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Divan

A divan or diwan (Persian: دیوان, dīvān; from Sumerian dub, clay tablet)[1] was a high government ministry in various Islamic states, or its chief official (see dewan).

Audience in the Diwan-i-Khas granted to the French ambassador, the vicomte d'Andrezel by Ottoman Sultan Ahmed III, 10 October 1724, in a contemporary painting by Jean-Baptiste van Mour.

Etymology

 
The winter Diwan of a Mughal Nawab (painting from 1812)

The word, recorded in English since 1586, meaning "Oriental council of a state", comes from Turkish divan, from Arabic diwan.

It is first attested in Middle Persian spelled as dpywʾn and dywʾn, itself hearkening back, via Old Persian, Elamite and Akkadian, ultimately to Sumerian dub, clay tablet.[1] The word was borrowed into Armenian as well as divan; on linguistic grounds this is placed after the 3rd century, which helps establish the original Middle Persian (and eventually New Persian) form was dīvān, not dēvān, despite later legends that traced the origin of the word to the latter form. The variant pronunciation dēvān however did exist, and is the form surviving to this day in Tajiki Persian.[1]

In Arabic, the term was first used for the army registers, then generalized to any register, and by metonymy applied to specific government departments.[2] The sense of the word evolved to "custom house" and "council chamber", then to "long, cushioned seat", such as are found along the walls in Middle-Eastern council chambers. The latter is the sense that entered European languages as divan (furniture).

The modern French, Dutch, Spanish, and Italian words douane, aduana, and dogana, respectively (meaning "customs house"), also come from diwan.[3]

Creation and development under the early Caliphates

Establishment and Umayyad period

The first dīwān was created under Caliph Umar (r. 634–644 CE) in 15 A.H. (636/7 CE) or, more likely, 20 A.H. (641 CE). It comprised the names of the warriors of Medina who participated in the Muslim conquests and their families, and was intended to facilitate the payment of salary (ʿaṭāʾ, in coin or in rations) to them, according to their service and their relationship to Muhammad. This first army register (dīwān al-jund) was soon emulated in other provincial capitals like Basra, Kufa and Fustat.[2][4] Al-Mughira ibn Shu'ba, a statesman from the Thaqif tribe who was versed in Persian, is credited with establishing Basra's dīwān during his governorship (636–638), and the dīwān of the Caliphate's other garrison centers followed its organization.[5]

With the advent of the Umayyad Caliphate, the number of dīwāns increased. To the dīwān al-jund, the first Umayyad caliph, Mu'awiya (r. 661–680), added the bureau of the land tax (dīwān al-kharāj) in Damascus, which became the main dīwān, as well as the bureau of correspondence (dīwān al-rasāʾil), which drafted the caliph's letters and official documents, and the bureau of the seal (dīwān al-khātam), which checked and kept copies of all correspondence before sealing and dispatching it.[2][6] A number of more specialist departments were also established, probably by Mu'awiya: the dīwān al-barīd in charge of the postal service; the bureau of expenditure (dīwān al-nafaqāt), which most likely indicates the survival of a Byzantine institution; the dīwān al-ṣadaqa was a new foundation with the task of estimating the zakāt and ʿushr levies; the dīwān al-mustaghallāt administered state property in cities; the dīwān al-ṭirāz controlled the government workshops that made official banners, costumes and some furniture.[6][7] Aside from the central government, there was a local branch of the dīwān al-kharāj, the dīwān al-jund and the dīwān al-rasāʾil in every province.[8]

Under Caliph Abd al-Malik (r. 685–705), the practices of the various departments began to be standardized and Arabized: instead of the local languages (Greek in Syria, Coptic and Greek in Egypt, Persian in the former Sasanian lands) and the traditional practices of book-keeping, seals and time-keeping, only Arabic and the Islamic calendar were to be used henceforth. The process of Arabization was gradual: in Iraq, the transition was carried out by Salih ibn Abd al-Rahman under the auspices of the governor al-Hajjaj ibn Yusuf in 697, in Syria by Sulayman ibn Sa'd al-Khushani in 700, in Egypt under Caliph al-Walid I's governor Abdallah ibn Abd al-Malik in 706, and in Khurasan by Ishaq ibn Tulayq al-Nahshali on the orders of Yusuf ibn Umar al-Thaqafi, governor of Iraq, in 741/42.[8][9]

