This is the second  capital of Syria (350 km  north of Damascus),  and one of the oldest continuously inhabited cities in history. Abraham is said  to have camped on the acropolis which, long before his time, served as the  foundation of a fortress (where the Aleppo  citadel is standing now). He milked his grey cow there, hence Aleppo's name: "Halab al-Shahba". 
 
 Ever since the 3rd millennium B.C., Aleppo  has been a flourishing city, with a unique strategic position. This position  gave the city a distinctive role from the days of the Akhadian and Amorite  kingdoms until modern times. It was the meeting-point of several important  commercial roads in the north. This enabled Aleppo  to be the link in trade between Mesopotamia, the Fertile Crescent and Egypt. The  Amorites made it their capital in the 18th century B.C. 
 
 This position made it subject to invasions from various races; from Hittites,  Egyptians, Assyrians, Persians, Greeks and Romans. Aleppo was prominent in the Christian era; it  became a Bishopric and a huge cathedral was built in it, which is still  standing. ![]()
 
 The conflict between Byzantium and Persia, however, resulted in the latter's  occupation of Aleppo  in 440. The Persians robbed the city, burned considerable parts of it and  damaged many of its features. Though expelled by Justinian, the Persians still  threatened Aleppo  and frightened its inhabitants until the Arab Islamic conquest came in 636. The  city then regained its status, both cultural and commercial. Apart from the  Omayyad and Abbassid periods in which Aleppo  flourished the Hamadani state established by Sayf al-Dawla in 944 made Aleppo the northern capital of Syria. Sayf al-Dawla built Aleppo's famous citadel,  and in his days the city enjoyed great prosperity and fame in science,  literature and medicine, despite this leader's military ambitions. Mention  should be made of the two most prominent poets, al-Mutanabbi and Abu al-Firas;  of the philosopher and scientist, al-Farabi; and of the linguist, Ibn Khalaweh,  all of whom lived in Sayf al-Dawla's court and were renowned for great  knowledge and scholarship. 
 
 
Aleppo was  famous for its architecture; for its attractive churches, mosques, schools,  tombs and baths. As an important center of trade between the eastern  Mediterranean kingdoms and the merchants of Venice,  Aleppo became  prosperous and famous in the centuries preceding the Ottoman era. Many of its  "khans" (caravanserai) are still in use even today; one of them is  called "Banadiqa Khan", "Banadiqa" in Arabic being the term  for "inhabitants of Venice". 
 
 In the Ottoman age, Aleppo remained an important  center of trade with turkey, France,  England and Holland. This caused various types of  European architecture to be adopted in Aleppo  which can be seen in many buildings today