in Ankawa of Mart Shmony in Ankawa Finnish Assyriologist
Simo Parpola has suggested that Ankawa corresponds to the Neo-Assyrian town of
Milqia near Arbela, where the Akitu-house of the goddess Ishtar was located. Milqia is often identified with Melqi, a town mentioned in the East Syriac
hagiography "
History of Mar Qardagh". In this text Melqi is the martyrdom site and burial place of the legendary Assyrian Saint
Mar Qardagh, a Sasanian noble and warrior who converted from Zoroastrianism to Christianity. The hagiography describes Mar Qardagh as being "from a great people from the stock of the kingdom of the Assyrians." Mar Qardagh is highly venerated in Ankawa and his story has remained popular among the local christian population. Ankawa was originally called Beth Amka, which later morphed to Amku-Bad, Ankava, and finally Ankawa. The name of the town is mentioned in
Bar Hebraeus's book entitled "A Brief History of the Countries," where he states: "
Mongol troops attacked the area of Erbil on Sunday July 1285 and reached some villages... including Ankawa." The shrine of Mary, also known as Mariamana, was built after the ancient Roman designs. Tell Qasra, or Qasra Knoll, is an ancient archaeological site, a 6-meter high mound that was used as a palace in the center of Ankawa. The hill dates back to the Neo-Assyrian period. The city was formerly known as Arbela, which was the capital city of
Adiabene and the seat of
Inanna. Ankawa has many archaeological sites, including "The Hill," which was recorded as an archaeological site in Iraq in 1945. It is also home to
Cathedral of Saint Joseph (Umra d'Mar Yosip), the seat of the
Chaldean Catholic Archeparchy of Arbil. Ankawa used to be a small village located northwest of Erbil, but has grown into a
city in its own right. The city has recently become a principal settlement for
Christians in Iraq. One of the main reasons for the town's population rise is due to the
ISIS takeover of the
Nineveh Plains in 2014 after KRG security forces forcibly disarmed local populations in the Nineveh Plains, asserting a full monopoly of arms and control over security, while pledging to protect all, and then preemptively retreated from their posts as ISIS approached, abandoning the local populations and exposing them to
genocide, all without informing locals that they were withdrawing at the last minute and without firing a single bullet. The
Assyrian Church of the East, which after several decades of being located in the United States, has decided to move their Patriarchal see to Ankawa. ==Allegations of tax discrimination==