Abbasid period

Under the Abbasid Caliphate the administration, partly under the increasing influence of Iranian culture, became more elaborate and complex.[6] As part of this process, the dīwāns increased in number and sophistication, reaching their apogee in the 9th–10th centuries.[8] At the same time, the office of vizier (wazīr) was also created to coordinate government.[8] The administrative history of the Abbasid dīwāns is complex, since many were short-lived, temporary establishments for specific needs, while at times the sections of larger dīwān might also be termed dīwāns, and often a single individual was placed in charge of more than one department.[10]

Caliph al-Saffah (r. 749–754) established a department for the confiscated properties of the Umayyads after his victory in the Abbasid Revolution. This was probably the antecedent of the later dīwān al-ḍiyāʿ, administering the caliph's personal domains.[8] Similarly, under al-Mansur (r. 754–775) there was a bureau of confiscations (dīwān al-muṣādara), as well as a dīwān al-aḥshām, probably in charge of palace service personnel, and a bureau of petitions to the Caliph (dīwān al-riḳāʿ).[8] Caliph al-Mahdi (r. 775–785) created a parallel dīwān al-zimām (control bureau) for every one of the existing dīwāns, as well as a central control bureau (zimām al-azimma). These acted as comptrollers as well as coordinators between the various bureaus, or between individual dīwāns and the vizier.[8] In addition, a dīwān al-maẓālim was created, staffed by judges, to hear complaints against government officials.[8] The remit of the dīwān al-kharāj now included all land taxes (kharāj, zakāt, and jizya, both in money and in kind), while another department, the dīwān al-ṣadaqa, dealt with assessing the zakāt of cattle. The correspondence of the dīwān al-kharāj was checked by another department, the dīwān al-khātam.[11] As in Umayyad times, miniature copies of the dīwān al-kharāj, the dīwān al-jund and the dīwān al-rasāʾil existed in every province, but by the mid-9th century each province also maintained a branch of its dīwān al-kharāj in the capital.[8]

The treasury department (bayt al-māl or dīwān al-sāmī) kept the records of revenue and expenditure, both in money and in kind, with specialized dīwāns for each category of the latter (e.g. cereals, cloth, etc.). Its secretary had to mark all orders of payment to make them valid, and it drew up monthly and yearly balance sheets.[10] The dīwān al-jahbad̲ha, responsible for the treasury's balance sheets, was eventually branched off from it, while the treasury domains were placed under the dīwān al-ḍiyāʿ, of which there appear at times to have been several.[10] In addition, a department of confiscated property (dīwān al-musādarīn) and confiscated estates (dīwān al-ḍiyāʿ al-maqbūḍa) existed.[10]

Caliph al-Mu'tadid (r. 892–902) grouped the branches of the provincial dīwāns present in the capital into a new department, the dīwān al-dār (bureau of the palace) or dīwān al-dār al-kabīr (great bureau of the palace), where "al-dār" probably meant the vizier's palace.[8] At the same time, the various zimām bureaux were combined into a single dīwān al-zimām which re-checked all assessments, payments and receipts against its own records and, according to the 11th-century scholar al-Mawardi, was the "guardian of the rights of bayt al-māl [the treasury] and the people".[10] The dīwān al-nafaḳāt played a similar role with regards to expenses by the individual dīwāns, but by the end of the 9th century its role was mostly restricted to the finances of the caliphal palace.[10] Under al-Muktafi (r. 902–908) the dīwān al-dār was broken up into three departments, the bureaux of the eastern provinces (dīwān al-mashriq), of the western provinces (dīwān al-maghrib), and of the Iraq (dīwān al-sawād), although under al-Muqtadir (r. 908–932) the dīwān al-dār still existed, with the three territorial departments considered sections of the latter.[8] In 913/4, the vizier Ali ibn Isa established a new department for charitable endowments (dīwān al-birr), whose revenue went to the upkeep of holy places, the two holy cities of Mecca and Medina, and on volunteers fighting in the holy war against the Byzantine Empire.[10]

