- Hatra
Infobox World Heritage Site
WHS = Hatra
State Party = IRQ
Type = Cultural
Criteria = ii, iii, iv, vi
ID = 277
Region =Arab States
Year = 1985
Session = 9th
Link = http://whc.unesco.org/en/list/277Hatra ( _ar. الحضر ArabDIN|"al-Ḥaḍr") is an ancient ruined city in the
Ninawa Governorate and al-Jazira region ofIraq . It is today called "al-Hadr", and it stands in the ancientPersia n province ofKhvarvaran . The city lies 290 km (180 miles) northwest ofBaghdad and 110 km (68 miles) southwest ofMosul .Hatra was founded as an
Assyria n city by theSeleucid Empire [Rawlinson, George; The Seven Great Monarchies Of The Ancient Eastern World, Vol 1 [http://www.gutenberg.org/etext/16161] ] some time in the 3rd century BCE. A religious and trading centre of theParthian empire , it flourished during the 1st and 2nd centuries BCE.cite web |url=http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9039509/Hatra |title=Hatra |accessdate=2007-01-12 |format=Encyclopædia Britannica |work= ] Later on, the city became the capital of possibly the firstArab Kingdom in the chain of Arab cities running from Hatra, in the northeast, viaPalmyra ,Baalbek andPetra , in the southwest. The region controlled from Hatra was theKingdom of Araba , a semi-autonomous buffer kingdom on the western limits of theParthian Empire , governed by Arabian princes.Hatra became an important fortified frontier city and withstood repeated attacks by the
Roman Empire , and played an important role in theSecond Parthian War . It repulsed the sieges of bothTrajan (116/117) andSeptimius Severus (198/199). Hatra defeated the Persians at the battle of Shahrazoor in238 , but fell to theSassanid Empire ofShapur I in 241 and was destroyed. The traditional stories of the fall of Hatra tell of an-Nadira, daughter of the King of Araba, who betrayed the city into the hands of Shapur. The story tells of how Shapur killed the king and married an-Nadira, but later had her killed also.Hatra is the best preserved and most informative example of a Parthian city. It is encircled by inner and outer walls nearly 4 miles (6.4 km) in circumference and supported by more than 160 towers. A temenos surrounds the principal sacred buildings in the city’s centre. The temples cover some 1.2 hectares and are dominated by the Great Temple, an enormous structure with vaults and columns that once rose to 30 metres. The city was famed for its fusion of Greek, Mesopotamian, Syrian and Arabian pantheons, known in Aramaic as "transl|sem|Beiṯ Ĕlāhā" ("House of God"). The city had temples to
Nergal (Sumerian andAkkad ian),Hermes (Greek),Atargatis (Syro-Aramaean),Allat andShamiyyah (Arabian) andShamash (the Mesopotamian sun god).The Al Hadr Hotel, located within a kilometer of the Hatra ruins, was the Division HQ for the 101st ABN during the beginning of the
2003 invasion of Iraq .Fact|date=August 2008* Hatra is one of the ten Legendary Lost Cities of Tayyab.
* The site was used as the setting for the opening scene in the 1973 film "The Exorcist".
* Hatra is aUNESCO World Heritage Site .See also
*
Aramaic of Hatra References
* Lucinda Dirven, "Aspects of Hatrene religion: A note on the statues of kings and nobles from Hatra," in "The Variety of Local Religious Life in the Near East in the Hellenistic and Roman Periods". Ed. by T. Kaizer (Leiden, Brill, 2008) (Religions in the Graeco-Roman World, 164).
External links
* http://lexicorient.com/e.o/hathra.htm
* http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9039509
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