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Amuda

Amuda
عامودا
Amûdê
Town
Amuda is located in Syria
Amuda
Amuda
Location in Syria
Coordinates: 37°06′15″N 40°55′48″E / 37.10417°N 40.93000°E / 37.10417; 40.93000
Country  Syria
Governorate Al Hasakah Governorate
District Qamishli District
Nahiyah Amuda
Elevation 470 m (1,540 ft)
Population (2004 census)
 • Total 26,821
Time zone EET (UTC+2)
 • Summer (DST) +3 (UTC)

Amuda or Amouda (Arabic: عامودا‎‎ 'Āmūdā, Kurdish: Amûdê‎) is a town in Al Hasakah Governorate) in northeastern Syria close to the border with Turkey. Amuda has a mostly Kurdish population with also a significant Assyrian presence. As a preliminary result of the ongoing Syrian Civil War, Amuda today is situated in Jazira Canton within the autonomous Federation of Northern Syria – Rojava framework.

Two tells exist in the area; the first is inside Amuda itself and the second exist on the Turkish side of the borders 3 kilometers north of the city. In older literature and some modern one, the tell inside Amuda is named tell Amuda; however, the actual name of it, according to locals, is tell Shermola while the tell on the Turkish side is the real tell Amuda which had its name changed by the Turkish authorities to tell Kemaliya.

Tell Shermola revealed evidence for a limited occupation dating to the third millennium BC.

Archaeological evidence from Shermola dating to the middle Assyrian period reveal that the city was inhabited by Assyrians as early as the reign of Shalmaneser I (1250 BC).

Shermola is identified by Elisabeth Wagner-Durand and Jeanne Marie Aynard with the Assyrian city of Kulishinas (Kulišinaš). This identification is based on tablets written in Kulishinas discovered and sold to museums by a dealer who claimed that they were taken from Shermola; hence, the identification is not certain although Shermola being a middle Assyrian city is confirmed by archaeology.

The demographics of this area saw a huge shift in the early part of the 20th century. At the onset of the 20th century, Kurds cooperated with Ottoman authorities in the massacres against Armenian and Assyrian Christians in Upper Mesopotamia and were in return granted their land as a reward. Kurds were responsible for most of the atrocities against Assyrians, and Kurdish expansion happened at the expense of Assyrians.


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