Under Caliph al-Mutawakkil (r. 847–861), a bureau of servants and pages (dīwān al-mawālī wa ’l-ghilmān), possibly an evolution of the dīwān al-aḥshām, existed for the huge number of slaves and other attendants of the palace.[8] In addition, the dīwān al-khātam, now also known as the dīwān al-sirr (bureau of confidential affairs) grew in importance.[8] Miskawayh also mentions the existence of a dīwān al-ḥaram, which supervised the women's quarters of the palace.[10]

Later Islamic dynasties

As the Abbasid Caliphate began to fragment in the mid 9th century, its administrative machinery was copied by the emergent successor dynasties, with the already extant local dīwān branches likely providing the base on which the new administrations were formed.[6]

Saffarids, Ziyarid, Sajids, Buyids and Samanids

The administrative machinery of the Tahirid governors of Khurasan is almost unknown, except that their treasury was located in their capital of Nishapur.[6] Ya'qub al-Saffar (r. 867–879), the founder of the Saffarid dynasty who supplanted the Tahirids, is known to have had a bureau of the army (dīwān al-ʿarḍ) for keeping the lists and supervising the payment of the troops, at his capital Zarang. Under his successor Amr ibn al-Layth (r. 879–901) there were two further treasuries, the māl-e khāṣṣa, and an unnamed bureau under the chief secretary corresponding to a chancery (dīwān al-rasāʾil or dīwān al-inshāʾ).[6]

The Buyids, who took over Baghdad and the remains of the Abbasid Caliphate in 946, drew partly on the established Abbasid practice, but was adapted to suit the nature of the rather decentralized Buyid "confederation" of autonomous emirates.[12] The Buyid bureaucracy was headed by three great departments: the dīwān al-wazīr, charged with finances, the dīwān al-rasāʾil as the state chancery, and the dīwān al-jaysh for the army.[12] The Buyid regime was a military regime, its ruling caste composed of Turkish and Daylamite troops. As a result, the army department was of particular importance, and its head, the ʿariḍ al-jaysh, is frequently mentioned in the sources of the period. Indeed, at the turn of the 11th century, there were two ʿariḍs, one for the Turks and one for the Daylamites, hence the department was often called "department of the two armies" (dīwān al-jayshayn).[12] A number of junior departments, like the dīwān al-zimām, the dīwān al-ḍiyāʿ, or the dīwān al-barīd were directly inherited from the Abbasid government. Under Adud al-Dawla (r. 978–983), however, the dīwān al-sawād, which oversaw the rich lands of lower Iraq, was moved from Baghdad to Shiraz. In addition, a dīwān al-khilāfa was established to oversee the affairs of the Abbasid caliphs, who continued to reside in Baghdad as puppets of the Buyid emirs.[12]

Seljuks

The Great Seljuks tended to cherish their nomadic origins, with their sultans leading a peripatetic court to their various capitals. Coupled with their frequent absence on campaign, the vizier assumed an even greater prominence, concentrating the direction of civil, military and religious affairs in his own bureau, the "supreme dīwān" (dīwān al-aʿlā).[12] The dīwān al-aʿlā was further subdivided into a chancery (dīwān al-inshāʾ wa’l-ṭughrā, also called dīwān al-rasāʾil) under the ṭughrāʾī or munshī al-mamālik, an accounting department (dīwān al-zimām wa’l-istīfāʾ) under the mustawfī al-mamālik, a fiscal oversight office (dīwān al-ishrāf or dīwān al-muʿāmalāt) under the mushrif al-mamālik, and the army department (dīwān al-ʿarḍ or dīwān al-jaysh) under the ʿariḍ (further divided into the recruitment and supply bureau, dīwān al-rawātib, and the salary and land grants bureau, dīwān al-iqṭāʾ).[13][14] A number of lesser departments is also attested, although they may not have existed at the same time: the office charged with the redress of grievances (dīwān al-maẓālim), the state treasury (bayt al-māl) and the sultan's private treasury (bayt al-māl al-khaṣṣ), confiscations (dīwān al-muṣādara), the land tax office (dīwān al-kharāj) and the department of religious endowments or waqfs (dīwān al-awqāf). A postal department (dīwān al-barīd) also existed but fell into disuse.[14][15] The system was apparently partly copied in provincial centres as well.[15]

