BBC World Histories - 08.2019 - 09.2019

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SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY

Historic cities

An artist’s impression of
early Abbasid-era Baghdad,
a vast round city ranged
around the caliph’s palace

Baghdad


12th–13th century


Grand city of marble palaces and
spotless streets, centre of trade,
learning and the arts

Founded on a circular plan on the banks
of the Tigris in AD 762 by Caliph
al-Mansur, in the ninth century
Baghdad was the world’s largest city –
a centre of learning and the arts to rival
ancient Athens. It suffered a decline
from about 1000, but remained a
flourishing city and capital of the
Abbasid Caliphate until 1258, when it
was sacked by the Mongols, who killed
most of the population and destroyed its
vital canal system.
In the late 1160s or early 1170s,
Benjamin of Tudela – a Jewish traveller
from northern Spain – described a
round city, 20 miles in circumference.
At its heart was the vast palace of the
caliph, whom Tudela did not name

but whom he clearly saw as trustworthy
and benevolent, a good friend to
Baghdad’s large Jewish community.
The caliph lived most of the year
in seclusion, appearing in the city just
once a year during the festival of Eid
al-Fitr (marking the end of Ramadan,
the holy month of fasting), when he
was accompanied by princes from
across the Islamic world. On that occa-
sion “he rides on a mule, and dressed in
royal robes of gold and silver and fine
linen; on his head is a turban adorned
with precious stones and over the turban
is a black shawl as a sign of his modesty,
implying that all this glory will be cov-
ered by darkness on the day of death...
The road he takes along the riverside is
watched all year through so that no man
shall tread in his footsteps.”
Sixty years later, another man
described his visit: Yaqut al-Hamawi,
born in Constantinople, who was the
associate of a Baghdadi trader. He saw
Baghdad as “a veritable city of palaces,
made of marble. The buildings are
usually of several storeys, the palaces

and mansions gilded and lavishly
decorated, and hung with beautiful
tapestry and hangings of brocade or silk.
The rooms are tastefully furnished with
luxurious divans, costly tables, Chinese
vases and gold and silver ornaments.
“The water gates are guarded night
and day,” he continued. “Every
household is supplied with water at all
seasons by the numerous aqueducts
which intersect the town; the streets,
gardens and parks are regularly swept
and watered, and no refuse is allowed to
remain within the walls. An immense
square in front of the palace is used for
reviews, military inspections, tourna-
ments and races; at night the square and
the streets are lighted by lamps.
“The scene on the river is animated
by thousands of gondolas, decked with
flags, dancing like sunbeams on the
water, and carrying the pleasure-seeking
citizens from one part of the city to the
other. Along the quays lie whole fleets
at anchor, sea and river craft of all kinds,
from Chinese junks to old Assyrian rafts
resting on inflated skins.”

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