Spy satellite images lead archeologists to the site of a historic battle
in Iraq
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[November 12, 2024]
By ABBY SEWELL
BEIRUT (AP) — Declassified 1970s-era U.S. spy satellite imagery has led
a British-Iraqi archeological team to what they believe is the site of a
seventh-century battle that became decisive in the spread of Islam
throughout the region.
The Battle of al-Qadisiyah was fought in Mesopotamia — in present-day
Iraq — in the A.D. 630s between Arab Muslims and the army of the
Sassanid Persian dynasty during a period of Muslim expansion. The Arab
army prevailed and continued on its march into Persia, now Iran.
A joint team of archeologists from the U.K.’s Durham University and the
University of Al-Qadisiyah stumbled across the site while undertaking a
remote sensing survey to map the Darb Zubaydah, a pilgrimage route from
Iraq’s Kufa to Mecca in Saudi Arabia built more than 1,000 years ago.
The findings were published Tuesday in the journal Antiquity.
While mapping the route, the team noticed that a site some 30 kilometers
(20 miles) south of Kufa in Iraq’s southern Najaf province — a desert
area with scattered plots of agricultural land — had features that
closely matched the description of the al-Qadisiyah battle site
described in historic texts.
William Deadman, a specialist in archaeological remote sensing at Durham
University, said the Cold War era satellite images are a commonly used
tools by archeologists working in the Middle East, because the older
images often show features that have been destroyed or altered and would
not show up on present-day satellite images.
“The Middle East has developed so much in the last 50 years, both
agricultural expansion and urban expansion,” he said. Some of the
distinguishing features at the al-Qadisiyah site, such as a distinctive
trench, were “much more pristine and clear” in the 1970s images, he
said.
A survey on the ground confirmed the findings and convinced the team
that they had correctly identified the site.
The key features were a deep trench, two fortresses and an ancient river
that was reportedly once forded by elephant-mounted Persian troops, said
Jaafar Jotheri, a professor of archeology at the University of Al-Qadisiyah
who is part of the team that made the discovery. The survey team also
found pottery shards consistent with the time period when the battle
took place.
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Dr Jaafar al Jotheri holds satellite images and explores the site of
the Battle of al-Qadisiyah, which was fought in Mesopotamia -
present-day Iraq - in the 630s AD between Arab Muslims and the army
of the Sassanid Persian dynasty during a period of Muslim expansion.
Abu Sakhir district- southern Najaf, Iraq, Sunday, Nov.10, 2024. (AP
Photo/Hadi Mizban)
Jotheri said that Iraqis of his generation, who grew up under the
rule of Saddam Hussein, were all familiar with the battle in minute
detail, down to the names of the generals on both sides.
The battle at the time had political connotations — Iraq was engaged
in a devastating war with Iran through much of the 1980s. Saddam
pointed to the Battle of Qadisiyah as a harbinger of victory for
Iraq.
Like most children growing up in that era, Jotheri said he had
watched a popular movie about the battle multiple times as it was on
regular rotation on television.
In the post-Saddam era, al-Qadisiyah has become something of a
political litmus test. Iraqis’ views of the battle vary depending on
their feelings toward Iran, which has expanded its influence in the
country since the 2003 US-led invasion of Iraq that toppled Saddam.
“There is some political and religious context in this battle,
because now, of course, we have religious differences, ethnic
differences, political differences in Iraq and we read or we view
everything based on our … differences,” Jotheri said. But he added,
”We all agree that it is a very important battle, a decisive one,
and we all know about it.”
The team plans to begin excavations at the site in the coming year,
Jotheri said.
The discovery comes as part of a broader project launched in 2015 to
document endangered archaeological sites in the region.
It also comes at the time of a resurgence of archeology in Iraq, a
country often referred to as the “cradle of civilization,” but where
archeological exploration has been stunted by decades of conflict
that halted excavations and led to the looting of tens of thousands
of artifacts.
In recent years, the digs have returned and thousands of stolen
artifacts have been repatriated.
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