1759 Near East earthquakes

1759 Near East earthquakes
Oct 30
Nov 25
(modern-day boundaries shown)
Local date1759
DurationOctober 30, ~ 1 minute
November 25, ~ 2 minutes
MagnitudeOctober 30, 6.6 Ms
November 25, 7.4 Ms
EpicenterOctober 30, 33°06′N 35°36′E / 33.1°N 35.6°E / 33.1; 35.6
November 25, 33°42′N 35°54′E / 33.7°N 35.9°E / 33.7; 35.9
FaultYammouneh
Areas affectedOttoman Syria
Max. intensityMMI VIII (Severe)MMI IX (Violent)
Aftershocks3 months
Casualties2,000 – 20,000

The 1759 Near East earthquakes shook a large portion of the Levant in October and November of that year. This geographical crossroads in the Eastern Mediterranean were at the time under the rule of the Ottoman Empire (includes portions of what are now Syria, Lebanon, Turkey, Israel, Palestine and Jordan). The ruins of Baalbek, a settlement in the Beqaa Valley of Lebanon east of the Litani River, were badly damaged. These 1759 events, along with the earlier 1202 Syria earthquake, are likely the strongest historical earthquakes in the region.