The birth of Baghdad
And the beginning of world civilization:
by Justin Marozzi
The round city of Baghdad in the 10th century, the peak of
the Abbasid Caliphate. Illustration: Jean Soutif/Science
Photo Library |
If Baghdad today is a byword for inner-city decay and violence on an
unspeakable scale, its foundation 1,250 years ago was a glorious
milestone in the history of urban design. More than that, it was a
landmark for civilisation, the birth of a city that would quickly become
the cultural lodestar of the world.
Contrary to popular belief, Baghdad is old but not ancient. Founded
in AD762 by the Abbasid caliph al-Mansur 'The Victorious' as the new
seat of his Islamic empire, in Mesopotamian terms it is more 'arriviste'
than 'grande dame' an upstart compared to Nineveh, Ur and Babylon
(seventh, fourth and third millennium BC respectively).
Baghdad is a mere baby, too, when compared with Uruk, another ancient
Mesopotamian urban settlement, which lays claim to being one of the
world's earliest cities and which was, sometime around 3,200BC, the
largest urban centre on earth with a population estimated at up to
80,000. Some think the Arabic title for Babylonia, al-Iraq, is derived
from its name.
We know a huge amount about the city's meticulous and inspired
planning thanks to detailed records of its construction. We are told,
for instance, that when Mansur was hunting for his new capital, sailing
up and down the Tigris to find a suitable site, he was initially advised
of the favourable location and climate by a community of Nestorian monks
who long predated Muslims in the area.
According to the ninth-century Arab geographer and historian Yaqubi,
author of 'The Book of Countries,' its trade-friendly position on the
Tigris close to the Euphrates gave it the potential to be 'the
crossroads of the universe'.
Greatest construction
This was a retrospective endorsement. By the time Yaqubi was writing,
Baghdad, City of Peace, had already become the centre of the world,
capital of the pre-eminent Dar al-Islam, home to pioneering scientists,
astronomers, poets, mathematicians, musicians, historians, legalists and
philosophers.
The last remaining gate of the walls that once surrounded
Baghdad. Photograph: Mohammed Jalil/EPA |
This was by far the greatest construction project in the Islamic
world.
Once Mansur had agreed the site, it was time to embark on the design.
Again we are told that this was entirely the caliph's work. Under strict
supervision, he had workers trace the plans of his round city on the
ground in lines of cinders. The perfect circle was a tribute to the
geometric teachings of Euclid, whom he had studied and admired. He then
walked through this ground-level plan, indicated his approval and
ordered cotton balls soaked in naphtha (liquid petroleum) to be placed
along the outlines and set alight to mark the position of the massively
fortified double outer walls.
On 30 July 762, after the royal astrologers had declared this the
most auspicious date for building work to begin, Mansur offered up a
prayer to Allah, laid the ceremonial first brick and ordered the
assembled workers to get cracking.
The scale of this great urban project is one of the most distinctive
aspects of the story of Baghdad. With a circumference of four miles, the
massive brick walls rising up from the banks of the Tigris were the
defining signature of Mansur's Round City.
According to 11th-century scholar Al Khatib al Baghdadi - whose
History of Baghdad is a mine of information on the construction of the
city - each course consisted of 162,000 bricks for the first third of
the wall's height, 150,000 for the second third and 140,000 for the
final section, bonded together with bundles of reeds. The outer wall was
80ft high, crowned with battlements and flanked by bastions. A deep moat
ringed the outer wall perimeter.
Abbasid Empire
The workforce itself was of a stupendous size. Thousands of
architects and engineers, legal experts, surveyors and carpenters,
blacksmiths, diggers and ordinary labourers were recruited from across
the Abbasid Empire. First they surveyed, measured and excavated the
foundations. Then, using the sun-baked and kiln-fired bricks that had
always been the main building material on the river-flooded Mesopotamian
plains in the absence of stone quarries, they raised the fortress-like
city walls brick by brick. This was by far the greatest construction
project in the Islamic world: Yaqubi reckoned there were 100,000 workers
involved.
The circular design was breathtakingly innovative. "They say that no
other round city is known in all the regions of the world," Khatib noted
approvingly. Four equidistant gates pierced the outer walls where
straight roads led to the centre of the city. The Kufa Gate to the
south-west and the Basra Gate to the south-east both opened on to the
Sarat canal - a key part of the network of waterways that drained the
waters of the Euphrates into the Tigris and made this site so
attractive. The Sham (Syrian) Gate to the north-west led to the main
road on to Anbar, and across the desert wastes to Syria. To the
north-east the Khorasan Gate lay close to the Tigris, leading to the
bridge of boats across it.
