ライブラリ ライブラリ
検索

Kurdipediaはクルド情報の最大の源です!


Search Options





詳細検索      キーボード


検索
詳細検索
ライブラリ
クルド名
出来事の年表
ソース
履歴
ユーザーコレクション
活動
検索ヘルプ?
出版
Video
分類
ランダムアイテム!
送信
送信記事
画像を送信
Survey
あなたのフィードバック
お問い合わせ
我々は情報をどのような必要はない!
規格
利用規約
アイテムの品質
ツール
について
Kurdipedia Archivists
私達についての記事!
あなたのウェブサイトにKurdipediaを追加
/追加メールを削除
訪問者統計
アイテムの統計
フォントコンバータ
カレンダーコンバータ
言語やページの方言
キーボード
ハンディリンク
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
言語
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
マイアカウント
サインイン
メンバー!
パスワードを忘れました!
検索 送信 ツール 言語 マイアカウント
詳細検索
ライブラリ
クルド名
出来事の年表
ソース
履歴
ユーザーコレクション
活動
検索ヘルプ?
出版
Video
分類
ランダムアイテム!
送信記事
画像を送信
Survey
あなたのフィードバック
お問い合わせ
我々は情報をどのような必要はない!
規格
利用規約
アイテムの品質
について
Kurdipedia Archivists
私達についての記事!
あなたのウェブサイトにKurdipediaを追加
/追加メールを削除
訪問者統計
アイテムの統計
フォントコンバータ
カレンダーコンバータ
言語やページの方言
キーボード
ハンディリンク
Kurdipedia extension for Google Chrome
Cookies
کوردیی ناوەڕاست
کرمانجی - کوردیی سەروو
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû
هەورامی
Zazakî
English
Française
Deutsch
عربي
فارسی
Türkçe
Nederlands
Svenska
Español
Italiano
עברית
Pусский
Norsk
日本人
中国的
Հայերեն
Ελληνική
لەکی
Azərbaycanca
サインイン
メンバー!
パスワードを忘れました!
        
 kurdipedia.org 2008 - 2024
 について
 ランダムアイテム!
 利用規約
 Kurdipedia Archivists
 あなたのフィードバック
 ユーザーコレクション
 出来事の年表
 活動 - Kurdipedia
 ヘルプ
新しいアイテム
統計
記事 518,612
画像 105,232
書籍 19,488
関連ファイル 97,516
Video 1,394
ライブラリ
カワと7にんのむすこたち クルドのおはなし
伝記
レイラ・ザーナ
ライブラリ
クルディスタンを訪ねて―トルコに暮らす国なき民
ライブラリ
クルディスタン=多国間植民地
Sharizor in the History of Kurdistan
グループ: 記事 | 記事言語: English
Share
Facebook0
Twitter1
Telegram0
LinkedIn0
WhatsApp0
Viber0
SMS0
Facebook Messenger0
E-Mail0
Copy Link0
ランキングアイテム
優秀
非常に良い
平均
悪い
悪い
は、私のコレクションに追加
は、この項目についてのあなたのコメントを書く!
アイテム履歴
Metadata
RSS
選択した項目に関連する画像は、Googleで検索!
選択した項目は、Googleで検索!
کوردیی ناوەڕاست0
Kurmancî - Kurdîy Serû0
عربي0
فارسی0
Türkçe0
עברית0
Deutsch0
Español0
Française0
Italiano0
Nederlands0
Svenska0
Ελληνική0
Azərbaycanca0
Fins0
Norsk0
Pусский0
Հայերեն0
中国的0
日本人0

