Timeline of Basra

The following is a timeline of the history of the city of Basra, Iraq.

Prior to 16th century

Part of a series on the
History of Iraq
 Iraq portal

16th-19th centuries

  • 1546 - Ottomans in power.[1]
  • 1547 - Basra Eyalet (administrative region) formed.[1]
  • 1556 - Portuguese attempt to take city.[1]
  • 1596 - Afrasiyab becomes governor.[6]
  • 1604 - Population: 50,000 (approximate); number of houses: 10,000 (approximate).[8]
  • 1645 - English factory in business.[1]
  • 1694 - Muntafiq tribes in power.[1]
  • 1733 - City becomes part of Baghdad Eyalet (administrative region).[6]
  • 1763 - British East India Company in business.[1]
  • 1773 - Epidemic.[1]
  • 1777 - City besieged by Persian forces led by Sadiq Khan Zand.[9]
  • 1779 - Turks in power.[10]
  • 1823 - Population: 55,000 (approximate).[11]
  • 1832 - Muhammad Ali of Egypt in power.[10]
  • 1840 - Turks in power.[10]
  • 1865 - Baghdad-Basra telegraph begins operating.[12]
  • 1884 - Basra Vilayet (administrative region) formed.[9]

20th century

  • 1901 - Consulate of Russia established.[1]
  • 1910 - Cholera and bubonic plague outbreak.[13]
  • 1911
  • 1913 - Reform Society of Basra founded.[14]
  • 1914 - Battle of Basra (1914); British in power.
  • 1915 - April: Turkish forces attempt to take city.[1]
  • 1919 - Baghdad-Basra Railway in operation.[1]
  • 1920
    • Uprising against British occupation.[1]
    • Population: 40,000 (approximate).[13]
  • 1947 - Population: 101,535.[15]
  • 1964 - University of Basrah established.[1]
  • 1965 - Population: 310,950.[16]
  • 1967 - Basrah Medical College established.
  • 1982 - July: Iranian forces attempt to take city.[1]
  • 1984 - Iranian forces attempt to take city.[1]
  • 1987
    • January–February: Iranian forces attempt to take city.
    • Population: 406,296.[17]
  • 1991
  • 1999
    • 25 January: Bombing by United States forces.
    • Uprising.

21st century

gollark: Catzrule: find one everyone hates.
gollark: Probably nothing will happen, but it'll still be quite funny.
gollark: For what?
gollark: Probably people will just learn to be happy with the trickles of other dragons pouring in as stuff begins to run down to 0 days.
gollark: Perhaps a modified version which won't allow walls somehow, who knows.

See also

References

  1. Stanley 2008.
  2. Naji 1981.
  3. Mohammadi-Malayeri, Mohammad (1382). تاریخ و فرهنگ ایران در دوران انتقال از عصر ساسانی به عصر اسلامی (in Persian). 5. Tehrān: Tūs. pp. 369–370. Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  4. Tabari, Muhammad ibn Yarir al- (1989). The History of al-Tabari Vol. 20: The Collapse of Sufyanid Authority and the Coming of the Marwanids: The Caliphates of Mu'awiyah II and Marwan I and the Beginning of The Caliphate of 'Abd al-Malik A.D. 683-685/A.H. 64-66. SUNY Press. p. 32. ISBN 978-0-88706-855-3.
  5. Grove 2009.
  6. Abdullah 2001.
  7. Le Strange 1905.
  8. Matthee 2006.
  9. Britannica 1910.
  10. Hartmann 1913.
  11. Morse 1823.
  12. Shahvar 2003.
  13. US GPO 1920.
  14. Tauber 1989.
  15. "Population of capital city and cities of 100,000 or more inhabitants". Demographic Yearbook 1955. New York: Statistical Office of the United Nations.
  16. United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs, Statistical Office (1976). "Population of capital city and cities of 100,000 and more inhabitants". Demographic Yearbook 1975. New York. pp. 253–279.
  17. United Nations Department for Economic and Social Information and Policy Analysis, Statistics Division (1997). "Population of capital cities and cities of 100,000 and more inhabitants". 1995 Demographic Yearbook. New York. pp. 262–321.
  18. "Second Sunni Mosque Is Blown Up in Basra". New York Times. 16 June 2007. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  19. "UK troops return Basra to Iraqis". BBC News. 16 December 2007. Retrieved 3 February 2013.
  20. "Basrah". Inter-Agency Information and Analysis Unit. Retrieved 2 February 2013.
  21. Encyclopædia Britannica Book of the Year. 2013. ISBN 978-1-62513-103-4.

