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Mosul

Mosul (Arabic: الموصل, romanizedal-Mawṣil, Kurdish: مووسڵ, romanized: Mûsil,[3][4] Turkish: Musul, Syriac: ܡܘܨܠ, romanizedMāwṣil[5]) is a major city in northern Iraq, serving as the capital of Nineveh Governorate.[6] The city is considered the second largest city in Iraq in terms of population and area after the capital Baghdad, with a population of over 3.7 million. Mosul is approximately 400 km (250 mi) north of Baghdad on the Tigris river. The Mosul metropolitan area has grown from the old city on the western side to encompass substantial areas on both the "Left Bank" (east side) and the "Right Bank" (west side), as locals call the two riverbanks. Mosul encloses the ruins of the ancient Assyrian city of Nineveh – once the largest city in the world – on its east side.

Mosul
الموصل
Top to bottom, left to right:
View over Tigris river
Church of Saint ThomasHatra
Mosul Rural area • The river's gate
Mosul Museum • Heritage house
Nickname(s): 
Nīnwē ܢܝ݂ܢܘܹܐ
The Pearl of the North
Mosul
Location in Iraq
Coordinates: 36°20′N 43°08′E / 36.34°N 43.13°E / 36.34; 43.13Coordinates: 36°20′N 43°08′E / 36.34°N 43.13°E / 36.34; 43.13
Country Iraq
GovernorateNineveh
DistrictMosul
Area
 • Total180 km2 (70 sq mi)
Elevation223 m (732 ft)
Population
 (2021)
 • Total1,683,000
 Macrotrends[2]
Demonym(s)Mosuli
Maslawi
Time zoneUTC+3 (AST)
Area code60
A map of Mosul and its quarters.
Mosul Museum is the second largest museum in Iraq after the National Museum of Iraq in Baghdad. It contains ancient Mesopotamian artifacts, mainly Assyrian.
The Shrine of Imam Yahya Abu Al Qasim
Nineveh - Mashki Gate

Mosul and its surroundings have an ethnically and religiously diverse population; a large majority of its population are Arabs, with Assyrians,[7] Turkmens, and Kurds, and other, smaller ethnic minorities comprising the rest of the city's population. Sunni Islam is the largest religion, but there are a significant number of Christians, as well as adherents of other sects of Islam and various other minority religions.

Mosul is considered among the larger and more historically and culturally significant cities of the Arab world. Due to Mosul's strategic location, it has traditionally served as a hub of international commerce and travel. The North Mesopotamian dialect of Arabic, commonly known as Moslawi, is named after Mosul and is widely spoken in the region.

Historically, essential products of the area include Mosul marble and oil. Mosul is home to the University of Mosul and its renowned Medical College, one of the Middle East's largest educational and research centers.

Together with the nearby Nineveh Plains, Mosul is one of the historical centers of the Assyrian people.[8]

Etymology

The city's name is first mentioned by Xenophon in his expeditionary logs in Achaemenid Assyria of 401 BC, during the reign of the Persian Achaemenid Empire. There, he notes a small Assyrian town of "Mépsila" (Ancient Greek: Μέψιλα) on the Tigris around where Mosul is today (Anabasis, III.iv.10). It may be safer to identify Xenophon's Mépsila with the site of Iski Mosul, or "Old Mosul," about 30 km (19 mi) north of modern Mosul, where six centuries after Xenophon's report, the Sasanian Empire's center of Budh-Ardhashir was built. In any case, "Mepsila" is doubtless the root of the current name.

In its current Arabic form and spelling, the term Mosul, or rather "Mawsil," means "linking point"—or, loosely, "Junction City," in Arabic. On Mosul's eastern side are the ruins of the ancient city of Nineveh, and Assyrians still call the entire city Nineveh (or Ninweh).[9]

Mosul is also nicknamed al-Faiha ("the Paradise"), al-Khaḍrah ("the Green"), and al-Hadbah ("the Humped"). It is sometimes called "The Pearl of the North"[10] and "the city of a million soldiers."[11]

History

Ancient era and early Middle Ages

 
Dair Mar Elia south of Mosul, Iraq's oldest monastery of the Assyrian Church of the East, dating from the 6th century. It was destroyed by ISIS in 2014.

The area where Mosul lies was an integral part of Assyria from as early as the 25th century BC. After the Akkadian Empire (2335–2154 BC), which united all the peoples of Mesopotamia under one rule, Mosul again became a continuous part of Assyria proper from circa 2050 BC through the fall of the Neo-Assyrian Empire between 612 and 599 BC. Mosul remained within the geopolitical province of Assyria for another 13 centuries (as a part of Achaemenid Assyria, Seleucid, Roman Assyria and Sasanian Asōristān) until the early Muslim conquests of the mid-7th century. After the Muslim conquests, the region saw a gradual influx of Muslim Arab, Kurdish, and Turkic peoples, although indigenous Assyrians continued to use the name Athura for the ecclesiastical province.[citation needed]

Nineveh was one of the oldest and most significant cities in antiquity and was settled as early as 6000 BC.[12] The city is mentioned in the Old Assyrian Empire (2025–1750 BC) and during the reign of Shamshi-Adad I (1809–1776 BC) it was listed as a center of worship of the goddess Ishtar, remaining so during the Middle Assyrian Empire (1365–1056 BC). During the Neo-Assyrian Empire (911–605 BC), Nineveh grew in size and importance, particularly from the reigns of Tukulti-Ninurta II and Ashurnasirpal II (883–859 BC) onward; he chose the city of Kalhu (the Biblical Calah, modern Nimrud) as his capital in place of the ancient traditional capital of Aššur (Ashur), 30 km (19 mi) from present-day Mosul.[citation needed]

Thereafter, successive Assyrian emperor-monarchs, such as Shalmaneser III, Adad-nirari III, Tiglath-Pileser III, Shalmaneser V and Sargon II, continued to expand the city. Around 700 BC, King Sennacherib made Nineveh Assyria's new capital. Immense building work was undertaken, and Nineveh eclipsed Babylon, Kalhu and Aššur in size and importance, making it the largest city in the world. Many scholars believe the Hanging Gardens of Babylon were at Nineveh.[13]

The mound of Kuyunjik in Mosul is the site of the palaces of King Sennacherib and his successors Esarhaddon, Ashurbanipal, (who established the Library of Ashurbanipal), Ashur-etil-ilani, Sin-shumu-lishir and Sin-shar-ishkun. The Assyrian Empire began to unravel in 626 BC, being consumed by a decade of brutal internal civil wars, significantly weakening it. A war-ravaged Assyria was attacked in 616 BC by a vast coalition of its former subjects, most notably their Babylonian relations from southern Mesopotamia, together with the Medes, Persians, Chaldeans, Scythians, Cimmerians, and Sagartians. Nineveh fell after a siege and bitter house-to-house fighting in 612 BC during the reign of Sin-shar-ishkun, who was killed defending his capital. His successor, Ashur-uballit II, fought his way out of Nineveh and formed a new Assyrian capital at Harran (now in southeastern Turkey).[citation needed]

Mosul (then the Assyrian town of Mepsila, founded by the former inhabitants out of the ruins of their former capital) later succeeded Nineveh as the Tigris bridgehead of the road that linked Assyria and Anatolia with the short-lived Median Empire and succeeding Achaemenid Empire (546–332 BC), where it was a part of the geopolitical province of Athura (Assyria), where the region, and Assyria in general, saw a significant economic revival.[citation needed]

Mosul became part of the Seleucid Empire after Alexander's conquests in 332 BC. While little is known of the city from the Hellenistic period, Mosul likely belonged to the Seleucid satrapy of Syria, the Greek term for Assyria ("Syria" originally meaning Assyria rather than the modern nation of Syria), which the Parthian Empire conquered circa 150 BC.[citation needed]

Mosul changed hands again with the rise of the Sasanian Empire in 225 and became a part of the Sasanian province of Asōristān. Christianity was present among the indigenous Assyrian people in Mosul as early as the 1st century, although the ancient Mesopotamian religion remained strong until the 4th century. It became an episcopal seat of the Assyrian Church of the East in the 6th century.[citation needed]

In 637 (other sources say 641), during the period of the Caliph Umar, Mosul was annexed to the Rashidun Caliphate by Utba ibn Farqad al-Sulami during the early Arab Muslim invasions and conquests, after which Assyria dissolved as a geopolitical entity.[citation needed]

9th century to 1535

 
A Persian miniature depicting the siege of Mosul in 1261–63 from: Rashid-al-Din Hamadani, Jami' al-tawarikh, Bibliothèque Nationale de France.

In the late 9th century the Turkish dynasts Ishaq ibn Kundaj and his son Muhammad seized control over Mosul, but in 893 Mosul came once again under the direct control of the Abbasid Caliphate. In the early 10th century Mosul came under the control of the native Arab Hamdanid dynasty. From Mosul, the Hamdanids under Abdallah ibn Hamdan and his son Nasir al-Dawla expanded their control over Upper Mesopotamia for several decades, first as governors of the Abbassids and later as de facto independent rulers. A century later they were supplanted by the Uqaylid dynasty. Ibn Hawqal, who visited Mosul in 968, described it as a beautiful town inhabited mainly by Kurds.[14]

Mosul was conquered by the Seljuk Empire in the 11th century. After a period under semi-independent atabeg such as Mawdud, in 1127 it became the centre of power of the Zengid dynasty. Saladin besieged the city unsuccessfully in 1182 but gained control of it in 1186. In the 13th century it was captured by the Mongols led by Hulagu Khan, but was spared the usual destruction since its governor, Badr al-Din Lu'lu', helped the Khan in his following campaigns in Syria.

After the Mongol defeat in the Battle of Ain Jalut against the Mamluks, Badr al-Din's son sided with the latter; this led to the city's destruction. It later regained some importance but never recovered its original splendor. Mosul was thenceforth ruled by the Mongol Ilkhanate and Jalairid Sultanate and escaped Timur's destructiveness.

In 1165, Benjamin of Tudela passed through Mosul; he wrote that he found a small Jewish community estimated at 7,000 people in Mosul, led by Rabbi Zakkai, presumably connected to the Davidic line. In 1288–89, the Exilarch was in Mosul and signed a supporting paper for Maimonides.[15][16] In the early 16th century, Mosul was under the Turkmen federation of the Ağ Qoyunlu, but in 1508 it was conquered by the Safavid dynasty of Iran.

Metalworking industry

 
The Blacas ewer, made by Shuja' ibn Man'a in Mosul in 1232, is one of the most famous brass pieces from Mosul.

In the 13th century, Mosul had a flourishing industry making luxury brass items that were ornately inlaid with silver.[17]: 283–6  Many of these items survive today; in fact, of all medieval Islamic artifacts, Mosul brasswork has the most epigraphic inscriptions.[18]: 12  However, the only reference to this industry in contemporary sources is the account of Ibn Sa'id, an Andalusian geographer who traveled through the region around 1250.[17]: 283–4  He wrote that "there are many crafts in the city, especially inlaid brass vessels which are exported (and presented) to rulers".[17]: 284  These were expensive items that only the wealthiest could afford, and it wasn't until the early 1200s that Mosul had the demand for large-scale production of them.[17]: 285  Mosul was then a wealthy, prosperous capital city, first for the Zengids and then for Badr al-Din Lu'lu'.[17]: 285 

The origins of Mosul's inlaid brasswork industry are uncertain.[18]: 52  The city had an iron industry in the late 10th century, when al-Muqaddasi recorded that it exported iron and iron goods like buckets, knives and chains.[18]: 52  However, no surviving metal objects from Mosul are known before the early 13th century.[18]: 52  Inlaid metalworking in the Islamic world was first developed in Khurasan in the 12th century by silversmiths facing a shortage of silver.[18]: 52–3  By the mid-12th century, Herat in particular had gained a reputation for its high-quality inlaid metalwork.[18]: 53  The practice of inlaying "required relatively few tools" and the technique spread westward, perhaps by Khurasani artisans moving to other cities.[18]: 53 

By the turn of the 13th century, the silver-inlaid-brass technique had reached Mosul.[18]: 53  A pair of engraved brass flabella found in Egypt and possibly made in Mosul are dated by a Syriac inscription to the year 1202, which would make them the earliest known Mosul brasses with a definite date (although they are not inlaid with anything).[18]: 49–50  One extant item may be even older: an inlaid ewer by the master craftsman Ibrahim ibn Mawaliya is of an unknown date, but D.S. Rice estimated that it was made around 1200.[18]: 53  Production of inlaid brasswork in Mosul may have already begun before the turn of the century.[18]: 53–4 

The body of Mosul metalwork significantly expands in the 1220s - several signed and dated items are known from this decade, which according to Julian Raby "probably reflects the craft's growing status and production."[18]: 54  In the two decades from roughly 1220 to 1240, the Mosul brass industry saw "rapid innovations in technique, decoration, and composition".[18]: 54  Artisans were inspired by miniature paintings produced in the Mosul area.[18]: 54 

Mosul seems to have become predominant among Muslim centers of metalwork in the early 13th century.[18]: 53  Evidence is partial and indirect - relatively few objects which directly state where they were made exist, and in the rest of cases it depends on nisbahs.[18]: 53  However, al-Mawsili is by far the most common nisbah; only two others are attested: al-Is'irdi (referring to someone from Siirt) and al-Baghdadi.[18]: 53  There are, however, some scientific instruments inlaid with silver that were made in Syria during this period, with the earliest being 1222/3 (619 AH).[18]: 53 

Instability after the death of Badr al-Din Lu'lu' in 1259, and especially the Mongol siege and capture of Mosul in July 1262, probably caused a decline in Mosul's metalworking industry.[18]: 54  There is a relative lack of known metalwork from the Jazira in the late 1200s; meanwhile, an abundance of metalwork from Mamluk Syria and Egypt is attested from this same period.[18]: 54  This doesn't necessarily mean that production in Mosul ended, though, and some extant objects from this period may have been made in Mosul.[18]: 54–5 

