Phoenicians who settled in UsefulNotes/{{Tunisia}} and mixed in with local Berbers who survived up to the last of the UsefulNotes/PunicWars in the 2nd century BCE, long after the Phoenicians declined as an entity. The Phoenicians famously created a writing system inspired by the one that existed in the Sinai peninsula, which in turn was inspired by Egyptian hieroglyps. This system was borrowed by the Greeks, through which it became ancestor to the Roman and Cyrillic alphabets, while through the Arameans it became ancestor to most abjads in the Middle East (including Hebrew and Arabic) as well as the Brahmi script of the Indian subcontinent.\\\

The decline of the Phoenicians in the 9th century BCE marked the end of the region's independence for a long time. In fact, Lebanon never became a sovereign state again until independence in 1943. Various foreign countries vied for power over for the next 2700 years, including the Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabs, Turks, Crusaders, and the French. The Arab conquest of the 7th century CE brought about Arabization of the previously Aramean state (like most of the Levant, the Lebanese spoke Aramaic at the time), although most of the population remained Christians. Through contact with the Catholic Crusaders who occupied the land in UsefulNotes/TheHighMiddleAges, the Maronite Christians, who had been isolated from the Catholic Church since the Schism of 1054, affirmed their loyalty to UsefulNotes/ThePope. It was also around this time that the Druze faith emerged and communities pursuing the new religion began to pop up in the Mount Lebanon area.\\\

During the Ottoman period of the 16th-20th centuries, Lebanon was governed through the Mount Lebanon Emirate vassal, which had a Druze ruling dynasty. Unrest in the 19th century led to a civil war between the Druze and the Maronites, the latter being supported by the French. This factored in to the French decision to carve Lebanon (then called Greater Lebanon), a separate state designated for the Maronite Christians out of Ottoman Syria, when they were given the mandate to control the region after the Ottoman Empire imploded at the end of UsefulNotes/WorldWarI. Lebanon's case was not unusual; the French in fact also gave the Druze and Alawites (another religious minority that live in the same area) separate states, but they were eventually absorbed into UsefulNotes/{{Syria}}, while Lebanon stayed independent.\\\

to:

During the truly ancient era, Lebanon, like its neighbor UsefulNotes/{{Israel}}, was known as the land of Canaan. Its indigenous people, the Phoenicians, rose as an important power after the Late Bronze Age collapse circa 1200 BCE destroyed its the authority of their previous overlords, the Egyptians and Hittites. They established a loose thalassocracy spanning the entire Mediterranean and became precursors of the Punic, a branch of the Phoenicians who settled in UsefulNotes/{{Tunisia}} and mixed in with local Berbers who survived up to the last of the UsefulNotes/PunicWars in the 2nd century BCE, long after the Phoenicians declined as an entity. The Phoenicians famously created a writing system inspired by the one that existed in the Sinai peninsula, which in turn was inspired by Egyptian hieroglyps. hieroglyphs. This system was borrowed by the Greeks, through which whom it became ancestor to the Roman and Cyrillic alphabets, while through the Arameans it became ancestor to most abjads in the Middle East (including Hebrew and Arabic) as well as the Brahmi script of the Indian subcontinent.\\\

The decline of the Phoenicians in the 9th century BCE marked the end of the region's independence for a long time. In fact, Lebanon never became a sovereign state again until independence in 1943. Various foreign countries foreigners vied for power over for the next 2700 years, including the Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabs, Turks, Crusaders, and the French. The Arab conquest of the 7th century CE brought about Arabization of the previously Aramean state (like most of the Levant, the Lebanese spoke Aramaic at the time), although most of the population remained Christians. Through contact with the Catholic Crusaders who occupied the land in UsefulNotes/TheHighMiddleAges, TheHighMiddleAges, the Maronite Christians, who had been isolated from the Catholic Church since the Schism of 1054, affirmed their loyalty to UsefulNotes/ThePope. It was also around this time that the Druze faith emerged and communities pursuing the new religion began to pop up in the Mount Lebanon area.\\\

During the Ottoman period of the 16th-20th centuries, Lebanon was governed through the Mount Lebanon Emirate vassal, which had a Druze ruling dynasty. Unrest in the 19th century led to a civil war between the Druze and the Maronites, the latter being supported by the French. This factored in to the French decision to carve Lebanon (then called Greater Lebanon), a separate state designated for the Maronite Christians Christians, out of Ottoman Syria, when they were given the mandate to control the region after the Ottoman Empire imploded at the end of UsefulNotes/WorldWarI. Lebanon's case was not unusual; the French in fact also gave the Druze and Alawites (another religious minority that live in the same area) Levant and which the Assad family, who have been ruling UsefulNotes/{{Syria}} since the 1970s, come from) separate states, but they were eventually absorbed into UsefulNotes/{{Syria}}, Syria, while Lebanon stayed independent.independent. \\\



Lebanon's history since independence in TheForties has been checkered at best. A major reason for this is that its independence was not really accepted by Syria, who held that Lebanon was more or less a(n autonomous at best) part of Syria proper. This even went as far as to show in the maps produced, showing the border between the two countries as being internal, like you would get between American states. Being a fairly small and weak country that had sizable ties with Israel and the West, it didn't contribute very much to the UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict, even in the initial invasion of Israel in 1948. However, lots of Palestinians fled to Lebanon, whose government refused to allow the Palestinians to integrate. They've been living in festering camps in the countryside ever since (albeit "camps" with a whole lot of pretty permanent-looking structures), a major problem that would come back to haunt the country in its times of trouble. Particularly since the camps soon became instruments of the Palestine Liberation Organization, serving and political and military strongholds that they would later use to pressure and eventually intervene in internal Lebanese politics.\\\

to:

Lebanon's history since independence in TheForties has been checkered at best. A major reason for this is that its independence was not really accepted by Syria, who held that Lebanon was more or less a(n autonomous at best) part of Syria proper. This even went as far as to show in the maps produced, showing the border between the two countries as being internal, like you would get between American states. Being a fairly small and weak country that had sizable ties with Israel and the West, it didn't contribute very much to the UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict, even in the initial invasion of Israel in 1948. However, lots thousands of Palestinians fled to Lebanon, whose government refused to allow the Palestinians to integrate. They've been living in festering permanent refugee camps in the countryside ever since (albeit "camps" with a whole lot of pretty permanent-looking structures), since, a major problem that would come back to haunt the country in its times of trouble. Particularly since the camps soon became instruments of the Palestine Liberation Organization, serving and political and military strongholds that they would later use to pressure and eventually intervene in internal Lebanese politics.\\\



