Aleppo Railway Station

Aleppo Railway Station
محطة قطار حلب
Location Gare de Baghdad district, Aleppo
Syria
Coordinates 36°12′50″N 37°8′52″E / 36.21389°N 37.14778°E / 36.21389; 37.14778Coordinates: 36°12′50″N 37°8′52″E / 36.21389°N 37.14778°E / 36.21389; 37.14778
Line(s) Baghdad Railway
History
Opened 1912

Aleppo Railway Station (Arabic: محطة قطار حلب) more commonly Gare de Baghdad (Arabic: محطة بغداد) is the 2nd oldest railway station in Syria and the main station of the city of Aleppo. It was opened in 1912 as part of the Berlin-Baghdad Railway. The first ever trip from the station was towards the town of Jarabulus.

History

The Baghdad Railway had reached Aleppo by 1912, with the branch to Tripoli complete, by the start of World War I; and onwards to Nusaybin by October 1918. The Turks, who sided with Germany and the Central Powers, decided to recover the infrastructure south of Aleppo to Lebanon in 1917. The Baghdad Railway created opportunity and problems for both sides, being unfinished but running just south of the then defined Syrian/Turkish border.[1] Post war, the border was redrawn, and the railway was now north of the border. From 1922 the Baghdad Railway was worked in succession by two French companies, who were liquidated in 1933 when the border was again redrawn, placing the Baghdad Railway section again in Syrian control. As a result, a new agreement was achieved between the French controlled Syria and the Ottoman Sham-Hama Railway Company (the operator of Damascus Railway) to put the Aleppo Railway under the management of the company for 15 years. As a result, the Aleppo railway line was connected with Damascus. During the 1940s, after the independence of Syria from the French mandate, the management agreement was expired and the Syrian government itself took over the administration of the Aleppo Railway with the establishment of the new Syrian Railway Company at the end of the 1940s.[2]

In 1956, the Syrian government decided to purchase the shares of the Sham-Hama Railway Company in Syria. As a result, all railways in Syria were nationalised and operated under one administration. Later, starting from 1 January 1965, the Syrian Railway was reorganised as Chemins de Fer Syriens (CFS), headquartered in Aleppo.

Until 2011, the Aleppo Railway Station was connected with Damascus, Latakia, Hama, Homs, Qamishly and Deir ez-Zor with daily trips.

References

  1. Hugh Hughes. "Middle East Railways". almashriq.hiof.no. Retrieved 2009-05-05.
  2. Baghdad Station of Aleppo
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