Kurds
The Babylonians where located in modern-day Iran and Iraq and other middle eastern places
Sumerians settled in Mesopotamia, which is now in Iraq. They developed agriculture and domesticated animals. If it were not for these traditions, we would not be as we are now.
The first civilization was the Kingdom of Sumer, which was settled between 4500 and 4001 BC, in the region of Mesopotamia, which is now Iraq.
Humans first arrived in Iraq, according to archaeological evidence, over 100,000 years ago, so the identity of the discoverer is unknown. Iraq is also one of the earliest settled places in the world. "Foreigners" did not discover Iraq before the Sumerians already had a culture and society.
No, he settled Israel, but there is a theory that he was born in Iraq.Answer:The Torah states explicitly that Abraham was born in what is now Iraq and later moved to what is now Israel. See Genesis 15:7, 24:4 and 10, and 11:27 to 12:5.
No, the Phoenicians settled on the eastern Mediterranean coast around today's Lebanon. The Mesopotamians were located between the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, where today's Iraq is located.
This question is difficult to answer because Iraq has been settled for centuries under different names and terms "country" is nebulous.Iraq has been settled by civilized peoples since roughly 5000 B.C.E., which was when the Sumerian Civilization was founded. However, the first term applied to the region was applied by the Ancient Greeks, who called the general area "Mesopotamia" or the "land between the rivers". The term "Iraq" was an Arab name for the region that appear later, but was used informally for the area.The first time that somebody picked up a map and drew the outline of Iraq on it and said, "I will name this territory Iraq", then the answer would be 1918 when the British and French were dividing up former Ottoman territories and Iraq was an oil-rich territory that the British wanted. Iraq declared independence as sovereign nation in 1923 when Iraq was given independence from the United Kingdom, but Iraq was finally out of the United Kingdom's sphere of influence and proceeded to make its own policies in 1954 when King Faisal II was assassinated in a car-bombing and the Ba'ath Party took control of Iraq.
The Sumerians settled in the area where the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers joined. It is now in parts of Iran, Iraq, and Kuwait. They were an extremely advanced civilization. No one knows where they came from or why they moved to that area. God ordered Abraham to leave the Sumerian culture and go to The Promised Land.
Iraq is not a language. Iraqis speak Arabic and the name for Iraq in Arabic is Al-Iraq which is pronounced Al-ee-raw-k.
First, we should note the wording of the question. The US did not "restore" democracy in Iraq, since "restoration" requires that there was a previous state of democracy in Iraq. This is incorrect. There has never been democracy in Iraq at any point in history since Iraq was first settled over 5000 years ago. Iraq has consistently been ruled by absolute monarchies or in Caudillo-States or in one-party "republics" like Saddam's. The US created a new democracy in Iraq, changing the history of the country radically.The US role in creating democracy in Iraq was primarily the Iraq War, which was the invasion and overthrow of Saddam's Republic or Iraq. Afterwards, the US brought together leaders from different regions and clans of Iraqi society to write a Constitution that they could all finally agree on as well as facilitating the negotiations. The US also assisted monetarily, by financing the new government, and militarily, by training the nascent Iraqi Army. (Saddam's army had been disbanded and its members forbidden from re-enlisting.)
The Government of the Republic of Iraq is in charge of Iraq.
Iraq is a country