Towering high above the Békaa plain, their monumental proportions
proclaimed the power and wealth of Imperial Rome. The gods
worshipped here, the Triad of Jupiter, Venus, and Mercury, were
grafted onto the indigenous deities of Hadad, Atargatis, and a
young male god of fertility. Local influences are also seen in the
planning and layout of the temples, which vary from the classic
Roman design. Over the centuries Baalbeck’s monuments suffered
from theft, war, and earthquakes, as well as from numerous medieval
additions. Fortunately, the modern visitor can see the site in
something close to its original from thanks to work in the past
hundred years by German, French, and Lebanese archaeologists. |