An 1883 illustration of early Baghdad |
For the great majority of the city's life, a fluctuating number of
these bridges, consisting of skiffs roped together and fastened to each
bank, were one of the most picturesque signatures of Baghdad; no more
permanent structure would be seen until the British arrived in the 20th
century and laid an iron bridge across the Tigris.
A gatehouse rose above each of the four outer gates. Those above the
entrances in the higher main wall offered commanding views over the city
and the many miles of lush palm groves and emerald fields that fringed
the waters of the Tigris. The large audience chamber at the top of the
gatehouse above the Khorasan Gate was a particular favourite of Mansur
as an afternoon retreat from the stultifying heat.
I have never seen a city of greater height, more perfect circularity,
more endowed with superior merits.
The four straight roads that ran towards the centre of the city from
the outer gates were lined with vaulted arcades containing merchants'
shops and bazaars. Smaller streets ran off these four main arteries,
giving access to a series of squares and houses; the limited space
between the main wall and the inner wall answered to Mansur's desire to
maintain the heart of the city as a royal preserve.
The centre of Baghdad consisted of an immense central enclosure -
perhaps 6,500 feet in diameter - with the royal precinct at its heart.
The outer margins were reserved for the palaces of the caliph's
children, homes for the royal staff and servants, the caliph's kitchens,
barracks for the horse guard and other state offices. The very centre
was empty except for the two finest buildings in the city: the Great
Mosque and the caliph's Golden Gate Palace, a classically Islamic
expression of the union between temporal and spiritual authority. No one
except Mansur, not even a gout-ridden uncle of the caliph who requested
the privilege on grounds of ill-health, was permitted to ride in this
central precinct.
Mansur's palace
One sympathises with this elderly uncle of the caliph. Unmoved by his
protestations of decrepit limbs, Mansur said he could be carried into
the central precinct on a litter, a mode of transport generally reserved
for women. "I will be embarrassed by the people," his uncle Isa said.
"Is there anyone left you could be embarrassed by?" the caliph replied
caustically.
Mansur's palace was a remarkable building of 360,000 sq ft. Its most
striking feature was the 130ft-high green dome above the main audience
chamber, visible for miles around and surmounted by the figure of a
horseman with a lance in his hand. Khatib claimed that the figure
swivelled like a weathervane, thrusting his lance in the direction from
which the caliph's enemies would next appear. Mansur's great mosque was
Baghdad's first. Encompassing a prodigious 90,000 sq ft, it paid dutiful
respect to Allah while emphatically conveying the message that the
Abbasids were his most powerful and illustrious servants on earth.
A crane lifts the statue of al-Mansur after it was hit by an
explosion in Baghdad in 2005. Photograph: Karim Sahib/AFP/Getty
Images |
By 766 Mansur's Round City was complete. The general verdict was that
it was a triumph. The ninth-century essayist, polymath and polemicist
al-Jahiz was unstinting in his praise. "I have seen the great cities,
including those noted for their durable construction. I have seen such
cities in the districts of Syria, in Byzantine territory, and in other
provinces, but I have never seen a city of greater height, more perfect
circularity, more endowed with superior merits or possessing more
spacious gates or more perfect defences than Al Zawra, that is to say
the city of Abu Jafar al-Mansur." What he particularly admired was the
roundness of the city: "It is as though it is poured into a mould and
cast."
The last traces of Mansur's Round City were demolished in the early
1870s when Midhat Pasha, the reformist Ottoman governor, tore down the
venerable city walls in a fit of modernising zeal. Baghdadis have since
grown used to being excluded from the centre of their resilient capital.
Just as they had been barred from the inner sanctum of the city under
Mansur, so were their 20th-century counterparts excluded from the heart
of Baghdad on pain of death 12 centuries later under Saddam Hussein. The
heavily guarded district of Karadat Maryam, slightly south of the
original Round City on the west bank, became the regime headquarters,
the engine room of a giant machine carefully calibrated to cow, control
and kill using the multiple security organisations that enabled a
country to devour itself. Under the American occupation of 2003 it
became the even more intensely fortified Green Zone, a surreal dystopia
of six square miles in which Iraqis were largely unwelcome in their own
capital.
Today, after a 12-year interlude, the Green Zone is open to Baghdadis
again. But as so often in their extraordinarily bloody history, Iraqis
find they have very little to cheer about as the country tears itself
apart. The great city of Baghdad survives, but its people are once again
engulfed in terrible violence.
(Justin Marozzi is the author of
Baghdad: City of Peace, City of Blood, winner of the Royal Society of
Literature's 2015 Ondaatje Prize. This article was originally published
in Guardian UK) |