From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Iran窶的raq War was fought for nearly eight years and left a lasting legacy on Iran and Iraq. The Battle of al-Qadisiyya was the engagement between the Arab-Muslim army and the Sト《ト]ian Iranian army during the first period of Muslim expansion which resulted in the Arab-Muslim conquest of Iran. In the centuries following the battle, Qト‥isiyyah became enshrined in Muslim collective memory as a symbol of the successes of early Islamic history. Already during the period of the Crusades, Muslim leaders referred to Qト‥isiyyah as a point of reference to which they compared their own achievements. [1] Academic studies of the narratives of Qト‥isiyyah and other early Islamic battles have revealed numerous topoi that make up a common schema of the Arab-Muslim conquests; the generation of these literary layers seems to have begun immediately, as story-tellers ( qu盪」盪」ト≪ケ」) embellished their narrative in order to create an entertaining story or to glorify past ancestors. [2]

Iran

The war is known is Iran as the Difa-e-Muqaddas ("Sacred Defence") and the Jang-e Tahmili ("the Imposed War"). [3]

Iraq

In modern times, Qト‥isiyyah saw a revival beginning with the tensions leading up to the Iran窶的raq War. 盪「addam 盧、ussein and the Ba窶兮th rテゥgime of Iraq began referring frequently to the historical battle, seeking to cast the contemporary hostilities as a replay of the ancient encounter. In official Iraqi rhetoric, the war even became known as Qト‥isiyyat-盪「addト[, or "Saddam's Qト‥isiyyah". The state reinforced this rhetoric through a conscious pattern of nomenclature, naming provinces, newspapers, army battalions, and awards after Qト‥isiyyah, issuing currency, stamps, and medals featuring the battle, and by producing an all-Arab film entitled Qト‥isiyyah. [4] [5] [6]

One of the more famous examples of the use of Qト‥isiyyah is the Victory Arch ( Arabic: ルほ畏ウ リァルルリオリア; transliteration, Qaws an-Na盪」r), an Iraqi monument constructed by Saddam's rテゥgime to commemorate its "victory" in the Iran窶的raq War. Iraq's leading sculptor, Adil Kamil, won the commission to design and execute the construction of the arches, which were based on a concept sketch made Saddam Hussein. The design consists of a pair of massive hands emerging from the ground, each holding a 140-foot (43m) long sword, modelled after the imagined sword used by the Muslim general at Qト‥isiyyah. A small flagpole rises from the point where the swords meet, at a point about 130 feet (40 m) above the ground. Kamil used photographs and plaster casts of Saddam's forearms to model for the design of the hands. When Kamil died in 1987, with the monument incomplete, his position was assumed by fellow artist Mohammed Ghani Hikmat. Ghani personally took an impression of one of Saddam's thumbs, and the resulting fingerprint was added to the mold for one of the arches' thumbs. Nearby this monument is the Monument to the Unknown Soldier, which housed in its museum Saddam's personal firearm alongside the alleged sword of Saハソd, the Muslim commander at Qト‥isiyyah. [7] [8] [9]

'The Sword of Qト‥isiyyah', sometimes known as the ' Hands of Victory', opened August 1989

Scholars have argued that Saddam's choice of Qト‥isiyyah reflects the emotive power of religious history in the Middle East; invoking its name imbues subconscious meaning to its audience. [10] Qト‥isiyyah has continued to appear in the Middle East today, as many Muslims and Arab nationalists have named training bases, religious courts, and mosques after the engagement and have cited it in their speeches and sermons. [11] In addition, Qト‥isiyyah graces the names of schools, sports clubs, bridges, businesses, and medical facilities across the Middle East and even in Europe. [12]

See also

References

  1. ^ Lewental, 窶浪ト‥isiyyah, then and now窶, p. 379.
  2. ^ See Donner, Early Islamic conquests and Noth, Early Arabic historical tradition. See Lewental, 窶浪ト‥isiyyah, then and now窶, for a study of this process as it applies specifically to Qト‥isiyyah.
  3. ^ Khosronejad 2013, p. 3.
  4. ^ Lewental, 窶浪ト‥isiyyah, then and now窶, pp. 390窶399
  5. ^ Rida, 窶浪adisiyya窶, 40窶43
  6. ^ Bengio, Saddam's Word, pp. 172窶175.
  7. ^ Makiya, The Monument, pp. 1窶6
  8. ^ Lewental, 窶浪ト‥isiyyah, then and now窶, pp. 396窶397
  9. ^ Lewental, 窶錬attle of al-Qト‥isiyyah窶, online.
  10. ^ Lewental, 窶浪ト‥isiyyah, then and now窶, pp. 436, 470.
  11. ^ Lewental, 窶浪ト‥isiyyah, then and now窶, pp. 453窶457.
  12. ^ Lewental, 窶錬attle of al-Qト‥isiyyah窶, online.

