Hit, Iraq

Hīt, also spelled Heet (Arabic: هيت), ancient name Is, is an Iraqi city in Al Anbar Governorate. Hīt lies northwest of Ramadi, the provincial capital.

Hīt
هيت
City
Hit in 2020
Hīt
Coordinates: 33°38′42″N 42°49′35″E
Country Iraq
Provinceal-Anbar
DistrictHīt District
Population
 (2018)
  Total66,700
Time zoneUTC+3 (GMT+3)
Postal code
31007
Ancient nameIs

Straddling the Euphrates, the city of Hīt was originally a small walled town surrounded by a halt moat and built on two mounds on the site of the ancient city of Is. In ancient times, the town was known for its bitumen wells; bitumen from the wells was used in the construction of Babylon over 3000 years ago, and for tasks such as caulking boats. Hīt also became a frontier fortress for Assyria. Now, Hīt is a marketplace for agricultural produce. Oil pipelines to the Mediterranean Sea cross the Euphrates there. It was regarded as the head of navigation on the river before the decline in river traffic.

Hīt marks the beginning of the high sedimentary plain on the Euphrates, and it contains a number of hot springs. The city of Hīt is also famous for its ancient yet still functioning norias, a kind of water wheel that used to play an important role in the irrigation of fields and palm groves, particularly when water levels of the Euphrates receded. The walled town, which had already suffered extensive damage during the Ottoman Empire, was abandoned in the 1920s, leading to its rapid deterioration.

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.