The war continued until 1990, when an uneasy peace deal was reached in TheNineties that ended the civil war. The early 2000s saw Israel leaving the southern part of the country without any conditions. During these years, much of the country was rebuilt (although bullet holes remained an expected part of any building). However, the Syrian elephant in the room stayed on for years in an effort to thoroughly subordinate Lebanon to its control, though generally preferring to act through [[TheQuisling quislings]], [[LesCollaborateurs sympathetic locals]], and [[TheCoronerDothProtestTooMuch well-timed and deniable "accidents"]] than directly. One of these was the assassination of the former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, which turned out to be a massive miscalculation as it spurred major protests that forced Syria to withdrawal.\\\

You think it's over yet? Nope. While Syria moved back to the other side of the border, it was determined to keep its influence in-country. It had backed the Shia militia/political party Hezbollah in the 1980s, and continued to do so after the civil war was over. Hezbollah decided that now that its Syrian protectors were gone, it would focus its attention on making Israel miserable. As a result, in July-August 2006 after Hezbollah kidnapped 2 Israeli soldiers and returned to rocketing Israel from Lebanon. In turn, Israel returned bombing the crap out of Lebanon in an attempt to destroy Hezbollah, but did not go beyond that because of internal politics and the hope that it would work enough. All of this contributed to Beirut getting torn up ''again'' just after the Lebanese had finished rebuilding it. It was never quite as intense as the civil war (a veritable bloodbath), but it was enough to give people nightmares until it more or less died down in 2009, though the country still remained divided. Hezbollah remains largely dominant in the country to the point where the country's politics have mostly boiled down to pro- and anti-Hezbollah factions, irrespective of religion (Hezbollah have just as many Christian, Druze, and Sunni allies as they have opponents).\\\

UsefulNotes/TheArabSpring sucked Lebanon into its vortex in 2012. Like before, Lebanon would again face major shock waves because of events and decisions in Syria. This time, however, the event in question was not the expansion of Syrian power but the explosion of the Syrian Civil War against the Assad government. Hundreds of thousands of Syrians entered Lebanon as refugees, sparking protests from Hezbollah. Meanwhile, the Hezbollah have been a consistent supporter of the UsefulNotes/BasharAlAssad regime and have been sending up regimes after regimes to help him win back his ailing country from the Sunni rebels. Nevertheless, the country never really succumbed to chaos of the Arab Spring politically.\\\

''Economically'', on the other hand, Lebanon has been suffering big time. Since TheNewTens the country has been suffering from another kind of war: a financial crisis. There are many factors to this, the biggest being decades of state corruption and waste but also the impact of the Syrian Civil War. Syria is among Lebanon's important trade partners, so for a long time trade with Syria was off-limits as Syria was blockaded for most of the civil war (it's only until 2018 that UsefulNotes/{{Jordan}} finally reopened its borders, followed by Iraq in 2019. UsefulNotes/{{Turkey}}, meanwhile, remains Assad's archenemy), while Lebanon has no diplomatic or economic relations with Israel since the end of the Lebanese Civil War. The increasing influence of the Iran-allied Hezbollah also made the Gulf Arab nations, long an aid donor for Lebanon, largely stay away, as do the West (albeit to a much lesser extent). Foreign reserves and donor money rapidly dried up, causing currency crisis that saw the Lebanese pound being depreciated as much as ''[[RidiculousExchangeRates 3 times]]'' to the dollar in the black market. This eventually triggered a protest movement in the late 2019 that continues to this day. However, the protests have yet to see tangible results (Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri decided to step down, but only because he is a critic of Hezbollah) and in fact seem to [[FromBadToWorse grow worse every day]]; Lebanon declared a debt default in March 2020, when it announced that it could not meet payments to foreign bondholders.

to:

The war continued until 1990, when 1990 and killed up to 150,000 people. When an uneasy peace deal was reached in TheNineties that ended the civil war. The early 2000s saw Israel leaving the southern part of the country without any conditions. During these years, much of the country was rebuilt (although bullet holes remained an expected part of any building). However, the Syrian elephant in the room stayed on for years in an effort to thoroughly subordinate Lebanon to its control, though generally preferring to act through [[TheQuisling quislings]], [[LesCollaborateurs sympathetic locals]], and [[TheCoronerDothProtestTooMuch well-timed and deniable "accidents"]] than directly. One of these was the assassination of the former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, which turned out to be a massive miscalculation as it spurred major protests that forced Syria to withdrawal.\\\

You think it's over yet? Nope. While Syria moved back to the other side of the border, it was determined to keep its influence in-country. It had backed the Shia militia/political party Hezbollah (originally founded by followers of the first Ayatollah of Iran, Ruhollah Khomeini) in the 1980s, and continued to do so after the civil war was over. Hezbollah decided that now that its Syrian protectors were gone, it would focus its attention on making Israel miserable. As a result, in July-August 2006 after Hezbollah kidnapped 2 Israeli soldiers and returned to rocketing Israel from Lebanon. In turn, Israel returned bombing the crap out of Lebanon in an attempt to destroy Hezbollah, but did not go beyond that because of internal politics and the hope that it would work enough. All of this contributed to Beirut getting torn up ''again'' just after the Lebanese had finished rebuilding it. It was never quite as intense as the civil war (a veritable bloodbath), but it was enough to give people nightmares until it more or less died down in 2009, though the country still remained divided. Hezbollah remains largely dominant in the country to the point where the country's politics have mostly boiled down to pro- and anti-Hezbollah factions, irrespective of religion (Hezbollah have just as many Christian, Druze, and Sunni allies as they have opponents).\\\

UsefulNotes/TheArabSpring sucked Lebanon into its vortex in 2012. Like before, Lebanon would again face major shock waves because of events and decisions in Syria. This time, however, the event in question was not the expansion of Syrian power but the explosion of the Syrian Civil War against the Assad government. Hundreds of thousands of Syrians entered Lebanon as refugees, sparking protests from Hezbollah. Meanwhile, the Hezbollah have been a consistent supporter of the UsefulNotes/BasharAlAssad regime and have been sending up regimes after regimes militias to help him win back his ailing country from the Sunni rebels. Nevertheless, the country never really succumbed to the chaos of the Arab Spring politically.\\\