The earliest definite evidence of Mawsili craftsmen emigrating westward to Mamluk Syria and Egypt dates from the 1250s.[18]: 23, 54  Extant Mawsili works from these regions seem to be the result of one particular family setting up workshops in Damascus and then Cairo rather than a mass movement of Mosul artisans to those cities.[18]: 37  Five Mawsili craftsmen are known from these two cities in the late 13th century, of which 3 or 4 are members of this same family.[18]: 37  The first is Husayn ibn Muhammad al-Mawsili, who produced the earliest known silver-inlaid work from Damascus in the late 1250s.[18]: 39  His presumed son, Ali ibn Husayn ibn Muhammad al-Mawsili, was active in Cairo several decades later.[18]: 37–9  However, the earliest known silver-inlaid brasswork from Cairo belongs to another presumed member of this family, Muhammad ibn Hasan.[18]: 37–9  His one known work, a candlestick dated to 1269, has an inscription which suggests he died before it was completed.[18]: 39  The "key figure" for early Mamluk metalwork in Cairo, however, was Ali ibn Husayn.[18]: 39  His works from the 1280s both show Mosul influence as well as a different "early Mamluk" style.[18]: 39  A final member was Husayn ibn Ahmad ibn Husayn, a grandson of Husayn ibn Muhammad, who was active at the turn of the 14th century and made "a major work" for the Rasulid sultan al-Mu'ayyad Hizabr al-Din Dawud ibn Yusuf.[18]: 42–4  This family appears to have initiated "two of the most characteristic features of 14th-century Mamluk metalwork: large-scale inspirational candlesticks, and large multi-lobed medallions with a wide border that eventually became filled with flying ducks".[18]: 42 

Elsewhere, Mosul metalwork eventually influenced a tradition of metal inlay in Fars and elsewhere in western Iran in the 14th century.[18]: 55  The Ilkhanids rounding up artisans and gathering them in their capital of Tabriz for centralized royal production may have played a role in this transmission.[18]: 55 

Only two items are definitively known to have been produced in Mosul.[18]: 23  The first is the Blacas ewer, made by Shuja' ibn Man'a in 1232, and the second is a silver-inlaid pen box made by Ali ibn Yahya in 1255/6 (653 AH).[18]: 12, 23  No other works by either craftsman are known.[18]: 23  They form part of the broader Mosul work which consists of 35 known surviving brasses made by artisans with the nisbah al-Mawsili, by some 27 different makers.[18]: 22  80% of them are from the years 1220 to 1275, and the remaining 20% are from 1275 to about 1325.[18]: 23 

Modern western scholarship has termed this body of metalwork attributed to Mosul the "Mosul School", although the validity of this grouping is disputed.[17]: 283  The "indiscriminate" attribution of silver-inlaid brasses to Mosul,[17]: 283  particularly by Gaston Migeon at the turn of the 20th century, led to a reaction against the term.[18]: 13  Later scholars such as Max van Berchem, Mehmet Ağa-Oğlu, and D.S. Rice all took a more skeptical view; van Berchem in particular argued that only six known items could be definitely attributed to Mosul, and others were likely made elsewhere.[18]: 13–5  Souren Melikian-Chirvani remarked in 1973 that Mosul had been famous in the west for a century for metalwork it did not make.[18]: 11  However, Julian Raby has defended the concept of the Mosul School, arguing that the city did have a distinct metalworking tradition with its own techniques, styles and motifs, and sense of community.[18]: 11–2  He compared Mosul's metalwork to Kashan's pottery and wrote that "Mawsili metalworkers displayed a conscious sense of community and tradition and, at least in the early years, a proud acknowledgement of tradition" and that the city's metalwork gained a wide reputation or "brand value" lasting for over a century.[18]: 57 

Part of Raby's argument was that many items shared one or two recurring symbols that "served no practical purpose" and may have been meant as a "brand", "workshop mark", a "guild emblem", or "perhaps as a mark of master craftsmanship".[18]: 12, 31, 33, 56  The first one is an octagon filled with complex geometric patterns, which appears on at least 13 items over the course of three decades: the 1220s through the 1240s.[18]: 30–2  Several of the most important Mosul artists from what Raby terms the "second generation of Mosul metalwork" all used this symbol: Ahmad al-Dhaki, Ibn Jaldak, Shuja' ibn Man'a, Dawud ibn Salama, and Yunus ibn Yusuf.[18]: 32  A notable absence is Ibrahim ibn Mawaliya, a member of the first generation.[18]: 32  The octagon disappears after about 1250, and is also not used by workers known to have been outside Mosul.[18]: 32 

Another recurring symbol is a rosette with either 10 or 12 leaves found at the bottom of the item - either the base of a ewer or the bottom of the shaft of a candlestick.[18]: 33  This is not normally visible, and perhaps because it served no practical purpose, it was eventually abandoned around the middle of the century.[18]: 33  The last example of this rosette is the bottom of a candlestick made by Dawud ibn Salama in 1248/9 (646 AH).[18]: 33 

Raby suggested that Ibrahim ibn Mawaliya "may have been a seminal figure" in the Mosul brasswork industry.[18]: 33  The particular phrasing of the "benedictory inscriptions" on his objects, bestowing good luck on their owners, is repeated in several works by other Mosul craftsmen.[18]: 33  Two assistants of Ibrahim ibn Mawaliya's are known: his tilmidh (apprentice) Isma'il ibn Ward, and his ghulam Qasim ibn Ali.[18]: 24  Ahmad al-Dhaki's workshop was possibly also "intimately connected to others in Mosul".[18]: 35 

The Mosul metalwork is the only example in the Muslim world where metalworkers recorded their relationships between masters and apprentices (tilmidh) and hirelings (ajir).[18]: 56  This was apparently a point of pride for Mosul artisans.[18]: 56  Julian Raby speculated that two elaborate but impractically tiny Mosuli objects, a tiny 6x4 cm box made by Isma'il ibn Ward and an anonymous 8-cm-tall bucket, were made as "credential work" by apprentice or journeyman metalworkers as part of a test to be accepted into a craftsman's guild.[18]: 56–7 

According to Raby, the Mosul metalwork may have been part of the gifts that Badr al-Din Lu'lu' gave to other rulers to appease them as part of his realpolitik diplomacy.[18]: 29 

Ottoman period

 
Conquest of Mosul (Nineveh) by Mustafa Pasha in 1631, a Turkish soldier in the foreground holding a severed head. L., C. (Stecher) 1631 -1650
 
Map of Mosul in 1778, by Carsten Niebuhr

What started as irregular attacks in 1517 were finalized in 1538, when Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent added Mosul to his empire by capturing it from his archrival, Safavid Persia.[19] Thenceforth Mosul was governed by a pasha. Mosul was celebrated for its line of walls, comprising seven gates with large towers, a renowned hospital (maristan) and a covered market (qaysariyya), and its fabrics and flourishing trades.

Mesopotamia had been acquired by the Ottoman Empire in 1555 by the Peace of Amasya, but until the Treaty of Zuhab in 1639 Ottoman control over Mesopotamia was not decisive.[20] After the Peace of Amasya, the Safavids recaptured most of Mesopotamia one more time during the reign of king Abbas I (r. 1588–1629). Among the newly appointed Safavid governors of Mesopotamia during those years was Qasem Sultan Afshar, who was appointed governor of Mosul in 1622.[21][22] Before 1638, the Ottomans considered Mosul "still a mere fortress, important for its strategic position as an offensive platform for Ottoman campaigns into Iraq, as well as a defensive stronghold and staging post guarding the approaches to Anatolia and to the Syrian coast. Then, with the Ottoman reconquest of Baghdad (1638), the liwa of Mosul became an independent wilaya."[23]: 202 

Despite being a part of the Ottoman Empire, during the four centuries of Ottoman rule Mosul was considered "the most independent district" within the Middle East, following the Roman model of indirect rule through local notables.[24]: 203–204  "Mosuli culture developed less along Ottoman–Turkish lines than along Iraqi–Arab lines; and Turkish, the official language of the State, was certainly not the dominant language in the province."[23]: 203 

In line with its status as a politically stable trade route between the Mediterranean and the Persian Gulf, Mosul developed considerably during the 17th and early 18th centuries. Like the development of the Mamluk dynasty in Baghdad, during this time "the Jalili family was establishing itself as the undisputed master of Mosul" and "helping to connect Mosul with a pre-Ottoman, pre-Turcoman, pre-Mongol, Arab cultural heritage that was to put the town on its way to recapturing some of the prestige and prominence it had enjoyed under the golden reign of Badr ad-Din Lu’lu’."[23]: 203 

Along with the al-Umari and Tasin al-Mufti families, the Jalilis formed an "urban-based small and medium gentry and a new landed elite", which proceeded to displace the control of previous rural tribes.[25] Such families establish themselves through private enterprise, solidifying their influence and assets through rents on land and taxes on manufacturing.

As well as by elected officials, Mosul's social architecture was highly influenced by the Dominican fathers who arrived in Mosul in 1750, sent by Pope Benedict XIV (Mosul had a large Christian population, predominantly indigenous Assyrians).[26] In 1873 they were followed by the Dominican nuns, who established schools, health clinics, a printing press, an orphanage, and workshops to teach girls sewing and embroidery.[27] A congregation of Dominican sisters founded in the 19th century still had its motherhouse in Mosul in the early 21st century. Over 120 Assyrian Iraqi Sisters belonged to this congregation.[26]

In the 19th century the Ottoman government started to reclaim central control over its outlying provinces. Their aim was to "restore Ottoman law, and rejuvenate the military" and to revive "a secure tax base for the government".[28]: 24–26  In order to reestablish rule, in 1834 the sultan abolished public elections for governor, and began "neutraliz[ing] local families such as the Jalilis and their class"[28]: 28–29  and appointing new, non-Maslawi governors directly. In line with its reintegration within central government rule, Mosul was required to conform to new Ottoman reform legislation, including the standardization of tariff rates, the consolidation of internal taxes and the integration of the administrative apparatus with the central government.[28]: 26 

This process started in 1834 with the appointment of Bayraktar Mehmet Pasha, who was to rule Mosul for the next four years. After his reign, the Ottoman government (wishing still to restrain the influence of powerful local families) appointed a series of governors in rapid succession, ruling "for only a brief period before being sent somewhere else to govern, making it impossible for any of them to achieve a substantial local power base."[28]: 29  Mosul's importance as a trading center declined after the opening of the Suez Canal, which enabled goods to travel to and from India by sea rather than by land through Mosul.

 
A coffee house in Mosul, 1914.

Mosul was the capital of Mosul Vilayet, one of the three vilayets (provinces) of Ottoman Iraq, with a brief break in 1623, when Persia seized the city.

During World War I, the Ottoman Empire sided with Germany, the Austro-Hungarian Empire and Bulgaria against the British Empire, France and the Russian Empire. In northern Mesopotamia, northern Syria and southeast Turkey the Ottomans held the armed support of the Kurds, Turcomans, Circassians and some Arab groups, while the British and Russians were militarily supported by the Assyrians and Armenians (particularly in the wake of the Armenian genocide and Assyrian genocide), and some Arab groups. The Ottomans were defeated, and in 1918 the British occupied Mosul and the whole of Iraq.

1918 to 1990s

At the end of World War I in October 1918, after the Armistice of Mudros, British forces occupied Mosul. After the war, the city and surrounding area became part of the British-occupied Iraq (1918–1920) and then Mandatory Iraq (1920–1932). This mandate was contested by Turkey, which continued to claim the area on the grounds that it was under Ottoman control during the signature of the Armistice.

In the Treaty of Lausanne, the dispute over Mosul was left for future resolution by the League of Nations. In 1926, Iraq's possession of Mosul was confirmed by the League of Nations' brokered agreement between Turkey and Great Britain. Former Ottoman Mosul Vilayet became the Nineveh Governorate of Iraq, but Mosul remained the provincial capital.

 
Mosul in 1932. The leaning minaret of Great Mosque of al-Nuri gave the city its nickname "the hunchback" (الحدباء al-Ḥadbāˈ)

Mosul's fortunes revived with the discovery of oil in the area, from the late 1920s onward. It became a nexus for the movement of oil via truck and pipeline to Turkey and Syria. Qyuarrah Refinery was built within about an hour's drive from the city and was used to process tar for road-building projects. It was damaged but not destroyed during the Iran–Iraq War.

The opening of the University of Mosul in 1967 enabled the education of many in the city and surrounding area.

 
Mosul, 1968
 
Iraqi police, U.S. Soldiers patrol neighborhood in Mosul, March 19, 2007

After the 1991 uprisings by the Kurds, Mosul did not fall within the Kurdish-ruled area, but was included in the northern no-fly zone imposed and patrolled by the United States and Britain between 1991 and 2003.

Although this prevented Saddam's forces from mounting large-scale military operations again in the region, it did not stop his regime from implementing a steady policy of "Arabisation" by which the demography of some areas of Nineveh Governorate were gradually changed. Despite this program, Mosul and its surrounding towns and villages remained home to a mixture of Arabs, Kurds, Assyrians, Armenians, Turkmens, Shabaks, a few Jews, and isolated populations of Yazidis, Mandeans, Kawliya and Circassians.

Saddam was able to garrison portions of the 5th Army within Mosul, had Mosul International Airport under military control, and recruited heavily from Mosul for his military's officer corps. This may have been because most of the Iraqi Army officers and generals were from Mosul long before the Saddam regime.

2003 American invasion

 
Saddam Hussein's sons Qusay and Uday were killed in a gun battle in Mosul on July 22, 2003.

When the 2003 invasion of Iraq was being planned, the United States had originally intended to base troops in Turkey and mount a thrust into northern Iraq to capture Mosul, but the Turkish parliament refused to grant permission for the operation. When the Iraq War broke out in March 2003, U.S. military activity in the area was confined to strategic bombing with airdropped special forces in the vicinity. Mosul fell on 11 April 2003, when the Iraqi Army 5th Corps, loyal to Saddam, abandoned the city and surrendered two days after the fall of Baghdad. U.S. Army Special Forces with Kurdish fighters quickly took civil control of the city. Thereafter began widespread looting before an agreement was reached to cede overall control to U.S. forces.

On 22 July 2003, Saddam Hussein's sons, Uday Hussein and Qusay Hussein, were killed in a gun battle with Coalition forces in Mosul after a failed attempt at their capture.[29] Mosul also served as the operational base for the US Army's 101st Airborne Division during the occupational phase of the Operation Iraqi Freedom. During its tenure, the 101st Airborne Division was able to extensively survey the city and, advised by the 431st Civil Affairs Battalion, non-governmental organizations, and the people of Mosul, began reconstruction work by employing the people of Mosul in security, electricity, local governance, drinking water, wastewater, trash disposal, roads, bridges, and environmental concerns.[30]

Other U.S. Army units to have occupied the city include the 4th Brigade Combat Team of the 1st Cavalry Division, the 172nd Stryker Brigade, the 3rd Brigade-2nd Infantry Division, 18th Engineer Brigade (Combat), Alpha Company 14th Engineer Battalion-555th Combat Engineer Brigade, 1st Brigade-25th Infantry Division, the 511th Military Police Company, the 812th Military Police Company and company-size units from Reserve components, an element of the 364th Civil Affairs Brigade, and the 404th Civil Affairs Battalion, which covered the areas north of the Green Line.[clarification needed] The 67th Combat Support Hospital (CSH) deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom (OIF) from January 2004 to January 2005, running split based operations in Mosul and Tikrit. The Task Force (TF) 67 Headquarters and Company B operated out of Forward Operating Base (FOB) Diamondback (Mosul), and Company A operating out of FOB Speicher (Tikrit).[31]

On 24 June 2004, a coordinated series of car bombs killed 62 people, many of them policemen.

