Category
page 2Iraq articles missing geocoordinate data
Sulaymaniyah District
district in Sulaymaniyah Governorate, Kurdistan, Iraq
Kashkar
Kashkar, also known as Kaskar, (), was a city in southern Mesopotamia. Its name appears to originate from Syriac ' meaning "citadel" or "town". Other sources connect it to ' "farming". It was originally built on the Tigris, across the river from the later medieval city of Wasit.
Siege of Baghdad (812-813)
siege of Baghdad during the Fourth Fitna
Battle of Zumail
battle fought in 633 CE
Dokan District
district in Kurdistan, Iraq
Battle of Saniyy
battle between Caliphate and Sassanids in 633
Kirkuk Field
oil field
Khawanaq
thumb|Persian miniature illustrating the construction of Khawarnaq
Khawarnaq was a medieval, pre-Islamic Arab castle built by the Lakhmids near their capital al-Hira. It is celebrated in the Arabic-Islamic literature and poetry as one of the "Thirty Wonders of the World". It is described in both Arabic and Persian sources, but "it seems quite impossible to distinguish clearly between historical facts and legendary accounts".
Saint Ahoadamah Church, Tikrit
church building in Tikrit, Iraq
Kirkuk–Ceyhan Oil Pipeline
oil pipeline running from Iraq to Turkey
Azupiranu
Azupiranu (𒌑𒄯𒊕 / Šamḫurrēšu) was a place described to be a city or a town in ancient Mesopotamia. In a Neo-Assyrian text purporting to be the autobiography of Sargon of Akkad, Azupiranu is named as Sargon's birthplace and described as "situated on the banks of the Euphrates."
Azupiranu is an Akkadian name meaning "city of saffron". Gwendolyn Leick points out that the name is just a general name for a mountainous area in the north where the azupiranu herbs grow.
Operation Dawn 6
1984 military operation
Khanaqin District
district in Iraq
Samarrah Offensive
1917 military offensive
Battle of Halule
ancient battle
Saddamiyat al-Mitla' District
administrative district of Iraq during the Iraqi military occupation of Kuwait (1990–1991)
Operation Simoom
Top secret Polish intelligence action of withdrawal American agents from Iraq in 1990

Operation Dawn 5
1984 military operation
Operation Dawn 2
1983 military operation
Operation Steel Curtain
2005 military operation
Operation Shader
2014 British military intervention in Iraq and Syria
Dastagird
right|thumb|Map of Asoristan and its surrounding provinces
Dastagird (also spelled as Dastgerd, Dastigird and Daskara), was an ancient Sasanian city in present-day Iraq, and was close to its capital, Ctesiphon.
Hakkari
historical region of West Asia
Operation Dawn 3
1983 military operation
Rapiqum
Rapiqum (also Rapiku and Rapiqu), ra-bi-qa-wiKI, was a city of the ancient Near East. The city was located in the north of Mesopotamia, probably on the eastern bank of the Euphrates River, in modern Iraq. It is firmly attested from early in the 2nd Millennium BC until early in the 1st Millennium BC.
Valashabad
right|thumb|300px|Map of the southwestern part of the Sasanian Empire.
Valashabad (also spelled as Valakhshkert, Valakhshgerd and Valakhshkard), known in Greek sources as Vologesocerta, and in Arabic sources as Sabat (), was an ancient city in present-day Iraq, and formed a suburb of Ctesiphon, the capital of the Parthian Empire and their successors, the Sasanian Empire.
Battle of Bubiyan
1991 naval engagement of the Gulf War
Al-Kawaz Mosque
ancient mosque in Basra, Iraq
Khurmal District
District in Halabja Governorate, Kurdistan Region, Iraq
Al-Hikma University
university in Baghdad, Iraq
Operation Hammer
1997 Turkish Armed Forces operation in northern Iraq against the Kurdistan Workers Party
Great Mosque of al-Mansur
First Friday mosque of Baghdad
Al-Sarraji Mosque
ancient mosque in Basra, Iraq
attempted assassination of Mustafa Al-Kadhimi
assassination attempt in Iraq
Siege of Mosul
1743 siege of the Persian invasion of the Ottoman Empire
Battle of Sheikh Sa'ad
1916 battle
University of Raparin
public university in Ranya, Iraq
Operation Ashura
2014 siege in Iraq
Operation Before the Dawn
1983 irani military operation during the Iraq-Iran war
Operation Zafar 7
Iranian offensive during the Iran-Iraq war
Siege of Baghdad (1157)
Seljuk siege of the Abbasid capital city
Kifri District
district in Diyala Governorate, Iraq
Palace of the Golden Gate
First Abbasid palace in Baghdad
Rawanduz District
district in Kurdistan, Iraq
Al-Imam Muhsin Mosque
mosque in Mosul, Iraq

Imam Dur Mausoleum
historic Mausoleum in Samarra, Iraq
Operation Soltan 10
1980 Operación Sultan 10
Ramadan Offensive
insurgent attacks against Coalition and Iraqi military targets from the end of October and during much of November 2003

Umayyad Mosque of Mosul
historic mosque in Mosul, Iraq

Mosque of the Prophet Shith
former mosque in Mosul, Iraq
Baghdad Conservatory
Former music school in Baghdad, Iraq
Akkas gas field
gas field in Iraq
Maogamalcha
Maogamalcha or Maiozamalcha was a fortress located in Mesopotamia. It was attacked and taken by the Roman Emperor Julian (Ammianus Marcellinus xxiv. 4.). It appears to have been strongly fortified and well defended. Zosimus evidently alludes to the same place, though he does not mention it by name, and states it was about 90 stadia from Ctesiphon (Zosimus iii.21). The fortress of Maogamalcha is described as having sixteen large towers or bastions, the solid walls were made of brick and bitumen. Along the walls was a deep ditch which prevented armies from actually climbing into the fortificatio
Battle of Mosul
battle in which Kilij Arslan I of the Rum Seljuks conquered Mosul in 1107
Weh Antioch Khosrow
city near Ctesiphon

Monastery of Beth Abe
syriac Monastery in Iraq
Al Istiqlal District
district in Baghdad Governorate, Iraq
Maishan Satrapy
Meshan (Middle Persian: 𐭬𐭩𐭱𐭠𐭭) was a province of the Sasanian Empire. It consisted of the Parthian vassal kingdom of Characene and reached north along the Shatt al-Arab river and then the lower Tigris to Madhar and possibly further. Its inhabitants were primarily Babylonians and Arabs, with minorities of Iranians and even some Indians and Malays (the Malays may have been slaves brought from the Indian sub-continent). The province was very fertile, the best place for barley according to Strabo, and contained many date palms. It was also an important trading province along the Persian Gulf.
Khor Al Amaya Oil Terminal
oil terminal in Iraq
Battle of Sharqat
1918 battle