551 Beirut earthquake
The 551 Beirut earthquake occurred on 9 July with an estimated magnitude of about 7.5 on the moment magnitude scale and a maximum felt intensity of X on the Mercalli intensity scale. It triggered a devastating tsunami which affected the coastal towns of Byzantine Phoenicia, causing great destruction and sinking many ships. Overall large numbers of people were reported killed, with one estimate of 30,000 by the anonymous pilgrim of Piacenza for Berytus alone.
Tectonic setting
What is now Lebanon lies astride the Dead Sea Transform, which forms part of the boundary between the Arabian plate and the African plate. In Lebanon the fault zone forms a restraining bend associated with a right stepping offset of the fault trace. Transpressional deformation associated with this bend has formed a number of thrust faults, such as the recently identified Mount Lebanon thrust, which underlies the city and is interpreted to crop out at the seabed offshore.Damage
There is little in the way of detailed descriptions of the damage caused by this earthquake in contemporary accounts. Sources refer to the coastal cities from Tyre to Tripoli being reduced to ruins with many thousands of casualties. The Anonymous pilgrim of Piacenza reported that 30,000 people died in Beirut alone. Reports of damage at Petra and other locations in the Jordan Valley associated with the 551 event have been re-analyzed, suggesting that a later earthquake was more likely to be responsible.Accounts
John Malalas' description
The earliest account of the earthquake comes from John Malalas, who recorded in his Chronographia that in the year 551 AD, during the 14th indiction, a catastrophic earthquake struck the regions of Palestine, Arabia, Mesopotamia, Antioch, Phoenice Maritima, and Phoenice Libanensis, with Tyre, Sidon, Beirut, Tripolis, Byblos, and Botrys being most affected, alongside parts of other settlements, where many people were trapped. In Botrys, part of the mountain known as Lithoprosopon, located near the sea, broke off and fell into the water, creating a harbor large enough to accommodate very large ships. This was significant, as the city had never previously had a harbor.In response to the disaster, the emperor provided financial assistance to all the affected provinces and undertook restoration efforts for parts of the damaged cities. During the earthquake, the sea receded by a mile, destroying numerous ships, but eventually returned to its original position.
Agathias' description
Agathias, a Greek poet and historian, also recounted the effects of the earthquake in his Histories:" several cities both on the islands and the mainland were razed to the ground and their inhabitants wiped out. The lovely city of Berytus, the jewel of Phoenicia, was completely ruined, and its world-famous architectural treasures were reduced to a heap of rubble, practically nothing but the bare pavements of the buildings being left. Many of the local inhabitants were crushed to death under the weight of the wreckage, as were many cultivated young men of distinguished parentage who had come there to study the Law At this point, then, the professors of law moved to the neighboring city of Sidon, and the schools were transferred there until Berytus was rebuilt. The restored city was very different from what it had been in the past, though it was not changed beyond recognition, since it still preserved a few traces of its former self "