Qabrikha

Qabrikha (Arabic: قبريخا), also spelled Abrika or Kabrika, is a municipality in the Marjayoun District, in southern Lebanon.

That here was an ancient heathen temple there can be little doubt, but whether it was of Phoenician, Greek, or Roman origin, there exists no historic trace whatever to afford light or reward inquiry.

[3] In 1881, the PEF's Survey of Western Palestine (SWP) described it: "A village, built of stone, containing about 150 Metawileh, situated on a hill-top.

The country round is cultivated with figs, olives, and arable land; there is a rock-cut birkeh and several cisterns in the village.

Two of the columns still stand in situ in the village, and one bears its capital of Corinthian design, resembling-those at Yarun.

Hezbullah responded by firing rockets into northern Israel, claiming that there had been 21 attacks on eleven Lebanese villages in southern Lebanon over the previous five days.