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Also known as: Bagdad, Baghdād, Madīnat al-Salām, the Round City
Also spelled:
Bagdad
Arabic:
Baghdād
Formerly:
Madīnat al-Salām (Arabic: “City of Peace”)

Government

Baghdad is both a national and a provincial capital. The governor (muḥāfiẓ) of the Baghdad governorate traditionally has been responsible to the minister of interior, and the city has been administered by a mayor. As the seat of the national government, Baghdad also contained the offices of the president, the Council of Ministers, and the National Assembly. During the Iraq War, the civil and military administration of the occupying forces was headquartered there pending reestablishment of Iraq’s government.

Municipal services

Beginning in the 1950s, the government greatly expanded public services in Baghdad, providing low-cost housing for poor and middle-income families, as well as electricity, sewage, and medical facilities. The Persian Gulf War left large parts of the infrastructure—particularly the city’s power grid and communications systems—in shambles. During the 1990s reconstruction was hampered by a lack of spare parts, and power blackouts were common. As a result, water purification, which was powered by electricity, was difficult to maintain, and rates of infectious disease transmitted through waterborne pathogens increased. The conflict that began in 2003 was also destructive, in part because of the already fragile state of the city’s infrastructure.

Police and fire services have historically been good, although the police force has traditionally been highly politicized. Following the initial phase of the Iraq War, the restoration of order (especially a crackdown on looting) was hampered by the large number of police officials who had been closely tied to the Baʿathist regime and were either unable or unwilling to return to duty. At that same time, fire fighting was hampered by such problems as a lack of equipment and low water pressure for hoses.

Health

Baghdad has numerous hospitals, clinics, and dispensaries—many of them specialized—and has far and away the best health-care facilities in the country. A major medical complex, Madīnat al-Ṭibb (“Medical City”), is located along the Tigris near Wizāriyyah. Medical services suffered during the UN sanctions of the 1990s, and the best medical care was generally available only to members of the ruling party and its supporters. Reviving the city’s greatly degraded health-care system became a major task of U.S. administrators following the initial phase of the Iraq War.

Education

Public school facilities expanded rapidly beginning in the 1950s. Education is compulsory through primary school, and statistics showed nearly total compliance in Baghdad throughout the 1980s. During the 1990s many young students left school to seek employment.

Pakistan Monument is a landmark in Islamabad which represents the four provinces of Pakistan.
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The Baghdad governorate has more than 1,000 primary schools, several hundred intermediate and secondary schools, and a number of vocational schools, as well as numerous technical institutes and teachers’ training schools. Baghdad is the centre of higher education in Iraq. The University of Baghdad was established in 1957, although some of its faculties were founded much earlier. There are, in addition, three other institutions of higher learning: Al-Mustanṣiriyyah University (1963), the University of Technology (1975), and Al-Bakr Military Academy. Education is free up to and including the university level.

Cultural life

Baghdad has long been an active cultural centre for the Arab world, producing prominent sculptors, painters, poets, and writers. Iraqi poets, for example, pioneered the free-verse movement in Arabic.

Among the most important of Baghdad’s museums are the Iraq Museum (1923), containing important archaeological treasures from ancient Mesopotamian history; the National Museum of Modern Art (1962), containing a permanent collection of painting, sculpture, and ceramics by Iraqi artists; and the Museum of Iraqi Art Pioneers, holding the works of Iraqi artists who laid the foundation of the modern Iraqi art movement. Although the city’s museums largely were undamaged by fighting during the initial phase of the Iraq War, several were looted and vandalized in the civil discord that followed. A number of important artifacts and works of art were lost.

Several of the most important mosques and shrines in the Islamic world are found in Baghdad, including the shrine of the Shiʿi imams Mūsā al-Kāẓim and Muḥammad al-Jawād, in Al-Kāẓimiyyah; the shrine of the important Sunni jurist Abū Ḥanīfah, in Al-Aʿẓamiyyah; and the shrine of ʿAbd al-Qādir al-Jīlānī, founder of the Qādiriyyah Sufi order, in Ruṣāfah. All contain libraries and are centres of Muslim pilgrimage.

Under Baʿathist rule, all mass media were controlled by the government. Several major daily newspapers were published in Arabic, and a variety of political, cultural, and professional journals were published. Following the ouster of the Baʿathist government, state controls were removed, and a variety of new media organs appeared. English is the most widely used foreign language, but publications in European and Asian languages can be found. Radio Baghdad broadcasts to the entire country over several frequencies and in several languages. Baghdad’s first television station began operation in 1956.

The National Theatre was once one of the Arab world’s best-equipped, with a regular schedule of plays, concerts, musical productions, and cinema. Its schedule was curtailed greatly in the 1990s. The National Troupe for Popular Arts presents Iraqi dance and folklore. Cinema is an important source of popular entertainment in Baghdad. The Baghdad International Fair, held annually in October, includes industrial displays, theatrical productions, and other cultural activities.