Bibliography

  • Baram, Amatzia. Culture, history, and ideology in the formation of Baハソthist Iraq, 1968窶69. New York City: St Martin窶冱 Press, 1991.
  • Bengio, Ofra. Saddam窶冱 word: Political discourse in Iraq. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998.
  • Donner, Fred. The Early Islamic conquests. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1981.
  • Makiya, Kanan. The Monument: Art, vulgarity, and responsibility in Iraq. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991.
  • Lewental, D Gershon. 窶 The Battle of al-Qト‥isiyyah and modern Middle Eastern discourse窶. DGLnotes.com. 21 November 2005.
  • Lewental, D Gershon. 窶 Qト‥isiyyah, then and now: A Case study of history and memory, religion, and nationalism in Middle Eastern discourse窶, Ph.D dissertation. UMI Dissertation Services, 2011.
  • Lewental, D Gershon. 窶 窶彜addam窶冱 Qadisiyyah窶: Religion and history in the service of state ideology in Baハソthi Iraq窶. Middle Eastern Studies 50.6 (November 2014): 891-910.
  • Khosronejad, Pedram (2013). Unburied Memories: The Politics of Bodies of Sacred Defense Martyrs in Iran. Taylor & Francis. ISBN  9781135711603.
  • Noth, Albrecht (in collaboration with Lawrence Conrad). The Early Arabic historical tradition: A Source-critical study. Translated from German by Michael Bonner. Studies in late antiquity and early Islam, 3. 2nd edition. Princeton: Darwin Press, 1994.
  • Rida, Muhammad. 窶浪adisiyya: A New stage in Arab cinema窶. Ur 3 (1981): 40-43.
  • Vaglieri, Laura Veccia. 窶和l-盧イト‥isiyya窶. In Encyclopaedia of Islam. 2nd edition. Leiden: Brill Publishers, 1960窶2005. (pp. IV 384-387)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Iran窶的raq War was fought for nearly eight years and left a lasting legacy on Iran and Iraq. The Battle of al-Qadisiyya was the engagement between the Arab-Muslim army and the Sト《ト]ian Iranian army during the first period of Muslim expansion which resulted in the Arab-Muslim conquest of Iran. In the centuries following the battle, Qト‥isiyyah became enshrined in Muslim collective memory as a symbol of the successes of early Islamic history. Already during the period of the Crusades, Muslim leaders referred to Qト‥isiyyah as a point of reference to which they compared their own achievements. [1] Academic studies of the narratives of Qト‥isiyyah and other early Islamic battles have revealed numerous topoi that make up a common schema of the Arab-Muslim conquests; the generation of these literary layers seems to have begun immediately, as story-tellers ( qu盪」盪」ト≪ケ」) embellished their narrative in order to create an entertaining story or to glorify past ancestors. [2]

Iran

The war is known is Iran as the Difa-e-Muqaddas ("Sacred Defence") and the Jang-e Tahmili ("the Imposed War"). [3]

Iraq

In modern times, Qト‥isiyyah saw a revival beginning with the tensions leading up to the Iran窶的raq War. 盪「addam 盧、ussein and the Ba窶兮th rテゥgime of Iraq began referring frequently to the historical battle, seeking to cast the contemporary hostilities as a replay of the ancient encounter. In official Iraqi rhetoric, the war even became known as Qト‥isiyyat-盪「addト[, or "Saddam's Qト‥isiyyah". The state reinforced this rhetoric through a conscious pattern of nomenclature, naming provinces, newspapers, army battalions, and awards after Qト‥isiyyah, issuing currency, stamps, and medals featuring the battle, and by producing an all-Arab film entitled Qト‥isiyyah. [4] [5] [6]