''Economically'', on the other hand, Lebanon has been suffering big time. Since TheNewTens the country has been suffering experiencing from another kind of war: a financial crisis. There are many factors to this, the biggest being decades of state corruption and waste but also the impact of the Syrian Civil War. Syria is among Lebanon's important trade partners, so for a long time trade with Syria was off-limits as Syria was blockaded for most of the civil war (it's only until 2018 that UsefulNotes/{{Jordan}} finally reopened its borders, followed by Iraq in 2019. UsefulNotes/{{Turkey}}, meanwhile, remains Assad's archenemy), while Lebanon has no diplomatic or economic relations with Israel since the end of the Lebanese Civil War. The increasing influence of the Iran-allied Hezbollah Hezbollah, which has been designated a terrorist group by the Arab League, the US, and the UK, also made the Gulf Arab nations, long an aid donor donors for Lebanon, largely stay away, as do the West (albeit to a much lesser extent). Foreign reserves and donor money rapidly dried up, causing a currency crisis that saw the Lebanese pound being depreciated as much as ''[[RidiculousExchangeRates 3 times]]'' to the dollar in the black market. This eventually triggered a protest movement in the late 2019 that continues to this day. However, the protests have yet to see tangible results (Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri decided to step down, but only because he is a critic of Hezbollah) and in fact seem to [[FromBadToWorse grow worse every day]]; day]]. Lebanon declared a debt default in March 2020, when it announced that it could not meet payments to foreign bondholders.

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Lebanon is where ancient Phoenicia, Canaan, and other ancient civilizations were based. Assyrians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabians, Ottomans, French, and others have ruled and made their mark over present-day Lebanon. The city of Tyre, among other cities, was very prominent in the ancient World. The city of Baalbek has a Roman-era temple. Lebanon was a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, the United States, Australia (where they are [[FantasticRacism stereotypically hated]]) and other countries, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent; we would also be remiss in not mentioning Music/{{Shakira}}, whose paternal grandparents emigrated from Lebanon to Colombia via New York). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.

to:

Lebanon is where ancient Phoenicia, Canaan, and other ancient civilizations were based. Assyrians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabians, Ottomans, French, and others have ruled and made their mark over present-day Lebanon. The city of Tyre, among other cities, was very prominent in the ancient World. The World, while the city of Baalbek has a Roman-era temple. For a very long time, Lebanon was a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world.UsefulNotes/ArabWorld. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, the United States, Australia (where they are [[FantasticRacism stereotypically hated]]) and other countries, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent; we would also be remiss in not mentioning Music/{{Shakira}}, whose paternal grandparents emigrated from Lebanon to Colombia via New York). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.



Other than the above, Lebanon also hosts an unusually diverse array of ethnic and religious minorities for such a small country, most of which are displayed in the 18 recognized confessionals (see above). The town of Bourj Hammound a few kilometers from the capital is heavily Armenian. Turks settled during colonial times and continue to live there today. Refugees from other Arab countries set up residences whenever their countries flare up in chaos, including Palestinians (from 1948), Iraqis (from 2003), and Syrians (from 2011). The last one has been a very contentious issue among civilians, the military, and politicians alike; with 1.5 million people as of 2015, they have added a whopping 25% into the population within the span of four years. Other than putting more pressure into the already exhausted resources, non-Sunnis are especially worried that their arrivals would jolt the fragile confessional balance and bring them crashing down, like it did when the second wave of Palestinians arrived forty years ago.

Despite all this division, there are a few things that most Lebanese will agree unite them. As so often happens, the diversity that creates tension also feeds a rich culture. Lebanon is disproportionately prominent in Arab culture, and Beirut is a much larger center of Arab mass media, music, and literature (particularly publishing--the old joke among Arab literati is that Egypt writes, Lebanon publishes, and Iraq reads) than its size would suggest. Lebanon is also a contender (with Yemen and Morocco) for best country for cuisine in the Arab world, and their common kitchen is one of the strongest day-to-day commonalities for Lebanese of all faiths. Lebanese of all sects have a reputation in the Arab world for business savvy, mostly because of the diaspora (which had to be entrepreneurial to survive), but Lebanese are rightly proud of their country's role as a commercial crossroads. The Lebanese also have a deserved reputation for enthusiastic celebration and living life to the fullest in the face of adversity; they say that Beirutis party hardest [[ScrewTheWarWerePartying when the bombs are falling]].

to:

Other than the above, Lebanon also hosts an unusually diverse array of ethnic and religious minorities for such a small country, most of which are displayed in the 18 recognized confessionals (see above). The town of Bourj Hammound a few kilometers from the capital is heavily Armenian. Turks settled during colonial times and continue to live there today. Refugees from other Arab countries set up residences whenever their countries flare up in chaos, including Palestinians (from 1948), Iraqis (from 2003), and Syrians (from 2011). The last one has been a very contentious issue among civilians, the military, and politicians alike; with 1.5 million 920,000 people as of 2015, they have added a whopping 25% into 2019, making it the population within second biggest host of Syrian refugees in the span of four years. world. Other than putting more pressure into the already exhausted resources, non-Sunnis are especially worried that their arrivals would jolt the fragile confessional balance and bring them it crashing down, like it did when the second wave of Palestinians arrived forty years ago.

in the 1970s.

Despite all this division, there are a few things that most Lebanese will agree unite them. As so often happens, the diversity that creates tension also feeds a rich culture. Lebanon is disproportionately prominent in Arab culture, and Beirut is a much larger center of Arab mass media, music, and literature (particularly publishing--the old joke among Arab literati is that Egypt UsefulNotes/{{Egypt}} writes, Lebanon publishes, and Iraq UsefulNotes/{{Iraq}} reads) than its size would suggest. Lebanon is also a contender (with Yemen UsefulNotes/{{Yemen}} and Morocco) UsefulNotes/{{Morocco}}) for best country for cuisine in the Arab world, and their common kitchen is one of the strongest day-to-day commonalities for Lebanese of all faiths. Lebanese of all sects have a reputation in the Arab world for business savvy, mostly because of the diaspora (which had to be entrepreneurial to survive), but Lebanese are rightly proud of their country's role as a commercial crossroads. The Lebanese also have a deserved reputation for enthusiastic celebration and living life to the fullest in the face of adversity; they say that Beirutis party hardest [[ScrewTheWarWerePartying when the bombs are falling]].



