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Show 46 over m]. 'II'].on. a 300,000 90 Coke's million, and Lapidus' 200,000 one supporting documents, in the absence of any are, to sheer 91 . conjecture. it would appear that From the above survey, reliable information on the numerical estimate of the Baghdad during the height of the reasonable to gol invasion assume that centuries of Buwayhid and c fifth/eleventh century, - - ruins, "kharabat"e pilgrim 92 and famous part of the city was existencee93 9twholly two and Baghdad and firese many quarters of some overcome was About half a half gradually the city were in the Andalusian western by ruins," although he did were not still century later, Yaqut, another great geographer, Idescribed West Baghdad I a Towards the end quarters of the city seventeen seems Baghdad during the Non- sixth/twilth centuryl' In the population of geographer, Ibn Jubayr, described the fail to observe that in of supremacy, destroyed by floods, civil disorder, of the no Nevertheless, it During the depleted. Saljuq have - Abbasids. the inhabitants have been must we as a series of isolated quarters • 90Ee Herzfeld, "Geschichte der Stadt Smarra," Die Ansgra bungen von Smarra, VI (1949); Robert Mee Adams, Land Behind BaghdadI A History of Settlement on the Diyala Plains (Chicagoa University of Chicago Press, 1965), pp. 90 and 180, n. 27 91 1957), Pit A. Coke, BaghdadI the City of Peace (LondonB Butterworth, Ira MIj Lapidus, Niddle Eastern Citiesi a Sym osium 257. and Contemporar on Ancient Islamic, Niddle Eastern Urbanism leYB University of California Press, 1969 , p" 61. 92Makdisi, 93 Ibn (1) Qurayyall', of the Basrah 2348 Pit 282" There were fOUT most populous quarxers s Bridge of Boats; (2) Karkhj (3) Quarter Gate; (4) SharIe Stlq al-Miristane See also Le Strange, Jubayr, suburb Baghdad, P. 333. i' "Topography," Berke p. near the |