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Sinjar Mountains

The Shingal Mountains[1][2] (Kurdish: چیایێ شنگالێ, romanized: Çiyayê Şingalê, Arabic: جَبَل سِنْجَار, romanizedJabal Sinjār, Syriac: ܛܘܪܐ ܕܫܝܓܪ, romanizedṬura d'Shingar),[3] are a 100-kilometre-long (62 mi) mountain range that runs east to west, rising above the surrounding alluvial steppe plains in northwestern Iraq to an elevation of 1,463 meters (4,800 ft). The highest segment of these mountains, about 75 km (47 mi) long, lies in the Nineveh Governorate. The western and lower segment of these mountains lies in Syria and is about 25 km (16 mi) long. The city of Sinjar is just south of the range.[4][5] These mountains are regarded as sacred by the Yazidis.[6][7]

Sinjar
Terrace farming on Sinjar mountains
Highest point
Elevation1,463 m (4,800 ft)
Coordinates36°22′0.22″N 41°43′18.62″E / 36.3667278°N 41.7218389°E / 36.3667278; 41.7218389
Geography
Sinjar

Geology edit

 
Satellite picture of Sinjar Mountains
 
Anticlinal structures in Nineveh. Jebel Sinjar is the largest and most western structure.

The Sinjar Mountains are a breached anticlinal structure.[4] These mountains consist of an asymmetrical, doubly plunging anticline, which is called the "Sinjar Anticline", with a steep northern limb, gentle southern limb and a northerly vergence. The northern side of the anticline is normally faulted, which results in the repetition of the sequence of sedimentary strata exposed in it. The deeply eroded Sinjar Anticline exposes a number of sedimentary formations ranging from Late Cretaceous to Early Neogene in age. The Late Cretaceous Shiranish Formation outcrops within the middle of the Sinjar Mountains. The flanks of this mountain range consist of outward dipping strata of the Sinjar and Aliji formations (Paleocene to Early Eocene); Jaddala Formation (Middle to Late Eocene); Serikagne Formation (Early Miocene); and Jeribe Formation (Early Miocene). The Sinjar Mountains are surrounded by exposures of Middle and Late Miocene sedimentary strata[5]

The mountain is a groundwater recharge area and should have good quality water, although away from the mountain groundwater quality is poor. Quantities are sufficient for agricultural and stock use.[8]

Sinjarite, a hygroscopic calcium chloride formed as soft pink mineral, was discovered in braided wadi fill, in limestone exposures near Sinjar.[9]

Population and history edit

 
A Yazidi shepherd on Mount Sinjar

The Sinjar mountains already appear in the records from second and third millennium BCE under the name Saggar, which was also applied to a deity associated with the same area. In that period, the range was viewed as a source of basalt, as well as various nuts, especially pistachios, as evidenced by texts from Mari and Mesopotamia.[10]

The mountains primarily served as the border frontiers of empires throughout its history; it served as a battlefield between the Assyrians and the Hittite Empire, and was later occupied by the Parthians in 538 BC. The Roman Empire in turn occupied the mountains from the Parthians in 115 AD. From 363 AD, as a result of the Byzantine–Sasanian wars, the mountains lay on the Persian side of the frontier between the two empires. This Persian influence lasted for at least two hundred years and led to the introduction of Zoroastrianism in the region. In the 4th century, Christian influences on the mountains became well established, with Sinjar being part of the Nestorian Christian diocese of Nusaybin.[11] Starting in the late 5th century, the mountains became an abode of the Banu Taghlib, an Arab tribe.[12]

