Samarra Archaeological City

CulturalIn Danger
Samarra Archaeological City
Photo: Jim Gordon / CC BY 2.0 (Wikimedia Commons)
Country Iraq
Year inscribed2007
Criteria(ii) (iii) (iv)

Overview

Samarra Archaeological City is the site of a powerful Islamic capital city that ruled over the provinces of the Abbasid Empire extending from Tunisia to Central Asia for a century. Located on both sides of the River Tigris 130 km north of Baghdad, the length of the site from north to south is 41.5 km; its width varying from 8 km to 4 km. It testifies to the architectural and artistic innovations that developed there and spread to the other regions of the Islamic world and beyond. The 9th-century Great Mosque and its spiral minaret are among the numerous remarkable architectural monuments of the site, 80% of which remain to be excavated.

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Source: UNESCO World Heritage List — CC BY-SA 4.0