On 21 December 2004, 14 U.S. soldiers, four American employees of Halliburton, and four Iraqi soldiers were killed in a suicide attack on a dining hall at the Forward Operating Base (FOB) Marez next to the main U.S. military airfield at Mosul. The Pentagon reported that 72 other personnel were injured in the attack, carried out by a suicide bomber wearing an explosive vest and the uniform of the Iraqi security services. The Islamist group Army of Ansar al-Sunna (partly evolved from Ansar al-Islam) took responsibility for the attack in an online statement.

In December 2007, Iraq reopened Mosul International Airport. An Iraqi Airways flight carried 152 Hajj pilgrims to Baghdad, the first commercial flight since U.S. forces declared a no-fly zone in 1993, though further commercial flight remained prohibited.[32] On 23 January 2008, an explosion in an apartment building killed 36 people. The next day, a suicide bomber dressed as a police officer assassinated the local police chief, Brigadier General Salah Mohammed al-Jubouri, the director of police for Nineveh province, as he toured the site of the blast.[33]

In May 2008, US-backed Iraqi Army Forces led by Major General Riyadh Jalal Tawfiq, the commander of military operations in Mosul, launched a military offensive of the Ninawa campaign in hopes of bringing stability and security to the city.[34] The representatives of Mosul in the Iraqi Parliament, the intellectuals of the city, and other concerned humanitarian groups agreed on the pressing need for a solution to the city's unbearable conditions, but still believed the solution was political and administrative. They also questioned whether such a large-scale military offensive would spare the lives of innocent people.[35]

All these factors deprived the city of its historical, scientific and intellectual foundations between 2003 and 2008, when many scientists, professors, academics, doctors, health professionals, engineers, lawyers, journalists, religious clergy (both Muslim and Christian), historians, as well as professionals and artists, were either killed or forced to leave the city under the threat of being shot, exactly as happened elsewhere in Iraq in those years.[36][37][38][39]

Christian exodus

In 2008, many Assyrian Christians (about 12,000) fled the city, following a wave of murders and threats against their community. The murder of a dozen Assyrians, threats that others would be murdered unless they converted to Islam, and the destruction of their houses sparked a rapid exodus of the Christian population. Some fled to Syria and Turkey; others were given shelter in churches and monasteries. Accusations were exchanged between Sunni fundamentalists and some Kurdish groups of being behind this new exodus. Some claims linked it to the provincial elections of January 2009, and the related Assyrian Christians' demands for broader representation in the provincial councils.[40][41]

Mosul was attacked on 4 June 2014. After six days of fighting, on 10 June the Islamic State took over the city during the June 2014 Northern Iraq offensive.[42][43][44] By August, the city's new ISIL administration was dysfunctional, with frequent power cuts, a tainted water supply, collapse of infrastructure, and failing health care.[45]

Government by the Islamic State

On June 10, 2014, the Islamic State captured Mosul, after the Iraqi troops stationed there withdrew.[46][47][48] Troop shortages and infighting among top officers and Iraqi political leaders played into ISIL's hands and fueled panic that led to the city's abandonment.[49] Half a million people escaped on foot or by car during the next two days.[50] According to western and pro-Iraqi government press, Mosul residents were de facto prisoners,[51] forbidden to leave the city unless they left ISIL a significant collateral of family members, personal wealth and property. They could then leave after paying a significant "departure tax"[52] for a three-day pass (for a higher fee they could surrender their home, pay the fee and leave for good) and if those with a three-day pass failed to return within that time, their assets would be seized and their family killed.[53] While ISIL ruled Mosul with an extreme monopolization of violence and committed many acts of terror, some scholars argue that it also had a highly efficient bureaucratic government that ran a highly functioning state within Mosul's borders via sophisticated diwans (governing bodies).[54]

 
Humvee down after Islamic State attack in 2014.
 
ISOF on the street of Mosul, 16 November 2016. The city was liberated in 2017.

Ali Ghaidan, a former commander of the Iraqi ground forces, accused al-Maliki of being the one who issued the order to withdraw from the city.[48] A short period of time after, Al-Maliki called for a national state of emergency on 10 June following the attack on Mosul, which had been seized overnight. Despite the security crisis, Iraq's parliament did not allow Maliki to declare a state of emergency; many legislators boycotted the session because they opposed expanding the prime minister's powers, since his reign has been described as sectarian by both Iraqis and western analysts, as well allegations of corruption, with hundreds of billions of dollars allegedly vanishing from government coffers.[55][56]

After more than two years of ISIL occupation of Mosul, Iraqi forces, with the help of American and French forces launched a joint offensive to recapture it on 16 October 2016.[57][58] The battle for Mosul was considered key in the military intervention against ISIL.[59] A military offensive to retake the city was the largest deployment of Iraqi forces since the 2003 invasion by U.S. and coalition forces[60] On 9 July 2017, Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi arrived in preparation to announce the full liberation and reclamation of Mosul after three years of ISIL control.[61] A formal declaration was made on the next day.[62] The battle continued for another couple of weeks in the Old City before Iraqi forces regained full control of Mosul on 21 July 2017.[63][64]

Demographics

 
A souk (traditional market) in Mosul, 1932

According to Salahuddin Khuda Bakhsh, the Arab geographer Ibn Hawqal was at Mosul in 969 AD (358 AH) He called it a "fine town with excellent markets, surrounded by fertile districts of which the most celebrated was that round Nineveh where the prophet Jonah was buried. In the 10th century the population consisted chiefly of Kurds, and the numerous districts round Mosul, occupying all Diyir Rabi'ah, are carefully enumerated by Ibn Hawkal."[65]

In 1813, James Playfair, the author of the book A System of Geography: Ancient and Modern wrote,

Mosul Is chiefly peopled by Curds [Kurds],[66] a sober and industrious race.

But Mosul has had various ethnic groups during its history. In 1923, half of its population was Kurd.[67] In the 20th century, Mosul was indicative of Iraq's mingling ethnic and religious cultures. Today Mosul has a Sunni Arab majority in urban areas, such as downtown Mosul west of the Tigris; across the Tigris and further north in the suburban areas, thousands of Assyrians, Kurds, Turkmens, Shabaks, Yazidis, Armenians and Mandeans made up the rest of Mosul's population.[68] Shabaks were concentrated on the city's eastern outskirts.

Religion

 
Celebration at the Syriac Orthodox Monastery in Mosul, early 20th century

Mosul has a predominantly Sunni Muslim population. This city had an ancient Jewish population. Like their counterparts elsewhere in Iraq, most were forced out in 1950–51. Most Iraqi Jews have moved to Israel, and some to the United States.[69] In 2003, during the Iraq War, a rabbi in the American army found an abandoned, dilapidated synagogue in Mosul dating to the 13th century.[70][71]

During ISIL's occupation, religious minorities were targeted to convert to Islam, pay tribute (jizya) money, leave, or be killed.[72] The persecution of Christians in Mosul and the surrounding Nineveh Plains removed a Christian community that had been present in the region since the 1st century.[73]

Infrastructure

 
View of the Tigris river in Mosul

The Mosul Dam was built in the 1980s to supply Mosul with hydroelectricity and water. Despite this, water supply cuts are still common.[74]

Five bridges cross the Tigris in Mosul, known from north to south as:[75]

  • Al Shohada Bridge (or "Third Bridge")
  • Fifth Bridge
  • Old Bridge (or "Iron Bridge", or "First Bridge")
  • Al Huriya Bridge (literally "Freedom Bridge", also known as "Second Bridge"): located about 1 km north of the 4th bridge and 0.8 km south of the 1st bridge, the al-Huriya Bridge connects the neighborhoods of Bab at-Tawb on the west bank and al-Faisaliyyah on the east bank.[76]: 8, 20  It was built between 1955-58 by German, French, and Dutch companies.[76]: 4  Made of steel with concrete supports, the bridge has 6 spans and is 340 m long.[76]: 4  A two-way street with one lane in each direction goes across the bridge, and there is also a sidewalk on both sides.[76]: 4  Before the bridge's destruction in 2016, an estimated 10,495 vehicles crossed the bridge per day, for a total of some 3.8 million vehicles per year.[76]: 17–8  In October 2016, a US airstrike destroyed the bridge's first span (starting from the left) along with the left-bank approach.[76]: 4  Later, bombings by the Islamic State destroyed three more spans (the 4th, 5th, and 6th) and damaged the last two (2nd and 3rd spans).[76]: 4  In the aftermath, Iraqi Army forces installed a temporary pontoon bridge 0.2 km north of the al-Huriya Bridge to provide an alternate route for commuters.[76]: 18 
  • Fourth Bridge

During the Battle of Mosul (2016–17) between ISIL and the Iraqi Army supported by an international coalition, two bridges were 'damaged' by coalition airstrikes in October 2016, two others in November, and the Old Bridge was 'disabled' in early December.[75] According to the BBC, in late December the bridges were targeted to disrupt the resupply of ISIL forces in East Mosul from West Mosul.[75] In January 2017, CNN reported that ISIL itself had 'destroyed' all bridges to slow the Iraqi ground troops' advance, citing Iraqi commander Lieutenant General Abdul Amir Rasheed Yarallah.[77]

During the last stages of the battle to retake Mosul, Lise Grande stated that per an initial assessment, basic infrastructure repair would cost over 1 billion USD. She stated that while stabilization in east Mosul could be achieved in two months, in some districts of Mosul it might take years, with six out of 44 districts almost completely destroyed. Every district of Mosul received light or moderate damage.[78] Per the United Nations, 15 of the 54 residential districts in the western half of Mosul were heavily damaged while at least 23 were moderately damaged.[79]

Mosul is served by Mosul International Airport.

Geography

Mosul stands 223 meters above sea level in the Upper Mesopotamia region of the Middle East. To the south west of Mosul is the Syrian Desert and to the East is the Zagros Mountains.

Climate

Mosul has a hot semi-arid climate (BSh), verging on the Mediterranean climate (Csa), with extremely hot, prolonged, dry summers, brief and mild autumn and spring, and moderately wet, relatively cool winters.

Climate data for Mosul
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 21.1
(70.0)
26.9
(80.4)
31.8
(89.2)
35.5
(95.9)
42.9
(109.2)
44.1
(111.4)
47.8
(118.0)
49.3
(120.7)
46.1
(115.0)
42.2
(108.0)
32.5
(90.5)
25.0
(77.0)
49.3
(120.7)
Average high °C (°F) 12.4
(54.3)
14.8
(58.6)
19.3
(66.7)
25.2
(77.4)
32.7
(90.9)
39.2
(102.6)
42.9
(109.2)
42.6
(108.7)
38.2
(100.8)
30.6
(87.1)
21.1
(70.0)
14.1
(57.4)
27.8
(82.0)
Daily mean °C (°F) 7.3
(45.1)
9.1
(48.4)
13.1
(55.6)
18.2
(64.8)
24.5
(76.1)
30.3
(86.5)
34.0
(93.2)
33.4
(92.1)
28.7
(83.7)
22.1
(71.8)
14.2
(57.6)
9.0
(48.2)
20.3
(68.6)
Average low °C (°F) 2.2
(36.0)
3.4
(38.1)
6.8
(44.2)
11.2
(52.2)
16.2
(61.2)
21.3
(70.3)
25.0
(77.0)
24.2
(75.6)
19.1
(66.4)
13.5
(56.3)
7.2
(45.0)
3.8
(38.8)
12.8
(55.1)
Record low °C (°F) −17.6
(0.3)
−12.3
(9.9)
−5.8
(21.6)
−4.0
(24.8)
2.5
(36.5)
9.7
(49.5)
11.6
(52.9)
14.5
(58.1)
8.9
(48.0)
−2.6
(27.3)
−6.1
(21.0)
−15.4
(4.3)
−17.6
(0.3)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 62.1
(2.44)
62.7
(2.47)
63.2
(2.49)
44.1
(1.74)
15.2
(0.60)
1.1
(0.04)
0.2
(0.01)
0.0
(0.0)
0.3
(0.01)
11.8
(0.46)
45.0
(1.77)
57.9
(2.28)
363.6
(14.31)
Average precipitation days 11 11 12 9 6 0 0 0 0 5 7 10 71
Mean monthly sunshine hours 158 165 192 210 310 363 384 369 321 267 189 155 3,083
Source 1: World Meteorological Organisation (UN)[80]
Source 2: Weatherbase (extremes only)[81]

Historical and religious buildings

Mosul is rich in old historical places and ancient buildings: mosques, castles, churches, monasteries, and schools, many of which have architectural features and decorative work of significance. The town centre is dominated by a maze of streets and 19th-century houses. The markets are known for the mixture of people who jostle there: Arabs, Kurds, Assyrians, Iraqi Jews, Kurdish Jews, Iraqi Turkmens, Armenians, Yazidi, Mandeans, Romani and Shabaks.[citation needed]

The Mosul Museum contains many finds from the ancient sites of the old Assyrian capital cities Nineveh and Nimrud. It is laid-out around a courtyard and with a façade of Mosul marble containing displays of Mosul life depicted in tableau form.[clarification needed] On February 26, 2015, ISIL militants destroyed the museum's ancient Assyrian artifacts.

