File Akre, Iraq.jpg 250px thumb right Akr Akre redirects here. For the American journalist, see Jane Akre for the city in Israel, see Akko Aqrah Kurdish language Kurdish Akr , lang syr aqra is a city and district in Iraq which is located in the Ninawa Governorate . The total area of the district is 6418 km2. It was formed in 1877 by the Ottoman Empire and the city of Aqrah became the center of the district. Population The population is mainly Kurdish people Kurds , but with an Assyrian people Assyrian minority. Defend International President Widad Akrawi , the Kurdish film director, Hiner Saleem , and the Iraqi Ambassador to Vienna, Tariq Aqrawi, were born in this city. coord 36 44 29 N 43 53 36 E region IQ type city source enwiki display title References reflist Category Nineveh Province Category Populated places in Nineveh Province Category District capitals of Iraq Districts of Iraq Iraq geo stub ar de Akr fa ku Akr arz ckb sv Aqrah ... more details
Infobox settlement name Akre District other name native name settlement type Districts of Iraq District image skyline imagesize image caption pushpin map pushpin label position right pushpin map caption coordinates display inline,title coordinates region subdivision type List of sovereign states Country subdivision name flag Iraq subdivision type1 Governorates of Iraq Governorate subdivision name1 Ninawa Governorate seat leader title leader name established title established date area total km2 population as of population footnotes population total population density km2 timezone AST utc offset 3 latd latm lats latNS N longd longm longs longEW E elevation footnotes elevation m elevation ft website footnotes Akre District is a district of the Ninawa Governorate , Iraq . Districts of Iraq Category Districts of Nineveh Province Iraq geo stub coord missing Iraq ... more details
AKKRA may refer to Accra , the capital city of Ghana Acra fortress in Jerusalem during the Hellenistic period Aqrah , city of Iraq Black eyed pea Culinary uses worldwide Akkra , a type of fritter disambig ... more details
AKRA may refer to Akra Township, Pembina County, North Dakota Acra fortress , in Jerusalem during the Hellenistic period Aqrah , city of Iraq Acre, Israel , in the northern part of the country Akra is the name of an archaeological site south of Peshawar in Pakistan Aqra Chaldean Diocese , diocese of the Chaldean Catholic Church disambig ... more details
Orphan date February 2009 Amadia and Aqrah Akra were two Chaldean Catholic dioceses in Turkey and Iraq . ref http www.newadvent.org cathen 01376a.htm Amadia and Akra Catholic Encyclopedia article ref References references Category Historical Roman Catholic Dioceses in Asia Category Chaldean Catholic Church Category Christianity in Turkey Category Christianity in Iraq Iraq stub Asia RC diocese stub Turkey stub ... more details
Huner Saleem Kurdish language Kurdish , also transliterated as Huner Salim , born 9 March 1964 , is an Iraqi people Iraqi Kurdish people Kurdish film director . He was born in the town of Aqrah Akre in Iraqi Kurdistan . He left Iraq at the age of 17, and soon made his way to Italy , where he completed school and attended university. Later on, he moved to France where he lives now. In 1992 , after the First Gulf War , he filmed undercover the living conditions of Iraqi Kurds . This footage was shown at the Venice Film Festival . In 1998 , he made his first movie, Vive la marie ... et la liberation du Kurdistan . His second, Passeurs de r ves , came out in 2000 , and his third film, Vodka Lemon , released in 2003 , won the San Marco Prize at the Venice Film Festival http www.labiennale.org it cinema storia 2000 it 4554.1.html . He wrote and directed all three. He was honored with the prestigious title Chevalier des Arts et Lettres by French Minister of Culture Renaud Donnedieu de Vabres in 2005 . His memoirs titled My Father s Rifle has been published in French language French , English language English and Greek language Greek . Filmography as director, writer Vive la mari e... et la lib ration du Kurdistan 1997 Passeurs de r ves 2000 English Title Beyond Our Dreams Absolitude 2001 TV Vodka Lemon 2003 Kilom tre z ro 2005 Dol 2007 Les Toits de Paris 2007 English Title Beneath the Rooftops of Paris Books My Father s Rifle A Childhood in Kurdistan , Translated from French language French by Catherine Temerson , 112 pp., Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Jan. 2005, ISBN 0 374 21693 2. To doufeki tou patera mou Translated from French language French by Efi Koromila, 181 pp., Okeanida,Athens, Feb. 2004, ISBN 960 410 324 5. References imdb name id 0757954 name Hiner Saleem http www.festival cannes.fr perso index.php?langue 6002&personne 4245676 Hiner Saleem , Cannes Film Festival . http www.findarticles.com p articles mi m2078 is 2 48 ai n8692081 Hiner Saleem, Litera ... more details
