Misplaced Pages

Talk:Lebanon/to do: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
< Talk:Lebanon Browse history interactively← Previous editContent deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 01:33, 11 April 2011 edit71.192.124.149 (talk)No edit summary← Previous edit Latest revision as of 02:32, 6 May 2013 edit undoRamaksoud2000 (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users, File movers, New page reviewers, Pending changes reviewers, Rollbackers16,924 edits I don't think this is normally put in articles 
(6 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
* Clean the 'Tourism' section / add references! * <s>Clean the 'Tourism' section / add references!</s>
* Provide citations for the Sports,<s>Flag</s>, Arts and Literature,<s>Music<s>, <s>and Festivals</s> sections. * <s>Provide citations for the Sports, Arts and Literature,Music, and Festivals sections.</s>
* Rectify the three {{Citation needed}} tags in the article:
1.)<s> Lebanon gained independence in 1943, while France was occupied by Germany.{{Citation needed|date=July 2009}}</s> <s>2) The economy's dependence on services has always been an issue of great criticism and concern,{{Citation needed|date=September 2008}} as it leaves the country subject to the instability of this sector and the vagaries of ]. 3) Lebanese performers are among the most popular in the Arab world.{{Citation needed|date=September 2008}}</s>
* Add a list of syndicates and orders for engineers, doctors, drivers,... that exist in Lebanon. Most of them have websites.

It list Lebanon's ethnic group as 95% Arab. This is not accurate;
Cultural

Are Lebanese Arabs?
Lebanon is a mix of ethnic groups. Part of the Lebanese are Arabs; 20-30% of the Lebanese in Lebanon and 10-20% of Lebanese in Diaspora are Arabs(estimates). Most of the Lebanese are the descendents of the Canaanites who inhabited Lebanon from around five thousand years ago.

They were called Phoenicians by the Greeks and Punic by the Romans. When the Muslim Arabs conquered the North of the Arabian Peninsula in the seventh century AD, they couldn’t conquer most of Lebanon due to its mountainous nature.

Some Arabs settled in coastal cities and mixed with the inhabitants while some of the Phoenicians converted to Islam, which made them Muslims not Arabs, i.e they changed their religion not ethnicity.
The Canaanites/Phoenicians, the Arabs, and the Syriac-Arameans are the three major ethnic groups in Lebanon. Armenians, Greeks, Hebrews, Assyrians, Kurds, Persians and other groups form the rest of the Lebanese community. (for Details)

Source: http://www.lgic.org/en/faq.php#1

Latest revision as of 02:32, 6 May 2013

  • Clean the 'Tourism' section / add references!
  • Provide citations for the Sports, Arts and Literature,Music, and Festivals sections.