The region was conquered by the Arab Muslim general Iyad ibn Ghanm during the early Muslim conquests in the 630s–640s and came under Islamic rule, forming part of the Diyar Rabi'a district of the Jazira (Upper Mesopotamia) province.[12] The Christian inhabitants were allowed to practice their faith in exchange for payment of a poll tax.[11] The late 7th-century Syriac work, the Apocalypse of Pseudo-Methodius, which was written in Sinjar, indicates Christian culture in the area declined during the first decades of Muslim rule.[12] The 9th-century Syriac patriarch Dionysius I Telmaharoyo records that a certain Atiq, possibly a Kharijite, raised a rebellion against the Umayyads in the Sinjar Mountains.[12] The medieval Arabic historian al-Mas'udi notes that a Kharijite sub-sect, the Ibadis, had a presence in the area.[12]

The Hamdanid dynasty, a branch of the Banu Taghlib, took over Sinjar in 970.[12] Toward the end of the century, Diyar Rabi'a was conquered by another Arab dynasty, the Uqaylids, who likely built the original citadel of Sinjar.[12] During this century, Yazidis are known to have inhabited the Sinjar Mountains,[12] and since the 12th century,[13] the area around the mountains have been mainly inhabited by Yazidis.[14] who venerate them and consider the highest to be the place where Noah's Ark settled after the biblical flood.[15] The Yazidis have historically used the mountains as a place of refuge and escape during periods of conflict. Gertrude Bell wrote, in the 1920s: "Until a couple of years ago the Yezidis were ceaselessly at war with the Arabs and with everybody else."[13]

The most prosperous period of Sinjar's history occurred in the 12th–13th centuries, beginning with the rule of the Turkmen atabeg Jikirmish in c. 1106–1107, through the high cultural period under a cadet branch of the Zengid dynasty and ending with Ayyubid rule.[12] The Armenian Mamluk ruler of Mosul, Badr ad-Din Lu'lu', in the first half of the 13th century, led a campaign against the Yazidis of the mountains, massacring Yazidis and desecrating the mausoleum of the Yazidi founder or reformer Sheikh Adi ibn Musafir in the Lalish valley.[16] During roughly the same era, Sunni Muslim Kurdish tribes launched widespread campaigns against the Yazidi population.[16]

During Ottoman rule, the historian Evliya Celebi noted that 45,000 Yazidis and so-called Baburi Kurds inhabited the Sinjar Mountains, while the city of Sinjar was inhabited by Kurds and Arabs of the Banu Tayy tribe.[12] The Yazidis often posed a threat to travelers through the mountains during the Ottoman era and revolted against the Empire in 1850–1864. The Ottomans were unable to impose their authority by force, but through the diplomatic efforts of the reformist statesman Midhat Pasha were able to impose taxes and customs in the Sinjar Mountains.[12] In the late 19th century, the Yazidis experienced religious persecution during campaigns by the Ottoman government, causing many to convert to Christianity to avoid the government's Islamization and conscription drives.[17]

In 1915 the Yazidis in Sinjar harbored many Armenians and Assyrians fleeing genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman government.[18]

Modern era edit

When the British gained control of the area after defeating the Ottomans in World War I, Sinjar became part of the British Mandate of Iraq. While British rule afforded the Yazidis a level of protection from religious persecution, it also contributed to the community's alienation from the nascent Kurdish nationalist movement.[17] Following Iraq's independence, the Yazidis of the Sinjar Mountains were the subject of land confiscations, military campaigns and attempts at conscription in the wars against the Kurdish nationalists in northern Iraq.[17] Starting in late 1974, the government of President Saddam Hussein launched a security project dubbed by the authorities as a "modernization drive" to ostensibly improve water, electricity and sanitation access for the villages in the Sinjar Mountains.[17] In practice, the central government sought to prevent Yazidis from joining the rebel Kurdish national movement of Mustafa Barzani, which collapsed in March 1975.[17] During the campaign, 137 mostly Yazidi villages were destroyed, most of which laid in or close to the Sinjar Mountains.[17] The inhabitants were then resettled in eleven new towns established 30–40 kilometers (19–25 mi) north or south of the mountains.[17] In 1976, the number of houses in the new towns, all of which bore Arabic names, were the following: 1,531 in Huttin, 1,334 in al-Qahtaniya, 1,300 in al-Bar, 1,195 in al-Tamin, 1,180 in al-Jazira, 1,120 in al-Yarmuk, 907 in al-Walid, 858 in al-Qadisiya, 838 in al-Adnaniya, 771 in al-Andalus and 510 in al-Uruba.[19] Five neighborhoods in the city of Sinjar were Arabized during this campaign; they were Bar Barozh, Saraeye, Kalhey, Burj and Barshey, whose inhabitants were relocated to the new towns or elsewhere in Iraq and replaced by Arabs.[19] In the censuses of 1977 and 1987, the Yazidis were mandated to register as Arabs and in the 1990s further lands in the region were redistributed to Arabs.[20]

