Al-Baggara

Al-Baggara Tribe
Regions with significant populations
Syria1,000,000
JordanUnknown
LebanonUnknown
Languages
Arabic
Religion
Islam

Al-Baggara or Bakara (Arabic: البقّارة (البكّارة), al-Baqqārah or al-Bakkārah) is an Arab tribe of the Euphrates tribes spread widely between Syria, Jordan, Iraq and Lebanon. The tribe was named by the name of their grandfather, Imam Muhammad al-Baqir, one of the grandsons of Ali ibn Abi Talib.[1]

Baggara tribespeople In Syria mainly live west of Deir al-Zour city, ranging from the northern banks of the Euphrates to the Raqqa provincial border, in villages from Al-Husseiniyah to Mahamidah, where the Baggara's chiefdom family lives, to al-Kasrat, al-Kubar/Jazrat al-Boshams, and Jazra Al-Milaj, spanning a distance of some 80 km.

East of Deir al-Zour, the Baggara live in smaller numbers in the villages of Meratt, Khusham, and Jadid Baggara; sources suggest a total of approximately 100,000 Baggara live in these areas east and west of the city. Although accurate figures are not available, a large number of people of Baggara lineage have integrated into Deir al-Zour city, some say a full one-third of the city's residents have roots in the tribe, Prominent Baggara families there are Fadel Al-Aboud, Al-Ayesh, Al-Ayyash, where they had a major role in the political leadership of the city of Deir al-Zour.[2][3]

Other regions where the Baggara lives include Hasaka province, in an area known as Baggara Al-Jabal (Baggara Mountain), Raqqa the city of Aleppo and other northern towns, and Idlib. Some reports indicate that their number in Syria is around 1.2 million.[4]

  1. ^ "محمد العايش 1880 -1968". 7 October 2012. Retrieved 5 August 2020 – via Internet Archive.
  2. ^ Al-Baggara، Wikipedia.
  3. ^ "A Tale of Six Tribes: Securing the Middle Euphrates River Valley". www.washingtoninstitute.org. Retrieved 5 August 2020.
  4. ^ "Ayed, Adel, Who is the Bakara tribe in Syria?, Aletihad Press, 3/01/2017". Retrieved 5 August 2020.

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