What is now Lebanon was under a French Mandate from the end of UsefulNotes/WorldWarI until 1943, leaving a deep impression in language and culture - for the Lebanese mostly, but also for the French. If you ever see French people greet each other with kisses on the cheeks, that's a Lebanese tradition. On the other hand, even today, Lebanese dialects of Arabic contain strong traces of French, and French is officially a national language. Lebanese cooking is famous throughout the Middle East and beyond: hummus, falafel, tabbouleh, and pastries unrivaled in taste (although an Egyptian would dispute that for the falafel and some of the pastries and Greeks would make a similar point about the baklava; Food is SeriousBusiness). An Egyptian restaurant opening abroad might call itself 'Lebanese' to get more customers.

Lebanon's history since independence in TheForties has been checkered at best. A major reason for this is that its independence is not really accepted by Damascus, who holds that Lebanon is more or less a(n autonomous at best) part of Syria proper. This even goes as far as to show in the maps produced, showing the border between the two countries as being internal, like you would get between American states. Being a fairly small and weak country that had sizable ties with Israel and the West, it didn't contribute very much to the UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict, even in the initial invasion of Israel in 1948. However, lots of Palestinians fled to Lebanon, whose government refused to allow the Palestinians to integrate. They've been living in festering camps in the countryside ever since (albeit "camps" with a whole lot of pretty permanent-looking structures), a major problem that would come back to haunt the country in its times of trouble. Particularly since the camps soon became instruments of PLO power, serving and political *and military* strongholds that they would later use to pressure and eventually intervene in Internal Lebanese politics.

Outside the camps, however, things seemed to run smoothly. A political crisis in 1958 (pitting mostly Christian pro-Westerners against mostly-Muslim pro-Syrians for reasons related to [[UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict the Suez War]] two years earlier) that threatened to turn into a civil war was defused when UsefulNotes/DwightEisenhower, on the request of the Lebanese president, sent the U.S. [[UsefulNotes/YanksWithTanks Army]] and [[SemperFi Marines]] to keep anything from happening. For a time, Lebanon was reasonably stable and prosperous; UsefulNotes/{{Beirut}} continued to live up to its reputation as the "Paris of the Middle East."

However, by 1975, the Palestinians had organized themselves into the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), which more or less became a "state within a state" in Lebanon. The Palestinians used southern Lebanon as a base for attacks on Israel, which screwed up everything most massively. Various groups within Lebanon took different positions on the issue (Christians generally frowning on it, Sunnis generally supportive, Shias generally too poor to be noticed). In retaliation for the PLO bombing the crap out of them from Lebanon, Israel started bombing the crap out of the Palestinians on Lebanese soil, driving the subject much closer to home and pushing things to get much nastier. By April of 1975, it had turned into an all-out civil war. Pro-PLO militias controlled the south of the country; Anti-PLO controlled the center and west; and to top it off, the north and east were invaded by UsefulNotes/{{Syria}}. Beirut itself was divided in two: the PLO and its allied militias controlled West Beirut, their enemies controlled East Beirut, and various people whose religious background did not match the militias' generally fled to the other side before they were shot. Oh, and did we mention that Syria and Israel decided to invade?

A force of American, British, French, and Italian peacekeepers were deployed to the country in the early 1980s to try and bring a stop to the civil war or at least to restrain the warring sides. However, they soon got sucked into the frenzied fighting and soon became a target of Syrian and Iranian intelligence, as well as their Islamist paramilitary proxies. As a result, one enterprising group picked two volunteers with the know how to drive, loaded trucks up with high explosives, and on October 23rd of 1983 [[SuicideAttack sent it careening into the Peacekeeping compounds.]] By far the more infamous and deadly attack was that on the USMC barracks, which killed 241 American servicemen and a Lebanese civilian and was basically the TropeCodifier for modern suicide bombing; less well known is that there was another attack on the French Para barracks not far, which killed an additional 58 Frenchmen and a Lebanese janitor's wife and four children. All in all, the death total wracked up to 299 peacekeepers, 305 total including civilians, and the two perpetrators. The event was one of the most devastating attacks any of the countries had suffered, and led to the decision to remove the Peacekeepers and leave Lebanon to the paramilitaries.

The war continued until 1990, when an uneasy peace deal was reached in The Nineties that ended the civil war. The early 2000s saw Israel leaving the southern part of the country without any conditions. During these years, much of the country was rebuilt (although bullet holes remained an expected part of any building). However, the Syrian elephant in the room stayed on for years in an effort to thoroughly subordinate Lebanon to its control, though generally preferring to act through [[TheQuisling quislings]], [[LesCollaborateurs sympathetic locals]], and [[TheCoronerDothProtestTooMuch well-timed and deniable "accidents"]] than directly. One of these was the assassination of the former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, which turned out to be a massive miscalculation as it spurred major protests that forced Syria to withdrawal.

You think it's over yet? Nope. While Syria moved back to the other side of the border, it was determined to keep its influence in-country. It had backed the Shia militia/political party Hezbollah in the 1980s, and continued to do so after the civil war was over. Hezbollah decided that now that its Syrian protectors were gone, it would focus its attention on making Israel miserable (ItMakesSenseInContext, which I haven't the time to give you). As a result, in July-August 2006 after Hezbollah kidnapped 2 Israeli soldiers and returned to rocketing Israel from Lebanon. In turn, Israel returned bombing the crap out of Lebanon in an attempt to destroy Hezbollah, but did not go beyond that because of internal politics and the hope that it would work enough. All of this contributed to Beirut getting torn up *again* just after the Lebanese had finished rebuilding it. It was never quite as intense as the civil war (a veritable bloodbath), but it was enough to give people nightmares until it more or less died down in 2009, though the country still remained divided. Hezbollah remains largely dominant in the country to the point where it threatens the independent Lebanese government, with supporting and opposing militias and paramilitaries all taking chunks of the country and threatening balkanization.

UsefulNotes/TheArabSpring sucked Lebanon into its vortex just a few years later; as you might expect for a country that has faced considerable occupation from a larger, authoritarian neighbor. Like before, Lebanon would again face major shock waves because of events and decisions in Syria. This time, however, the event in question was not the expansion of Syrian power but the explosion of the Syrian Civil War against the Assad government. As a result, both Pro and Anti Syrian/Baathist/Assad factions have gone across the border in large numbers to fight in what is almost a larger proxy war, even as internally the country suffers from a sort of smaller "proxy cold war", with both sides maneuvering for advantage.