Islamic State conflict edit

In August 2014, an estimated 40,000[21] to 50,000[22] Yazidis fled to the mountains following raids by Islamic State (IS) forces on the city of Sinjar, which fell to ISIL on August 3.[23] The Yazidi refugees on the mountain faced what a relief worker called a "genocide" at the hands of ISIS.[24] Stranded without water, food, shade, or medical supplies, the Yazidis had to rely on scarce[25] supplies of water and food airdropped by American,[26] British,[27] Australian,[28] and Iraqi forces.[29] By August 10, Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), People's Protection Units (YPG) and Kurdish Peshmerga forces defended some 30,000 of the Yezidis by opening a corridor from the mountains into nearby Rojava, through the Cezaa and Telkocher road, and from there into Iraqi Kurdistan.[30][31] Haider Sheshu commanded a militia that waged a guerilla war against ISIS.[32] Although thousands more remained stranded on the mountain as of August 12, 2014.[24] It has been reported that 7,000 Yazidi women were taken as slaves and over 5,000 men, women, and children were killed, some beheaded or buried alive in the foothills, as part of an effort to instill fear and to supposedly desecrate the mountain the Yazidis consider sacred.[26][31][33] Yezidi girls allegedly raped by ISIS fighters committed suicide by jumping to their death from Mount Sinjar, as described in a witness statement.[34]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Jabal Sinjār (Approved) at GEOnet Names Server, United States National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency
  2. ^ جبل سنجار (Native Script) at GEOnet Names Server, United States National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency
  3. ^ Thomas A. Carlson, “Mount Sinjar — ܛܘܪܐ ܕܫܝܓܪ ” in The Syriac Gazetteer last modified June 30, 2014, http://syriaca.org/place/524.
  4. ^ a b Edgell, H. S. 2006. Arabian Deserts: Nature, Origin, and Evolution. Springer, Dordrecht, The Netherlands. 592 pp. ISBN 978-1-4020-3969-0
  5. ^ a b Numan, N. M. S., and N. K. AI-Azzawi. 2002. Progressive Versus Paroxysmal Alpine Folding in Sinjar Anticline Northwestern Iraq. Iraqi Journal of Earth Science. vol. 2, no.2, pp.59-69.
  6. ^ Phillips, David L. (7 October 2013). "Iraqi Kurds: "No Friend but the Mountains"". Huffington Post.
  7. ^ By Rudaw. "ISIS resumes attacks on Yezidis in Shingal". Rudaw.
  8. ^ Al-Sawaf, F.D.S. 1977. Hydrogeology of South Sinjar Plain Northwest Iraq. Doctoral thesis, University of London
  9. ^ Aljubouri, Zeki A.; Aldabbagh, Salim M. (March 1980), "Sinjarite, a new mineral from Iraq" (PDF), Mineralogical Magazine, 43 (329): 643–645, Bibcode:1980MinM...43..643A, CiteSeerX 10.1.1.626.6187, doi:10.1180/minmag.1980.043.329.13, S2CID 140671477
  10. ^ Fales 2008, pp. 520–522.
  11. ^ a b Fuccaro, Nelida (1995). Aspects of the social and political history of the Yazidi enclave of Jabal Sinjar (Iraq) under the British mandate, 1919-1932 (PDF). Durham University. pp. 22–3. Retrieved 13 May 2018.