One of the more famous examples of the use of Qト‥isiyyah is the Victory Arch ( Arabic: ルほ畏ウ リァルルリオリア; transliteration, Qaws an-Na盪」r), an Iraqi monument constructed by Saddam's rテゥgime to commemorate its "victory" in the Iran窶的raq War. Iraq's leading sculptor, Adil Kamil, won the commission to design and execute the construction of the arches, which were based on a concept sketch made Saddam Hussein. The design consists of a pair of massive hands emerging from the ground, each holding a 140-foot (43m) long sword, modelled after the imagined sword used by the Muslim general at Qト‥isiyyah. A small flagpole rises from the point where the swords meet, at a point about 130 feet (40 m) above the ground. Kamil used photographs and plaster casts of Saddam's forearms to model for the design of the hands. When Kamil died in 1987, with the monument incomplete, his position was assumed by fellow artist Mohammed Ghani Hikmat. Ghani personally took an impression of one of Saddam's thumbs, and the resulting fingerprint was added to the mold for one of the arches' thumbs. Nearby this monument is the Monument to the Unknown Soldier, which housed in its museum Saddam's personal firearm alongside the alleged sword of Saハソd, the Muslim commander at Qト‥isiyyah. [7] [8] [9]

'The Sword of Qト‥isiyyah', sometimes known as the ' Hands of Victory', opened August 1989

Scholars have argued that Saddam's choice of Qト‥isiyyah reflects the emotive power of religious history in the Middle East; invoking its name imbues subconscious meaning to its audience. [10] Qト‥isiyyah has continued to appear in the Middle East today, as many Muslims and Arab nationalists have named training bases, religious courts, and mosques after the engagement and have cited it in their speeches and sermons. [11] In addition, Qト‥isiyyah graces the names of schools, sports clubs, bridges, businesses, and medical facilities across the Middle East and even in Europe. [12]

See also

References

  1. ^ Lewental, 窶浪ト‥isiyyah, then and now窶, p. 379.
  2. ^ See Donner, Early Islamic conquests and Noth, Early Arabic historical tradition. See Lewental, 窶浪ト‥isiyyah, then and now窶, for a study of this process as it applies specifically to Qト‥isiyyah.
  3. ^ Khosronejad 2013, p. 3.
  4. ^ Lewental, 窶浪ト‥isiyyah, then and now窶, pp. 390窶399
  5. ^ Rida, 窶浪adisiyya窶, 40窶43
  6. ^ Bengio, Saddam's Word, pp. 172窶175.
  7. ^ Makiya, The Monument, pp. 1窶6
  8. ^ Lewental, 窶浪ト‥isiyyah, then and now窶, pp. 396窶397
  9. ^ Lewental, 窶錬attle of al-Qト‥isiyyah窶, online.
  10. ^ Lewental, 窶浪ト‥isiyyah, then and now窶, pp. 436, 470.
  11. ^ Lewental, 窶浪ト‥isiyyah, then and now窶, pp. 453窶457.
  12. ^ Lewental, 窶錬attle of al-Qト‥isiyyah窶, online.

Bibliography

  • Baram, Amatzia. Culture, history, and ideology in the formation of Baハソthist Iraq, 1968窶69. New York City: St Martin窶冱 Press, 1991.
  • Bengio, Ofra. Saddam窶冱 word: Political discourse in Iraq. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998.
  • Donner, Fred. The Early Islamic conquests. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1981.
  • Makiya, Kanan. The Monument: Art, vulgarity, and responsibility in Iraq. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1991.
  • Lewental, D Gershon. 窶 The Battle of al-Qト‥isiyyah and modern Middle Eastern discourse窶. DGLnotes.com. 21 November 2005.
  • Lewental, D Gershon. 窶 Qト‥isiyyah, then and now: A Case study of history and memory, religion, and nationalism in Middle Eastern discourse窶, Ph.D dissertation. UMI Dissertation Services, 2011.
  • Lewental, D Gershon. 窶 窶彜addam窶冱 Qadisiyyah窶: Religion and history in the service of state ideology in Baハソthi Iraq窶. Middle Eastern Studies 50.6 (November 2014): 891-910.
  • Khosronejad, Pedram (2013). Unburied Memories: The Politics of Bodies of Sacred Defense Martyrs in Iran. Taylor & Francis. ISBN  9781135711603.
  • Noth, Albrecht (in collaboration with Lawrence Conrad). The Early Arabic historical tradition: A Source-critical study. Translated from German by Michael Bonner. Studies in late antiquity and early Islam, 3. 2nd edition. Princeton: Darwin Press, 1994.
  • Rida, Muhammad. 窶浪adisiyya: A New stage in Arab cinema窶. Ur 3 (1981): 40-43.
  • Vaglieri, Laura Veccia. 窶和l-盧イト‥isiyya窶. In Encyclopaedia of Islam. 2nd edition. Leiden: Brill Publishers, 1960窶2005. (pp. IV 384-387)

Videos

Youtube | Vimeo | Bing

Websites

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Encyclopedia

Google | Yahoo | Bing

Facebook