Other Definitions
tikrit (dest)

Tikrit

Tikrit (تكريت, also transliterated as Takrit or Tekrit) is a town in Iraq, located 140 km northwest of Baghdad on the Tigris river (at 34.61N, 43.68E). The town, with an estimated population in 2002 of about 28,900, is the administrative centre of the province of Salah ad Din. The town was founded over a thousand years ago, at which time it possessed a fortress and a large Christian monastery. It was renowned as a centre for the production of woolen textiles. Around 1137, the legendary Muslim leader Saladin was born there; among his many achievements he defended Egypt against the Crusaders, and recaptured Jerusalem in 1187. The modern province of which Tikrit is the capital is named after him. The town, and much of Iraq with it, was devastated in the 14th century by the Mongol invasion under Timur Lenk. In September 1917, British forces captured the town during a major advance against the Ottoman Empire during World War I. The town is now perhaps best known for being the birthplace in 1937 of the former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein, who frequently liked to compare himself with Saladin. Many senior members of the Iraqi government during his rule were drawn from Saddam's own Tikriti tribe, the Al Bu Nasir, as were members of his Iraqi Republican Guard, chiefly because Saddam apparently felt that he was most able to rely on relatives and allies of his family. The Tikriti domination of the Iraqi government became something of an embarrassment to Saddam and prompted him in 1977 to abolish the use of surnames in Iraq to conceal the fact that so many of his key supporters bore the same surname, al-Tikriti (as did Saddam himself).

2003

In the opening weeks of the 2003 invasion of Iraq, many observers speculated that Saddam would return to Tikrit as his "last stronghold". The town was subjected to intense aerial bombardment and on April 13, 2003 several thousand US Marines aboard 300 lightly armored vehicles converged on the town, meeting little or no resistance. With the fall of Tikrit, U.S. Major General Stanley McChrystal said, "I would anticipate that the major combat operations are over." This did indeed mark the end of major military action in Iraq, but during the subsequent occupation Tikrit became the scene of a number of insurgent attacks against the occupying forces. It is commonly regarded as being the northern axis of the notorious "Sunni Triangle" within which the insurgency is at its most intense. After the fall of Baghdad, Saddam Hussein was sheltered in and around Tikrit by relatives and allies for a period of about six months. During his final period in hiding, he lived just outside the town of ad-Dawr, fifteen kilometres south of Tikrit. He was captured by Coalition forces, primarily the US 4th Infantry Division, on December 13, 2003. During the 2003 occupation of Iraq, AFN Iraq ("Freedom Radio") broadcast news and entertainment within Tikrit, among other locations.

See also

External links

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
massive compact halo object
lois lowry
newbery medal
airedale
jacques nicolas augustin thierry
many minds interpretation
amede simon dominique thierry
robert catesby
v engine
studlycaps
nuneaton
v10
v4
jean baptiste guillaume joseph, comte de villle
v16
engine configuration
flat engine
flat twin
flat 4
cannibals and kings
john w. taylor
emmanuel joseph sieys
jacques antoine marie de cazals
kdevelop
franois mignet
caldecott medal
list of romantic novelists
public holidays in the republic of ireland
philippe de mzires
arabian desert and east sahero arabian xeric shrublands
barbara cartland
bettie page
nicolas eugne gruzez
epoch (astronomy)
bzier triangle
paul deschanel
a boy and his dog
red supergiant
richard boyle
blonde on blonde
bringing it all back home
the basement tapes
john boyle, 5th earl of cork
baldness