Dooreh, Iraq

Dooreh
Dooreh
Location in Iraq
Dooreh
Dooreh (Iraqi Kurdistan)
Coordinates: 37°13′24″N 43°28′7″E / 37.22333°N 43.46861°E / 37.22333; 43.46861
Country Iraq
Region Kurdistan Region
GovernorateDohuk Governorate
DistrictAmadiya District

Dooreh is a village in Dohuk Governorate in Kurdistan Region, Iraq.[a] It is located near the Iraq–Turkey border in the Amadiya District and the historical region of Barwari. In the village, there is a church of Mar Gewargis,[3] and the ruins of the monastery of Mar Qayyoma.[1] There was previously two shrines dedicated to Mart Maryam and Mar Apius and four cemeteries.[1]

Etymology

It is suggested that the name of the village is derived from "dūru(m)" ("fortress, wall" in Akkadian).[1]

History

The remains of a fortress nearby Dooreh have been dated to the early period of Assyria in the late third millennium BC, and likely inspired the village's name.[6] The monastery of Mar Qayyoma was founded in the 4th-century AD, and the church of Mar Gewargis was first constructed in 909.[1] The monastery of Mar Qayyoma is first mentioned in the mentioned in the 10th-century Life of Rabban Joseph Busnaya, and had become the seat of the Church of the East diocese of Barwari by 1610.[7] Dooreh itself is mentioned in a manuscript of 1683.[7] In 1850, 20-40 Church of the East families inhabited Dooreh, and were served by two functioning churches and four priests.[1]

Prior to the First World War, Dooreh was populated by 200 Assyrians,[1] who were forced to flee under the leadership of Agha Petros to the vicinity of Urmia in Iran, amidst the Assyrian genocide.[2] Whilst in Iran, 90 villagers died, and 30 women and children were either killed or abducted,[1] and the survivors were settled at the refugee camp at Baqubah in 1918.[8] After residing there for two years, 90 people eventually returned to Dooreh.[8] Dooreh was temporarily deserted again in the early 1930s due to the conflict between the Turkish government and the Kurdish Emir of Barwari.[2] 35 families inhabited the village in 1938, and the population of Dooreh was recorded as 296 people in 1957.[1]

At the onset of the First Iraqi–Kurdish War in 1961, 75 families in 40 houses resided at Dooreh,[2] and the village was damaged by a napalm attack during the war in 1968.[1] Despite this damage, the population increased to 100 families in 75 houses by 1978, in which year on 8 August the village was destroyed by the Iraqi government, and much of its population was forcibly resettled at Batifa.[1] The village's destruction was total, as all houses, churches, farms, and orchards were obliterated.[1] In the aftermath of the 1991 uprisings in Iraq, 30 families returned to Dooreh,[2] and the church of Mar Gewargis was rebuilt in 1995 with support from the Evangelical-Lutheran Church in Württemberg.[3]

By 2011, the Supreme Committee of Christian Affairs had constructed 37 houses and a hall,[4] and the village was inhabited by 250 adherents of the Assyrian Church of the East in the following year.[9] Dooreh was struck by Turkish airstrikes on 1 September 2018 as part of the Kurdish–Turkish conflict.[10]

Notable people

References

Notes

  1. ^ Alternatively transliterated as Dūre,[1] Dore,[2] Dura,[3] or Doore.[4] (Kurdish: دورێ;[5] Syriac: ܕܘܪܐ).[4]

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Donabed (2015), pp. 294–296.
  2. ^ a b c d e Eshoo (2004), pp. 2–3.
  3. ^ a b c "Mar Gewargiz church – Dura". Ishtar TV. 8 October 2011. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  4. ^ a b c "Doore". Ishtar TV. 5 July 2011. Retrieved 30 July 2020.
  5. ^ "2009 - ناوی پاریزگا. يه که کارگيرييه كانی پاریزگاكانی هه ریمی کوردستان" (PDF). Kurdistan Region Statistics Office (KRSO) (in Kurdish). p. 154. Archived (PDF) from the original on 14 March 2017. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  6. ^ Donabed (2010), pp. 165–168.
  7. ^ a b Wilmshurst (2000), pp. 149–151.
  8. ^ a b Khan (2008), p. 1889.
  9. ^ "Christian Communities in the Kurdistan Region". Iraqi Kurdistan Christianity Project. 2012. Archived from the original on 24 November 2020. Retrieved 5 August 2020.
  10. ^ "Human Rights Report 2018: Struggling to Breathe: the Systematic Repression of Assyrians" (PDF). Assyrian Confederation of Europe. 1 April 2019. p. 26. Retrieved 20 August 2020.
  11. ^ Donabed (2015), p. 151.

Bibliography