The English writer Agatha Christie lived in Mosul while her second husband, Max Mallowan, an archaeologist, was involved in the excavation in Nimrud.[82]

Mosques and shrines

  • Umayyad Mosque: The first ever in the city, built in 640 AD by Utba bin Farqad Al-Salami after he conquered Mosul in the reign of Caliph Umar ibn Al-Khattab. The only original part extant to recent times was the remarkably elaborate brickwork 52m high minaret that leans like the Leaning Tower of Pisa, called Al-Hadba (The Humped). It was largely destroyed during the Battle of Mosul.[which?]
  • The Great (Nuriddin) Mosque: Built by Nuriddin Zangi in 1172 AD next door to the Umayyad Mosque. Ibn Battuta (the great Moroccan traveller) found a marble fountain there and a mihrab (the niche that indicates the direction of Mecca) with a Kufic inscription. It was destroyed during the Battle of Mosul.[which?]
  • Mujahidi Mosque: The mosque dates back to 12th century AD, and is distinguished for its shen[clarification needed] dome and elaborately wrought mihrab.
  • Prophet Younis Mosque and Shrine: Located east of the city, and included the tomb of Prophet Younis (Jonah), dating back to the 8th century BC, with a tooth of the whale that swallowed and later released him. It was completely demolished by IS in July 2014.[83]
  • Prophet Jirjis Mosque and Shrine: The late 14th century mosque and shrine honoring Prophet Jirjis (George) was built over the Quraysh cemetery. It was destroyed by IS in July 2014.[84]
  • Prophet Daniel Shrine: A Tomb attributed to Prophet Daniel was destroyed by IS in July 2014.[85][86]
  • Hamou Qado (Hema Kado) Mosque: An Ottoman-era mosque in the central Maydan area built in 1881, and officially named Mosque of Abdulla Ibn Chalabi Ibn Abdul-Qadi.[87] It was destroyed by IS in March 2015 because it contained a tomb that was revered and visited by local Muslims on Thursdays and Fridays.[88]

Churches and monasteries

Mosul had the highest proportion of Assyrian Christians of all the Iraqi cities outside of the Kurdish region, and contains several interesting old churches, some of which originally date back to the early centuries of Christianity. Its ancient Assyrian churches are often hidden and their entrances in thick walls are not easy to find. Some of them have suffered from overmuch restoration.

  • Shamoun Al-Safa (St. Peter, Mar Petros): This church dates from the 13th century is and named after Shamoun Al-Safa or St. Peter (Mar Petros in Assyrian Aramaic). Earlier it had the name of the two Apostles, Peter and Paul, and was inhabited by the nuns of the Sacred Hearts.
  • Church of St. Thomas (Mar Touma in Assyrian Aramaic): One of the oldest historical churches, named after St. Thomas the Apostle who preached the Gospel in the East, including India. The exact time of its foundation is unknown, but it was before 770 AD, since Al-Mahdi, the Abbasid Caliph, is mentioned as listening to a grievance concerning this church on his trip to Mosul.
  • Mar Petion Church: Mar Petion, educated by his cousin in a monastery, was martyred in 446 AD. It is the first Chaldean Catholic church in Mosul, after the union of many Assyrians with Rome in the 17th century. It dates back to the 10th century, and lies 3 m below street level. This church suffered destruction, and it has been reconstructed many times. A hall was built on one of its three parts in 1942. As a result, most of its artistic features have been severely damaged.
  • Ancient Tahira Church (The Immaculate): Near Bash Tapia, considered one of the most ancient churches in Mosul. No evidence helps to determine its exact area. It could be either the remnants of the church of the Upper Monastery or the ruined Mar Zena Church. Al-Tahira Church dates back to the 7th century, and it lies 3 m below street level. Reconstructed last in 1743.
  • Al-Tahera Church: Syriac Catholic Church completed in 1862.
  • Mar Hudeni Church: It was named after Mar Ahudemmeh (Hudeni) Maphrian of Tikrit who was martyred in 575 AD. Mar Hudeni is an old church of the Tikritans in Mosul. It dates back to the 10th century, lies 7 m below street level and was first reconstructed in 1970. People can get mineral water from the well in its yard. The chain, fixed in the wall, is thought to cure epileptics.
  • St. George's Monastery (Mar Gurguis): One of the oldest churches in Mosul, named after St. George, located to the north of Mosul, was probably built late in the 17th century. Pilgrims from different parts of the North[clarification needed] visit it yearly in the spring, when many people also go out to its whereabouts on holiday.[clarification needed] It is about 6 m below street level. A modern church was built over the old one in 1931, abolishing much of its archeological significance. The only monuments left are a marble door-frame decorated with a carved Estrangelo (Syriac) inscription, and two niches, which date back to the 13th or 14th century.
  • Mar Matte: This monastery is situated about 20 km (12 mi) east of Mosul on the top of a high mountain (Mount Maqloub). It was built by Mar Matte, a monk who fled with several other monks in 362 AD from the Monastery of Zuknin near the City of Amid (Diyarbakir) in the southern part of Asia Minor (modern Turkey) and the north of Iraq during the reign of Emperor Julian the Apostate (361–363 AD). It has a precious library containing Syrianic scriptures.
  • Monastery of Mar Behnam: Also called Deir Al-Jubb (The Cistern Monastery) and built in the 12th or 13th century, it lies in the Nineveh Plain near Nimrud about 32 km (20 mi) southwest of Mosul. The monastery, a great fort-like building, rises next to the tomb of Mar Behnam, a prince who was killed by the Sassanians, perhaps during the 4th century AD. A legend made him a son of an Assyrian king.
  • St. Elijah's Monastery (Dair Mar Elia): Dating from the 6th century, it was the oldest Christian Monastery in Iraq, until its destruction by IS in January 2016.[89][90]

Other Christian historical buildings:

  • The Roman Catholic Church (built by the Dominican Fathers in Nineveh Street in 1893)
  • Mar Michael
  • Mar Elias
  • Mar Oraha
  • Rabban Hormizd Monastery, the monastery of Notre-Dame des Semences, near the Assyrian town of Alqosh

Other sites

  • Bash Tapia Castle: A ruined castle rising high over the Tigris, which was one of the few remnants of Mosul's old walls until it was blown up by IS in 2015.
  • Qara Saray (The Black Palace): The remnants of the 13th-century palace of Sultan Badruddin Lu'lu'.

Arts

Painting

 
Old house in Mosul.

The so-called Mosul School of Painting refers to a style of miniature painting that developed in northern Iraq in the late 12th to early 13th century under the patronage of the Zangid dynasty (1127–1222). In technique and style the Mosul school was similar to the painting of the Seljuq Turks, who controlled Iraq at that time, but the Mosul artists had a sharper sense of realism based on the subject matter and degree of detail in the painting rather than on representation in three dimensions, which did not occur. Most of the Mosul iconography was Seljuq—for example, the use of figures seated cross-legged in a frontal position. Certain symbolic elements, however, such as the crescent and serpents, were derived from the classical Mesopotamian repertory.

Most Mosul paintings were manuscript illustrations—mainly scientific works, animal books, and lyric poetry. A frontispiece painting, now held in the Bibliothèque nationale, Paris, dating from a late 12th century copy of Galen's medical treatise, the Kitab al-diriyak ("Book of Antidotes"), is a good example of the earlier work of the Mosul school. It depicts four figures surrounding a central, seated figure who holds a crescent-shaped halo. The painting is in a variety of whole hues; reds, blues, greens, and gold. The Küfic lettering is blue. The total effect is best described as majestic.

Another mid-13th century frontispiece held in the Nationalbibliothek, Vienna, to another copy of the same text suggests the quality of later Mosul painting. There is realism in its depiction of the preparation of a ruler's meal and of horsemen engaged in various activities, and the painting is as many hued as that of the early Mosul school, yet it is somehow less spirited. The composition is more elaborate but less successful. By this time the Baghdad school, which combined the styles of the Syrian and early Mosul schools, had begun to dominate. With the invasion of the Mongols in the mid-13th century the Mosul school came to an end, but its achievements were influential in both the Mamluk and the Mongol schools of miniature painting.

Education

Mosul has several universities and colleges. These include the University of Mosul, which is the largest university in Mosul,[91] Ninevah University, Al-Hadbaa University College, and the Northern Technical University.

Mosul also has multiple highschools some of which are coeducational while others are gender segregated. These include but are not limited to:

  • Al-Hafsah School[92]
  • Al-Haj Secondary School for Girls[93]
  • Kourtoba High School for Girls
  • Al-Mouhobeen Secondary School for Boys and Girls
  • Al-Mustaqbal High School for Boys
  • Al-Mutamaizat High School for Girls
  • Al-Mutamaizeen High School for Boys
  • Al-Resalah Al-Islamia (Al-Resalah) High School for Boys
  • Al-Sharqiya High School for Boys

Sport

The city has one football team capable of competing in the top-flight of Iraqi football – Mosul FC.

Al Mosul University Stadium is the home stadium to Mosul FC and can hold up to 20,000 people.

 
Mosul university Stadium

The University of Mosul contains a College of Physical Education and Sports Science which teaches undergraduate and graduate students and performs research in three scientific departments.[94]

Media

Newspapers

Notable people

See also

References

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External links

  • ninava-explorer
  • Iraq Image – Mosul Satellite Observation
  • Detailed map of Mosul by the National Imagery and Mapping Agency, from lib.utexas.edu
  • ArchNet.org. . Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA: MIT School of Architecture and Planning. Archived from the original on 2012-12-10. Retrieved 2013-04-15.

