Some photos in the video are belong to another mosque and minaret located in the north of Samarra called Abu Dalaf mosque. Its minaret is similar to Al-Malwiya minaret but it is smaller.
Thank you sir. I tried climbing that ziggurat in 1962 but I got scared and couldn’t make it to the top. Have wonderful memories of the Alawiyah club, and the time of Abdul Karin Kassim.
@@professormh samaraa is an Arabic name سر من رأى لكن أختصرت إلى سمراء كمدينة كربلاء هي كذلك إختصار لإسم كرب و بلاء please translate this because I don't have the words in English to explain it to you ☺
In Samarra, there are two mosques and two Manara ( Malwyya) . You showed them both in the pictures, but you only explained about the first Mallawya, the other mosque and Manara ( Malwyya ) are 15 km away from Samarra. Thank you
Hi, Martina! :) Greetings from Portugal. This is an amazing video! May I please use and properly credit some clips for a not-for-profit art project I'm working on right now? It would really mean the world to me. Thank you so much in advance. :) Carlos
Im sorry but ascribing Iraqi abbasid architecture to preislamic Persia and mixing Mesopotamian religion with Persian religion is incorrect and very misleading. As preislamic Mesopotamian (Iraqi) culture and religion is very distinct from Persian cultures and religion despite the geographical closeness of the two. You could’ve chosen the western common theory that it was inspired the hanging gardens of Babylon which would’ve been more logical as both were in Iraq. But you chose to bring up the other. This only shows disregard towards any local Iraqi scholarly knowledge of this cultural heritage.
Some photos in the video are belong to another mosque and minaret located in the north of Samarra called Abu Dalaf mosque. Its minaret is similar to Al-Malwiya minaret but it is smaller.
Thank you sir. I tried climbing that ziggurat in 1962 but I got scared and couldn’t make it to the top. Have wonderful memories of the Alawiyah club, and the time of Abdul Karin Kassim.
This is my city ❤
Situs ini pada tahun 1980 direnovasi oleh TKI dari Indonesia termasuk saya di bawah Ministry of Culture and Information Rep.Iraq.selama 2 thn.
Greetings from Samrra - PEACE ^_^
Thank you for watching!
❤
Beautiful video. Thank you!
Thank you!
@@professormh samaraa is an Arabic name سر من رأى لكن أختصرت إلى سمراء كمدينة كربلاء هي كذلك إختصار لإسم كرب و بلاء please translate this because I don't have the words in English to explain it to you ☺
In Samarra, there are two mosques and two Manara ( Malwyya) . You showed them both in the pictures, but you only explained about the first Mallawya, the other mosque and Manara ( Malwyya ) are 15 km away from Samarra.
Thank you
very interesting work well done thanks
You have researched this architecture pretty well.
C'est une construction unique au monde 👏🌹😍
من سامراء تحياتي لكي
اهلا وسهلا
Great video Thank you
I visited this mosque a month ago
Very helpful ❤ Thankyou
Amazing lecture.
Thank you!
Golden era
Nice😍
Hi, Martina! :) Greetings from Portugal. This is an amazing video! May I please use and properly credit some clips for a not-for-profit art project I'm working on right now? It would really mean the world to me. Thank you so much in advance. :) Carlos
Yes, of course!
العراق بلد اقدم واغنى الحضارات
I am from Samarra city
العراق العظيم 💗🇮🇶❤🇺🇲
اين قبة جامع الملوية ؟
Why Iraq Doesnot Rebuilt it?
Fibonacci would approve
Enregistrer en langue française svp
مدينتي
🇮🇶🌿👋👋👋🌿🇮🇶
Im sorry but ascribing Iraqi abbasid architecture to preislamic Persia and mixing Mesopotamian religion with Persian religion is incorrect and very misleading. As preislamic Mesopotamian (Iraqi) culture and religion is very distinct from Persian cultures and religion despite the geographical closeness of the two. You could’ve chosen the western common theory that it was inspired the hanging gardens of Babylon which would’ve been more logical as both were in Iraq. But you chose to bring up the other. This only shows disregard towards any local Iraqi scholarly knowledge of this cultural heritage.
Just stop, Mesopotamians were long gone, with but a minority left, just shut up and be proud of your Arab origin, and don't be a thief!
It's pronounced Isslaam not Izlaam