Nahr al-Kabir

'the southern great river', in contrast with the Nahr al-Kabir al-Shamali) or in Lebanon simply as the Kebir, is a river in Syria and Lebanon flowing into the Mediterranean Sea at Arida.

[1] Its headwaters are at the Ain as-Safa spring in Lebanon and it flows through the Homs Gap in the Orontes River Valley of southern Syria.

The river forms the northern part of the Lebanon–Syria border at the Jebel Ansariyeh mountains in Syria.

In antiquity, the river was known as Eleutherus (Greek Ελεύθερος Eleutheros, Ελευθερίς Eleuteris lit.

It defined the border between the Seleucid and Ptolemaic empires during much of the 3rd century BCE.

Map of a part of the Levant . Blue lines are rivers, white lines are country borders. Nahr al-Kabir is the relatively short river that forms a part of the Lebanon–Syria border , flowing into the Mediterranean Sea roughly between the cities of Trablous (Tripoli) and Tartus