mosul, this, article, about, city, former, province, vilayet, other, uses, disambiguation, moslawi, redirects, here, dialect, north, mesopotamian, arabic, arabic, الموصل, romanized, mawṣil, kurdish, مووسڵ, romanized, mûsil, turkish, musul, syriac, ܡܘܨܠ, romani. This article is about the city For the former province see Mosul Vilayet For other uses see Mosul disambiguation Moslawi redirects here For the dialect see North Mesopotamian Arabic Mosul Arabic الموصل romanized al Mawṣil Kurdish مووسڵ romanized Musil 3 4 Turkish Musul Syriac ܡܘܨܠ romanized Mawṣil 5 is a major city in northern Iraq serving as the capital of Nineveh Governorate 6 The city is considered the second largest city in Iraq in terms of population and area after the capital Baghdad with a population of over 3 7 million Mosul is approximately 400 km 250 mi north of Baghdad on the Tigris river The Mosul metropolitan area has grown from the old city on the western side to encompass substantial areas on both the Left Bank east side and the Right Bank west side as locals call the two riverbanks Mosul encloses the ruins of the ancient Assyrian city of Nineveh once the largest city in the world on its east side Mosul الموصلCityTop to bottom left to right View over Tigris river Church of Saint Thomas Hatra Mosul Rural area The river s gate Mosul Museum Heritage houseNickname s Ninwe ܢܝ ܢܘ ܐ The Pearl of the NorthMosulLocation in IraqCoordinates 36 20 N 43 08 E 36 34 N 43 13 E 36 34 43 13 Coordinates 36 20 N 43 08 E 36 34 N 43 13 E 36 34 43 13Country IraqGovernorateNinevehDistrictMosulArea Total180 km2 70 sq mi Elevation 1 223 m 732 ft Population 2021 Total1 683 000 Macrotrends 2 Demonym s MosuliMaslawiTime zoneUTC 3 AST Area code60A map of Mosul and its quarters Mosul Museum is the second largest museum in Iraq after the National Museum of Iraq in Baghdad It contains ancient Mesopotamian artifacts mainly Assyrian The Shrine of Imam Yahya Abu Al Qasim Nineveh Mashki Gate Mosul and its surroundings have an ethnically and religiously diverse population a large majority of its population are Arabs with Assyrians 7 Turkmens and Kurds and other smaller ethnic minorities comprising the rest of the city s population Sunni Islam is the largest religion but there are a significant number of Christians as well as adherents of other sects of Islam and various other minority religions Mosul is considered among the larger and more historically and culturally significant cities of the Arab world Due to Mosul s strategic location it has traditionally served as a hub of international commerce and travel The North Mesopotamian dialect of Arabic commonly known as Moslawi is named after Mosul and is widely spoken in the region Historically essential products of the area include Mosul marble and oil Mosul is home to the University of Mosul and its renowned Medical College one of the Middle East s largest educational and research centers Together with the nearby Nineveh Plains Mosul is one of the historical centers of the Assyrian people 8 Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Ancient era and early Middle Ages 2 2 9th century to 1535 2 2 1 Metalworking industry 2 3 Ottoman period 2 4 1918 to 1990s 2 5 2003 American invasion 2 6 Christian exodus 2 7 Government by the Islamic State 3 Demographics 3 1 Religion 4 Infrastructure 5 Geography 5 1 Climate 6 Historical and religious buildings 6 1 Mosques and shrines 6 2 Churches and monasteries 6 3 Other sites 7 Arts 7 1 Painting 8 Education 9 Sport 10 Media 10 1 Newspapers 11 Notable people 12 See also 13 References 14 Sources 15 External linksEtymology EditThe city s name is first mentioned by Xenophon in his expeditionary logs in Achaemenid Assyria of 401 BC during the reign of the Persian Achaemenid Empire There he notes a small Assyrian town of Mepsila Ancient Greek Mepsila on the Tigris around where Mosul is today Anabasis III iv 10 It may be safer to identify Xenophon s Mepsila with the site of Iski Mosul or Old Mosul about 30 km 19 mi north of modern Mosul where six centuries after Xenophon s report the Sasanian Empire s center of Budh Ardhashir was built In any case Mepsila is doubtless the root of the current name In its current Arabic form and spelling the term Mosul or rather Mawsil means linking point or loosely Junction City in Arabic On Mosul s eastern side are the ruins of the ancient city of Nineveh and Assyrians still call the entire city Nineveh or Ninweh 9 Mosul is also nicknamed al Faiha the Paradise al Khaḍrah the Green and al Hadbah the Humped It is sometimes called The Pearl of the North 10 and the city of a million soldiers 11 History EditAncient era and early Middle Ages Edit See also Mesopotamia and Assyria Dair Mar Elia south of Mosul Iraq s oldest monastery of the Assyrian Church of the East dating from the 6th century It was destroyed by ISIS in 2014 The area where Mosul lies was an integral part of Assyria from as early as the 25th century BC After the Akkadian Empire 2335 2154 BC which united all the peoples of Mesopotamia under one rule Mosul again became a continuous part of Assyria proper from circa 2050 BC through the fall of the Neo Assyrian Empire between 612 and 599 BC Mosul remained within the geopolitical province of Assyria for another 13 centuries as a part of Achaemenid Assyria Seleucid Roman Assyria and Sasanian Asōristan until the early Muslim conquests of the mid 7th century After the Muslim conquests the region saw a gradual influx of Muslim Arab Kurdish and Turkic peoples although indigenous Assyrians continued to use the name Athura for the ecclesiastical province citation needed Nineveh was one of the oldest and most significant cities in antiquity and was settled as early as 6000 BC 12 The city is mentioned in the Old Assyrian Empire 2025 1750 BC and during the reign of Shamshi Adad I 1809 1776 BC it was listed as a center of worship of the goddess Ishtar remaining so during the Middle Assyrian Empire 1365 1056 BC During the Neo Assyrian Empire 911 605 BC Nineveh grew in size and importance particularly from the reigns of Tukulti Ninurta II and Ashurnasirpal II 883 859 BC onward he chose the city of Kalhu the Biblical Calah modern Nimrud as his capital in place of the ancient traditional capital of Assur Ashur 30 km 19 mi from present day Mosul citation needed Thereafter successive Assyrian emperor monarchs such as Shalmaneser III Adad nirari III Tiglath Pileser III Shalmaneser V and Sargon II continued to expand the city Around 700 BC King Sennacherib made Nineveh Assyria s new capital Immense building work was undertaken and Nineveh eclipsed Babylon Kalhu and Assur in size and importance making it the largest city in the world Many scholars believe the Hanging Gardens of Babylon were at Nineveh 13 The mound of Kuyunjik in Mosul is the site of the palaces of King Sennacherib and his successors Esarhaddon Ashurbanipal who established the Library of Ashurbanipal Ashur etil ilani Sin shumu lishir and Sin shar ishkun The Assyrian Empire began to unravel in 626 BC being consumed by a decade of brutal internal civil wars significantly weakening it A war ravaged Assyria was attacked in 616 BC by a vast coalition of its former subjects most notably their Babylonian relations from southern Mesopotamia together with the Medes Persians Chaldeans Scythians Cimmerians and Sagartians Nineveh fell after a siege and bitter house to house fighting in 612 BC during the reign of Sin shar ishkun who was killed defending his capital His successor Ashur uballit II fought his way out of Nineveh and formed a new Assyrian capital at Harran now in southeastern Turkey citation needed Mosul then the Assyrian town of Mepsila founded by the former inhabitants out of the ruins of their former capital later succeeded Nineveh as the Tigris bridgehead of the road that linked Assyria and Anatolia with the short lived Median Empire and succeeding Achaemenid Empire 546 332 BC where it was a part of the geopolitical province of Athura Assyria where the region and Assyria in general saw a significant economic revival citation needed Mosul became part of the Seleucid Empire after Alexander s conquests in 332 BC While little is known of the city from the Hellenistic period Mosul likely belonged to the Seleucid satrapy of Syria the Greek term for Assyria Syria originally meaning Assyria rather than the modern nation of Syria which the Parthian Empire conquered circa 150 BC citation needed Mosul changed hands again with the rise of the Sasanian Empire in 225 and became a part of the Sasanian province of Asōristan Christianity was present among the indigenous Assyrian people in Mosul as early as the 1st century although the ancient Mesopotamian religion remained strong until the 4th century It became an episcopal seat of the Assyrian Church of the East in the 6th century citation needed In 637 other sources say 641 during the period of the Caliph Umar Mosul was annexed to the Rashidun Caliphate by Utba ibn Farqad al Sulami during the early Arab Muslim invasions and conquests after which Assyria dissolved as a geopolitical entity citation needed 9th century to 1535 Edit A Persian miniature depicting the siege of Mosul in 1261 63 from Rashid al Din Hamadani Jami al tawarikh Bibliotheque Nationale de France In the late 9th century the Turkish dynasts Ishaq ibn Kundaj and his son Muhammad seized control over Mosul but in 893 Mosul came once again under the direct control of the Abbasid Caliphate In the early 10th century Mosul came under the control of the native Arab Hamdanid dynasty From Mosul the Hamdanids under Abdallah ibn Hamdan and his son Nasir al Dawla expanded their control over Upper Mesopotamia for several decades first as governors of the Abbassids and later as de facto independent rulers A century later they were supplanted by the Uqaylid dynasty Ibn Hawqal who visited Mosul in 968 described it as a beautiful town inhabited mainly by Kurds 14 Mosul was conquered by the Seljuk Empire in the 11th century After a period under semi independent atabeg such as Mawdud in 1127 it became the centre of power of the Zengid dynasty Saladin besieged the city unsuccessfully in 1182 but gained control of it in 1186 In the 13th century it was captured by the Mongols led by Hulagu Khan but was spared the usual destruction since its governor Badr al Din Lu lu helped the Khan in his following campaigns in Syria After the Mongol defeat in the Battle of Ain Jalut against the Mamluks Badr al Din s son sided with the latter this led to the city s destruction It later regained some importance but never recovered its original splendor Mosul was thenceforth ruled by the Mongol Ilkhanate and Jalairid Sultanate and escaped Timur s destructiveness In 1165 Benjamin of Tudela passed through Mosul he wrote that he found a small Jewish community estimated at 7 000 people in Mosul led by Rabbi Zakkai presumably connected to the Davidic line In 1288 89 the Exilarch was in Mosul and signed a supporting paper for Maimonides 15 16 In the early 16th century Mosul was under the Turkmen federation of the Ag Qoyunlu but in 1508 it was conquered by the Safavid dynasty of Iran Metalworking industry Edit This section may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help improve it by rewriting it in a balanced fashion that contextualizes different points of view November 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message The Blacas ewer made by Shuja ibn Man a in Mosul in 1232 is one of the most famous brass pieces from Mosul In the 13th century Mosul had a flourishing industry making luxury brass items that were ornately inlaid with silver 17 283 6 Many of these items survive today in fact of all medieval Islamic artifacts Mosul brasswork has the most epigraphic inscriptions 18 12 However the only reference to this industry in contemporary sources is the account of Ibn Sa id an Andalusian geographer who traveled through the region around 1250 17 283 4 He wrote that there are many crafts in the city especially inlaid brass vessels which are exported and presented to rulers 17 284 These were expensive items that only the wealthiest could afford and it wasn t until the early 1200s that Mosul had the demand for large scale production of them 17 285 Mosul was then a wealthy prosperous capital city first for the Zengids and then for Badr al Din Lu lu 17 285 The origins of Mosul s inlaid brasswork industry are uncertain 18 52 The city had an iron industry in the late 10th century when al Muqaddasi recorded that it exported iron and iron goods like buckets knives and chains 18 52 However no surviving metal objects from Mosul are known before the early 13th century 18 52 Inlaid metalworking in the Islamic world was first developed in Khurasan in the 12th century by silversmiths facing a shortage of silver 18 52 3 By the mid 12th century Herat in particular had gained a reputation for its high quality inlaid metalwork 18 53 The practice of inlaying required relatively few tools and the technique spread westward perhaps by Khurasani artisans moving to other cities 18 53 By the turn of the 13th century the silver inlaid brass technique had reached Mosul 18 53 A pair of engraved brass flabella found in Egypt and possibly made in Mosul are dated by a Syriac inscription to the year 1202 which would make them the earliest known Mosul brasses with a definite date although they are not inlaid with anything 18 49 50 One extant item may be even older an inlaid ewer by the master craftsman Ibrahim ibn Mawaliya is of an unknown date but D S Rice estimated that it was made around 1200 18 53 Production of inlaid brasswork in Mosul may have already begun before the turn of the century 18 53 4 The body of Mosul metalwork significantly expands in the 1220s several signed and dated items are known from this decade which according to Julian Raby probably reflects the craft s growing status and production 18 54 In the two decades from roughly 1220 to 1240 the Mosul brass industry saw rapid innovations in technique decoration and composition 18 54 Artisans were inspired by miniature paintings produced in the Mosul area 18 54 Mosul seems to have become predominant among Muslim centers of metalwork in the early 13th century 18 53 Evidence is partial and indirect relatively few objects which directly state where they were made exist and in the rest of cases it depends on nisbahs 18 53 However al Mawsili is by far the most common nisbah only two others are attested al Is irdi referring to someone from Siirt and al Baghdadi 18 53 There are however some scientific instruments inlaid with silver that were made in Syria during this period with the earliest being 1222 3 619 AH 18 53 Instability after the death of Badr al Din Lu lu in 1259 and especially the Mongol siege and capture of Mosul in July 1262 probably caused a decline in Mosul s metalworking industry 18 54 There is a relative lack of known metalwork from the Jazira in the late 1200s meanwhile an abundance of metalwork from Mamluk Syria and Egypt is attested from this same period 18 54 This doesn t necessarily mean that production in Mosul ended though and some extant objects from this period may have been made in Mosul 18 54 5 The earliest definite evidence of Mawsili craftsmen emigrating westward to Mamluk Syria and Egypt dates from the 1250s 18 23 54 Extant Mawsili works from these regions seem to be the result of one particular family setting up workshops in Damascus and then Cairo rather than a mass movement of Mosul artisans to those cities 18 37 Five Mawsili craftsmen are known from these two cities in the late 13th century of which 3 or 4 are members of this same family 18 37 The first is Husayn ibn Muhammad al Mawsili who produced the earliest known silver inlaid work from Damascus in the late 1250s 18 39 His presumed son Ali ibn Husayn ibn Muhammad al Mawsili was active in Cairo several decades later 18 37 9 However the earliest known silver inlaid brasswork from Cairo belongs to another presumed member of this family Muhammad ibn Hasan 18 37 9 His one known work a candlestick dated to 1269 has an inscription which suggests he died before it was completed 18 39 The key figure for early Mamluk metalwork in Cairo however was Ali ibn Husayn 18 39 His works from the 1280s both show Mosul influence as well as a different early Mamluk style 18 39 A final member was Husayn ibn Ahmad ibn Husayn a grandson of Husayn ibn Muhammad who was active at the turn of the 14th century and made a major work for the Rasulid sultan al Mu ayyad Hizabr al Din Dawud ibn Yusuf 18 42 4 This family appears to have initiated two of the most characteristic features of 14th century Mamluk metalwork large scale inspirational candlesticks and large multi lobed medallions with a wide border that eventually became filled with flying ducks 18 42 Elsewhere Mosul metalwork eventually influenced a tradition of metal inlay in Fars and elsewhere in western Iran in the 14th century 18 55 The Ilkhanids rounding up artisans and gathering them in their capital of Tabriz for centralized royal production may have played a role in this transmission 18 55 Only two items are definitively known to have been produced in Mosul 18 23 The first is the Blacas ewer made by Shuja