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January 26, 2003

The history of Iraq

Photo
GETTY PHOTO ARCHIVE
King Faisal I, who became King of Iraq in 1921, at the Hyde Park Hotel during a visit to London. Faisal was installed by the British, who kept control of Iraq.


The birthplace of civilization
8000 B.C.E. - 750 C.E. | 1095-1932 | 1933-2002

FROM THE MONGOLS TO INDEPENDENCE

1095-1192
Christian knights from Europe launch three Crusades, attacking Islam in the Holy Land and Middle East. Baghdad is largely ignored, although Turks recruit soldiers there.

1219-1227
Mongols led by Genghis Khan storm from the steppes of central Asia into what is now Iran, Iraq and Afghanistan. Irrigation systems in place since the Sumerians are demolished and lush fields along the Tigris and Euphrates revert to desert.

1258
Mongols leave after looting Baghdad.

1300
Timur the Lame (Tamerlane), believing himself a direct descendant of Genghis Khan, returns to conquer Mesopotamia; the region lapses into decay.

1281-1453
Ottoman Turks rise to power and conquer Constantinople, the last Christian stronghold in the East.

1501-1508
Shia Islam is declared the official faith of Persia (Iran). Shiites briefly seize part of Mesopotamia, hoping to control two Shia holy cities, Najaf and Karbala. Ottomans maintain the region as a Sunni-controlled buffer state for the empire. But Sunni religious sites are desecrated, and violence begins.

1516-1566
A Sunni, Suleyman the Magnificent, gains firm control of Mesopotamia.

1774-1792
Muhammad bin Abdel-Wahhab, a fundamentalist Muslim, joins the court of Mohammed ibn Saud, ruler of what is now Saudi Arabia. The Wahhabis move on Mesopotamia, converting desert Arabs to Shiism. Ottomans retain power, relying on Sunnis in Baghdad and other cities.

1831
Bubonic plague and floods devastate Baghdad. Water surges over banks of the Tigris, disintegrating hundreds of public buildings and mosques made of mud brick.

1831-1869
During a period of Ottoman decline, Baghdad has more than 10 governors.

1869
Suez Canal opens; Britain gains a major share in order to protect sea routes to India.

1914
World War I begins.

1915-1916
Damascus Protocol would form an Arab state after the war, encompassing the Arabian Peninsula, Palestine and what is now Syria, Lebanon and Iraq. But secret Sykes-Picot Agreement between Britain and France puts Ottoman lands under joint control, with Iraq going to Britain.

1917
British Maj. Gen. Sir Stanley Maude marches toward Baghdad, promising Arab allies in the countryside control over their own affairs.

1918
World War I ends.

1919
League of Nations makes Iraq and Palestine mandates entrusted to Britain. Syria goes to France.

1920
Arabs, including nationalists in Baghdad and Kurdish minorities, stage violent demonstrations and strikes against British rule.

1921
Cairo Conference names the country Iraq, which it sometimes was called in antiquity. Faisal, son of the Sharif of Mecca, is declared king, with Britain maintaining administrative control.

1922-1927
Wahhabis from the Arabian Peninsula periodically raid tribesmen in the south of Iraq. The British chase them back into Arabia with Model T Fords mounted with machine guns.

1923
London includes Kurds in oil-rich northern Mosul Province in the Iraqi state with proviso they hold government positions in Kurdish areas and the Kurdish language be preserved.

1924
Elections are held for a representative assembly under the monarchy.

1925
League of Nations extends Iraqi treaty with Britain to 25 years to protect Kurds. Reza Shah Pahlavi ascends the Peacock Throne in Iran. Urged on by Britain, Iraq and Iran negotiate a boundary agreement.

Oct. 3, 1932
Iraq gains independence.

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THE OTTOMAN EMPIRE
Thumbnail The powerful Ottoman Empire spanned 600 years, and for most of that time, Iraq was under its control. The original speakers of the Turkish language, a nomadic people, came from Central Asia, moving south and west in the 10th century; their strongest sultans were the Seljuks. MORE
THE BRITISH MANDATE
Thumbnail During World War I, the British led Arabs to believe that the breakup of the Ottoman empire would result in Arab states becoming independent at the end of the war. It was an effective strategy to enlist Arab support in overthrowing the Ottomans. MORE

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