  12. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Haase 1997, p. 643.
  13. ^ a b Tim Lister (August 12, 2014). "Dehydration or massacre: Thousands caught in ISIS chokehold". CNN. Retrieved 2014-08-13.
  14. ^ Fuccaro, Nelida (1999). The Other Kurds: Yazidis in Colonial Iraq. London: I.B.Tauris. pp. 47–48. ISBN 978-1-86064-170-1.
  15. ^ Parry, Oswald Hutton (1895). Six Months in a Syrian Monastery: Being the Record of a Visit to the Head Quarters of the Syrian Church in Mesopotamia: With Some Account of the Yazidis Or Devil Worshippers of Mosul and El Jilwah, Their Sacred Book. London: H. Cox. p. 381. OCLC 3968331.
  16. ^ a b Savelzberg, Hajo & Dulz 2010, p. 101.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g Savelzberg, Hajo & Dulz 2010, p. 103.
  18. ^ Gaunt 2015, p. 89.
  19. ^ a b Savelzberg, Hajo & Dulz 2010, pp. 103–104.
  20. ^ Savelzberg, Hajo & Dulz 2010, pp. 105.
  21. ^ Martin Chulov (3 August 2014). "40,000 Iraqis stranded on mountain as Isis jihadists threaten death". The Guardian. Retrieved 2014-08-06.
  22. ^ "Northern Iraq: UN voices concern about civilians' safety, need for humanitarian aid". United Nations News Centre. 2014-08-08. Retrieved 2014-08-12.
  23. ^ "Irak : la ville de Sinjar tombe aux mains de l'Etat islamique". Le Monde (in French). 2014-08-03. Retrieved 2014-08-12.
  24. ^ a b "Thousands of Yazidis 'still trapped' on Iraq mountain". BBC News. 2014-08-12. Retrieved 2014-08-12.
  25. ^ "People Eating Leaves to Survive on Shingal Mountain, Where Three More Die". Rûdaw.net. 2014-08-07. Retrieved 2014-08-12.
  26. ^ a b "Iraq crisis: No quick fix, Barack Obama warns". BBC News. 2014-08-09. Retrieved 2014-08-09.
  27. ^ "Britain's RAF makes second aid drop to Mount Sinjar Iraqis trapped by Isis – video". The Guardian. 2014-08-12. Retrieved 2014-08-12.
  28. ^ "JTF633 supports Herc mercy dash". Media Release. Department of Defence. 22 August 2014. Retrieved 25 August 2014.
  29. ^ "Irak : les opérations pour sauver les réfugiés yézidis continuent". Le Monde (in French). 2014-08-12. Retrieved 2014-08-12.
  30. ^ Parkinson, Joe (18 August 2014). "Iraq Crisis: Kurds Push to Take Mosul Dam as U.S. Gains Controversial Guerrilla Ally". Wall Street Journal.
  31. ^ a b "Irak: les yazidis fuient les atrocités des djihadistes". Le Figaro (in French). 10 August 2014. from the original on 2014-08-11.
  32. ^ Rubin, Alissa J.; Almukhtar, Sarah; Kakol, Kamil (April 2, 2018). "In Iraq, I Found Checkpoints as Endless as the Whims of Armed Men". The New York Times.
  33. ^ "Etat islamique en Irak : décapités, crucifiés ou exécutés, les yézidis sont massacrés par les djihadistes" (in French). Atlantico. 9 August 2014. from the original on 12 August 2014.
  34. ^ Ahmed, Havidar (14 August 2014). "The Yezidi Exodus, Girls Raped by ISIS Jump to their Death on Mount Shingal". Rudaw Media Network. Retrieved 26 August 2014.

