al-Jajiyah (, also known as al-Dajajiya) is a village in central Syria, administratively part of the Hama Governorate, located on the eastern outskirts of Hama city. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Jajiyah had a population of 6,419 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are Sunni Muslims.
via Open-Meteo
al-Jajiyah (, also known as al-Dajajiya) is a village in central Syria, administratively part of the Hama Governorate, located on the eastern outskirts of Hama city. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Jajiyah had a population of 6,419 in the 2004 census. Its inhabitants are Sunni Muslims.
==History== ===Ottoman period=== Jajiyah was one of three villages in the Hama Sanjak, all situated on the banks of the Orontes River, that was classified as qutuniyat, or 'cotton-growing', in 1818 Ottoman tax records. It consisted of 22 feddans and paid 4,950 qirsh in taxes. In 1836, Muhammad Khurfan Bey, the emir of the Mawali, a large Arab tribe in central Syria, leased an extensive tract of waqf (endowment) land in Jajiyah.
2 mapped locations
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).