Sheikh Ma'ruf Cemetery

Sheikh Ma'ruf Cemetery (Arabic: مقبرة الشيخ معروف), also known as Maqbarat Shuniziyyah, is a historic cemetery located in the neighborhood of Karkh in Baghdad, Iraq. The cemetery's name is derived from Ma'ruf Karkhi, a Sufi mystic who is buried in here. Several historic mausoleums are present in the cemetery, such as the Zumurrud Khatun Mosque and Mausoleum.

Sheikh Ma'ruf Mosque
The Sheikh Ma'ruf Mosque was built around the grave of the renowned ascetic Ma'ruf Karkhi between the years 1215 to 1216. In 1225, the Abbasid Caliph Al-Nasir renovated the mosque. In the Ottoman era, the mosque was restored and refurbished twice, first by the governor Ahmed Pasha and later on Ahmed Pasha. In 2001, the mosque was fully reconstructed in a modern, futurist style, which also doubled the area of the mosque and replaced the old minaret with a new one.

The mosque has a large prayer hall. A room at the end of the prayer hall contains the tomb of Ma'ruf Karkhi, while some rooms at the sides of the prayer hall serve as private mausoleums for the Suwaidi and Qashtini families.

Zumurrud Khatun's mausoleum
The mausoleum of Zumurrud Khatun was first built in 1202 by Sayyida Zumurrud Khatun herself. It was later developed into a mosque, known as the Haza'ir Mosque. The mosque has two prayer halls, one for the Hanafi school of thought and the other for the Shafi'i school. The mausoleum sports a tall muqarnas conical dome and fine brickwork.

Tomb of Bahlool
Bahlool, real name Wahhab ibn 'Amr, was a former qadi during the Abbasid Caliphate who served the Caliph Harun al-Rashid. He eventually became insane so that he would be excused from signing an approval to execute his friend Musa al-Kadhim. Bahlool was buried in this cemetery, and a shrine was built for him during the Ottoman rule in 1893.

Tomb of Sheikh Mashi'uh
Sayyid Abdullah al-Assaf al-Ithawi, nicknamed Sheikh Mashi'uh by his followers, was a Sufi mystic who followed the Rifa'i and Qadiri Sufi orders. He was buried in 1835.

Controversy
In 2023, an order was made from the Iraqi government to exhume some of the bodies and transfer them to a different cemetery, as a highway would be built passing through the territory of the cemetery. This would be done to reduce traffic congestion. The decision was met with outrage amongst locals, despite a fatwa from the local clerics that approved of the exhumation and transfer of the deceased. Locals gathered outside the cemetery and protested against the exhumation. Due to these protests, the government eventually decided to build a bridge which passed over the cemetery instead.

Notable burials

 * Aisha Khatun (d. 18th century) the mother of Ahmed Pasha the governor of Baghdad under the Ottoman Empire
 * Mahmud al-Alusi (1802–1854) Hanafi scholar and author of Ruh al-Ma'ani
 * Rashid Hassan al-Kurdi (1882–1954) Preacher and Salafist theologian
 * Abdul Karim Zaidan (1917–2014) Former minister of state for Waqf Affairs