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Baban

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Baban Principality
بابان
16th century–1850
CapitalKirkuk (16th century - 1783)
Sulaymaniah (1783 - 1850)
Common languagesSorani Kurdish
Religion
Shafiʽi Sunni Islam[1]
GovernmentMonarchy
History 
• Established
16th century
• Baban revolt suppressed
1850
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Ottoman Empire
Ottoman Empire

Baban (Kurdish: بابان)[2] was a Kurdish principality existing from the 16th century to 1850, centered on Sulaymaniyah. The Baban Principality played an active role in the Ottoman-Safavid conflict and gave significant military support to the Ottomans.[3] They were in constant rivalry with Ardalan, Bohtan[3] and Soran and its territory would therefore oscillate. Before the removal of the last Baban leader in 1850, their rule had become limited to their capital Sulaymaniyah and few surrounding villages.

The modern city of Sulaymaniyah was built by Baban in 1784 which served as their capital. Prior to the founding of the city, the dynasty lived in Qala Çolan. The principality also encouraged and facilitated the use of Sorani Kurdish among its local literary authors.[4]

Origins

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When the Ottomans arrived to the Sulaymaniyah plains (Shahrizor), the Baban princes had already established themselves in the region. However, there is no pre-Ottoman source on Baban,[4] and their origins are obscure.[3] Information on the relations between Baban and the Soran Emirate up to 1596 exist in Sharafnama,[3] which also mentioned that Pīr Budak Beg was the founder of the dynasty in the early 16th-century.[4] There is no consensus on the dynastic chronology of Baban.[3]

One myth claimed that the founder of the Baban dynasty was Aḥmad Faqīh (Faqī Aḥmad) from Pshdar, who received the land around Shahrizor by the Shah of Iran because of his loyalty to the monarch. Another myth claimed that the dynasty descended from an English woman named Keghan.[4]

History

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After the Battle of Chaldiran in 1514, Baban remained unincorporated to the Ottoman Empire.[5] As a representative for the Ottomans, Idris Bitlisi met with the Prince of Baban and other Kurdish states immediately after the Battle of Chaldiran and succeeded in forming an alliance between them against the Safavids. Nonetheless, the loyalty of Baban fluctuated.[6] In the early 1500s, Baban under Haci Şeyh Baban extended its territory around Lake Urmia which forced Tahmasp I to send a military force against the Kurds.[7]

According to Claudius Rich, the dynasty gained Ottoman recognition of the hereditary rights of their dynasty in 1678.[8] From the 1720s to the 1740s, the Baban dynasty aided the Ottomans against Iran.[9] The period from 1750 to 1847 was dominated by rivalry with both Soran and Bohtan, as they also fought against the centralization attempts by the Ottomans and Iran.[3] In the late 1700s, Baban supported the Qajar dynasty against Zand dynasty but had to transfer their support to the Zands after the victories of the latter.[10]

The principality was destroyed during the mid-19th century Ottoman modernization period. The Baban revolt lasted for three years, but was defeated by a coalition of Ottoman forces and Kurdish tribes. Ahmed Baban, the last Baban ruler, was defeated near Koy Sanjaq in 1847 and the region of Shahrazur was annexed to the Ottoman Empire.[3] Iranian claims to Baban ceased after the treaty of 1847.[11]

When the Brits entered Sulaymaniyah in 1918, the city was no longer under the influence of the Baban dynasty. Descendants of the dynasty joined the Kurdish independence movement in Iraq, while others became Ottoman politicians.[4]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Rosskeen Gibb, Hamilton Alexander (1954). The Encyclopaedia of Islam (Volume 4 ed.). Brill. pp. 188–192.
  2. ^ Bīmār, ʻAbd al-Razzāq (2006). خوێندنه‌وه‌يه‌كى تازه‌ى هه‌ڵبه‌ستى كوردى : خوێندنه‌وه‌يه‌كى تازه‌ى هه‌ڵبه‌ستى قوتابخانه‌ى بابان، له‌ نموونه‌ى مسته‌فا به‌گى كوردى، تاهير به‌گ، حه‌ريق، سافى، ئه‌ده‌ب، بێخود، حاجى قادرى كۆيى، ڕه‌نجوورى، مه‌وله‌وى (in Kurdish). Erbil: Dezgay Çap u Biławkirdinewey Aras.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g Behn (1988).
  4. ^ a b c d e Atmaca (2012).
  5. ^ Bozarslan, Gunes & Yadirgi (2021), p. 2.
  6. ^ Atmaca (2021), p. 46.
  7. ^ Atmaca (2021), pp. 52 & 54.
  8. ^ Rich (1836), p. 81.
  9. ^ Kissling, Spuler & Barbour (1997), p. 82.
  10. ^ Atmaca (2021), p. 65.
  11. ^ Atmaca (2021), p. 67.

References

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  • Atmaca, Metin (2012). "Bābān". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Rowson, Everett (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam (3rd ed.). Brill Online. ISSN 1873-9830.
  • Atmaca, Metin (2021), "Negotiating Political Power in the Early Modern Middle East: Kurdish Emirates between the Ottoman Empire and Iranian Dynasties (Sixteenth to Nineteenth Centuries)", in Bozarslan, Hamit (ed.), Cambridge History of the Kurds, Cambridge University Press
  • Behn, W. (1988), BĀBĀN, vol. III, Encyclopedia Iranica
  • Bozarslan, Hamit; Gunes, Cengis; Yadirgi, Veli (2021), "Introduction: The Kurds and the Kurdish question in the Middle East", Cambridge History of the Kurds, Cambridge University Press
  • Kissling, H. J.; Spuler, Bertold; Barbour, N. (1997), The Last Great Muslim Empires, Brill Publishers, ISBN 9789004021044
  • Rich, Claudius (1836), Narrative of a residence in Koordistan, and on the site of ancient Nineveh: with journal of a voyage down the Tigris to Bagdad and an account of a visit to Shirauz and Persepolis, vol. 2, J. Duncan

Further reading

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