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Qaraqosh (; (official name), or , also known as al-Ḥamdāniyya or Qara-Qūš; a Turkic placename meaning "Black Bird") is an city in the Nineveh Governorate, of located about southeast of the city of and west of amid agricultural lands, close to the ruins of the ancient cities and .

Qaraqosh is connected to the main city of Mosul by two main roads. The first runs through the Assyrian towns of and , which connects to the city of as well. The second, which was gravel before being paved in the 1990s, is direct to Mosul. All of its Assyrian Christian citizens fled to the after the invasion on August 6, 2014. The town was under control of IS until October 19, 2016, when it was liberated as part of the Battle of Mosul after which residents have begun to return.

Local , who are ethnically distinct from Arabs and Kurds, speak the of Northeastern Neo-Aramaic.


Etymology
The present name of the town, Qaraqosh, is first attested in a source from the sixteenth century. It is of origin, meaning 'Black Bird', and was introduced either by the after their conquest of the area at the beginning of the sixteenth century or by the Turkoman rulers of the region in the fifteenth century. The local population, however, when speaking in their Aramaic dialect, still refer to the town by its former name. The name Bakhdida (; Beth Khdeda), is of uncertain origin and when translated from the it has two components Beth which means "house", and Khodida which could either mean "Youths" in or actually "Baghdadak" a diminutive form of Baghdad, meaning "God's gift". Some also believe that Bakhdida comes from the Aramaic Beth Deta, meaning "Land of the Kite". اصول أسماء القرى والمواقع التابعة لمنطقة بخديدا, بهنام عطاالله


Security
As of October 2016, the city is under the control of the Nineveh Plain Protection Units. On November 25, 2017; Nineveh Plain Protection Units (NPU) celebrated the completion of its new military camp in Bakhdida, Nineveh Plain.


Education
Students from the village were harassed in ; many female students were forced to wear an Islamic dress for fear of being attacked. On May 2, 2010, a convoy of buses carrying students from Bakhdida to the University of Mosul was the target of a coordinated attack, which killed and injured more than a hundred. Bombs Hit School Buses in North Iraq, SAM DAGHER, The New York Times

The Iraqi Ministry of Education started the construction of a subsidiary of the University of Mosul which in 2014 became the University of AL-Hamdaniya, which is planned to serve the whole region.

(2025). 9783854765905, Mandelbaum Verlag.
The University of AL-Hamdaniya currently consists of two colleges: The college of Education and the college of Administration and Economics. The University is based at the Mosul-Erbil road, Al-Hamdaniya intersection.


History

Pre-Christian accounts
It is thought that the ancient city of Rasin mentioned in some texts, the second city built by the Assyrian king Nimrud, was in Bakhdida.


Early Christian history
The Assyrians of Bakhdida became Christians during early Christianity. With the Christological disputes of the 4th century, they followed the Church of the East teachings, but switched to the Syriac Orthodox Church through the influence of Shapur of Baghdeda in the 7th century and the arrival of Assyrian refugees from in the 11th century.


Raids of Persians and Kurds
In their literature and writings, the Assyrians of Bakhdida remember vividly the raids of the and on their village and churches. In 1171, while the governors of Mosul and were fighting each other, the Kurds used the opportunity to attack the Mor Mattai Monastery. The chronography of Gregory Abû'l Faraj, the son of Aaron, the Hebrew physician According to the 13th-century writer , in 1261 the Kurds came down to Mosul, killing many Christians who refused to follow Islam and looting their homes and churches. The Kurds then occupied the Monastery of Saint John of Dailam and killed many of its and those who had sought refuge there. In 1288, a battle took place between the Kurds and near Baghdida. In 1324 Baghdida was attacked by the Kurds again, in which many homes and four churches were burned.Bar Hebraius, Summary of the History of the lands, Arabic edition P. 492-497


Afshar–Ottoman wars
In the early 18th century, Persians under the leadership of invaded the Mosul region and most of the inhabitants of Baghdida escaped to Mosul with all their valuables, in accordance with the governor's orders. Mosul was harassed and then besieged for months. However, the Christians defended it and after months of blockade, the Persians finally signed a peace agreement with Mosul's governor Hasan Pasha Al Jalili, and withdrew in 1743. To reward the Christians for their bravery, the governor permitted many churches in the Mosul region to be restored.


After the 2003 US invasion

Politics since 2005
The people of Bakhdida got the chance to vote for the first time on 30 January 2005. The secular led the votes in the town. However many Assyrians, and were not allowed to vote, which led to demonstrations against the results.