ibn Man a in 1232 and the second is a silver inlaid pen box made by Ali ibn Yahya in 1255 6 653 AH 18 12 23 No other works by either craftsman are known 18 23 They form part of the broader Mosul work which consists of 35 known surviving brasses made by artisans with the nisbah al Mawsili by some 27 different makers 18 22 80 of them are from the years 1220 to 1275 and the remaining 20 are from 1275 to about 1325 18 23 Modern western scholarship has termed this body of metalwork attributed to Mosul the Mosul School although the validity of this grouping is disputed 17 283 The indiscriminate attribution of silver inlaid brasses to Mosul 17 283 particularly by Gaston Migeon at the turn of the 20th century led to a reaction against the term 18 13 Later scholars such as Max van Berchem Mehmet Aga Oglu and D S Rice all took a more skeptical view van Berchem in particular argued that only six known items could be definitely attributed to Mosul and others were likely made elsewhere 18 13 5 Souren Melikian Chirvani remarked in 1973 that Mosul had been famous in the west for a century for metalwork it did not make 18 11 However Julian Raby has defended the concept of the Mosul School arguing that the city did have a distinct metalworking tradition with its own techniques styles and motifs and sense of community 18 11 2 He compared Mosul s metalwork to Kashan s pottery and wrote that Mawsili metalworkers displayed a conscious sense of community and tradition and at least in the early years a proud acknowledgement of tradition and that the city s metalwork gained a wide reputation or brand value lasting for over a century 18 57 Part of Raby s argument was that many items shared one or two recurring symbols that served no practical purpose and may have been meant as a brand workshop mark a guild emblem or perhaps as a mark of master craftsmanship 18 12 31 33 56 The first one is an octagon filled with complex geometric patterns which appears on at least 13 items over the course of three decades the 1220s through the 1240s 18 30 2 Several of the most important Mosul artists from what Raby terms the second generation of Mosul metalwork all used this symbol Ahmad al Dhaki Ibn Jaldak Shuja ibn Man a Dawud ibn Salama and Yunus ibn Yusuf 18 32 A notable absence is Ibrahim ibn Mawaliya a member of the first generation 18 32 The octagon disappears after about 1250 and is also not used by workers known to have been outside Mosul 18 32 Another recurring symbol is a rosette with either 10 or 12 leaves found at the bottom of the item either the base of a ewer or the bottom of the shaft of a candlestick 18 33 This is not normally visible and perhaps because it served no practical purpose it was eventually abandoned around the middle of the century 18 33 The last example of this rosette is the bottom of a candlestick made by Dawud ibn Salama in 1248 9 646 AH 18 33 Raby suggested that Ibrahim ibn Mawaliya may have been a seminal figure in the Mosul brasswork industry 18 33 The particular phrasing of the benedictory inscriptions on his objects bestowing good luck on their owners is repeated in several works by other Mosul craftsmen 18 33 Two assistants of Ibrahim ibn Mawaliya s are known his tilmidh apprentice Isma il ibn Ward and his ghulam Qasim ibn Ali 18 24 Ahmad al Dhaki s workshop was possibly also intimately connected to others in Mosul 18 35 The Mosul metalwork is the only example in the Muslim world where metalworkers recorded their relationships between masters and apprentices tilmidh and hirelings ajir 18 56 This was apparently a point of pride for Mosul artisans 18 56 Julian Raby speculated that two elaborate but impractically tiny Mosuli objects a tiny 6x4 cm box made by Isma il ibn Ward and an anonymous 8 cm tall bucket were made as credential work by apprentice or journeyman metalworkers as part of a test to be accepted into a craftsman s guild 18 56 7 According to Raby the Mosul metalwork may have been part of the gifts that Badr al Din Lu lu gave to other rulers to appease them as part of his realpolitik diplomacy 18 29 Ottoman period Edit Conquest of Mosul Nineveh by Mustafa Pasha in 1631 a Turkish soldier in the foreground holding a severed head L C Stecher 1631 1650 Map of Mosul in 1778 by Carsten Niebuhr What started as irregular attacks in 1517 were finalized in 1538 when Ottoman Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent added Mosul to his empire by capturing it from his archrival Safavid Persia 19 Thenceforth Mosul was governed by a pasha Mosul was celebrated for its line of walls comprising seven gates with large towers a renowned hospital maristan and a covered market qaysariyya and its fabrics and flourishing trades Mesopotamia had been acquired by the Ottoman Empire in 1555 by the Peace of Amasya but until the Treaty of Zuhab in 1639 Ottoman control over Mesopotamia was not decisive 20 After the Peace of Amasya the Safavids recaptured most of Mesopotamia one more time during the reign of king Abbas I r 1588 1629 Among the newly appointed Safavid governors of Mesopotamia during those years was Qasem Sultan Afshar who was appointed governor of Mosul in 1622 21 22 Before 1638 the Ottomans considered Mosul still a mere fortress important for its strategic position as an offensive platform for Ottoman campaigns into Iraq as well as a defensive stronghold and staging post guarding the approaches to Anatolia and to the Syrian coast Then with the Ottoman reconquest of Baghdad 1638 the liwa of Mosul became an independent wilaya 23 202 Despite being a part of the Ottoman Empire during the four centuries of Ottoman rule Mosul was considered the most independent district within the Middle East following the Roman model of indirect rule through local notables 24 203 204 Mosuli culture developed less along Ottoman Turkish lines than along Iraqi Arab lines and Turkish the official language of the State was certainly not the dominant language in the province 23 203 In line with its status as a politically stable trade route between the Mediterranean and the Persian Gulf Mosul developed considerably during the 17th and early 18th centuries Like the development of the Mamluk dynasty in Baghdad during this time the Jalili family was establishing itself as the undisputed master of Mosul and helping to connect Mosul with a pre Ottoman pre Turcoman pre Mongol Arab cultural heritage that was to put the town on its way to recapturing some of the prestige and prominence it had enjoyed under the golden reign of Badr ad Din Lu lu 23 203 Along with the al Umari and Tasin al Mufti families the Jalilis formed an urban based small and medium gentry and a new landed elite which proceeded to displace the control of previous rural tribes 25 Such families establish themselves through private enterprise solidifying their influence and assets through rents on land and taxes on manufacturing As well as by elected officials Mosul s social architecture was highly influenced by the Dominican fathers who arrived in Mosul in 1750 sent by Pope Benedict XIV Mosul had a large Christian population predominantly indigenous Assyrians 26 In 1873 they were followed by the Dominican nuns who established schools health clinics a printing press an orphanage and workshops to teach girls sewing and embroidery 27 A congregation of Dominican sisters founded in the 19th century still had its motherhouse in Mosul in the early 21st century Over 120 Assyrian Iraqi Sisters belonged to this congregation 26 In the 19th century the Ottoman government started to reclaim central control over its outlying provinces Their aim was to restore Ottoman law and rejuvenate the military and to revive a secure tax base for the government 28 24 26 In order to reestablish rule in 1834 the sultan abolished public elections for governor and began neutraliz ing local families such as the Jalilis and their class 28 28 29 and appointing new non Maslawi governors directly In line with its reintegration within central government rule Mosul was required to conform to new Ottoman reform legislation including the standardization of tariff rates the consolidation of internal taxes and the integration of the administrative apparatus with the central government 28 26 This process started in 1834 with the appointment of Bayraktar Mehmet Pasha who was to rule Mosul for the next four years After his reign the Ottoman government wishing still to restrain the influence of powerful local families appointed a series of governors in rapid succession ruling for only a brief period before being sent somewhere else to govern making it impossible for any of them to achieve a substantial local power base 28 29 Mosul s importance as a trading center declined after the opening of the Suez Canal which enabled goods to travel to and from India by sea rather than by land through Mosul A coffee house in Mosul 1914 Mosul was the capital of Mosul Vilayet one of the three vilayets provinces of Ottoman Iraq with a brief break in 1623 when Persia seized the city During World War I the Ottoman Empire sided with Germany the Austro Hungarian Empire and Bulgaria against the British Empire France and the Russian Empire In northern Mesopotamia northern Syria and southeast Turkey the Ottomans held the armed support of the Kurds Turcomans Circassians and some Arab groups while the British and Russians were militarily supported by the Assyrians and Armenians particularly in the wake of the Armenian genocide and Assyrian genocide and some Arab groups The Ottomans were defeated and in 1918 the British occupied Mosul and the whole of Iraq 1918 to 1990s Edit At the end of World War I in October 1918 after the Armistice of Mudros British forces occupied Mosul After the war the city and surrounding area became part of the British occupied Iraq 1918 1920 and then Mandatory Iraq 1920 1932 This mandate was contested by Turkey which continued to claim the area on the grounds that it was under Ottoman control during the signature of the Armistice In the Treaty of Lausanne the dispute over Mosul was left for future resolution by the League of Nations In 1926 Iraq s possession of Mosul was confirmed by the League of Nations brokered agreement between Turkey and Great Britain Former Ottoman Mosul Vilayet became the Nineveh Governorate of Iraq but Mosul remained the provincial capital Mosul in 1932 The leaning minaret of Great Mosque of al Nuri gave the city its nickname the hunchback الحدباء al Ḥadbaˈ Mosul s fortunes revived with the discovery of oil in the area from the late 1920s onward It became a nexus for the movement of oil via truck and pipeline to Turkey and Syria Qyuarrah Refinery was built within about an hour s drive from the city and was used to process tar for road building projects It was damaged but not destroyed during the Iran Iraq War The opening of the University of Mosul in 1967 enabled the education of many in the city and surrounding area Mosul 1968 Iraqi police U S Soldiers patrol neighborhood in Mosul March 19 2007 After the 1991 uprisings by the Kurds Mosul did not fall within the Kurdish ruled area but was included in the northern no fly zone imposed and patrolled by the United States and Britain between 1991 and 2003 Although this prevented Saddam s forces from mounting large scale military operations again in the region it did not stop his regime from implementing a steady policy of Arabisation by which the demography of some areas of Nineveh Governorate were gradually changed Despite this program Mosul and its surrounding towns and villages remained home to a mixture of Arabs Kurds Assyrians Armenians Turkmens Shabaks a few Jews and isolated populations of Yazidis Mandeans Kawliya and Circassians Saddam was able to garrison portions of the 5th Army within Mosul had Mosul International Airport under military control and recruited heavily from Mosul for his military s officer corps This may have been because most of the Iraqi Army officers and generals were from Mosul long before the Saddam regime 2003 American invasion Edit Saddam Hussein s sons Qusay and Uday were killed in a gun battle in Mosul on July 22 2003 When the 2003 invasion of Iraq was being planned the United States had originally intended to base troops in Turkey and mount a thrust into northern Iraq to capture Mosul but the Turkish parliament refused to grant permission for the operation When the Iraq War broke out in March 2003 U S military activity in the area was confined to strategic bombing with airdropped special forces in the vicinity Mosul fell on 11 April 2003 when the Iraqi Army 5th Corps loyal to Saddam abandoned the city and surrendered two days after the fall of Baghdad U S Army Special Forces with Kurdish fighters quickly took civil control of the city Thereafter began widespread looting before an agreement was reached to cede overall control to U S forces On 22 July 2003 Saddam Hussein s sons Uday Hussein and Qusay Hussein were killed in a gun battle with Coalition forces in Mosul after a failed attempt at their capture 29 Mosul also served as the operational base for the US Army s 101st Airborne Division during the occupational phase of the Operation Iraqi Freedom During its tenure the 101st Airborne Division was able to extensively survey the city and advised by the 431st Civil Affairs Battalion non governmental organizations and the people of Mosul began reconstruction work by employing the people of Mosul in security electricity local governance drinking water wastewater trash disposal roads bridges and environmental concerns 30 Other U S Army units to have occupied the city include the 4th Brigade Combat Team of the 1st Cavalry Division the 172nd Stryker Brigade the 3rd Brigade 2nd Infantry Division 18th Engineer Brigade Combat Alpha Company 14th Engineer Battalion 555th Combat Engineer Brigade 1st Brigade 25th Infantry Division the 511th Military Police Company the 812th Military Police Company and company size units from Reserve components an element of the 364th Civil Affairs Brigade and the 404th Civil Affairs Battalion which covered the areas north of the Green Line clarification needed The 67th Combat Support Hospital CSH deployed in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom OIF from January 2004 to January 2005 running split based operations in Mosul and Tikrit The Task Force TF 67 Headquarters and Company B operated out of Forward Operating Base FOB Diamondback Mosul and Company A operating out of FOB Speicher Tikrit 31 On 24 June 2004 a coordinated series of car bombs killed 62 people many of them policemen On 21 December 2004 14 U S soldiers four American employees of Halliburton and four Iraqi soldiers were killed in a suicide attack on a dining hall at the Forward Operating Base FOB Marez next to the main U S military airfield at Mosul The Pentagon reported that 72 other personnel were injured in the attack carried out by a suicide bomber wearing an explosive vest and the uniform of the Iraqi security services The Islamist group Army of Ansar al Sunna partly evolved from Ansar al Islam took responsibility for the attack in an online statement In December 2007 Iraq reopened Mosul International Airport An Iraqi Airways flight carried 152 Hajj pilgrims to Baghdad the first commercial flight since U S forces declared a no fly zone in 1993 though further commercial flight remained prohibited 32 On 23 January 2008 an explosion in an apartment building killed 36 people The next day a suicide bomber dressed as a police officer assassinated the local police chief Brigadier General Salah Mohammed al Jubouri the director of police for Nineveh province as he toured the site of the blast 33 In May 2008 US backed Iraqi Army Forces led by Major General Riyadh Jalal Tawfiq the commander of military operations in Mosul launched a military offensive of the Ninawa campaign in hopes of bringing stability and security to the city 34 The representatives of Mosul in the Iraqi Parliament the intellectuals of the city and other concerned humanitarian groups agreed on the pressing need for a solution to the city s unbearable conditions but still believed the solution was political and administrative They also questioned whether such a large scale military offensive would spare the lives of innocent people 35 All these factors deprived the city of its historical scientific and intellectual foundations between 2003 and 2008 when many scientists professors academics doctors health professionals engineers lawyers journalists religious clergy both Muslim and Christian historians as well as professionals and artists were either killed or forced to leave the city under the threat of being shot exactly as happened elsewhere in Iraq in those years 36 37 38 39 Christian exodus Edit In 2008 many Assyrian Christians about 12 000 fled the city following a wave of murders and threats against their community The murder of a dozen Assyrians threats that others would be murdered unless they converted to Islam and the destruction of their houses sparked a rapid exodus of the Christian population Some fled to Syria and Turkey others were given shelter in churches and monasteries Accusations were exchanged between Sunni fundamentalists and some Kurdish groups of being behind