The beautiful cedar tree on the flag was adopted as both the symbol of the government and the anti-Syrian factions, and it looks like until that conflict is resolved it will remain tormented.

to:

What is now During the truly ancient era, Lebanon, like its neighbor UsefulNotes/{{Israel}}, was known as the land of Canaan. Its indigenous people, the Phoenicians, rose as an important power after the Late Bronze Age collapse circa 1200 BCE destroyed its previous overlords, the Egyptians and Hittites. They established a loose thalassocracy spanning the entire Mediterranean and became precursors of the Punic, a branch of the Phoenicians who settled in UsefulNotes/{{Tunisia}} and mixed in with local Berbers who survived up to the last of the UsefulNotes/PunicWars in the 2nd century BCE, long after the Phoenicians declined as an entity. The Phoenicians famously created a writing system inspired by the one that existed in the Sinai peninsula, which in turn was inspired by Egyptian hieroglyps. This system was borrowed by the Greeks, through which it became ancestor to the Roman and Cyrillic alphabets, while through the Arameans it became ancestor to most abjads in the Middle East (including Hebrew and Arabic) as well as the Brahmi script of the Indian subcontinent.\\\

The decline of the Phoenicians in the 9th century BCE marked the end of the region's independence for a long time. In fact, Lebanon never became a sovereign state again until independence in 1943. Various foreign countries vied for power over for the next 2700 years, including the Assyrians, Babylonians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabs, Turks, Crusaders, and the French. The Arab conquest of the 7th century CE brought about Arabization of the previously Aramean state (like most of the Levant, the Lebanese spoke Aramaic at the time), although most of the population remained Christians. Through contact with the Catholic Crusaders who occupied the land in UsefulNotes/TheHighMiddleAges, the Maronite Christians, who had been isolated from the Catholic Church since the Schism of 1054, affirmed their loyalty to UsefulNotes/ThePope. It was also around this time that the Druze faith emerged and communities pursuing the new religion began to pop up in the Mount Lebanon area.\\\

During the Ottoman period of the 16th-20th centuries,
Lebanon was under governed through the Mount Lebanon Emirate vassal, which had a Druze ruling dynasty. Unrest in the 19th century led to a civil war between the Druze and the Maronites, the latter being supported by the French. This factored in to the French Mandate from decision to carve Lebanon (then called Greater Lebanon), a separate state designated for the Maronite Christians out of Ottoman Syria, when they were given the mandate to control the region after the Ottoman Empire imploded at the end of UsefulNotes/WorldWarI until 1943, leaving UsefulNotes/WorldWarI. Lebanon's case was not unusual; the French in fact also gave the Druze and Alawites (another religious minority that live in the same area) separate states, but they were eventually absorbed into UsefulNotes/{{Syria}}, while Lebanon stayed independent.\\\

Despite lasting only 23 years, the French colonial rule left
a deep impression in the country's language and culture - for the Lebanese mostly, but also for the French. If you ever see French people greet each other with kisses on the cheeks, that's a Lebanese tradition. On the other hand, even today, Lebanese dialects of Arabic contain contains strong traces of French, and French is officially a national language. Lebanese cooking is famous throughout the Middle East and beyond: hummus, falafel, tabbouleh, and pastries unrivaled in taste (although an Egyptian would dispute that for the falafel and some of the pastries and Greeks would make a similar point about the baklava; Food is SeriousBusiness). An Egyptian restaurant opening abroad might call itself 'Lebanese' to get more customers.

customers.\\\

Lebanon's history since independence in TheForties has been checkered at best. A major reason for this is that its independence is was not really accepted by Damascus, Syria, who holds held that Lebanon is was more or less a(n autonomous at best) part of Syria proper. This even goes went as far as to show in the maps produced, showing the border between the two countries as being internal, like you would get between American states. Being a fairly small and weak country that had sizable ties with Israel and the West, it didn't contribute very much to the UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict, even in the initial invasion of Israel in 1948. However, lots of Palestinians fled to Lebanon, whose government refused to allow the Palestinians to integrate. They've been living in festering camps in the countryside ever since (albeit "camps" with a whole lot of pretty permanent-looking structures), a major problem that would come back to haunt the country in its times of trouble. Particularly since the camps soon became instruments of PLO power, the Palestine Liberation Organization, serving and political *and military* and military strongholds that they would later use to pressure and eventually intervene in Internal internal Lebanese politics.

politics.\\\

Outside the camps, however, things seemed to run smoothly. A political crisis in 1958 (pitting mostly Christian pro-Westerners against mostly-Muslim pro-Syrians for reasons related to [[UsefulNotes/ArabIsraeliConflict the Suez War]] War two years earlier) that threatened to turn into a civil war was defused when UsefulNotes/DwightEisenhower, on the request of the Lebanese president, President Camille Chamoun, sent the U.S. [[UsefulNotes/YanksWithTanks Army]] and [[SemperFi Marines]] to keep anything from happening. For a time, Lebanon was reasonably stable and prosperous; UsefulNotes/{{Beirut}} continued to live up to its reputation as the "Paris of the Middle East."

"\\\

However, by 1975, the Palestinians had organized themselves into the Palestine Liberation Organization (PLO), PLO, which more or less became a "state within a state" in Lebanon. The Palestinians used southern Lebanon as a base for attacks on Israel, which screwed up everything most massively. Various groups within Lebanon took different positions on the issue (Christians generally frowning on it, Sunnis and Druze generally supportive, Shias generally too poor to be noticed). In retaliation for the PLO bombing the crap out of them from Lebanon, Israel started bombing the crap out of the Palestinians on Lebanese soil, driving the subject much closer to home and pushing things to get much nastier. By April of 1975, it had turned into an all-out civil war. Pro-PLO militias controlled the south of the country; Anti-PLO anti-PLO controlled the center and west; and to top it off, the north and east were invaded by UsefulNotes/{{Syria}}.Syria. Beirut itself was divided in two: the PLO and its allied militias controlled West Beirut, their enemies controlled East Beirut, and various people whose religious background did not match the militias' generally fled to the other side before they were shot. Oh, and did we mention that Syria and Israel decided to invade?\n\n\\\

