Old Baghdad Heritage Walk: Al-Rashid Street to Al-Mutanabbi
This is the walk locals take visitors on to explain Baghdad in a single afternoon. It threads the historic Rusafa quarter on the east bank of the Tigris, where the Abbasid capital, the Ottoman administration, and the modern Iraqi state each left their mark within a few hundred metres of one another.
You begin where the river meets the medieval city — at an Abbasid-era courtyard palace — then step onto Al-Rashid Street, Baghdad's first modern boulevard, with its shaded colonnades and faded grandeur. From the Ottoman clock tower of Al-Qishla you reach the Mustansiriyah, one of the oldest universities on earth, before turning into Al-Mutanabbi Street, the booksellers' road where Baghdad has bought and argued over books for a century.
The walk ends, as every good Baghdad day does, at Shabandar Café — a room of old photographs and strong tea where poets and printers have gathered since 1917. Wear comfortable shoes, go in the morning before the heat, and leave time to linger.
6 rawestgeh
- 1

Kolana El Reşîd
Dîrokî Bexda 20 deqîqe li virStart on Baghdad's first modern street, opened in 1916. Walk beneath the colonnades and read the city in its shopfronts, printing houses and first-floor balconies.
Hûragahî bibîneHead west toward the Tigris to reach the Abbasid Palace — about a five-minute walk.
- 2

Qesra Ebasiyan
Dîrokî Bexda 30 deqîqe li virA rare survivor of the Abbasid capital: a two-storey courtyard of pointed brick arches and muqarnas, overlooking the river.
Hûragahî bibîneDouble back south-east to the clock-tower square of Al-Qishla.
- 3

Avahiya El Qişla
Dîrokî Bexda 25 deqîqe li virThe Ottoman parade ground and its landmark clock tower — long the administrative heart of old Baghdad, and still a gathering place for poets on Fridays.
Hûragahî bibîneContinue south-east for about ten minutes to the medieval university.
- 4
Dibistana Mustansiriyeyê
Dîrokî Bexda 30 deqîqe li virFounded in 1227, among the oldest universities in the world — a calm brick courtyard that once housed a celebrated water clock and the four schools of law.
Hûragahî bibîneTurn back toward Al-Mutanabbi Street, the road of the booksellers.
- 5
Kolana El Mutenabî
Çandeyî Bexda 40 deqîqe li virThe booksellers' street, named for the great tenth-century poet. Browse the open-air stalls — busiest and best on a Friday morning.
Hûragahî bibîneAt the river end of the street, step into the café that has anchored it for over a century.
- 6

Kafeya Şabandar
Çandeyî Bexda 30 deqîqe li virFinish with sweet tea at Shabandar, open since 1917. Its walls are a photo-archive of old Baghdad, and its benches have seated generations of writers.
Hûragahî bibîne
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