this new exodus Some claims linked it to the provincial elections of January 2009 and the related Assyrian Christians demands for broader representation in the provincial councils 40 41 Mosul was attacked on 4 June 2014 After six days of fighting on 10 June the Islamic State took over the city during the June 2014 Northern Iraq offensive 42 43 44 By August the city s new ISIL administration was dysfunctional with frequent power cuts a tainted water supply collapse of infrastructure and failing health care 45 Government by the Islamic State Edit Main article ISIS occupation of Mosul On June 10 2014 the Islamic State captured Mosul after the Iraqi troops stationed there withdrew 46 47 48 Troop shortages and infighting among top officers and Iraqi political leaders played into ISIL s hands and fueled panic that led to the city s abandonment 49 Half a million people escaped on foot or by car during the next two days 50 According to western and pro Iraqi government press Mosul residents were de facto prisoners 51 forbidden to leave the city unless they left ISIL a significant collateral of family members personal wealth and property They could then leave after paying a significant departure tax 52 for a three day pass for a higher fee they could surrender their home pay the fee and leave for good and if those with a three day pass failed to return within that time their assets would be seized and their family killed 53 While ISIL ruled Mosul with an extreme monopolization of violence and committed many acts of terror some scholars argue that it also had a highly efficient bureaucratic government that ran a highly functioning state within Mosul s borders via sophisticated diwans governing bodies 54 Humvee down after Islamic State attack in 2014 ISOF on the street of Mosul 16 November 2016 The city was liberated in 2017 Ali Ghaidan a former commander of the Iraqi ground forces accused al Maliki of being the one who issued the order to withdraw from the city 48 A short period of time after Al Maliki called for a national state of emergency on 10 June following the attack on Mosul which had been seized overnight Despite the security crisis Iraq s parliament did not allow Maliki to declare a state of emergency many legislators boycotted the session because they opposed expanding the prime minister s powers since his reign has been described as sectarian by both Iraqis and western analysts as well allegations of corruption with hundreds of billions of dollars allegedly vanishing from government coffers 55 56 After more than two years of ISIL occupation of Mosul Iraqi forces with the help of American and French forces launched a joint offensive to recapture it on 16 October 2016 57 58 The battle for Mosul was considered key in the military intervention against ISIL 59 A military offensive to retake the city was the largest deployment of Iraqi forces since the 2003 invasion by U S and coalition forces 60 On 9 July 2017 Prime Minister Haider Al Abadi arrived in preparation to announce the full liberation and reclamation of Mosul after three years of ISIL control 61 A formal declaration was made on the next day 62 The battle continued for another couple of weeks in the Old City before Iraqi forces regained full control of Mosul on 21 July 2017 63 64 Demographics Edit A souk traditional market in Mosul 1932 According to Salahuddin Khuda Bakhsh the Arab geographer Ibn Hawqal was at Mosul in 969 AD 358 AH He called it a fine town with excellent markets surrounded by fertile districts of which the most celebrated was that round Nineveh where the prophet Jonah was buried In the 10th century the population consisted chiefly of Kurds and the numerous districts round Mosul occupying all Diyir Rabi ah are carefully enumerated by Ibn Hawkal 65 In 1813 James Playfair the author of the book A System of Geography Ancient and Modern wrote Mosul Is chiefly peopled by Curds Kurds 66 a sober and industrious race But Mosul has had various ethnic groups during its history In 1923 half of its population was Kurd 67 In the 20th century Mosul was indicative of Iraq s mingling ethnic and religious cultures Today Mosul has a Sunni Arab majority in urban areas such as downtown Mosul west of the Tigris across the Tigris and further north in the suburban areas thousands of Assyrians Kurds Turkmens Shabaks Yazidis Armenians and Mandeans made up the rest of Mosul s population 68 Shabaks were concentrated on the city s eastern outskirts Religion Edit Celebration at the Syriac Orthodox Monastery in Mosul early 20th century Mosul has a predominantly Sunni Muslim population This city had an ancient Jewish population Like their counterparts elsewhere in Iraq most were forced out in 1950 51 Most Iraqi Jews have moved to Israel and some to the United States 69 In 2003 during the Iraq War a rabbi in the American army found an abandoned dilapidated synagogue in Mosul dating to the 13th century 70 71 During ISIL s occupation religious minorities were targeted to convert to Islam pay tribute jizya money leave or be killed 72 The persecution of Christians in Mosul and the surrounding Nineveh Plains removed a Christian community that had been present in the region since the 1st century 73 Infrastructure Edit View of the Tigris river in Mosul The Mosul Dam was built in the 1980s to supply Mosul with hydroelectricity and water Despite this water supply cuts are still common 74 Five bridges cross the Tigris in Mosul known from north to south as 75 Al Shohada Bridge or Third Bridge Fifth Bridge Old Bridge or Iron Bridge or First Bridge Al Huriya Bridge literally Freedom Bridge also known as Second Bridge located about 1 km north of the 4th bridge and 0 8 km south of the 1st bridge the al Huriya Bridge connects the neighborhoods of Bab at Tawb on the west bank and al Faisaliyyah on the east bank 76 8 20 It was built between 1955 58 by German French and Dutch companies 76 4 Made of steel with concrete supports the bridge has 6 spans and is 340 m long 76 4 A two way street with one lane in each direction goes across the bridge and there is also a sidewalk on both sides 76 4 Before the bridge s destruction in 2016 an estimated 10 495 vehicles crossed the bridge per day for a total of some 3 8 million vehicles per year 76 17 8 In October 2016 a US airstrike destroyed the bridge s first span starting from the left along with the left bank approach 76 4 Later bombings by the Islamic State destroyed three more spans the 4th 5th and 6th and damaged the last two 2nd and 3rd spans 76 4 In the aftermath Iraqi Army forces installed a temporary pontoon bridge 0 2 km north of the al Huriya Bridge to provide an alternate route for commuters 76 18 Fourth BridgeDuring the Battle of Mosul 2016 17 between ISIL and the Iraqi Army supported by an international coalition two bridges were damaged by coalition airstrikes in October 2016 two others in November and the Old Bridge was disabled in early December 75 According to the BBC in late December the bridges were targeted to disrupt the resupply of ISIL forces in East Mosul from West Mosul 75 In January 2017 CNN reported that ISIL itself had destroyed all bridges to slow the Iraqi ground troops advance citing Iraqi commander Lieutenant General Abdul Amir Rasheed Yarallah 77 During the last stages of the battle to retake Mosul Lise Grande stated that per an initial assessment basic infrastructure repair would cost over 1 billion USD She stated that while stabilization in east Mosul could be achieved in two months in some districts of Mosul it might take years with six out of 44 districts almost completely destroyed Every district of Mosul received light or moderate damage 78 Per the United Nations 15 of the 54 residential districts in the western half of Mosul were heavily damaged while at least 23 were moderately damaged 79 Mosul is served by Mosul International Airport Geography EditMosul stands 223 meters above sea level in the Upper Mesopotamia region of the Middle East To the south west of Mosul is the Syrian Desert and to the East is the Zagros Mountains Climate Edit Mosul has a hot semi arid climate BSh verging on the Mediterranean climate Csa with extremely hot prolonged dry summers brief and mild autumn and spring and moderately wet relatively cool winters Climate data for MosulMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 21 1 70 0 26 9 80 4 31 8 89 2 35 5 95 9 42 9 109 2 44 1 111 4 47 8 118 0 49 3 120 7 46 1 115 0 42 2 108 0 32 5 90 5 25 0 77 0 49 3 120 7 Average high C F 12 4 54 3 14 8 58 6 19 3 66 7 25 2 77 4 32 7 90 9 39 2 102 6 42 9 109 2 42 6 108 7 38 2 100 8 30 6 87 1 21 1 70 0 14 1 57 4 27 8 82 0 Daily mean C F 7 3 45 1 9 1 48 4 13 1 55 6 18 2 64 8 24 5 76 1 30 3 86 5 34 0 93 2 33 4 92 1 28 7 83 7 22 1 71 8 14 2 57 6 9 0 48 2 20 3 68 6 Average low C F 2 2 36 0 3 4 38 1 6 8 44 2 11 2 52 2 16 2 61 2 21 3 70 3 25 0 77 0 24 2 75 6 19 1 66 4 13 5 56 3 7 2 45 0 3 8 38 8 12 8 55 1 Record low C F 17 6 0 3 12 3 9 9 5 8 21 6 4 0 24 8 2 5 36 5 9 7 49 5 11 6 52 9 14 5 58 1 8 9 48 0 2 6 27 3 6 1 21 0 15 4 4 3 17 6 0 3 Average precipitation mm inches 62 1 2 44 62 7 2 47 63 2 2 49 44 1 1 74 15 2 0 60 1 1 0 04 0 2 0 01 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 01 11 8 0 46 45 0 1 77 57 9 2 28 363 6 14 31 Average precipitation days 11 11 12 9 6 0 0 0 0 5 7 10 71Mean monthly sunshine hours 158 165 192 210 310 363 384 369 321 267 189 155 3 083Source 1 World Meteorological Organisation UN 80 Source 2 Weatherbase extremes only 81 Historical and religious buildings EditMosul is rich in old historical places and ancient buildings mosques castles churches monasteries and schools many of which have architectural features and decorative work of significance The town centre is dominated by a maze of streets and 19th century houses The markets are known for the mixture of people who jostle there Arabs Kurds Assyrians Iraqi Jews Kurdish Jews Iraqi Turkmens Armenians Yazidi Mandeans Romani and Shabaks citation needed The Mosul Museum contains many finds from the ancient sites of the old Assyrian capital cities Nineveh and Nimrud It is laid out around a courtyard and with a facade of Mosul marble containing displays of Mosul life depicted in tableau form clarification needed On February 26 2015 ISIL militants destroyed the museum s ancient Assyrian artifacts The English writer Agatha Christie lived in Mosul while her second husband Max Mallowan an archaeologist was involved in the excavation in Nimrud 82 Mosques and shrines Edit Main article Islamic sites of Mosul Mosul Grand Mosque Umayyad Mosque The first ever in the city built in 640 AD by Utba bin Farqad Al Salami after he conquered Mosul in the reign of Caliph Umar ibn Al Khattab The only original part extant to recent times was the remarkably elaborate brickwork 52m high minaret that leans like the Leaning Tower of Pisa called Al Hadba The Humped It was largely destroyed during the Battle of Mosul which The Great Nuriddin Mosque Built by Nuriddin Zangi in 1172 AD next door to the Umayyad Mosque Ibn Battuta the great Moroccan traveller found a marble fountain there and a mihrab the niche that indicates the direction of Mecca with a Kufic inscription It was destroyed during the Battle of Mosul which Mujahidi Mosque The mosque dates back to 12th century AD and is distinguished for its shen clarification needed dome and elaborately wrought mihrab Prophet Younis Mosque and Shrine Located east of the city and included the tomb of Prophet Younis Jonah dating back to the 8th century BC with a tooth of the whale that swallowed and later released him It was completely demolished by IS in July 2014 83 Prophet Jirjis Mosque and Shrine The late 14th century mosque and shrine honoring Prophet Jirjis George was built over the Quraysh cemetery It was destroyed by IS in July 2014 84 Prophet Daniel Shrine A Tomb attributed to Prophet Daniel was destroyed by IS in July 2014 85 86 Hamou Qado Hema Kado Mosque An Ottoman era mosque in the central Maydan area built in 1881 and officially named Mosque of Abdulla Ibn Chalabi Ibn Abdul Qadi 87 It was destroyed by IS in March 2015 because it contained a tomb that was revered and visited by local Muslims on Thursdays and Fridays 88 Churches and monasteries Edit Main article List of churches and monasteries in Nineveh Mar Mattai Monastery of the Syriac Orthodox Church Church of Saint Thomas Mosul Church of Saint Thomas Mosul Mosul had the highest proportion of Assyrian Christians of all the Iraqi cities outside of the Kurdish region and contains several interesting old churches some of which originally date back to the early centuries of Christianity Its ancient Assyrian churches are often hidden and their entrances in thick walls are not easy to find Some of them have suffered from overmuch restoration Shamoun Al Safa St Peter Mar Petros This church dates from the 13th century is and named after Shamoun Al Safa or St Peter Mar Petros in Assyrian Aramaic Earlier it had the name of the two Apostles Peter and Paul and was inhabited by the nuns of the Sacred Hearts Church of St Thomas Mar Touma in Assyrian Aramaic One of the oldest historical churches named after St Thomas the Apostle who preached the Gospel in the East including India The exact time of its foundation is unknown but it was before 770 AD since Al Mahdi the Abbasid Caliph is mentioned as listening to a grievance concerning this church on his trip to Mosul Mar Petion Church Mar Petion educated by his cousin in a monastery was martyred in 446 AD It is the first Chaldean Catholic church in Mosul after the union of many Assyrians with Rome in the 17th century It dates back to the 10th century and lies 3 m below street level This church suffered destruction and it has been reconstructed many times A hall was built on one of its three parts in 1942 As a result most of its artistic features have been severely damaged Ancient Tahira Church The Immaculate Near Bash Tapia considered one of the most ancient churches in Mosul No evidence helps to determine its exact area It could be either the remnants of the church of the Upper Monastery or the ruined Mar Zena Church Al Tahira Church dates back to the 7th century and it lies 3 m below street level Reconstructed last in 1743 Al Tahera Church Syriac Catholic Church completed in 1862 Mar Hudeni Church It was named after Mar Ahudemmeh Hudeni Maphrian of Tikrit who was martyred in 575 AD Mar Hudeni is an old church of the Tikritans in Mosul It dates back to the 10th century lies 7 m below street level and was first reconstructed in 1970 People can get mineral water from the well in its yard The chain fixed in the wall is thought to cure epileptics St George s Monastery Mar Gurguis One of the oldest churches in Mosul named after St George located to the north of Mosul was probably built late in the 17th century Pilgrims from different parts of the North clarification needed visit it yearly in the spring when many people also go out to its whereabouts on holiday clarification needed It is about 6 m below street level A modern church was built over the old one in 1931 abolishing much of its archeological significance The only monuments left are a marble door frame decorated with a carved Estrangelo Syriac inscription and two niches which date back to the 13th or 14th century Mar Matte This monastery is situated about 20 km 12 mi east of Mosul on the top of a high mountain Mount Maqloub It was built by Mar Matte a monk who fled with several other monks in 362 AD from the Monastery of Zuknin near the City of Amid Diyarbakir in the southern part of Asia Minor modern Turkey and the north of Iraq during the reign of Emperor Julian the Apostate 361 363 AD It has a precious library containing Syrianic scriptures Monastery of Mar Behnam Also called Deir Al Jubb The Cistern Monastery and built in the 12th or 13th century it lies in the Nineveh Plain near Nimrud about 32 km 20 mi southwest of Mosul The monastery a great fort like building rises next to the tomb of Mar Behnam a prince who was killed by the Sassanians perhaps during the 4th century AD A legend made him a son of an Assyrian king St Elijah s Monastery Dair Mar Elia Dating from the 6th century it was the oldest Christian Monastery in Iraq until its destruction by IS in January 2016 89 90 Other Christian historical buildings The Roman Catholic Church built by the Dominican Fathers in Nineveh Street in 1893 Mar Michael Mar Elias Mar Oraha Rabban Hormizd Monastery the monastery of Notre Dame des Semences near the Assyrian town of AlqoshOther sites Edit Bash Tapia Castle A ruined castle rising high over the Tigris which was one of the few remnants of Mosul s old walls until it was blown up by IS in 2015 Qara Saray The Black Palace The remnants of the 13th century palace of Sultan Badruddin Lu lu Arts EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed July 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Painting Edit Old house in Mosul The so called Mosul School of Painting refers to a style of miniature painting that developed in northern Iraq in the late 12th to early 13th century under the patronage of the Zangid dynasty 1127 1222 In technique and style the Mosul school was similar to the painting of the Seljuq Turks who controlled