A force of American, British, French, and Italian peacekeepers were deployed to the country in the early 1980s to try and bring a stop to the civil war or at least to restrain the warring sides. However, they soon got sucked into the frenzied fighting and soon became a target of Syrian and Iranian [[UsefulNotes/{{Iran}} Iranian]] intelligence, as well as their Islamist Shia Muslim paramilitary proxies. As a result, one enterprising group picked two volunteers with the know how to drive, loaded trucks up with high explosives, and on October 23rd of 1983 [[SuicideAttack sent it careening into the Peacekeeping compounds.]] By far the more infamous and deadly attack was that on the USMC barracks, which killed 241 American servicemen and a Lebanese civilian and was basically the TropeCodifier for modern suicide bombing; less well known is that there was another attack on the French Para barracks not far, which killed an additional 58 Frenchmen and a Lebanese janitor's wife and four children. All in all, the death total wracked up to 299 peacekeepers, 305 total including civilians, and the two perpetrators. The event was one of the most devastating attacks any of the countries had suffered, and led to the decision to remove the Peacekeepers and leave Lebanon to the paramilitaries.

paramilitaries.\\\

The war continued until 1990, when an uneasy peace deal was reached in The Nineties TheNineties that ended the civil war. The early 2000s saw Israel leaving the southern part of the country without any conditions. During these years, much of the country was rebuilt (although bullet holes remained an expected part of any building). However, the Syrian elephant in the room stayed on for years in an effort to thoroughly subordinate Lebanon to its control, though generally preferring to act through [[TheQuisling quislings]], [[LesCollaborateurs sympathetic locals]], and [[TheCoronerDothProtestTooMuch well-timed and deniable "accidents"]] than directly. One of these was the assassination of the former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri, which turned out to be a massive miscalculation as it spurred major protests that forced Syria to withdrawal.

withdrawal.\\\

You think it's over yet? Nope. While Syria moved back to the other side of the border, it was determined to keep its influence in-country. It had backed the Shia militia/political party Hezbollah in the 1980s, and continued to do so after the civil war was over. Hezbollah decided that now that its Syrian protectors were gone, it would focus its attention on making Israel miserable (ItMakesSenseInContext, which I haven't the time to give you).miserable. As a result, in July-August 2006 after Hezbollah kidnapped 2 Israeli soldiers and returned to rocketing Israel from Lebanon. In turn, Israel returned bombing the crap out of Lebanon in an attempt to destroy Hezbollah, but did not go beyond that because of internal politics and the hope that it would work enough. All of this contributed to Beirut getting torn up *again* ''again'' just after the Lebanese had finished rebuilding it. It was never quite as intense as the civil war (a veritable bloodbath), but it was enough to give people nightmares until it more or less died down in 2009, though the country still remained divided. Hezbollah remains largely dominant in the country to the point where it threatens the independent Lebanese government, with supporting country's politics have mostly boiled down to pro- and opposing militias anti-Hezbollah factions, irrespective of religion (Hezbollah have just as many Christian, Druze, and paramilitaries all taking chunks of the country and threatening balkanization.

Sunni allies as they have opponents).\\\

UsefulNotes/TheArabSpring sucked Lebanon into its vortex just a few years later; as you might expect for a country that has faced considerable occupation from a larger, authoritarian neighbor.in 2012. Like before, Lebanon would again face major shock waves because of events and decisions in Syria. This time, however, the event in question was not the expansion of Syrian power but the explosion of the Syrian Civil War against the Assad government. As a result, both Pro and Anti Syrian/Baathist/Assad factions Hundreds of thousands of Syrians entered Lebanon as refugees, sparking protests from Hezbollah. Meanwhile, the Hezbollah have gone across been a consistent supporter of the border in large numbers UsefulNotes/BasharAlAssad regime and have been sending up regimes after regimes to fight in what is almost a larger proxy war, even as internally help him win back his ailing country from the Sunni rebels. Nevertheless, the country suffers from a sort never really succumbed to chaos of smaller "proxy cold war", with both sides maneuvering for advantage.

The beautiful cedar tree
the Arab Spring politically.\\\

''Economically'',
on the flag was adopted as both other hand, Lebanon has been suffering big time. Since TheNewTens the symbol country has been suffering from another kind of war: a financial crisis. There are many factors to this, the biggest being decades of state corruption and waste but also the impact of the government and Syrian Civil War. Syria is among Lebanon's important trade partners, so for a long time trade with Syria was off-limits as Syria was blockaded for most of the anti-Syrian factions, and it looks like civil war (it's only until 2018 that conflict UsefulNotes/{{Jordan}} finally reopened its borders, followed by Iraq in 2019. UsefulNotes/{{Turkey}}, meanwhile, remains Assad's archenemy), while Lebanon has no diplomatic or economic relations with Israel since the end of the Lebanese Civil War. The increasing influence of the Iran-allied Hezbollah also made the Gulf Arab nations, long an aid donor for Lebanon, largely stay away, as do the West (albeit to a much lesser extent). Foreign reserves and donor money rapidly dried up, causing currency crisis that saw the Lebanese pound being depreciated as much as ''[[RidiculousExchangeRates 3 times]]'' to the dollar in the black market. This eventually triggered a protest movement in the late 2019 that continues to this day. However, the protests have yet to see tangible results (Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri decided to step down, but only because he is resolved a critic of Hezbollah) and in fact seem to [[FromBadToWorse grow worse every day]]; Lebanon declared a debt default in March 2020, when it will remain tormented.
announced that it could not meet payments to foreign bondholders.




* ''Literature/TheEpicOfGilgamesh'': Gilgamesh went to the cedar forests of Lebanon to get to...[[ArtisticLicenseGeography the Persian Gulf]]. Though do take note that the tale is mostly exploits of fun and glory; it's not like UsefulNotes/{{Homer}} or UsefulNotes/{{Virgil}} got perfectly correct with their writings anyway.
* Features quite a bit in Myth/ClassicalMythology, courtesy of the Phoenicians. Europa, who inspired the name for the continent of Europe, was a Phoenician princess who [[ImmortalityImmorality got abducted by Zeus in bull form]]. One of the Twelve Olympians, Dionysus, also had a (mortal) Phoenician grandfather.
* Mentioned a ''lot'' in ''Literature/TheBible'', because of the aforementioned cedar trees and a certain reason *cough* CreatorProvincialism *cough* in part of the Bible writers, who mostly came from Israel/Palestine, although much of the region is mentioned. According to [[https://www.openbible.info/topics/lebanon this website]], it's mentioned 73 times, and that's not including the indirect references.
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One of the few nations (the [[UsefulNotes/TheIrishDiaspora other famous example]] being UsefulNotes/{{Ireland}}) in which the people who live outside the country far outnumber those who live inside it. Not counting residents, refugees, and the like, the total population of Lebanon is (as of 2018) slightly more than 4 million. The diaspora? ''[[HolyShitQuotient 14 million]]''. And this is all made very, very, recently, so you can bet that the country's population would be much higher if there were no wars.

