An Numaniyah

An-Nu'maniyah
النعمانية
An-Nu'maniyah النعمانية is located in Iraq
An-Nu'maniyah النعمانية
An-Nu'maniyah
النعمانية
Location Iraq
Coordinates: 32°30′0″N 45°20′0″E / 32.50000°N 45.33333°E / 32.50000; 45.33333
CountryIraq
GovernorateWasit
DistrictAl-Nu'maniya District
Population
 (2018)[citation needed]
 • Total
71,000

An-Nu'mānīyah (Arabic: النعمانية, romanizedan-Nuʿmānīyah) is a city on the Tigris river in Iraq, located roughly 140 kilometres (87 mi) southeast of Baghdad in the Wasit Province. It is the site of one of four national training centers for the Iraqi Army.

It is also the site of a base that was built by the Hussein regime and constructed by Yugoslavian contractors Mostogradnja. Following the beginning of the Iraq War, it changed its purpose September 1, 2004[1] to operate as a training base for new recruits and serve as the home station for three battalions of the Iraqi Intervention Force – the Iraqi army's counterinsurgency wing.

History

An-Nu'maniyah is named after al-Nu'man III ibn al-Mundhir who ruled the region. The city hosts the tomb of Al-Mutanabbi.[citation needed]

Nu'maniyah was an important town during the Middle Ages. It lay on the western bank of the Tigris, across from the town of Jabbul, and was the capital of the Upper Zab district. It had a Friday mosque in its marketplace. Ibn Rustah commented that Nu'maniyah was renowned for its carpets, which resembled those made at al-Hirah. In the 1300s, Hamdallah Mustawfi described Nu'maniyah as a prosperous town surrounded by date palm groves. Near the town, there was a monastery called Dayr Hizqil, where the monks looked after the mentally ill.[2]

An-Numaniyah Airfield

Located in An Numaniyah was the An Numaniyah Air Base and Training Center, which garrisoned 3 battalions of the Iraq Intervention Force. The base closed in 2006 after suffering corruption.[3]

References

  1. ^ IRAQI ARMY OPENS $165 MILLION BASE AT AN NUMANIYAH - Globalsecurity.org
  2. ^ Le Strange (1905), pp. 37-38
  3. ^ An Numaniyah Airfield - Globalsecurity.org

Sources

  • Le Strange, Guy (1905). The Lands of the Eastern Caliphate: Mesopotamia, Persia, and Central Asia, from the Moslem Conquest to the Time of Timur. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. OCLC 458169031.