Iraq:
Historical Setting
Library of Congress Country Study
Glossary
- Autonomous
Region
- Governorates
of As Sulaymaniyah, Dahuk, and Irbil, the Kurdish
majority area. In this region--popularly known as
Kurdistan--Kurdish has status of official language, and
residents enjoy limited autonomy from central
government.
- atabeg
- Turkish word
that during the period of the Ottoman Empire meant
governor of a province.
- barrels
per day
- Production of
crude oil and petroleum products is frequently measured
in barrels per day, often abbreviated bpd or bd. A barrel
is a volume measure of forty-two United States gallons.
Conversion of barrels to metric tons depends on the
density of a specific product. About 7.3 barrels of
average crude oil, or about 7 barrels of heavy crude oil,
weigh 1 metric ton. Light products, such as gasoline and
kerosene, average close to eight barrels per metric
ton.
- currency
- See
dinar.
- dinar
(ID)
- Currency unit
consisting of 1,000 fils or 20 dirhams. When officially
introduced at the end of the British mandate (1932), the
dinar was equal to, and was linked to, the British pound
sterling, which at that time was equal to US$4.86. Iraqi
dinar (ID) equaled US$4.86 between 1932 and 1949 and
after devaluation in 1949, equaled US$2.80 between 1949
and 1971. Iraq officially uncoupled the dinar from the
pound sterling as a gesture of independence in 1959, but
the dinar remained at parity with the pound until the
British unit of currency was again devalued in 1967. One
Iraqi dinar remained equal to US$2.80 until December
1971, when major realignments of world currencies began.
Upon the devaluation of the United States dollar in 1973,
the Iraqi dinar appreciated to US$3.39. It remained at
this level until the outbreak of the Iran-Iraq War in
1980. In 1982 Iraq devalued the dinar by 5 percent, to a
value equal to US$3.22, and sustained this official
exchange rate without additional devaluation despite
mounting debt. In early 1988, the official dinar-dollar
exchange rate was still ID1 to US$3.22; however, with
estimates of the nation's inflation rate ranging from 25
percent to 50 percent per year in 1985 and 1986, the
dinar's real transaction value, or black market exchange
rate, was far lower-- only about half the 1986 official
rate.
- Free
Officers
- Term applied
retroactively to the group of young military officers
that planned and carried out the July 14 Revolution in
1958.
- GDP (gross
domestic product)
- A value
measure of the flow of domestic goods and services
produced by an economy over a period of time, such as a
year. Only output values of goods for final consumption
and for intermediate production are assumed to be
included in final prices. GDP is sometimes aggregated and
shown at market prices, meaning that indirect taxes and
subsidies are included; when these have been eliminated,
the result is GDP at factor cost. The word gross
indicates that deductions for depreciation of physical
assets have not been made.
- GNP (gross
national product)
- GDP
(q.v.) plus the net income or loss stemming from
transactions with foreign countries. GNP is the broadest
measurement of the output of goods and services by an
economy. It can be calculated at market prices, which
include indirect taxes and subsidies. Because indirect
taxes and subsidies are only transfer payments, GNP is
often calculated at factor cost, removing indirect taxes
and subsidies.
- hadith
- Tradition
based on the precedent of Muhammad's nondivinely revealed
words that serves as one of the sources of Islamic law
(sharia).
- hijra
- Literally to
migrate, to sever relations, to leave one's tribe.
Throughout the Muslim world hijra refers to the migration
of Muhammad and his followers to Medina. In this sense
the word has come into European languages as hegira, and
it is usually, and somewhat misleadingly, translated as
flight.
- ID
- Iraqi dinar.
See dinar.
- Imam
- A word used
in several senses. In general use and in lower case, it
means the leader of congregational prayers; as such it
implies no ordination or special spiritual powers beyond
sufficient education to carry out this function. It is
also used figuratively by many Sunni (q.v.)
Muslims to mean the leader of the Islamic community.
Among Shias (q.v.) the word takes on many
complex meanings; in general, it indicates that
particular descendent of the House of Ali ibn Abu Talib,
who is believed to have been God's designated repository
of the spiritual authority inherent in that line. The
identity of this individual and the means of ascertaining
his identity have been major issues causing divisions
among Shias.
- International
Monetary Fund (IMF)
- Established
along with the World Bank in 1945, the IMF is a
specialized agency affiliated with the United Nations and
is responsible for stabilizing international exchange
rates and payments. The main business of the IMF is the
provision of loans to its members (including
industrialized and developing countries) when they
experience balance of payments difficulties. These loans
frequently carry conditions that require substantial
internal economic adjustments by the recipients, most of
which are developing countries.
- Levant
- Historically,
the countries along the eastern shores of the
Mediterranean.
- shaykh
- Leader or
chief. Word of Arabic origin used to mean either a
political leader or a learned religious leader. Also used
as an honorific.
- Shia, from
Shiat Ali, the Party of Ali
- A member of
the smaller of the two great divisions of Islam. The
Shias supported the claims of Ali and his line to
presumptive right to the caliphate and to leadership of
the Muslim community, and on this issue they divided from
the Sunni (q.v.) in the great schism within
Islam. Later schisms have produced further divisions
among the Shias over the identity and the number of Imams
(q.v.). Shias revere Twelve Imams, the last of
whom is believed to be in hiding.
- Shiite
- See
Shia.
- Sunni
(from sunna, orthodox)
- A member of
the larger of the two great divisions of Islam. The
Sunnis supported the traditional method of election to
the caliphate, and they accepted the Umayyad line that
began with caliph Muawiyah in 661. On this issue they
divided from the Shias (q.v.) in the great
schism within Islam.
-
Iraq:
Historical Setting
Library of Congress Country Study
Bibliography
<<< Contents
|