Basufan

{{Infobox settlement

|official_name = Basufan

|native_name = باصوفان

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|pushpin_map =Syria

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|subdivision_type = Country

|subdivision_name = {{flagicon image|Flag of the Syrian revolution.svg}} Syria

|subdivision_type1 = Governorate

|subdivision_name1 = Aleppo Governorate

|subdivision_type2 = District

|subdivision_name2 = Afrin District

|subdivision_type3 = Nahiyah

|subdivision_name3 = Afrin Subdistrict

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|settlement_type = Village

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|population_total = 901

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Basufan ({{langx|ar|باصوفان}}; {{Langx|ku|Basûfan}}){{Cite book |last=علي |first=د. محمد عبدو |title=جبال الكرد: دراسة جغرافية شاملة |edition=1 |location=Afrin |pages=171 |language=ar}} (sometimes spelled Bassoûfâne, Bassoufane, Bosoufane, Bāşūfān) is an ancient village located in northwestern Syria. The village is populated by Yezidi Kurds and had a population of 901 in the 2004 census according to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS),[https://archive.today/20120730224244/http://www.cbssyr.org/new%20web%20site/General_census/census_2004/NH/TAB02-15-2004.htm General Census of Population and Housing 2004]. Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS). Aleppo Governorate. {{in lang|ar}} and had a population of 2059 according to the civil registry records at the end of 2005.

The village is notable for being the site of a former fifth-century church dedicated to Saint Phocas.

Location

The village of Basufan is located in Aleppo Governorate, about 30 kilometers northwest of the city of Aleppo. It is built at an altitude of 632 meters,[http://www.fallingrain.com/world/SY/09/Basufan.html Basufan, Syria Page. Fallingrain.com] and is located to the east of Mount Simeon.

Description

The village hosts several vestiges of the Byzantine-era settlement which are dated between the fifth and the seventh centuries. Howard Crosby Butler, in 1905, at the head of an archaeological expedition from the American University of Princeton, mentioned a large Islamic cemetery located around the ancient church. He also mentioned having found the remains of another church, older and completely destroyed.Howard Crosby Butler: Syria. Publications of the Princeton University Archaeological Expeditions to Syria in 1904–5 and 1909. Division I: Geography and Itinerary. E. J. Brill, Leiden 1930, {{p.|73}}, [https://archive.org/details/publicationsdivi01prinuoft En ligne sur Archive.org] The church dedicated to Saint Phocas was probably part of a monastic complex. The same year, Gertrude Bell crossed Basufan and found the village mainly inhabited by Kurds, who rented their houses during the hot summer months to Christians and Jews of Aleppo who had come on vacation.Gertrude Bell, Am Ende des Lavastromes. Durch die Wüsten und Kulturstätten Syriens. Gabriele Habinger (Hrsg.), Promedia, Wien 1991, {{p.|254}}. Édition originale : The Desert and the Sown, 1908

Church of St. Phocas

File:Church of Saint Phocas, Basufan (باصوفان), Syria - South façade, southeast corner - PHBZ024 2016 6046 - Dumbarton Oaks.jpg

St. Phocas Church, now in ruins, was a basilica with three naves separated by columns. According to an inscription on the south wall, the building was dedicated to Saint Phocas and erected in 491-492.

The nave was 24 meters long and 15.4 wide. The arches of the nave rested on columns, while the outer walls were reinforced by pilasters. To the east, the chevet was composed of two rectangular apses framing a semicircular central apse. The two rectangular apses connected to the lateral aisles, and the south room was also open to the central apse, serving as a martyrium. The building bore a resemblance to the church of Qal'at Sem'anJean-Pierre Sodini, Jean-Luc Biscop, Qal'at Sem'an et les chevets à colonnes de Syrie du Nord, Syria, 1984, Volume 61, pp. 267-330, p.282, [https://www.jstor.org/stable/4198432 JSTOR] which could result from an imitation of the architecture of the latter.Michel Kaplan, Le sacré et son inscription dans l'espace à Byzance et en Occident, Publications de la Sorbonne, 2001 - 318 pages, p.251 [https://books.google.com/books?id=ybSGw7Ttbo4C&q=Basufan&pg=PA251 lire en ligne] Access to the nave was through a door in the middle of the south façade, and a second access was on the west gable.Howard Crosby Butler: Early Churches in Syria. Fourth to Seventh Centuries. Princeton University Press, Princeton 1929, {{p.|67}}, 69 (Plan), 70

Photographs by Gertrude Bell

Church of St. Phocas - Kurdish girl in doorway, carved lintel.jpg|{{center|Kurdish girl standing in doorway.}}

Basufan Church of St. Phocas - Apse and arch of Prothesis - Corinthian columns with spiral fluting and wind blown capital. Kurdish man seated in foreground.jpg|{{center|Kurdish man in front of the church apse. Twisted column, Corinthian capital.}}

Church of St. Phocas - Syriac inscription in S wall with adjoining window.jpg|{{center|Inscription in Syriac.}}

References