Sharizor in the History of Kurdistan

Sharizor in the History of Kurdistan
Amed Demirhan
Historians have different opinions about the origins of the city of Sharizor (Alternative spellings: Şahr-i Zor, Şahr-i Zul, Sharahzur, Shari Zor), as is often the case with important historical cities. Several historical figures are associated with the city and region. Some claim that it was founded by the son of Dahhak Zour. Others say that Alexander the Great died on his return from India on the road to Sharizor. The name Sharizor in Kurdish simply means strong city or city of strength. For a long time, this city and region have been one of Kurdistan's cultural, political, and intellectual capitals.
One of the greatest medieval historians Ṭabarī (839-923) states that Alexander (356 BC-323 BC) “died on the road to Sharahzur” and another well respect historian Qazwíní (1281-1349) says that he died in Sharizor.
A hill with a shrine roughly one day’s walking distance from the ruins of the historic city is referred to by local people as the hill of Alexander.
The presumed place of Alexander’s death, local people still consider it a shrine.
Sharizor is the name both of a historical city in southern Kurdistan and of a region home to several Kurdish dynasties. At the same time, the name of Sharizor region is synonymous with Kurdistan. Abu al-Kasim Ibn Hawkal al-Nasibi (Nesebini) travel there in the 960s AD, and calls Sharizor is a walled Kurdish town.
The surrounding land, from Iraq to the north, is notably productive, fertile, pleasant, and Kurdish. It is important to underline that Iraq refers here to historical Arab Iraq, which is in the southern section of Mesopotamia and south of Baghdad today. The following map is based on Arab geographer Al-Muqdassi in 985, AD. (Red highlight of Sharizor and the Dinawar Kingdom and Iraq is mine.)
Suwar-al-Aqdlim writes, “it is said that this place is named Shahr-zur (city of strength) because its governors are always the Kurds, ...” (as quoted by Qazvini in 740 (1340).
Yaqut ibn 'Abd Allah al-Hamawi, (1179?-1229), a Muslim Greek geographer, says that this country produced so many scholars that even the person with the sharpest memory cannot recall all of them. The tradition of scholarship in this region still inspires the Muslim world from Algeria to the Caucasus. For example, Mewlana Khalid Shahrizori (1779-1827) studied theological studies, grammar, logic, mathematics, geometry, astronomy, and astrolabe at a number of colleges in Kurdistan. He also then studied in many other international schools and became the founder of the Naqshbandi Khalidi Sufi order. The majority of Sunni-Muslim Kurds still follow these teachings, which have many branches in other countries. For instance, Shaykh Ahmad Kuftaro, the former Grand Mufti [Chief Justice of Islam] of Syria (1963-2004), was a follower.
Şeref (Sharaf) Han (king), the author of the Kurdish Dynasties, writes in 1597 about the Hasanveyh Kingdom of Şehrizor and Dinawer (970-1107 A.D.) during the reign of Bedir ben Hasanveyh, saying that the Kingdom “expanded its territory to Ahvaz, Khuzestan, Berucerd, Esedabad, and Nihavend.”
Unfortunately the city of Sharizor was destroyed by the Mongol ruler Hulagu (1215-1265). After Kurds and Mongols made peace, the Mongols, in compensation for the historic city of Sharizor, helped the Kurds to build the Citadel of Kirkuk as the new Sharizor. Therefore, sometimes Kirkuk is called Sharizor, and old and new get mixed up, and Kirkuk becomes the capital of Sharizor region and state after that.
In the 16th century, a large part of Kurdistan/Sharizor became affiliated with or part of the Ottoman Empire during the reign of Kanuni Sultan Suleyman or Suleiman the Magnificent (1520-1566) after the war of “two Iraqs” [Iraqi Ajam and Iraqi Arab] 1534. After defeating the Safavids [Persians], the Ottomans faced extreme danger from the winter. Ottoman historians describe these events in 1632:
While, on account of the inability and incapacity of the army of Islam [Ottoman] to move forward at all, and the blockade on their retreat by the abundance of snow and sleet, the late Sultan Suleyman was dazed and concerned over the fate of the army of Islam. The Kurdish commanders [Kings] opened paths leading from the pasture of Sultaniye [a city in Eastern Kurdistan] in the direction of Baghdad, guiding the troops of victory…
This relationship becomes the basis of the second treaty of military alliance between Kurdistan and the Ottoman Dynasty in 1534. It is stated that after victory, the Sultan expressed his gratitude by recognizing Kurdish Kings and Princes with many gifts and granting them land ownership. The Sultan expressed his feeling about Kurdistan by saying,
“God made Kurdistan act in the protection of my imperial kingdoms like a strong barrier and an iron fortress against the sedition of the demon Gog of Ajam [Iran]. A thousand thanks and praises to the presence of Almighty, creators of everything.”
According to the Ottoman historian and traveler Evliya Çelebi (1611-1682) Sharizor voluntarily joined the Ottoman Empire during the reign of Sultan Suleyman, and by law, become a state (eyalet) of the empire. It had 86 strongly built citadels, which were impossible to conquer by war. The city of Kirkuk became the capital.
Another Ottoman historian and geographer, Katip Çelebi (1609-1657) says the state of Sharizor in Kurdistan consists of 32 counties, [sanjak], and Kirkuk was the capital.
Women’s legal rights to become rulers