Infobox Patriarch image name Paul II Cheikho birth name Paul Cheikho church Chaldean Catholic Church see Patriarchial See of Babylon of the Chaldeans Babylon of the Chaldeans patriarch of Patriarch of Babylon of the Chaldeans residence Iraq enthroned December 13, 1958 ended April 13, 1989 predecessor Yousef VII Ghanima successor Raphael I Bidawid birth date November 19, 1906 birth place Alqosh death date BirthDeathAge 1906 11 19 1989 4 13 death place ordination Febr 16, 1930 Priesthood Catholic Church Priest consecration May 4, 1947 Bishop Catholic Church Bishop consecrated by Hormisdas Djibri Mar Paul II Cheikho lang syr , Arabic language Arabic was the patriarch of the Chaldean Catholic Church from 1958 1989. Life He was born on November 19, 1906 in Alqosh and was ordained a priest on February 16, 1930. On May 4, 1947 he was ordained Bishop of Aqrah Akra , Iraq, at the age of 40, by the Archbishop of Kirkuk Hormisdas Etienne Djibri ref Archbishop Hormisdas Etienne Djibri was in turn consecrated bishop in 1902 by patriarch Yousef VI Emmanuel II Thomas ref , . From 1957 till his appointment as Patriarch of Babylon of the Chaldeans in 1958 Paul Cheikho served as bishop of Alep . He was the Patriarch of the Chaldean Church from 1958 till his death on April 13, 1989. He replaced Patriarch Yousef VII Ghanima and was followed by Raphael I Bidawid . Notes reflist 1 References cite web url http www.catholic hierarchy.org bishop bcheikho.html title Archbishop Paul II Cheikho publisher Catholic Hierarchy.org accessdate 2009 01 15 s start s bef before Yousef VII Ghanima br 1947 1958 s ttl title List of Chaldean Catholic Patriarchs of Babylon Patriarch of Babylon br of the Chaldean Catholic Church years 1958&ndash 1989 s aft after Raphael I Bidawid br 1989 2003 end Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Cheikho, Paul 02 ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH November 19, 1906 PLACE OF BIRTH Alqosh DATE OF DEATH April 13 ... more details
Infobox language name Barzani Jewish Neo Aramaic nativename Li n d J n n states Israel region Jerusalem , originally from Bijil in Iraq speakers 20 second language speakers, effectively extinct familycolor Afro Asiatic fam2 Semitic languages Semitic fam3 Central Semitic languages Central Semitic fam4 Aramaic language Aramaic fam5 Eastern Aramaic fam6 Central fam7 Northeastern Neo Aramaic Northeastern iso3 bjf Barzani Jewish Neo Aramaic is a modern Jew ish Aramaic language , often called Neo Aramaic or Judeo Aramaic . It was originally spoken in three villages near Aqrah in Iraq . ref nameSabar Cite book publisher Algonquin Books of Chapel Hill isbn 1565124901 last Sabar first Ariel title My Father s Paradise A Son s Search for His Jewish Past in Kurdish Iraq date 2008 09 16 ref The native name of the language is Lishanid Janan , which means our language , and is similar to names used by other Jewish Neo Aramaic dialects Lishan Didan , Lishanid Noshan . ref name MUTZAFI Cite journal volume 14 pages 41 70 last MUTZAFI first H. title BARZANI JEWISH NEO ARAMAIC AND ITS DIALECTS journal Mediterranean Language Review year 2002 ref ref name Sabar Cite journal pages 201 211 last Sabar first Y. title The Arabic Elements in the Jewish Neo Aramaic Texts of Nerwa and Am d ya, Iraqi Kurdistan journal Journal of the American Oriental Society year 1984 ref ref name MutzafiB Cite journal doi 10.1017 S0041977X08000815 volume 71 issue 03 pages 409 431 last Mutzafi first H. title Trans Zab Jewish Neo Aramaic journal Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies year 2008 ref ref name MUTZAFIC Cite journal volume 67 issue 01 pages 1 13 last MUTZAFI first H. title Two texts in Barzani Jewish Neo Aramaic journal Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies year 2004 ref ref name Sabar2 Cite journal doi 10.2307 600067 issn 00030279 volume 94 issue 3 pages 329 336 last Sabar first Yona title Nursery Rhymes and Baby Words in the Jewish Neo Aramaic Dialect of ... more details