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  •   Media related to Sinjar Mountains at Wikimedia Commons

sinjar, mountains, shingal, mountains, kurdish, چیایێ, شنگالێ, romanized, çiyayê, şingalê, arabic, ار, romanized, jabal, sinjār, syriac, ܛܘܪܐ, ܕܫܝܓܪ, romanized, Ṭura, shingar, kilometre, long, mountain, range, that, runs, east, west, rising, above, surrounding. The Shingal Mountains 1 2 Kurdish چیایێ شنگالێ romanized Ciyaye Singale Arabic ج ب ل س ن ج ار romanized Jabal Sinjar Syriac ܛܘܪܐ ܕܫܝܓܪ romanized Ṭura d Shingar 3 are a 100 kilometre long 62 mi mountain range that runs east to west rising above the surrounding alluvial steppe plains in northwestern Iraq to an elevation of 1 463 meters 4 800 ft The highest segment of these mountains about 75 km 47 mi long lies in the Nineveh Governorate The western and lower segment of these mountains lies in Syria and is about 25 km 16 mi long The city of Sinjar is just south of the range 4 5 These mountains are regarded as sacred by the Yazidis 6 7 SinjarTerrace farming on Sinjar mountainsHighest pointElevation1 463 m 4 800 ft Coordinates36 22 0 22 N 41 43 18 62 E 36 3667278 N 41 7218389 E 36 3667278 41 7218389GeographySinjarSinjar Iraq Contents 1 Geology 2 Population and history 2 1 Modern era 2 2 Islamic State conflict 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksGeology edit nbsp Satellite picture of Sinjar Mountains nbsp Anticlinal structures in Nineveh Jebel Sinjar is the largest and most western structure The Sinjar Mountains are a breached anticlinal structure 4 These mountains consist of an asymmetrical doubly plunging anticline which is called the Sinjar Anticline with a steep northern limb gentle southern limb and a northerly vergence The northern side of the anticline is normally faulted which results in the repetition of the sequence of sedimentary strata exposed in it The deeply eroded Sinjar Anticline exposes a number of sedimentary formations ranging from Late Cretaceous to Early Neogene in age The Late Cretaceous Shiranish Formation outcrops within the middle of the Sinjar Mountains The flanks of this mountain range consist of outward dipping strata of the Sinjar and Aliji formations Paleocene to Early Eocene Jaddala Formation Middle to Late Eocene Serikagne Formation Early Miocene and Jeribe Formation Early Miocene The Sinjar Mountains are surrounded by exposures of Middle and Late Miocene sedimentary strata 5 The mountain is a groundwater recharge area and should have good quality water although away from the mountain groundwater quality is poor Quantities are sufficient for agricultural and stock use 8 Sinjarite a hygroscopic calcium chloride formed as soft pink mineral was discovered in braided wadi fill in limestone exposures near Sinjar 9 Population and history edit nbsp A Yazidi shepherd on Mount Sinjar The Sinjar mountains already appear in the records from second and third millennium BCE under the name Saggar which was also applied to a deity associated with the same area In that period the range was viewed as a source of basalt as well as various nuts especially pistachios as evidenced by texts from Mari and Mesopotamia 10 The mountains primarily served as the border frontiers of empires throughout its history it served as a battlefield between the Assyrians and the Hittite Empire and was later occupied by the Parthians in 538 BC The Roman Empire in turn occupied the mountains from the Parthians in 115 AD From 363 AD as a result of the Byzantine Sasanian wars the mountains lay on the Persian side of the frontier between the two empires This Persian influence lasted for at least two hundred years and led to the introduction of Zoroastrianism in the region In the 4th century Christian influences on the mountains became well established with Sinjar being part of the Nestorian