Two Kurdish Kingdoms were in this state: the Kingdom of Gâzîyân and the Kingdom of Mehrevân. The rulers’ title was King of the King and is not subject to appointment or dismissal by the Sultan. Their rule was hereditary. Only in these two Kingdoms could women legally become rulers; nowhere else is it allowed, according to Evliya.
In 1864-1871, the Ottoman government instituted an administrative reorganization by moving from the traditional eyalet/state system to the vilayet/province system. The state of Sharizor was divided into the provinces of Mosul and Baghdad, but Kirkuk retained its status as the new administrative capital for several districts of the province of Mosul, still called Sharizor as shown in the following map from 1884.
Sharizor has always played an important role in Kurdistan’s history, politics, and culture.
Amed Demirhan is the General Manager and Director of Barzani National Memorial. He is a multilingual librarian and researcher internationally recognized with multiple awards in librarianship.
References:
Yaqut ibn 'Abd Allah al-Hamawi, 1179?-1229; Barbier de Meynard, C. (Charles), 1826-1908. Dictionnaire géographique, historique et littéraire de la Perse et des contrées adjacentes, extrait du Mo'djem el-bouldan de Yaqout, et complété à l'aide de documents arabes et persans pourla plupart inédits (Kindle Locations 7534-7535). Paris Impr. impériale. And Evliya, C., Kahraman, A. S., Dağlı, Y., Dankoff, R., Kurşun, Z., & Sezgin, I. (2011). Evliya Celebi Seyahatnamesi. Istanbul: Yapı Kredi Yayınları. (P. 24, 25, Vol. 4)
Perlmann, M. (1987). History of al-Tabari, Volume 4: The Ancient Kingdoms. Albany: State University of New York Press. (Vol. IV P.109)
Ḥamd, A. M. Q., Browne, E. G., & Nicholson, R. A. (1910). The Ta'ríkh-i-guzída: Or, Select history of Hamdulláh Mustawfí-i-Qazwíní, compiled in A.H. 730 (A.D. 1330), and now reproduced in fac-simile from a manuscript dated A.H. 857 (A.D. 1453). Leyden: E.J. Brill. P.33)
Nesebin is a historic city in Northern Kurdistan and in Turkish they call it “Nusaybin” in Syrian border the home of Abu al – Kasim Ibn Hawkal al- Nasibi
Kramers, J. H. (2014). Ibn Hawqal's Kitab-Surat al ard. Opus geographicum / Abu al-Kasim Ibn Haukal al-Nasibi. The second edition (1938-39) by J.H. Kramers. Leiden: Koninklijke Brill NV. (P.369)
Le, S. G. (1905). The lands of the eastern caliphate: Mesopotamia, Persia, and Central Asia, from the Moslem conquest to the time of Timur. Cambridge: University Press. (P. 24)
Qazwini, H. A. M. (1915). The geographical part of the Nuzhat-al-qulub: Composed by Hamd-Allah Mustawfi of Qazwin in 740 (1340); translated by G. Le Strange and printed for the trustees of the E.J.W. Gibb memorial.. Leyden: E.J. Brill. (P. 106)
Barbier, . M. C., & Yāqūt, . A. A.-H. (1861). Dictionnaire géographique, historique et littéraire de la Perse et des contrées adjacentes: Extrait du Moʻdjem el-Bouldan de Yaqout, et complété a l'aide de documents arabes et persans. Paris: L'Imprimerie Imperiale.(P. 358)
Hani, Abdülmecid (2011) Hadaikul verdiyye - Nakşibendi Şeyhleri (Fidan, Mehmet Emin Trans) Semerkand Yayınları. (Pp. 766 - 9) And Hourani, Albert (1981). THE EMERGENCE OF THE MODERN MIDDLE EAST. UNIVERSITY OF CALI FORNIA PRESS Berkeley and Los Angeles. California (Pp. 81 – 87)
Haddad, Gibril Fouad. Shaykh Ahmad Kuftaro (1912-2004). Living Islam. Retrieved December 11, 2022, from https://www.livingislam.org/n/shk_e.html
Bidlīsī, S. K. (2009). Şerefname: [Yazan] Şeref Han, Arapçadan çeviren, Mehmet Emin Bozarslan. İstanbul: Deng Yayinlari. (P. 27)
Evliya, C., Kahraman, A. S., Dağlı, Y., Dankoff, R., Kurşun, Z., & Sezgin, I. (2011). Evliya Celebi Seyahatnamesi. Istanbul: Yapı Kredi Yayınları. (P. 524, Vol. 4)
Ibd. ʻAzîz Efendi., . (19851984). Kanûn-nâme-i sultânî li ʻAzîz Efendi: Aziz Efendi's Book of Sultanic laws and regulations : an agenda for reform by a seventeenth-century Ottoman statesman. [Cambridge, Mass.]: Harvard University.[Edited and Translated by Murphey, Rhods original text composed circa 1632] (P. 14)
Ibid P. 14
Evliya, C., Kahraman, A. S., Dağlı, Y., Dankoff, R., Kurşun, Z., & Sezgin, I. (2011). Evliya Celebi Seyahatnamesi. Istanbul: Yapı Kredi Yayınları. (P. 524 - 25, Vol. 4)
Kâtip, C. (1609-1657)., Bayhan, N., Karlığa, B., Öztürk, S., & Koyunoğlu, H. (2010). Cihânnümâ. İstanbul: İstanbul Büyükşehir Kültür A.Ş. Yayınları. (Pp. 534-7)
Evliya, C., Kahraman, A. S., Dağlı, Y., Dankoff, R., Kurşun, Z., & Sezgin, I. (2011). Evliya Celebi Seyahatnamesi. Istanbul: Yapı Kredi Yayınları. (P. 524 - 25, Vol. 4)
Erdoğan, Turan (2014) OSMANLI DEVLETİ’NDE EYALET’TEN VİLAYET’E GEÇİŞ 1864 – 1871 VİLAYET NİZAMNAMELERİ (Master Thesis) ARTUKLU ÜNİVERSİTESİ SOSYAL BİLİMLER ENSTİTÜSÜ. Mardin
Retrieved May 13, 2020 from http://acikerisim.artuklu.edu.tr/xmlui/bitstream/handle/20.500.12514/1021/Turan%20ERDO%C4%9EAN.pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y
Ahmed CEMAL (1893), Mufassal Coğrafya-yı Osmânî. Mekteb-i Fünûn]-I Harbiye Matbaası, [The Ottoman Geography in detail Istanbul [Military printing press] (Pp. 181 – 194].[1]
この商品は(English)言語で記述されてきた、元の言語でアイテムを開くには、アイコンをクリックして
This item has been written in (English) language, click on icon to open the item in the original language!
このアイテムは1,575表示された回数
HashTag
ソース
リンクされたアイテム: 9
グループ: 記事
記事言語: English
Publication date: 12-02-2023 (1 年)
Publication Type: Born-digital
ブック: 芸術
ブック: 履歴
プロヴァンス: 南クルディスタン
方言: 英語
都市: Sulaimaniyah
Technical Metadata
アイテムの品質: 94%
94%
は、 ( هەژار کامەلا 26-08-2023上で追加しました
Denne artikkelen har blitt gjennomgått og utgitt av ( زریان سەرچناری ) på 29-08-2023
最近の( هەژار کامەلا )によって更新この商品: 29-08-2023
URL
この項目はKurdipediaのによると規格はまだ確定されていません!
このアイテムは1,575表示された回数
Attached files - Version
タイプ Version エディタ名
写真ファイル 1.0.199 KB 26-08-2023 هەژار کامەلاهـ.ک.
Kurdipediaはクルド情報の最大の源です!
イメージと説明
カズィ・ムハンマド大統領の処刑