Bibliography

in English

Published in 19th century
  • James Hingston Tuckey (1815). "Bussora". Maritime Geography and Statistics. London: Black, Parry, and Co.
  • Jedidiah Morse; Richard C. Morse (1823), "Bassora", A New Universal Gazetteer (4th ed.), New Haven: S. Converse
  • William Milburn; Thomas Thornton (1825). "Bussorah". Oriental Commerce. London: Kingsbury, Parbury, and Allen.
  • J. R. Wellsted (1840), "(Busrah)", Travels to the City of the Caliphs, along the Shores of the Persian Gulf and the Mediterranean, London: H. Colburn, OCLC 5395027
  • Ainsworth, William Harrison (1846). "Bassora". Ainsworth's Magazine. London.
  • Al Hariri of Basra (1850). "The Makamah of the Mosque Beni Haram". Makamat: Or, Rhetorical Anecdotes. Translated by Theodore Preston. London: Oriental Translation Fund.. Also: The Makamah of Basra.
  • James Horsburgh (1852). "Persian Gulf: Basra". India Directory: Or, Directions for Sailing to and from the East Indies, China, Australia, and the Interjacent Ports of Africa and South America (6th ed.). London: William H. Allen & Co. via Google Books.
  • Edward Balfour, ed. (1871). "Bassorah". Cyclopaedia of India and of Eastern and Southern Asia (2nd ed.). Madras.
Published in 20th century
  • Pedro Teixeira (1902), "(Basora)", Travels of Pedro Teixeira, translated by William F. Sinclair, London: Printed for the Hakluyt Society
  • Guy Le Strange (1905). "(Al-Basrah)". Lands of the Eastern Caliphate. Cambridge University Press.
  • "Basra", Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.), New York, 1910, OCLC 14782424 via Internet Archive
  • Hamdallah Mustawfi (1910). Tarikh-i guzida. Translated by Edward G Browne.. (Includes description of Basra in the 14th century)
  • R. Hartmann (1913). "al-Basra". Encyclopaedia of Islam. Brill.
  • "Al Basra". Persian Gulf Pilot. Washington DC: Government Printing Office. 1920.
  • A. J. Naji; Y. N. Ali (1981). "The Suqs of Basrah: Commercial Organization and Activity in a Medieval Islamic City". Journal of the Economic and Social History of the Orient. 24: 298–324. doi:10.1163/156852081X00130.
  • Eliezer Tauber (1989). "Sayyid Talib and the Young Turks in Basra". Middle Eastern Studies. 25.
  • Khoury (1992). "Iraqi Cities during the Early Ottoman Period: Mosul and Basra". Arab Historical Review for Ottoman Studies.
Published in 21st century
  • Thabit A. J. Abdullah (2001), Merchants, Mamluks, and Murder: The Political Economy of Trade in Eighteenth-Century Basra, State University of New York Press, ISBN 9780791448076, 079144807X
  • Soli Shahvar (2003). "Tribes and Telegraphs in Lower Iraq: The Muntafiq and the Baghdad-Basrah Telegraph Line of 1863-65". Middle Eastern Studies. 39.
  • Rudi Matthee (2006). "Between Arabs, Turks and Iranians: The Town of Basra, 1600-1700". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. 69: 53–78. doi:10.1017/s0041977x06000036.
  • Josef W. Meri, ed. (2006). "Basra". Medieval Islamic Civilization. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-96691-7.
  • C. Edmund Bosworth, ed. (2007). "Basra". Historic Cities of the Islamic World. Leiden: Koninklijke Brill. p. 49+.
  • Bruce Stanley (2008), "Basrah", in Michael R.T. Dumper; Bruce E. Stanley (eds.), Cities of the Middle East and North Africa, Santa Barbara, USA: ABC-CLIO, p. 72+
  • Gabor Agoston; Bruce Alan Masters (2009). "Basra". Encyclopedia of the Ottoman Empire. Facts on File. ISBN 978-1-4381-1025-7.
  • "Basra". Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art & Architecture. Oxford University Press. 2009.

in other languages

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