Iraq at that time but the Mosul artists had a sharper sense of realism based on the subject matter and degree of detail in the painting rather than on representation in three dimensions which did not occur Most of the Mosul iconography was Seljuq for example the use of figures seated cross legged in a frontal position Certain symbolic elements however such as the crescent and serpents were derived from the classical Mesopotamian repertory Most Mosul paintings were manuscript illustrations mainly scientific works animal books and lyric poetry A frontispiece painting now held in the Bibliotheque nationale Paris dating from a late 12th century copy of Galen s medical treatise the Kitab al diriyak Book of Antidotes is a good example of the earlier work of the Mosul school It depicts four figures surrounding a central seated figure who holds a crescent shaped halo The painting is in a variety of whole hues reds blues greens and gold The Kufic lettering is blue The total effect is best described as majestic Another mid 13th century frontispiece held in the Nationalbibliothek Vienna to another copy of the same text suggests the quality of later Mosul painting There is realism in its depiction of the preparation of a ruler s meal and of horsemen engaged in various activities and the painting is as many hued as that of the early Mosul school yet it is somehow less spirited The composition is more elaborate but less successful By this time the Baghdad school which combined the styles of the Syrian and early Mosul schools had begun to dominate With the invasion of the Mongols in the mid 13th century the Mosul school came to an end but its achievements were influential in both the Mamluk and the Mongol schools of miniature painting Education EditMosul has several universities and colleges These include the University of Mosul which is the largest university in Mosul 91 Ninevah University Al Hadbaa University College and the Northern Technical University Mosul also has multiple highschools some of which are coeducational while others are gender segregated These include but are not limited to Al Hafsah School 92 Al Haj Secondary School for Girls 93 Kourtoba High School for Girls Al Mouhobeen Secondary School for Boys and Girls Al Mustaqbal High School for Boys Al Mutamaizat High School for Girls Al Mutamaizeen High School for Boys Al Resalah Al Islamia Al Resalah High School for Boys Al Sharqiya High School for BoysSport EditThe city has one football team capable of competing in the top flight of Iraqi football Mosul FC Al Mosul University Stadium is the home stadium to Mosul FC and can hold up to 20 000 people Mosul university Stadium The University of Mosul contains a College of Physical Education and Sports Science which teaches undergraduate and graduate students and performs research in three scientific departments 94 Media EditNewspapers Edit Ash Shabibah a defunct daily newspaper 95 Notable people EditThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed October 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Abdulahad AbdulNour physician and humanitarian Thabit AbdulNour Iraqi Politician Government Administrator and Diplomat 96 Zaha Hadid noted architect and first woman to win the Pritzker award Was named dame by Queen Elizabeth II Al Jalili Hussein Pasha raised and led army to defend Mosul against Persian Shah Nadir Shah 1743 Al Jalili Ismael Eye doctor who discovered and researched the Jalili syndrome Al Jamil Sayyar Historian and political analyst Abu Al Soof Behnam Archeologist anthropologist historian and writer of Christian ancestry Tariq Aziz Assyrian Deputy Prime Minister 1979 2003 real name Michael Youkhanna from Tel Keppe Munir Bashir Assyrian musician who had several successes in the Mideast during the 20th century Asenath Barzani first Jewish female rabbi Vian Dakhil Yazidi member of the Iraqi parliament Hawar Mulla Mohammed Kurdish Iraqi soccer player for the national team Paulos Faraj Rahho Assyrian Chaldean Catholic Archbishop of Mosul assassinated 2008 Taha Yassin Ramadan Kurdish former Vice President of Iraq Hormuzd Rassam Assyrian Archaeologist and diplomat of the 19th century Kathem Al Saher Arab Iraqi pop singer songwriter and musician Adnan Koucher Iraqi scholar Salah al Din al Sabbagh Arab Iraqi Army officer Salah Salim Ali Norwegian Iraqi Writer and translator author of Ibsen i Arabia Ignatius Gabriel I Tappouni Assyrian Patriarch of Antioch and all east for the Syriac Catholic Church between 1929 and 1968 Church Father of the Second Vatican Council and the first Eastern Rite prelate to be raised to the College of Cardinals since the reign of Pope Pius IX Behnam Afas Iraqi New Zealander author and researcher into the role of Christian scholars and missionaries Ghazi Mashal Ajil al Yawer Arab Interim President of Iraq during 2004 05 Ignatius Zakka I Assyrian Patriarch of Antioch and all east for the Syriac Orthodox Church Mosul Eye Mosul Eye Arabic عين الموصل is a news blog created and maintained by historian and citizen journalist Omar Mohammed Loris Ohannes Chobanian Armenian American composer and professor at Baldwin Wallace UniversitySee also Edit Iraq portalList of largest cities of Iraq List of rulers of Mosul University of Mosul Iraq Nineveh Governorate Mosul District Assyrian homeland Asteroid 22292 Mosul named after the city in 2018 Battle of Mosul 2016 2017 Chaldean Catholic Archeparchy of Mosul Mosul question Nineveh PlainsReferences Edit Gladstone Philip 10 February 2014 Synop Information for ORBM 40608 in Mosul Iraq Weather Quality Reporter Retrieved 16 June 2014 Mosul Iraq Metro Area Population 1950 2021 Macrotrends Necirvan Barzani Serxwebun Mafe Gele Kurd E in Kurdish Voice of America Retrieved 13 March 2020 ئەمساڵ كۆنسۆڵخانەى توركيا لە مووسڵ دووبارە دەكرێتەوە in Kurdish Anadolu Agency Retrieved 13 March 2020 Thomas A Carlson et al Mosul ܡܘܨܠ in The Syriac Gazetteer last modified June 30 2014 http syriaca org place 139 Coker Margaret 2017 12 10 After Fall of ISIS Iraq s Second Largest City Picks Up the Pieces The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 2021 04 25 Unrepresented Nations and People Organization UNPO Assyrians the Indigenous People of Iraq 1 Dalley Stephanie 1993 Nineveh After 612 BC Alt Orientanlische Forshchungen 20 p 134 Dalley Stephanie 1993 Nineveh After 612 BC Alt Orientanlische Forshchungen 20 p 134 Mosul Iraq from AtlasTours net The war against Islamic State 2 Mosul beckons The Economist 11 April 2015 Retrieved 22 April 2015 Nineveh Max Mallowan Dalley Stephanie 2013 The Mystery of the Hanging Garden of Babylon an elusive World Wonder traced Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 966226 5 Bosworth Edmund 2007 Historic Cities of the Islamic World Brill p 414 ISBN 9789047423836 עזרא לניאדו יהודי מוצל מגלות שומרון עד מבצע עזרא ונחמיה המכון לחקר יהדות מוצל טירת כרמל ה תשמ א Davidson Herbert A 2005 Moses Maimonides The Man and His Works New York Oxford University Press p 560 ISBN 0 19 517321 X a b c d e f g Rice D S 1957 Inlaid Brasses from the Workshop of Aḥmad al Dhaki al Mawṣili Ars Orientalis 2 283 326 JSTOR 4629040 Retrieved 17 November 2022 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc bd be bf bg bh Raby Julian 2012 The Principle of Parsimony and the Problem of the Mosul School of Metalwork In Porter Venetia Rosser Owen Mariam eds Metalwork and Material Culture in the Islamic World PDF Bloomsbury Publishing pp 11 85 ISBN 978 0 85773 343 6 Retrieved 18 November 2022 Rothman 2015 p 236 Shaw Stanford J Shaw Ezel Kural 1976 History of the Ottoman Empire and Modern Turkey Volume 1 Empire of the Gazis The Rise and Decline of the Ottoman Empire 1280 1808 Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 199 ISBN 978 0 521 29163 7 Nasiri amp Floor 2008 p 248 Oberling 1984 pp 582 586 a b c Kemp Percy 1983 Power and Knowledge in Jalili Mosul Middle Eastern Studies 19 2 201 12 doi 10 1080 00263208308700543 Al Tikriti Nabil 2007 Ottoman Iraq Journal of the Historical Society 7 2 201 11 doi 10 1111 j 1540 5923 2007 00214 x Khoury Dina Rizk 1997 State and Provincial Society in the Ottoman Empire Mosul 1540 1834 Studies in Islamic Civilization Cambridge p 19 a b Woods Richard 2006 Iraq Perspectives Catholics and Dominicans in Iraq Dominican Life Retrieved 2009 09 13 Rasam Suha 2005 Christianity in Iraq Its Origins and Development to the Present Day Gracewing ISBN 9780852446331 Retrieved 2009 09 13 a b c d Shields Sarah D 2000 Mosul Before Iraq Like Bees Making Five Sided Cells Albanay State University of New York Press ISBN 0 7914 4487 2 Pentagon Saddam s sons killed in raid CNN com 2003 07 22 Retrieved on 2011 07 02 Mosul Globalsecurity org Retrieved on 2011 07 02 Wurzburg hospital team is home from Iraq News Stripes www stripes com Archived from the original on 2020 10 19 Iraq reopens Mosul airport after 14 years US military Forbes dead link Gamel Kim January 25 2008 Provincial Police Chief Killed in Mosul Associated Press Sadrists and Iraqi Government Reach Truce Deal New York Times May 11 2008 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original on October 11 2013 Retrieved 2009 03 12 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Plight of Iraqi Academics PDF Archived from the original on May 15 2006 Retrieved 2008 05 10 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Human Rights in Iraq Archived from the original on June 29 2006 Retrieved 2009 03 12 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint bot original URL status unknown link Iraq s deadly brain drain France 24 Archived from the original on 2011 05 21 Retrieved 2011 07 02 Losing Mosul Time October 16 2004 Archived from the original on October 19 2004 Retrieved May 13 2010 Muir Jim 2008 10 28 Iraqi Christians fear of exile BBC News Retrieved on 2011 07 02 Christians flee Iraqi city after killings threats officials say Archived 2008 10 12 at the Wayback Machine CNN 11 October 2008 Abdulrahim Raja 5 October 2014 Iraqi Kurdish forces moving toward complex battle in Mosul The Los Angeles Times Retrieved 21 December 2014 Iraq s battles need sense of resolve BBC News Iraq Islamic State Baghdad War Al monitor Sep 2014 archived from the original on 2014 10 19 retrieved 2014 10 19 Laila Ahmed 29 August 2014 Since Islamic State swept into Mosul we live encircled by its dark fear The Guardian Iraqi insurgents seize city BBC 11 June 2014 Militant group seizes cities in Iraq CNN 11 June 2014 a b قائد عسكري سابق المالكي أمر بسحب القوات من الموصل www aljazeera net in Arabic Retrieved 2022 02 09 How Mosul fell An Iraqi general disputes Baghdad s story Reuters 14 October 2014 Since Islamic State swept into Mosul we live encircled by its dark fear The Guardian 29 August 2014 Loveday morris October 19 2015 Isis in Iraq Mosul residents are paying traffickers and risking their lives to escape cruel grip of Islamic State The Independent Sinan Salaheddin March 13 2015 ISIS Blocks Trapped Residents From Leaving Iraq s Mosul Huffington Post Archived from the original on August 25 2015 Abdelhak Mamoun Mar 11 2015 ISIS warns people of Mosul not to leave city Iraqi News al Tamimi Aymenn August 2015 The Evolution in Islamic State Administration The Documentary Evidence Perspectives on Terrorism 9 Obama s Iraq dilemma Fighting ISIL puts US and Iran on the same side america aljazeera com Retrieved 2022 02 09 Alzalzalee Assad Iraq s Troubled School Building Lesson OCCRP Retrieved 2022 02 09 Battle for Mosul Iraq and Kurdish troops make gains BBC News 17 October 2016 Retrieved 17 October 2016 Blau Max Park Madison McLaughlin Eliott C 17 October 2016 Battle for Mosul Iraqi forces close in CNN Retrieved 17 October 2016 Yan Holly Muaddi Nadeem 17 October 2016 Why the battle for Mosul matters in the fight against ISIS CNN Retrieved 17 October 2016 In liberated Mosul ISIS still imperils the path to city s revival Christian Science Monitor August 11 2017 Mosul Iraq PM to celebrate victory over IS in the city BBC 9 July 2017 Battle for Mosul Iraq PM Abadi formally declares victory BBC 10 July 2017 Retrieved 10 July 2017 Ivor Prickett 1 August 2017 In Mosul Revealing the Last ISIS Stronghold The New York Times Retrieved 5 November 2017 Civilians return to Mosul as Iraqi forces mop up residual ISIS fighters Stars and Stripes 21 July 2017 Archived from the original on 21 July 2017 Retrieved 22 July 2017 Salahuddin Khuda Bakhsh 1914 A History of the Islamic Peoples University of Calcutta Playfair James 1813 A System of Geography ancient and Modern L Phillips David 2018 The Great Betrayal How America Abandoned an Ally in the Middle East I B Tauris p 87 Mosul Encyclopedia com Facts Pictures Information Encyclopedia com Retrieved on 2011 07 02 Mosul Jewish Virtual Library Retrieved on 2011 07 02 Cf Carlos C Huerta Jewish heartbreak and hope in Nineveh Archived 2010 11 19 at the Wayback Machine Huerta Carlos Jewish Mosul Revisited Jewish heartbreak and hope in Nineveh almosul org Archived from the original on 19 November 2010 Iraq ISIS Abducting Killing Expelling Minorities Human Rights Watch 19 July 2014 Retrieved 20 October 2016 Logan Lara 22 March 2015 Iraq s Christians persecuted by ISIS CBS News Retrieved 20 October 2016 In Mosul Water Electricity Shortages And Warnings Of Disease RadioFreeEurope RadioLiberty a b c Mosul battle Last bridge disabled by air strike BBC News 27 December 2016 Retrieved 2 March 2017 a b c d e f g h Harith Mustafa Khalil Slim Linda 2018 Site Specific Environmental and Social Impact Assessment Limited ESIA for the Rehabilitation of Al Mosul Second Bridge Al Huriya Bridge in Nineveh Governorate PDF Republic of Iraq Ministry of Construction Housing Municipalities and Public Works Roads and Bridges Directorate Retrieved 13 March 2023 Mohammed Tawfeeq 13 January 2017 ISIS destroys Mosul bridges as troops advance CNN Retrieved 2 March 2017 Basic infrastructure repair in Mosul will cost over 1 billion U N BBC 5 July 2017 Retrieved 10 July 2017 Mosul US commander says Iraq must stop Islamic State 2 0 BBC 11 July 2017 Retrieved 11 July 2017 World Weather Information Service Mosul United Nations Retrieved 1 January 2011 Mosul Iraq Travel Weather Averages Weatherbase Retrieved 2012 12 19 Reuters ISIS destroys Jonah s tomb in Mosul Al Arabiya 25 July 2014 Islamic State destroys ancient Mosul mosque the third in a week The Guardian Associated Press 28 July 2014 Clark Heather 27 July 2014 Muslim Militants Blow Up Tombs of Biblical Jonah Daniel in Iraq Christian News Network Retrieved 28 July 2014 Al Sumaria News also reported on Thursday that local Mosul official Zuhair al Chalabi told the outlet that ISIS likewise implanted explosives around Prophet Daniel s tomb in Mosul and blasted it leading to its destruction Hafiz Yasmine 25 July 2014 ISIS Destroys Jonah s Tomb In Mosul Iraq As Militant Violence Continues The Huffington Post Retrieved 28 July 2014 The tomb of Daniel a man revered by Muslims as a prophet though unlike Jonah he is not mentioned in the Quran has also been reportedly destroyed Al Arabiya reports that Zuhair al Chalabi a local Mosul official told Al Samaria News that ISIS implanted explosives around Prophet Daniel s tomb in Mosul and blasted it leading to its destruction ISIS destroys beloved mosque in central Mosul Rudaw Gianluca Mezzofiore 6 March 2015 Iraq Isis destroys 19th century Ottoman mosque in central Mosul International Business Times UK Chaplains Struggle to Protect Monastery in Iraq NPR s Morning Edition 21 November 2007 Retrieved on 2011 07 02 Only on AP Islamic State razing of Iraq monastery condemned news yahoo com Archived from the original on January 22 2016 Retrieved 2016 01 19 Iraqi university rebuilds after IS dark age BBC News 2018 11 21 Retrieved 2021 03 17 Responding to Iraq s learning crisis UNICEF Connect 2020 02 10 Retrieved 2021 03 17 Education will help us build a future Iraq ReliefWeb Retrieved 2021 03 17 College of Physical Education and Sport Science University of Mosul Retrieved 2021 08 22 Yitzhak Oron 1960 Middle East Record Volume 1 1960 The Moshe Dayan Center p 243 GGKEY 3KXGTYPACX2 Basri Mir 2004 Notable Iraqi Personalities in the New Iraq in Arabic London Sources EditSee also Bibliography of the history of Mosul Nasiri Ali Naqi Floor Willem M 2008 Titles and Emoluments in Safavid Iran A Third Manual of Safavid Administration Mage Publishers p 309 ISBN 978 1933823232 Oberling P 1984 AFSAR Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol I Fasc 6 pp 582 586 Archived from the original on 2011 04 29 Rothman E Nathalie 2015 Brokering Empire Trans Imperial Subjects between Venice and Istanbul Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0801463129 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mosul Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Mosul ninava explorer Iraq Image Mosul Satellite Observation Detailed map of Mosul by the National Imagery and Mapping Agency from lib utexas edu ArchNet org Mosul Cambridge Massachusetts USA MIT School of Architecture and Planning Archived from the original on 2012 12 10 Retrieved 2013 04 15 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mosul amp oldid 1146186158, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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