Christian diocese of Nusaybin 11 Starting in the late 5th century the mountains became an abode of the Banu Taghlib an Arab tribe 12 The region was conquered by the Arab Muslim general Iyad ibn Ghanm during the early Muslim conquests in the 630s 640s and came under Islamic rule forming part of the Diyar Rabi a district of the Jazira Upper Mesopotamia province 12 The Christian inhabitants were allowed to practice their faith in exchange for payment of a poll tax 11 The late 7th century Syriac work the Apocalypse of Pseudo Methodius which was written in Sinjar indicates Christian culture in the area declined during the first decades of Muslim rule 12 The 9th century Syriac patriarch Dionysius I Telmaharoyo records that a certain Atiq possibly a Kharijite raised a rebellion against the Umayyads in the Sinjar Mountains 12 The medieval Arabic historian al Mas udi notes that a Kharijite sub sect the Ibadis had a presence in the area 12 The Hamdanid dynasty a branch of the Banu Taghlib took over Sinjar in 970 12 Toward the end of the century Diyar Rabi a was conquered by another Arab dynasty the Uqaylids who likely built the original citadel of Sinjar 12 During this century Yazidis are known to have inhabited the Sinjar Mountains 12 and since the 12th century 13 the area around the mountains have been mainly inhabited by Yazidis 14 who venerate them and consider the highest to be the place where Noah s Ark settled after the biblical flood 15 The Yazidis have historically used the mountains as a place of refuge and escape during periods of conflict Gertrude Bell wrote in the 1920s Until a couple of years ago the Yezidis were ceaselessly at war with the Arabs and with everybody else 13 The most prosperous period of Sinjar s history occurred in the 12th 13th centuries beginning with the rule of the Turkmen atabeg Jikirmish in c 1106 1107 through the high cultural period under a cadet branch of the Zengid dynasty and ending with Ayyubid rule 12 The Armenian Mamluk ruler of Mosul Badr ad Din Lu lu in the first half of the 13th century led a campaign against the Yazidis of the mountains massacring Yazidis and desecrating the mausoleum of the Yazidi founder or reformer Sheikh Adi ibn Musafir in the Lalish valley 16 During roughly the same era Sunni Muslim Kurdish tribes launched widespread campaigns against the Yazidi population 16 During Ottoman rule the historian Evliya Celebi noted that 45 000 Yazidis and so called Baburi Kurds inhabited the Sinjar Mountains while the city of Sinjar was inhabited by Kurds and Arabs of the Banu Tayy tribe 12 The Yazidis often posed a threat to travelers through the mountains during the Ottoman era and revolted against the Empire in 1850 1864 The Ottomans were unable to impose their authority by force but through the diplomatic efforts of the reformist statesman Midhat Pasha were able to impose taxes and customs in the Sinjar Mountains 12 In the late 19th century the Yazidis experienced religious persecution during campaigns by the Ottoman government causing many to convert to Christianity to avoid the government s Islamization and conscription drives 17 In 1915 the Yazidis in Sinjar harbored many Armenians and Assyrians fleeing genocide perpetrated by the Ottoman government 18 Modern era edit When the British gained control of the area after defeating the Ottomans in World War I Sinjar became part of the British Mandate of Iraq While British rule afforded the Yazidis a level of protection from religious persecution it also contributed to the community s alienation from the nascent Kurdish nationalist movement 17 Following Iraq s independence the Yazidis of the Sinjar Mountains were the subject of land confiscations military campaigns and attempts at conscription in the wars against the Kurdish nationalists in northern Iraq 17 Starting in late 