Talk:Sidon
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Spelling
Looks like the Phoenician name is spelt wrong, as it is going left-to-right.120.147.72.251 (talk) 14:44, 13 October 2016 (UTC)
This is just an alternative spelling for Sidon. Why not connect the two articles? There is plenty to say about modern Sidon in Lebanon Danny
Now we have two almost identical articles for the same thing with different spellings. BTW, Sidon is an important Christian town in Lebanon today, home of the Phalangist Party. It was very involved in the civil war and was a major arena for fighting during the Israeli invasion. Danny
That is not correct Danny, Sidon is not a christian city today. The majority are muslims now. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 80.81.159.11 (talk) 06:59, 2007 August 17 (UTC)
Incorrect statements
Sidon a Christian town? Where do you get your information? Sidon is NOT a Christian town. I am from a Christian village on the outskirts of Sidon. There are several such villages surrounding the city. Sidon is NOT a center for the Phalangist party. You are confusing it with some other place. Sidon is largely Muslim, with a slight majority of Sunnis although there is a substantial Shi'a population. THere are radical Islamist parties in Sidon, as well as a popular Sunni movement that is Communist, centered around a charismatic leader (I'll have to get the name later).
Up until the 1970s there were still Jews living in Sidon: my cousins and uncles had Jewish friends and classmates. According to my father, Jews began leaving the Sidon area as early as the 1950s, going to Beirut or emigrating, due to the political pressures after the foundation of Israel. THere had been a substantial Jewish minority in Sidon up until the mid-20th century. Edmond Safra of Bank Safra was a Sidonian.
Zidon and Tzidon are completely new spellings to me - I have been reading about SIdon in English for 35 years and never have I seen this spelling. It has no relationship to how the local people pronounce it, nor to any English variation I've ever seen. I guess this is a Hebrew variant? Has no meaning in English, and I fail to see its usefulness in an English language encyclopedia.
Why does this history entry start with the Crusades? Sidon is one of the most ancient cities in the world. Here's text from http://almashriq.hiof.no/lebanon/900/910/919/saida1/history.html "There is evidence that Sidon was inhabited as long ago as 4000 B.C., and perhaps even earlier, in Neolithic times." — Preceding unsigned comment added by 68.122.35.170 (talk) 14:50, November 20, 2004 (UTC)
- I agree with the comment that immediately precedes this one. My folks are from Sidon, and to call it a Christian town is like calling, I don't know, New York a Mexican town or England an Indian country or something. Aside from that, don't you think there's an unsuitably Biblical slant to this entry? (1) The possession of the town ends with what happened around the time of Jesus; (2) half of the first two lines is in Hebrew, and (3) a quarter of the entry is about where Sidon showed up in the Bible.
- Regarding (1), it's probably important to mention the town being conquered by the Arabs during the Muslim expansion, since that's been the event that's given the town its predominant language, ethnicity, and religion and its political, economic, and social identity for the past fourteen centuries.
- Re: (2), I agree with the previous commentator that if this is going to be an English language entry, the only two parentheticals about the name, other than etymology, are what we call it in English---Sidon---and what the natives call it in their native language---Saida (or Sayda; possibly with the transliteration). I mean I'm sure it's got a name in Chinese or Lao or something but we can't be in the business of listing all that. That's why there are other-language Wikipediae. That said, I can imagine Biblical scholars might find it interesting to see how the name is written in some Biblical languages, but certainly that's not the front-and-center, inverted-pyramid, most important thing to say about it. I mean, cedars are important in the Bible, too, but see what you find if you look up cedar.
- And re: (3), this is interesting stuff, although not anything you can't get from going to one of the umpteen Bible sites and searching for Sidon, but perhaps it belongs in a separate entry on "Biblical Sidon." We don't want to confuse historical Sidon and especially the past two thousand years of Sidon with speculation---at least not in a main entry. This is not Wikibiblepedia.
- The point is, Sidon is an actual place, with an archeologically and otherwise documented past, two thousand years of history since the Bible, and a current population. It would be a misleading disservice to turn it into a flash-card from Bible study. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 209.6.170.62 (talk) 20:18, August 13, 2005 (UTC)