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AKRES HISTORY ERBIL, Kurdistan Region (Kurdistan 24) – Akre is a breathtakingly beautiful little historic town and one of the gems of Kurdistan. Located at the edge of the Nineveh Plains, it was traditionally a mixed town of Muslims, Jews, and Christians and was part of a string of similar settlements such as Shush and Gondik nestled against the same mountain range. Nowadays, Akre consists of a historic old quarter tucked along the ridges and valleys, with the growing new neighborhoods sprawling out downhill in the flatlands that lead to the Nineveh Plains. Akre’s modern political history began when the Ottoman Empire urbanized it to serve as the seat of its own eponymous district at the end of the 19th century. Since then it has shifted between Mosul and Duhok governorates as the Iraqi government attempted to gerrymander districts with large Kurdish populations into governorates where they would be minorities. A large security fort was established by Saddam Hussein as an administrative center for the genocide, part of a network of identical forts such as those at Nizarke in Duhok city and in Spilik overlooking the Harir plain. Following the establishment of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), the district was attached to Duhok and has remained part of Duhok and the KRG ever since. Akre has endured as a center for population and culture despite being at the nexus between Ottoman control and ungoverned mountains, and more recently between Kurdish autonomy and Iraqi oppression. The town is a majestic blend of precipitous mountains, gushing rivers, crashing waterfalls, historic shrines, gargantuan ruins, and a rising urban middle-class. This has led to it becoming a bucolic holiday destination in the summertime, and a remarkable photo opportunity any time. Akre today is mostly inhabited by Kurds from the Zebari and Surchi tribes who speak the Badini dialect. Also, it has seen an influx of Kurds from Mosul who moved to Akre to flee the anomie after 2003, and more recently a wave of Kurdish refugees arriving from Syria. There is also a Christian minority living in Akre, the descendants of the historic indigenous Nestorian community in Mesopotamia. The visual anchor of the old town is the mosque located in the main valley, whose minaret rises to greet the surrounding hills and mountains. Within the mosque is an old tree, and one of the few remaining trees of its size in the entire region, when fuel shortages in the 1990s resulted in mass deforestation for heating. When navigating Akre, there are narrow, winding roads with houses and shops built high on both sides. But at times the myopic, tightly-clustered streets will have openings that give stunning vistas. The old center of town has the large ‘qishla’ or Ottoman security fort on one side, and the ‘qayseri’ or covered bazaar on the other side. It is tucked into the base of Kale, the largest mountain. The historic Ottoman fort was used and reused by successive British and Iraqi governments. It's part of a constellation of similar Ottoman forts such as those in Sulaimani, Erbil, and Zakho. The ancient cultural fabric of Akre is sometimes hidden in plain sight, such as this round piece in a makeshift wall. The piece was either a door pivot or a fragment of a roof roller. Roof rollers were stone pieces shaped like cylindrical logs and rolled across mud roofs to press out moisture. Walking up from the center of the old town, all roads arrive at the footpath to the mountaintop of Kale. At the start of the footpath is a historic old church that is no longer used. Adjacent to the church is a free-standing and seemingly very old stone doorway with inscriptions. After the cataclysmic massacres and displacements led by the Ottoman and Iraqi governments, Christians in Akre found themselves marginalized again during the Anfal and the Kurdish Civil War. Kurdish uprisings led to violence which saw many nearby villages completely vacated by all Christians. In Akre itself, the once diverse town saw its Christian population largely reduced by the 21st century. After centuries of ecclesiastical history, though, the stabilized situation in the 21st century has enabled the Christian community in Akre to survive with its own neighborhood in town. At the top of Kale mountain is a stunning view over Akre and a fascinating complex of ruins carved into the stone. There are various rumors regarding the history of Akre, and many fixate on the ruins. It is said that a Kurdish prince founded Akre hundreds or thousands of years ago, and the ruins are all that remain of his massive palace. In fact, however, the ruins and the large church just beneath them are completely consistent with small monastic villages in the region. Located on mountaintops, these were tiny villages where reclusive monks and a small non-ecclesiastic population lived together. #AKRE NOWROZ #4K #VIEW #IRAQ #DJI #mavicpro # djidrone #drone ##fullhd #mountaINS #FIREWORKS #FIRE