Actual
ライブラリ
カワと7にんのむすこたち クルドのおはなし
01-06-2015
هاوڕێ باخەوان
カワと7にんのむすこたち クルドのおはなし
伝記
レイラ・ザーナ
18-10-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
レイラ・ザーナ
ライブラリ
クルディスタンを訪ねて―トルコに暮らす国なき民
17-10-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
クルディスタンを訪ねて―トルコに暮らす国なき民
ライブラリ
クルディスタン=多国間植民地
18-10-2013
هاوڕێ باخەوان
クルディスタン=多国間植民地
新しいアイテム
統計
記事 518,612
画像 105,232
書籍 19,488
関連ファイル 97,516
Video 1,394
Kurdipediaはクルド情報の最大の源です!
イメージと説明
カズィ・ムハンマド大統領の処刑
Folders
伝記 - 性別 - 女性 伝記 - ネイション - クルド 伝記 - - 北クルディスタン 伝記 - 人タイ - 議会メンバー 伝記 - 人タイ - 政治犯 伝記 - 方言 - クルド - Badini イメージと説明 - プロヴァンス - 東クルディスタン イメージと説明 - 都市 - Mahabadの 記事 - ドキュメントの種類 - 元の言語 記事 - 方言 - 日本人

Kurdipedia.org (2008 - 2024) version: 15.58
| お問い合わせ | CSS3 | HTML5

| ページ生成時間:0.984 秒(秒) !