HDATTA
Hdatta
or Haditha (Classical Syriac: Hdatta, Arabic: al-Hadit_a), was a
historical city on the East bank of the Tigris just below its confluence
with the Upper Zab. The city flourished during the Sasanian and
early Islamic periods.
History
:
The town was apparently established by the Sasanians, hence its
Middle Persian name Newkart (literally "Newly Founded"),
which corresponds with its Syriac and later Arabic names. According
to al-Baladhuri, the town gained its name when the inhabitants of
Firuz Shabur (Pirisabora; Anbar) of central Mesopotamia migrated
to this location and transferred the name of their newly founded
city with them. The city became renowned as a bishopric centre of
the Church of the East within the ecclesiastical province of Adiabene.
There existed also a substantial number of Jews, many of whom were
converted to Christianity at the hand of its bishop Titus of Hdatta
in the 6th century.
The
city prospered and expanded during the Abbasid period, and the fourth
Caliph Al-Hadi made it his capital before his death. The Abbasid
general Musa ibn Bugha had his headquarters in Haditha during the
Anarchy at Samarra. The population of the city remained Christian
mostly belonging to the Church of the East. Some of Hdatta's bishops,
such as Abraham of Marga, rose to the rank of the Catholicos of
the East, others such as Yeshudad of Merv authored important theological
books.
Hdatta's
importance declined and it was eventually ruined and deserted after
the Mongol invasion in the 13th century.
Source
:
https://en.wikipedia.org/
wiki/Hdatta