'Kut' (;
BGN: 'Al Kūt'; also spelled 'Kut-Al-Imara' or 'Kut El Amara') is a city in eastern
Iraq, on the left bank of the
Tigris River, about 100 miles south east of
Baghdad.
As of 2003 the estimated population is about 400,000 people. It is the capital of the province long known as Al Kut, but since the
1960s renamed
Wasit.
The old town of Kut is within a sharp "U" bend of the river, almost making it an island but for a narrow connection to the shore. For centuries Kut was a regional center of the
carpet trade. The area around Kut is a fertile
cereal grain growing region. The
Baghdad Nuclear Research Facility, looted following the
2003 invasion of Iraq, is located near Kut.
Kut in World War I
Kut was the scene of fierce battle during
World War I. The
British Mesopotamian Expeditionary Force, led by General
Townshend, marched north from
Basra in September of
1915 in what became known as the
Mesopotamian Campaign. They reached Kut on
September 26, where after three days of fighting they drove the
Ottoman forces from the town.
After a halt of nearly 2 months, Townshend then headed up river to
Ctesiphon. Following a
battle there, the British forces withdrew back to Kut. On
December 7,
1915 the
Turks, under their commander
Baron von der Goltz, arrived at Kut and began a
siege. The British cavalry under Colonel
Gerard Leachman succeeded in breaking out, but Townshend and the bulk of the force remained besieged. Many attempts were made to relieve Townshend's forces, but all were defeated. Some 23,000 British and Indian soldiers died in the attempts to retake Kut, probably the worst loss of life for the British away from the European theater. Near the end of the siege,
T.E. Lawrence and
Aubrey Herbert of British Intelligence unsuccessfully tried to bribe
Khalil Pasha to allow the troops to escape.
Townshend, with some 8,000 surviving soldiers, finally surrendered Kut on
April 29,
1916. The captured soldiers were impressed into
slave labour until the surrender of the Ottoman Empire; more than half of them died. The British went back on the offensive in December of 1916 with a larger and better supplied force under General Sir
Frederick Stanley Maude and reconquered Kut on
February 23,
1917.
See also
★
List of places in Iraq
★
Siege of Kut