Jindires


Jindires is a town in northern Syria in the Afrin District of the Aleppo Governorate. It is located on the Afrin River, northwest by road from Aleppo and southwest of Afrin. Nearby localities include Deir Ballut and Bayadah to the southwest, Zahra to the northwest, Kafr Safra to the north, Afrin to the northeast and Burj Abdullah to the east. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics, Jindires had a population of 13,661 in the 2004 census. As a preliminary result of the ongoing Syrian Civil War, Jindires was part of the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria from 2012 until it was captured by the Syrian National Army in March 2018, bringing it under the Turkish occupation of northern Syria.
of the Afrin District.

Name

Jindiris is the site of the ancient town of Gindarus or Gindaros also called Gindara. The Middle Persian and Parthian transliterations, attested in Shapur I's inscription at the Ka'ba-ye Zartosht, are Gndlswy and Gndrws respectively.

History

The ancient town was originally an acropolis of Cyrrhestica during the Hellenistic period. The Battle of Mount Gindarus took place near the town in 38 BC. The Parthians under Pacorus I suffered a massive defeat to the Roman armies of Ventidius and Pacorus himself was killed in battle. Under the Romans the city belonged to Antioch. In 252/3, during the second Roman campaign of Sasanian King Shapur I, the city was captured by the Persians. Emperor Theodosius I, fortified the city during his reign. Traces of the fortified wall still remain on the south and west side of the tell, while the modern village is located at the base.
In the 14th-century, during Mamluk rule, Jindires was visited by Syrian geographer al-Dimashqi who described it as "a town near Tizin, and in the territory of Jumah. It is a place full of habitations. There are thermal springs here, but it is unknown where the waters rise, or whither they flow."
The 19th-century British writer, William Harrison Ainsworth, visited the village and described it in his magazine as "containing about fifty cottages, and characterized by its artificial mound, or tel, upon which but few traces are now to be met of the castle or citadel of Cyrrhestica, and described by Strabo as 'a fit receptacle for thieves.'"

Ecclesiastical history

The first and only known bishop of Gindarus was Peter, who attended the Council of Nicaea in 325 and that of Antioch in 341. At the time of Justinian, Gindarus had only a periodeutes and not a bishop. The relics of St. Marinus were kept here but were later transferred to Antioch. The bishopric is included in the Catholic Church's list of titular sees.

Modern era

By the summer of 2012, during the Syrian uprising, Jindires was captured by the Democratic Union Party and its armed wing the People's Protection Units.
On 8 March 2018, Jindires was captured by the Syrian National Army from the YPG, during Operation Olive Branch.