1974 the government of President Saddam Hussein launched a security project dubbed by the authorities as a modernization drive to ostensibly improve water electricity and sanitation access for the villages in the Sinjar Mountains 17 In practice the central government sought to prevent Yazidis from joining the rebel Kurdish national movement of Mustafa Barzani which collapsed in March 1975 17 During the campaign 137 mostly Yazidi villages were destroyed most of which laid in or close to the Sinjar Mountains 17 The inhabitants were then resettled in eleven new towns established 30 40 kilometers 19 25 mi north or south of the mountains 17 In 1976 the number of houses in the new towns all of which bore Arabic names were the following 1 531 in Huttin 1 334 in al Qahtaniya 1 300 in al Bar 1 195 in al Tamin 1 180 in al Jazira 1 120 in al Yarmuk 907 in al Walid 858 in al Qadisiya 838 in al Adnaniya 771 in al Andalus and 510 in al Uruba 19 Five neighborhoods in the city of Sinjar were Arabized during this campaign they were Bar Barozh Saraeye Kalhey Burj and Barshey whose inhabitants were relocated to the new towns or elsewhere in Iraq and replaced by Arabs 19 In the censuses of 1977 and 1987 the Yazidis were mandated to register as Arabs and in the 1990s further lands in the region were redistributed to Arabs 20 Islamic State conflict edit See also Genocide of Yazidis by ISIL and Sinjar massacre In August 2014 an estimated 40 000 21 to 50 000 22 Yazidis fled to the mountains following raids by Islamic State IS forces on the city of Sinjar which fell to ISIL on August 3 23 The Yazidi refugees on the mountain faced what a relief worker called a genocide at the hands of ISIS 24 Stranded without water food shade or medical supplies the Yazidis had to rely on scarce 25 supplies of water and food airdropped by American 26 British 27 Australian 28 and Iraqi forces 29 By August 10 Kurdistan Workers Party PKK People s Protection Units YPG and Kurdish Peshmerga forces defended some 30 000 of the Yezidis by opening a corridor from the mountains into nearby Rojava through the Cezaa and Telkocher road and from there into Iraqi Kurdistan 30 31 Haider Sheshu commanded a militia that waged a guerilla war against ISIS 32 Although thousands more remained stranded on the mountain as of August 12 2014 24 It has been reported that 7 000 Yazidi women were taken as slaves and over 5 000 men women and children were killed some beheaded or buried alive in the foothills as part of an effort to instill fear and to supposedly desecrate the mountain the Yazidis consider sacred 26 31 33 Yezidi girls allegedly raped by ISIS fighters committed suicide by jumping to their death from Mount Sinjar as described in a witness statement 34 See also edit nbsp Iraq portal Ilandag of the Lesser Caucasus in Nakhchivan Azerbaijan List of Yazidi holy places List of Yazidi settlements Mount Judi in southeast Anatolia Turkey Nuh or Noah SingaraReferences edit Jabal Sinjar Approved at GEOnet Names Server United States National Geospatial Intelligence Agency جبل سنجار Native Script at GEOnet Names Server United States National Geospatial Intelligence Agency Thomas A Carlson Mount Sinjar ܛܘܪܐ ܕܫܝܓܪ in The Syriac Gazetteer last modified June 30 2014 http syriaca org place 524 a b Edgell H S 2006 Arabian Deserts Nature Origin and Evolution Springer Dordrecht The Netherlands 592 pp ISBN 978 1 4020 3969 0 a b Numan N M S and N K AI Azzawi 2002 Progressive Versus Paroxysmal Alpine Folding in Sinjar Anticline Northwestern Iraq Iraqi Journal of Earth Science vol 2 no 2 pp 59 69 Phillips David L 7 October 2013 Iraqi Kurds No Friend but the Mountains Huffington Post By Rudaw ISIS resumes attacks on Yezidis in Shingal Rudaw Al Sawaf F D S 1977 Hydrogeology of South Sinjar Plain Northwest Iraq Doctoral thesis University of London