Bajadda Explained

Bājaddā was a small town in the Balikh River valley inhabited during the early Islamic period.[1] [2] It is identified with the present-day Khirbat al-Anbār, located a few kilometers south of the contemporary town of Hisn Maslama.[1] [2]

Geography

The site measures 800x700 m in size and consists of a low mound with a flat top, which suggests that there was only one main building phase.[1] [2] It has not been explored by archaeologists; the only monument visible from the surface is a large dome that may cover an underground cistern or well.[1] [2]

History

The name "Bajadda" is Syriac, probably indicating a local Syriac-speaking population.[1] [2] The town was the place of origin of the Banu Taymiyya family of Hanbali scholars.[1] [2] According to Ahmad ibn al-Tayyib al-Sarakhsi, who visited the Balikh valley in 884-5, Bajadda had originally formed part of the Umayyad general Maslama ibn Abd al-Malik's landed estates in the region.[2] Maslama then granted it to a lieutenant of his, Usayd al-Sulamī, who built the small town up and fortified it with a wall.[2] Sarakhsi wrote that there was a spring in Bajadda that provided water for drinking and agriculture; this spring may be under the dome.[1] [2] Bajadda was probably flourishing in the 880s when Sarakhsi visited.[2] Some possible 12th/13th-century pottery fragments have also been found at the site, indicating that the town may have still existed then.[1] [2]

See also

Notes and References

  1. Heidemann . Stefan . Settlement Patterns, Economic Development and Archaeological Coin Finds in Bilad al-Sham: the Case of the Diyar Mudar - The Process of Transformation from the 6th to the 10th Century A.D. . Orient-Archäologie . 2009 . 24 . 493-516 . 11 March 2022.
  2. Book: Heidemann . Stefan . Borrut . A. . Debié . M. . Papaconstantinou . A. . Pieri . D. . Sodini . J.-P. . Le Proche-Orient de Justinien aux Abbasides: Peuplement et Dynamiques Spatiales . 2011 . Brepols Publishers . Turnhout . 978-2-503-53572-2 . 20 March 2022 . The Agricultural Hinterland of Baghdad, al-Raqqa and Samarra': Settlement Patterns in the Diyar Muḍar.