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Kafr Buhum (; also transliterated Kfarbuhum and Kafr Bihem), commonly referred to as Kfarbo (), is a town in central , administratively part of the , located southwest of . Nearby localities include and to the northwest, to the north, al-Khalidiyah to the east, to the southeast, to the south and to the southwest. According to the Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), Kafr Buhum had a population of 12,194 in the 2004 census. General Census of Population and Housing 2004. Syria Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS). Hama Governorate. Its inhabitants are predominantly Christian.Socin, 1912, p. 371. It is 330 meters (1082 ft) above the sea level.


History

Ottoman period
Kafr Buhum was the birthplace of Patriarch Ignatius III Atiyah of the Greek Orthodox Church of Antioch (). In the mid-17th century, the village was noted as wealthy and had a population of 1,025 men, according to Patriarch Macarius III Ibn al-Za'im ().

Due to its access to irrigation from the , Kafr Buhum was one of the cotton-growing villages of the Hama region in the 18th century. The date of the Monastery of St. George in Kafr Buhum is not known, though its oldest dated manuscript, penned by a local deacon, is from 1805. By the 19th century, during rule (1516–1918), Kafr Buhum was one of the older-established villages in the environs of . In a tax record from 1828–1829, it consisted of 72 , making it one of the largest villages in the . Kafr Buhum and , the two large Christian villages of the area, paid the (poll tax for Christians), though this accounted for 2% of its overall taxes, suggesting a relative clemency by the authorities on the rural Christian communities at that time.

Kafr Buhum contained a small Jewish community earlier during Ottoman rule but most had emigrated by the mid-19th century; maintained commercial interests in the village up to the mid-1830s. Kafr Buhum was also invested in by the urban elite of Hama, including the agha Abdallah Agha Tayfur, in the early 1840s.


Post-Syrian independence
In 1961 a cement factory was built in Kafr Buhum and at the time of its nationalization later in the decade it employed about 260 workers. Kafr Buhum's bid to become its own (subdistrict) center, instead of part of , was denied in 1991 due to opposition from the local administration of Hama city, which sought to avoid a weakening of its administrative influence in the area.


Bibliography


Further reading
  • Saloum, Sorgham Saloum (2000) . Kafr Buhum: Past and Present

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