Infobox Patriarch image honorific prefix Mar name Joseph I birth name Joseph church Chaldean Catholic Church see Patriarchial See of Babylon of the Chaldeans Amid of the Chaldeans patriarch of Patriarch of Babylon of the Chaldeans Patriarch of the Chaldeans residence Amid , Turkey enthroned 23 June 1681 ended 2 February 1696 predecessor successor Joseph II Chaldean Patriarch Joseph II Sliba Maruf birth date birth place death date 10 November 1707 death place Rome Mar Joseph I or Youssef , 1707 was the first incumbent of the Josephite line of Church of the East , thus being considered the Patriarch of the Chaldean Catholic Church from 1681 to 1696. Background situation By 1660 the Church of the East had become divided into two patriarchates the largest and oldest episcopal see patriarchal See was based at the Rabban Hormizd Monastery of Alqosh . It spread from Aqrah up to Amid and Nusaybin Nisibis , covering in the South the rich plain of Mosul it is known also as Eliya line . Since the 15th century its Patriarchs were appointed through an hereditary system. the second patriarchal See was located in Khosrowa, near Salmas from 1672 in Qochanis and extended into the North East mountains it is also known as the Shimun line . This patriarchal line began in 1553 when Mar Shimun VIII Yohannan Sulaqa Yohannan Sulaqa was consecrated bishop by the Pope in 1553, but soon it lost the connections with Rome. The last patriarch of this line recognized by the Holy See was Shimun IX Dinkha died 1600 and later there were only few correspondences thought missionaries. This See reintroduced in 1600 the heredity system for patriarchs succession, a use unacceptable for Rome. This patriarchal line still survives in the denomination today known as Assyrian Church of the East . Life Although the town of Amid in 1553 has been the See of Yohanan Shimun VIII Sulaqa, the area of influence of the Shimun patriarchs moved soon towards East, and by 1660 the area of Amid was under the Alqosh s patri ... more details
transl ar DIN Aqra is a diocese of the Chaldean Church. The diocese was founded in the middle of the nineteenth century. Background Before the fourteenth century the transl ar DIN Aqra or Aqrah region was part of the diocese of Adiabene East Syrian Ecclesiastical Province Marga , one of the suffragan dioceses in the metropolitan province of Adiabene East Syrian Ecclesiastical Province Adiabene . This diocese, frequently mentioned in Thomas of Marga s Book of Governors , included the districts of Sapsapa the Navkur plain south of transl ar DIN Aqra, on the east bank of the Khazir river , Talana and Nahla d Malka two valleys around the upper course of the Khazir river , Beth Rustaqa the Gomel valley and probably also several villages in the Zibar district. The diocese is first mentioned in the eighth century the region was probably in the diocese of Beth Nuhadra previously , and several of its bishops are mentioned between the eighth century and the first half of the thirteenth century. By the second half of the thirteenth century the names of two villages in the Gomel valley, Tella and Barbelli Billan , were also included in the title of the diocese. Two bishops of Tella and Barbelli are known from the second half of the thirteenth century and a third, Isho transl ar DIN yahb, was present at the synod of Timothy II in 1318. The diocese is not mentioned thereafter, and no other bishops are known from the transl ar DIN Aqra region until the nineteenth century. The Chaldean diocese of Aqra As far as is known, neither the Mosul nor the Qudshanis patriarchate had a bishop for the transl ar DIN Aqra region until the nineteenth century. The colophons of the surviving manuscripts from the transl ar DIN Aqra region invariably mention the Mosul patriarchs of the Eliya line, and there is no evidence that the Qudshanis patriarchs took any interest in the region before the 1830s. Most of the villages in the transl ar DIN Aqra region were still traditionalist at th ... more details