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Caliph Al-Mansur founds Baghdad as the new seat of the Abbasid Caliphate

On July 30, 762 C.E., one of the most consequential city foundings in human history began on the western bank of the Tigris River. Caliph Al-Mansur, ruler of the Abbasid Caliphate, broke ground on a city he called Madīnat as-Salām — the City of Peace. Within a generation, it would become the largest city on Earth.

Key details

  • Baghdad founding: Al-Mansur commissioned construction on July 30, 762 C.E., after the Abbasids displaced the Umayyad dynasty and needed a capital that symbolized their new order — geographically and politically centered in their empire.
  • Round City design: Two Zoroastrian and Jewish scholars — Naubakht and Mashallah ibn Athari — designed the city’s famous circular layout, selecting an astrologically auspicious date under the sign of Leo and orienting the plan to reflect ancient Near Eastern urban traditions.
  • Urban infrastructure: Unlike most cities of its era, Baghdad was built with a sanitation system, public fountains, and thousands of hammams, reflecting a planned approach to public health that was rare in the medieval world.

Why Al-Mansur chose this site

The Abbasids had overthrown the Umayyad dynasty in 750 C.E. and needed a capital that reflected their vision of a more cosmopolitan, Persian-inflected Islamic empire. The old Umayyad capital of Damascus felt too tied to the old order.

Al-Mansur scouted sites personally. The location he chose — at the convergence of Tigris waterways and ancient overland trade routes — had been occupied since at least the Neo-Babylonian period. Bricks stamped with the name of Nebuchadnezzar II have been found along the western bank of the Tigris at the site. Al-Mansur was not building in empty land. He was building on top of millennia.

The historian al-Tabari recorded that Al-Mansur felt an almost spiritual pull toward the location, and that he declared it would be the enduring home of his dynasty. He was right, at least for a time.

A city designed across traditions

The two principal designers of Baghdad were not Arab Muslims. Naubakht was a Zoroastrian scholar from the Iranian tradition. Mashallah ibn Athari was a Jewish astronomer from Khorasan. Together, they calculated the most auspicious date for the city’s foundation and laid out its distinctive circular plan — a 2-kilometer-wide Round City at its core, surrounded by parks, gardens, villas, and concentric walls.

The Iranian Barmakid family, who served as key advisors to Al-Mansur, also shaped the city’s early administration and culture. The Baghdad founding was, from its first moment, a multicultural act — Persian, Jewish, Zoroastrian, and Arab knowledge woven into a single urban vision.

This crossed-tradition approach was not coincidental. The Abbasid Caliphate self-consciously positioned itself as a synthesis empire, drawing on Greek philosophy, Persian statecraft, and Indian mathematics alongside the Islamic intellectual tradition.

The city that became a center of learning

Within decades of its founding, Baghdad had grown into a city of more than one million people — rivaling the Tang Dynasty capital of Chang’an as the most populous on Earth. It drew scholars, physicians, poets, merchants, and translators from across the known world.

The House of Wisdom, established in Baghdad in the early ninth century C.E., became the most important intellectual institution of the medieval world. Scholars there translated Greek, Persian, Sanskrit, and Syriac texts into Arabic, preserving and extending knowledge in mathematics, astronomy, medicine, and philosophy. Many of the intellectual foundations of the European Renaissance passed first through Baghdad.

The city was also home to a large Jewish community, Sikh pilgrims, Christian monks, and practitioners of multiple traditions. Its coffeehouses, mosques, churches, synagogues, and mandis existed within a few miles of each other. The UNESCO recognition of Baghdad’s historical significance points to this layered legacy as central to the city’s world importance.

Lasting impact

The Baghdad founding set in motion one of the most remarkable centuries of human intellectual output in recorded history. The Islamic Golden Age — roughly 800 to 1258 C.E. — produced advances in algebra, optics, surgery, cartography, and philosophy that shaped civilization well beyond the Islamic world. Much of what Europe later called the Renaissance was built on knowledge that had been translated, synthesized, and extended in Baghdad.

The city’s circular design influenced urban planning across the medieval Islamic world. Its model of deliberate, state-sponsored intellectual life — funding scholars, building libraries, commissioning translations — established a template for institutional knowledge-gathering that echoes in every modern research university.

Baghdad remains the capital of Iraq today, home to roughly eight million people, and still a primary financial and cultural center of the Arab world.

Blindspots and limits

The Baghdad founding was an act of imperial consolidation as much as cultural ambition. Al-Mansur was a ruthless political operator who eliminated rivals with efficiency, and the prosperity of Abbasid Baghdad rested on a tax-and-tribute system that extracted wealth from a vast conquered territory. The city’s celebrated cosmopolitanism coexisted with hierarchies of power that were anything but equal.

In 1258 C.E., Mongol forces under Hulagu Khan sacked the city, killing a significant portion of its population and destroying the House of Wisdom and much of its irreplaceable library. How much knowledge was permanently lost that day remains one of the genuine open wounds of human intellectual history. The city that took a generation to build took weeks to destroy, and its full recovery has never quite arrived.

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For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — Baghdad

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