Humānīya
Humayniyah | |
---|---|
Coordinates: near 32°50′38″N 45°04′36″E / 32.84389°N 45.07667°E | |
Country | Iraq |
Governorate | Wasit |
al-Humānīya, also called al-Humayniyah, is a historical town in Iraq, on the Tigris. [1] Of probable Sasanian origin, Humaniya was a large regional town of medieval Iraq, mentioned by several contemporary authors. [2]
After the caliph al-Amin, died, his mother, Zubaydah, and his two sons were imprisoned in Humaniya on the orders of al-Ma'mun. [1] In the early 1200s, Yaqut al-Hamawi described it as a village the size of a city, [2] surrounded by extensive farmland. [2] This suggests that Humaniya may have expanded during the late Abbasid period, even while most towns in the area were shrinking or becoming abandoned altogether. [2]
Archaeological evidence indicates that Humaniya was one of a relatively small number of permanent settlements in the region to remain occupied during the Ilkhanid period, [2] when settled agriculture was dramatically reduced throughout Iraq. [2] One or more minarets were still standing here when Felix Jones surveyed the area of the Nahrawan Canal in the mid-1800s, [2] and Guy Le Strange noted that Humaniya was "still found on the map" around the turn of the 20th century. [1]
Historically, Humaniya was on the right, or south, bank of the Tigris, but the oxbow loop it lay on became cut off in the late 19th century, [2] and it is now on the left/north bank. [3]