Aljubouri Zeki A Aldabbagh Salim M March 1980 Sinjarite a new mineral from Iraq PDF Mineralogical Magazine 43 329 643 645 Bibcode 1980MinM 43 643A CiteSeerX 10 1 1 626 6187 doi 10 1180 minmag 1980 043 329 13 S2CID 140671477 Fales 2008 pp 520 522 a b Fuccaro Nelida 1995 Aspects of the social and political history of the Yazidi enclave of Jabal Sinjar Iraq under the British mandate 1919 1932 PDF Durham University pp 22 3 Retrieved 13 May 2018 a b c d e f g h i j k Haase 1997 p 643 a b Tim Lister August 12 2014 Dehydration or massacre Thousands caught in ISIS chokehold CNN Retrieved 2014 08 13 Fuccaro Nelida 1999 The Other Kurds Yazidis in Colonial Iraq London I B Tauris pp 47 48 ISBN 978 1 86064 170 1 Parry Oswald Hutton 1895 Six Months in a Syrian Monastery Being the Record of a Visit to the Head Quarters of the Syrian Church in Mesopotamia With Some Account of the Yazidis Or Devil Worshippers of Mosul and El Jilwah Their Sacred Book London H Cox p 381 OCLC 3968331 a b Savelzberg Hajo amp Dulz 2010 p 101 a b c d e f g Savelzberg Hajo amp Dulz 2010 p 103 Gaunt 2015 p 89 a b Savelzberg Hajo amp Dulz 2010 pp 103 104 Savelzberg Hajo amp Dulz 2010 pp 105 Martin Chulov 3 August 2014 40 000 Iraqis stranded on mountain as Isis jihadists threaten death The Guardian Retrieved 2014 08 06 Northern Iraq UN voices concern about civilians safety need for humanitarian aid United Nations News Centre 2014 08 08 Retrieved 2014 08 12 Irak la ville de Sinjar tombe aux mains de l Etat islamique Le Monde in French 2014 08 03 Retrieved 2014 08 12 a b Thousands of Yazidis still trapped on Iraq mountain BBC News 2014 08 12 Retrieved 2014 08 12 People Eating Leaves to Survive on Shingal Mountain Where Three More Die Rudaw net 2014 08 07 Retrieved 2014 08 12 a b Iraq crisis No quick fix Barack Obama warns BBC News 2014 08 09 Retrieved 2014 08 09 Britain s RAF makes second aid drop to Mount Sinjar Iraqis trapped by Isis video The Guardian 2014 08 12 Retrieved 2014 08 12 JTF633 supports Herc mercy dash Media Release Department of Defence 22 August 2014 Retrieved 25 August 2014 Irak les operations pour sauver les refugies yezidis continuent Le Monde in French 2014 08 12 Retrieved 2014 08 12 Parkinson Joe 18 August 2014 Iraq Crisis Kurds Push to Take Mosul Dam as U S Gains Controversial Guerrilla Ally Wall Street Journal a b Irak les yazidis fuient les atrocites des djihadistes Le Figaro in French 10 August 2014 Archived from the original on 2014 08 11 Rubin Alissa J Almukhtar Sarah Kakol Kamil April 2 2018 In Iraq I Found Checkpoints as Endless as the Whims of Armed Men The New York Times Etat islamique en Irak decapites crucifies ou executes les yezidis sont massacres par les djihadistes in French Atlantico 9 August 2014 Archived from the original on 12 August 2014 Ahmed Havidar 14 August 2014 The Yezidi Exodus Girls Raped by ISIS Jump to their Death on Mount Shingal Rudaw Media Network Retrieved 26 August 2014 Bibliography editFales Frederick Mario 2008 Saggar Reallexikon der Assyriologie retrieved 2022 03 14 Haase C P 1997 Sindjar In Bosworth C E van Donzel E Heinrichs W P amp Lecomte G eds The Encyclopaedia of Islam Second Edition Volume IX San Sze Leiden E J Brill pp 643 644 ISBN 978 90 04 10422 8 Savelzberg Eva Hajo Siamend Dulz Irene July December 2010 Effectively Urbanized Yezidis in the Collective Towns of Sheikhan and Sinjar Etudes rurales 186 101 116 doi 10 4000 etudesrurales 9253 JSTOR 41403604 Gaunt David 2015 The Complexity of the Assyrian Genocide Genocide Studies International 9 1 83 103 doi 10 3138 gsi 9 1 05 S2CID 129899863 External links edit nbsp Media related to Sinjar Mountains at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Sinjar Mountains amp oldid 1223480775, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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