Secular list3,08031%
Nahrain list (Assyrian list)2,66427%
Assyrian Democratic Movement2,46625%
Kurdistan Alliance7447%

The next parliamentary elections on 7 March 2010, saw the rise of local candidates with the Assyrian Democratic Movement coming second. Only 52% of registered voters participated in this election. سير الأنتخابات في مراكز بغديدا وكرمليس, منظمة حمورابي لحقوق الأنسان Due to the rise of extremism in Iraq shortly after the US-led invasion, many of the villagers in and were targeted for being Christians.

On 22 November 2006 Yeshu' Hadaya, the leader of a National Syriac movement was assassinated in Bakhdida.


IS attacks and invasion
At the beginning of July 2014, forces attempted to occupy the city. The Kurdish and the Assyrian Qaraqosh Protection Committee successfully defended it, while elders, women, and children fled to neighboring towns, thus joining other Christian refugees from nearby that had previously escaped the city in fear of the extremists.As reported by Frankfurter Allgemeine (in German language) The Islamists proceeded to cut off the town's water supply. This, together with the rise in the price of oil following IS's invasion of nearby oil field and an imposed by IS forcing nearby Muslim villages to stop trade with Bakhdida, rendered life difficult in the town also burdened with incoming refugees.Iraq's On August 6, 2014, the Kurdish troops withdrew from the city and the next day Islamists from IS invaded the city.As reported by Le Figaro (in French language) Much of the population, including recent arrivals, was left joining the 150,000 Assyrians fleeing, though they were forced to walk towards without their cars and possessions as Kurdish forces feared Islamist infiltration.As reported by Radio Vatican (in French language)

All of its citizens fled to after the IS invasion on 6 August 2014. The town was under control of IS until 19 October 2016, when it was liberated as part of the Battle of Mosul.


Post–IS
Currently, the Nineveh Plain Protection Units run the security profile in the city and participated alongside the in the liberation efforts of the city.

On 26 September 2023, a fire broke out at the Al Haytham Wedding Hall during a Syriac Catholic wedding in the city, which killed at least 114 people, and injured 150.


Geography
It is southeast of ." No Mass said in Mosul for first time in 1,600 years, says Archbishop" ( Archive). . June 28, 2014. Retrieved on July 7, 2014.


Climate
Bakhdida has a hot-summer Mediterranean climate (Köppen climate classification Csa). Most rain falls in the winter. The average annual temperature in Bakhdida is . About of precipitation falls annually.


Archaeology
Since the late 19th century, various locations on the outskirts of the town were excavated by . In (the ancient Assyrian city of Imgur-Enlil) a number of Assyrian artifacts have been excavated; they are currently displayed in the and . There is a lot of interest in the archaeology of Baghdida today. It has many Assyrian remains, like those of Tel Bashmoni (Beth Shmoni), Tel Muqortaya, Tel Karamles, Tel Mar Bihnam and others. These mounds were fortresses, temples or buildings that belonged to the Assyrian capital of . Throughout 1922, 1927, and 1935, archaeologists found gold pieces and cylinder seals, as well as an Assyrian statue (now in Mosul museum) in a well in the church of Mar Zina. In 1942 an Assyrian bathroom and several graves were found near the church of Bashmoni. Furthermore, during the 1980s excavations in the grounds of the Church of Mar Youhanna (Saint John), archaeologists found human remains inside graves in the eastern side and at a depth of one and a half metres. These graves were built with typical Assyrian large rectangular bricks.

References to Athur (Assyria) continued in texts from Bakhdida. Mapharian Athanasius Ibrahim II of Tur Abdin visited Tikrit, Baghdad, and Arbil to attend to his congregation. According to Afram Abdal al-Khouri and his book al-Lu'lu' al-Nadheed fi Tareekh Deir Mar Bihnam al-Shaheed( The Layers of Pearls in the History of the Monastery of Martyred Mar Bihnam), 1951, p. 219, Sony writes: "in 1365 the Mapharian came to Athur or Mosul and was welcomed by Nour al-Din the Chief of Baghdeda … " (Sony 1998, 699). Last but not least, Sony writes that in 1294–1295 (according to the Mar Bihnam monastery archives) a certain king "came to Lower Athur, the city of Saint Mar Bihnam … " (Sony 1998, 95).


See also
  • Assyrian homeland
  • Assyrians in Iraq
  • Proposals for Assyrian autonomy in Iraq
  • List of Assyrian settlements
  • List of largest cities in Iraq


External links
  • http://www.ishtartv.com/en/viewarticle,35746.html—Service and Construction for the city - 2011-12-16

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