For other uses, see the disambiguation, Jazira.
'Al-Jazira' (
Arabic, الجزيرة) is the traditional Arabic name for the modern-day regions of northwestern
Iraq and northeastern
Syria. (It is variously transliterated into
Roman script as Djazirah, Djezirah and Jazirah.) It covers northern
Mesopotamia, extending from the
Euphrates River to the
Tigris River. The
Khabur River runs for 440 km through the district, from Turkey in the north, feeding into the Euphrates. Its major settlements are
Mosul,
Deir ez-Zor,
Ar Raqqah,
Al Hasakah and
Qamishli. The western, Syrian part, is contiguous with the Syrian
Al-Hasakah Governorate. The capital of the western region is Al-Hasakah. The eastern, Iraqi part, is contiguous with the Iraqi
Ninewa Governorate. The capital of this eastern region is Mosul.
Al-Jazira is characterised as a
plain, quite distinct from the
Syrian Desert and lower-lying central
Mesopotamia. The region has several parts to it. In the northwestern part, is one of the largest salt
deserts in the world. Further south, extending from
Mosul to near
Basra is a huge sandy desert similar to the
Empty Quarter, where temperatures can reach 58
degrees Celsius in the summer. The region has been plagued by drought in recent years.
Ancient ruins
It contains the archaelological site
Tell Halaf.
History
In ancient times it was part of
Assyria.
The name was used by Islamic sources to refer to the northern section of Mesopotamia, which together with
Sawād, made up
Al-‘arāgh (
Iraq). The region was limited to the
Sanjar Mountains in the south, but the western and eastern boundaries seem to have fluctuated in the pre-
Abbasid times (sometimes to include Northern Syria to the west and
Adiabene in the east). During the early Islamic Empire (i.e.
Umayyads), the administration of Jazira was often shared with that of
Armenia.
Al-Jazira included the
Sasanian provinces of
Arbayestan,
Nisibis, and
Mosul. The conquest of the region took place under the early
caliphate that left the general administration of the region intact, with the exception of levying the ''
jizya'' tax on the population. At the time of
Mu‘awiyah (governor of Syria and the later founder of the Umayyad Caliphate), the administration of al-Jazira was included in the administration of Syria.
Since the pre-Islamic times, al-Jazira has been an economically prosperous region with various agricultural (fruit and cereal) products, as well as a prolific manufacturing (food processing and cloth weaving) system. The region’s position at the border of the
Sasanian and
Byzantine territories also made it an important commercial center, and advantage that the region continued to enjoy, even after the
Muslim conquest of Byzantine possessions in
Anatolia.
The prosperity of the region and its high agricultural and manufacturing output made it an object of contest between the leaders of the early conquering Arab armies. Various conquerors tried, in vain, to bind various cities of the former Sasanian provinces, as well as the newly conquered Byzantine provinces of Mesopotamia, into a coherent unit under their own rule.
The control of the region, however, was essential to any power centered in
Baghdad. Consequently, the establishment of the
Abbasid Caliphate brought al-Jazira under the direct rule of the government in Baghdad. At this time, al-Jazira was one of the highest tax yielding provinces of the Abbasid Empire.
During the early history of Islam, al-Jazira became a center for
Kharijite (Xwārij) movement and had to be constantly subdued by various caliphs. Later, a local dynasty called the
Hamdānids, themselves descendants of a Kharijite, established an autonomous state with two branches in al-Jazira and Northern Syria. The demise of the Hamdānid power put the region back under the nominal rule of the Caliphs of Baghdad, while the true control was indeed in the hands of the
Buyid brothers who had conquered Baghdad itself.
In subsequent eras, al-Jazira came under the control of newly established Turkic dynasties such as the
Ikhshidids and the
Zangis, and eventually was controlled by the
Ayyubids (i.e.
Saladin). Later development of the region was determined by the rise of Mosul and Nisibis, both important commercial and manufacturing centers. In the 12th century, the region was conquered and controlled by the
Seljuk dynasty and was later put under the control of
Seljuks of Rum, joining the emerging
Ottoman Empire when the latter replaced the Seljuks of Rum in Asia Minor.
Historical and cultural characteristics in the 20th and 21st centuries
Thousands of Christian refugees entered into Syrian Al-Jazira, from Turkey following World War I. Additionally, in 1933 17,000 Assyrian Christians and 7,000
Chaldean Catholics fled into the area, following persecution in the
Mosul region of northern Iraq.
[1]
Djezirah is one of the four
dioceses of the Syrian Orthodox Church. (The others are in
Aleppo,
Homs-Hama and
Damascus.)
[2]
The area has experienced a high rate of emigration in the past 40 years. Prime factors have been drought, the influx of Christians from the Turkish side of the Turkish-Syrian border and the influx of Kurds from the east.
[2]
Bibliography
★ Istakhri, Ibrahim. ''Al-Masālik wa-al-mamālik,'' Dār Al Qalam, Cairo, 1961
★ Brauer, Ralph W., ''Boundaries and Frontiers in Medieval Muslim Geography'', Philadelphia, 1995
★ Ibn Khurradādhbih. ''Almasalik wal Mamlik'', E. J. Brill, Leiden, 1967
★ Lestrange, G. ''The lands of the eastern caliphate''. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1930
★ Mohammadi Malayeri, Mohammad. ''Tārikh o Farhang-i Irān dar Asr-e Enteghaal'', Tus, Tehran, 1996
★ Morony, Michael G. ''Iraq after the Muslim Conquest'', Princeton, 1984