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One of the few nations (the [[UsefulNotes/TheIrishDiaspora other famous example]] being UsefulNotes/{{Ireland}}) in which the people who live outside the country far outnumber those who live inside it. Not counting residents, refugees, and the like, the total population of Lebanon is (as of 2018) slightly more than 4 million. The diaspora? ''[[HolyShitQuotient 14 million]]''.''14 million''. And this is all made very, very, recently, so you can bet that the country's population would be much higher if there were no wars.
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Lebanon is where ancient Phoenicia, Canaan, and other ancient civilizations were based. Assyrians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabians, Ottomans, French, and others have ruled and made their mark over present-day Lebanon. The city of Tyre, among other cities, was very prominent in the ancient World. The city of Baalbek has a Roman-era temple. Lebanon was a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, the United States, Australia (where they are [[FantasticRacism stereotypically hated]]) and other countries, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.

to:

Lebanon is where ancient Phoenicia, Canaan, and other ancient civilizations were based. Assyrians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabians, Ottomans, French, and others have ruled and made their mark over present-day Lebanon. The city of Tyre, among other cities, was very prominent in the ancient World. The city of Baalbek has a Roman-era temple. Lebanon was a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, the United States, Australia (where they are [[FantasticRacism stereotypically hated]]) and other countries, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent).descent; we would also be remiss in not mentioning Music/{{Shakira}}, whose paternal grandparents emigrated from Lebanon to Colombia via New York). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.
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Despite all this division, there are a few things that most Lebanese will agree unite them. As so often happens, the diversity that creates tension also feeds a rich culture. Lebanon is disproportionately prominent in Arab culture, and Beirut is a much larger center of Arab music, mass media, literature, and especially cuisine than its size would suggest. Lebanese of all sects have a reputation in the Arab world for business savvy, mostly because of the diaspora (which had to be entrepreneurial to survive), but Lebanese are rightly proud of their country's role as a commercial crossroads. The Lebanese also have a deserved reputation for enthusiastic celebration and living life to the fullest in the face of adversity; they say that Beirutis party hardest [[ScrewTheWarWerePartying when the bombs are falling]].

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Despite all this division, there are a few things that most Lebanese will agree unite them. As so often happens, the diversity that creates tension also feeds a rich culture. Lebanon is disproportionately prominent in Arab culture, and Beirut is a much larger center of Arab music, mass media, literature, music, and especially cuisine literature (particularly publishing--the old joke among Arab literati is that Egypt writes, Lebanon publishes, and Iraq reads) than its size would suggest.suggest. Lebanon is also a contender (with Yemen and Morocco) for best country for cuisine in the Arab world, and their common kitchen is one of the strongest day-to-day commonalities for Lebanese of all faiths. Lebanese of all sects have a reputation in the Arab world for business savvy, mostly because of the diaspora (which had to be entrepreneurial to survive), but Lebanese are rightly proud of their country's role as a commercial crossroads. The Lebanese also have a deserved reputation for enthusiastic celebration and living life to the fullest in the face of adversity; they say that Beirutis party hardest [[ScrewTheWarWerePartying when the bombs are falling]].
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Added DiffLines:

Despite all this division, there are a few things that most Lebanese will agree unite them. As so often happens, the diversity that creates tension also feeds a rich culture. Lebanon is disproportionately prominent in Arab culture, and Beirut is a much larger center of Arab music, mass media, literature, and especially cuisine than its size would suggest. Lebanese of all sects have a reputation in the Arab world for business savvy, mostly because of the diaspora (which had to be entrepreneurial to survive), but Lebanese are rightly proud of their country's role as a commercial crossroads. The Lebanese also have a deserved reputation for enthusiastic celebration and living life to the fullest in the face of adversity; they say that Beirutis party hardest [[ScrewTheWarWerePartying when the bombs are falling]].
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* ''Animation/{{Waves 98}}'' is an animated short film in which a young student in Beirut gets aboard a gigantic golden elephant (really!) and takes a strange and mystical journey.
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* Mentioned a ''lot'' in ''Literature/TheBible'', because of the aforementioned cedar trees and a certain reason *cough* CreatorProvincialism *cough* in part of the Bible writers, who mostly came from Israel. According to [[https://www.openbible.info/topics/lebanon this website]], it's mentioned 73 times, and that's not including the indirect references.

to:

* Mentioned a ''lot'' in ''Literature/TheBible'', because of the aforementioned cedar trees and a certain reason *cough* CreatorProvincialism *cough* in part of the Bible writers, who mostly came from Israel.Israel/Palestine, although much of the region is mentioned. According to [[https://www.openbible.info/topics/lebanon this website]], it's mentioned 73 times, and that's not including the indirect references.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Lebanon is where ancient Phoenicia, Canaan, and other ancient civilizations were based. Assyrians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabians, French, and others ruled over present-day Lebanon. The city of Tyre, among other cities, was very prominent in the ancient World. The city of Baalbek has a Roman-era temple. Lebanon was a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, the United States, Australia (where they are [[FantasticRacism stereotypically hated]]) and other countries, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.

to:

Lebanon is where ancient Phoenicia, Canaan, and other ancient civilizations were based. Assyrians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabians, Ottomans, French, and others have ruled and made their mark over present-day Lebanon. The city of Tyre, among other cities, was very prominent in the ancient World. The city of Baalbek has a Roman-era temple. Lebanon was a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, the United States, Australia (where they are [[FantasticRacism stereotypically hated]]) and other countries, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
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Lebanon is where ancient Phoenicia, Canaan, and other ancient civilizations were based. Assyrians, Greeks, Romans, Arabians, French, and others ruled over present-day Lebanon. The city of Tyre, among other cities, was very prominent in the ancient World. The city of Baalbek has a Roman-era temple. Lebanon was a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, the United States, Australia (where they are [[FantasticRacism stereotypically hated]]) and other countries, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.

to:

Lebanon is where ancient Phoenicia, Canaan, and other ancient civilizations were based. Assyrians, Persians, Greeks, Romans, Arabians, French, and others ruled over present-day Lebanon. The city of Tyre, among other cities, was very prominent in the ancient World. The city of Baalbek has a Roman-era temple. Lebanon was a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, the United States, Australia (where they are [[FantasticRacism stereotypically hated]]) and other countries, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Lebanon is where ancient Phoenicia, Canaan, and other ancient civilizations were based. Assyrians, Greeks, Romans, Arabians, French, and others ruled over present-day Lebanon. The city of Tyre, among other cities, was very prominent in the ancient World. The city of Baalbek has a Roman-era temple. Lebanon was a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, the United States, and other countries, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.

to:

Lebanon is where ancient Phoenicia, Canaan, and other ancient civilizations were based. Assyrians, Greeks, Romans, Arabians, French, and others ruled over present-day Lebanon. The city of Tyre, among other cities, was very prominent in the ancient World. The city of Baalbek has a Roman-era temple. Lebanon was a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, the United States, Australia (where they are [[FantasticRacism stereotypically hated]]) and other countries, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Lebanon is where ancient Phoenicia, Canaan, and other ancient civilizations were based. Assyrians, Greeks, Romans, Arabians, French, and others ruled over present-day Lebanon. The city of Tyre, among other cities, was very prominent in the ancient World. Was originally a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, the United States, and other countries, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.

to:

Lebanon is where ancient Phoenicia, Canaan, and other ancient civilizations were based. Assyrians, Greeks, Romans, Arabians, French, and others ruled over present-day Lebanon. The city of Tyre, among other cities, was very prominent in the ancient World. Was originally The city of Baalbek has a Roman-era temple. Lebanon was a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, the United States, and other countries, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
None


Lebanon is where ancient Phoenicia, Canaan, and other ancient civilizations were based. Assyrians, Greeks, Romans, and French ruled over present-day Lebanon. The city of Tyre, among other cities, was very prominent in the ancient World. Was originally a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, the United States, and other countries, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.

to:

Lebanon is where ancient Phoenicia, Canaan, and other ancient civilizations were based. Assyrians, Greeks, Romans, Arabians, French, and French others ruled over present-day Lebanon. The city of Tyre, among other cities, was very prominent in the ancient World. Was originally a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, the United States, and other countries, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.
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!!Lebanon in fiction

UsefulNotes/{{Beirut}} used to be known as the Paris of the Middle East, until the Civil War. If it's set in pre-war Lebanon, expect a BellyDancer to shimmy her way into the plot somehow.

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!!Lebanon in fiction

fiction/literature

UsefulNotes/{{Beirut}} used to be known as the Paris of the Middle East, until the Civil War. If it's set in pre-war Lebanon, expect a BellyDancer to shimmy her way into the plot somehow.
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Lebanon was under a French Mandate from the end of UsefulNotes/WorldWarI until 1943, leaving a deep impression in language and culture - for the Lebanese mostly, but also for the French. If you ever see French people greet each other with kisses on the cheeks, that's a Lebanese tradition. On the other hand, even today, Lebanese dialects of Arabic contain strong traces of French, and French is officially a national language. Lebanese cooking is famous throughout the Middle East and beyond: hummus, falafel, tabbouleh, and pastries unrivaled in taste (although an Egyptian would dispute that for the falafel and some of the pastries and Greeks would make a similar point about the baklava; Food is SeriousBusiness). An Egyptian restaurant opening abroad might call itself 'Lebanese' to get more customers.

to:

What is now Lebanon was under a French Mandate from the end of UsefulNotes/WorldWarI until 1943, leaving a deep impression in language and culture - for the Lebanese mostly, but also for the French. If you ever see French people greet each other with kisses on the cheeks, that's a Lebanese tradition. On the other hand, even today, Lebanese dialects of Arabic contain strong traces of French, and French is officially a national language. Lebanese cooking is famous throughout the Middle East and beyond: hummus, falafel, tabbouleh, and pastries unrivaled in taste (although an Egyptian would dispute that for the falafel and some of the pastries and Greeks would make a similar point about the baklava; Food is SeriousBusiness). An Egyptian restaurant opening abroad might call itself 'Lebanese' to get more customers.
Is there an issue? Send a MessageReason:
Please put more ancient history here.


Was originally a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.

to:

Lebanon is where ancient Phoenicia, Canaan, and other ancient civilizations were based. Assyrians, Greeks, Romans, and French ruled over present-day Lebanon. The city of Tyre, among other cities, was very prominent in the ancient World. Was originally a Christian country, and the only one in the Arab world. Because of all the commotion in the late 20th century, a great deal of the Christians, who are historically wealthier than their Muslim neighbors, emigrated and settled in various countries, particularly Brazil, the United States, and other countries, creating the aforementioned humongous diaspora. Many have done very ''well'' for themselves indeed (for instance, Carlos Slim, a Mexican telecom magnate who trades places with Bill Gates for the title "richest man in the world", is of Lebanese descent). This has some benefits--whenever bad things go on in Lebanon, the diaspora sends back aid and often invests in rebuilding schemes[[note]]Though if the violence hasn't died down yet, nobody bothers patching things up, so wait for a few years after each one apparently ends...[[/note]]. That's not to say that the Christians disappear altogether, though; estimates count that 40% of the population still identify as Christians.
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One of the few nations in which the people who live outside the country far outnumber those who live inside it. Not counting residents, refugees, and the like, the total population of Lebanon is (as of 2018) slightly more than 4 million. The diaspora? ''[[HolyShitQuotient 14 million]]''. And this is all made very, very, recently, so you can bet that the country's population would be much higher if there were no wars.

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One of the few nations (the [[UsefulNotes/TheIrishDiaspora other famous example]] being UsefulNotes/{{Ireland}}) in which the people who live outside the country far outnumber those who live inside it. Not counting residents, refugees, and the like, the total population of Lebanon is (as of 2018) slightly more than 4 million. The diaspora? ''[[HolyShitQuotient 14 million]]''. And this is all made very, very, recently, so you can bet that the country's population would be much higher if there were no wars.

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Changed: 80

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* ''Film/TheInsult'', a 2017 film in which a minor confrontation between a Christian car mechanic and a Palestinian construction worker in Lebanon blows up into a major incident and a trial.

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* ''Film/TheInsult'', a 2017 film in which a minor confrontation between a Christian car mechanic and a Palestinian construction worker in Lebanon blows up into a major incident and a trial.
trial. First Lebanese film to get an Oscar nomination for Best Foreign Language Film.

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