Ottoman Tripolitania

Following the Ottoman conquest of North Africa, the Maghreb was divided into three provinces, Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli. After 1565, administrative authority in Tripoli was vested in a Pasha directly appointed by the Sultan in Constantinople. The sultan provided the pasha with a corps of Janissaries, which was in turn divided into a number of companies under the command of a junior officer or Bey. The Janissaries quickly became the dominant force in Ottoman Libya. As a self-governing military guild answerable only to their own laws and protected by a Divan (in this context, a council of senior officers who advised the Pasha), the Janissaries soon reduced the Pasha to a largely ceremonial role.

Government councils

The Divan-ı Hümayun or Sublime Porte was for many years the council of ministers of the Ottoman Empire. It consisted of the Grand Vizier, who presided, and the other viziers, the kadi'askers, the nisanci, and the defterdars.

The Assemblies of the Danubian Principalities under Ottoman rule were also called "divan" ("Divanuri" in Romanian) (see Akkerman Convention, ad hoc Divan).

In Javanese and related languages, the cognate Dewan is the standard word for chamber, as in the Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat or Chamber of People's Representatives..

Ministerial departments

In the sultanate of Morocco, several portfolio Ministries had a title based on Diwan:

  • Diwan al-Alaf: Ministry of War.
  • Diwan al-Bahr: 'Ministry of the Sea', i.e. (overseas=) Foreign Ministry.
  • Diwan al-Shikayat (or - Chikayat): Ministry of Complaints (Ombudsman).

References

  1. ^ a b c de Blois 1995, p. 432.
  2. ^ a b c Duri 1991, p. 323.
  3. ^ Holt, Lambton & Lewis 1977, p. 533.
  4. ^ Bosworth 1995, pp. 432–433.
  5. ^ Wellhausen 1927, pp. 115–116.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Bosworth 1995, p. 433.
  7. ^ Duri 1991, pp. 323–324.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Duri 1991, p. 324.
  9. ^ Sprengling 1939, pp. 211–214.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g h Duri 1991, p. 325.
  11. ^ Duri 1991, pp. 324, 325.
  12. ^ a b c d e Bosworth 1995, p. 434.
  13. ^ Lambton 1988, pp. 28–29.
  14. ^ a b Korobeinikov 2014, p. 84.
  15. ^ a b Bosworth 1995, p. 435.

Sources

  • Bosworth, C. E. (1995). "DĪVĀN – ii. GOVERNMENT OFFICE". In Yarshater, Ehsan (ed.). Encyclopaedia Iranica. Vol. VII. pp. 432–438.
  • de Blois, François (1995). "DĪVĀN – i. THE TERM". In Yarshater, Ehsan (ed.). Encyclopaedia Iranica. Vol. VII. p. 432.
  • Duri, A. A. (1991). "Dīwān i.—The caliphate". The Encyclopedia of Islam, New Edition, Volume II: C–G. Leiden and New York: BRILL. pp. 323–327. ISBN 90-04-07026-5.
  • Holt, P. M.; Lambton, Ann K. S.; Lewis, Bernard, eds. (1977). The Cambridge History of Islam, Volume 2B: Islamic Society and Civilization. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-29138-5.
  • Korobeinikov, Dimitri (2014). Byzantium and the Turks in the Thirteenth Century. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-870826-1.
  • Lambton, Ann K. S. (1988). Continuity and Change in Medieval Persia. Albany, New York: State University of New York Press. ISBN 0-88706-133-8.
  • Sprengling, M. (April 1939). "From Persian to Arabic". The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures. The University of Chicago Press. 56 (2): 175–224. doi:10.1086/370538. JSTOR 528934.
  • Wellhausen, Julius (1927). The Arab Kingdom and its Fall. Translated by Margaret Graham Weir. Calcutta: University of Calcutta. OCLC 752790641.

divan, type, modern, furniture, furniture, other, uses, diwan, disambiguation, diwan, redirects, here, room, fort, delhi, diwan, fort, divan, diwan, persian, دیوان, dīvān, from, sumerian, clay, tablet, high, government, ministry, various, islamic, states, chie. For the type of modern furniture see Divan furniture For other uses see Diwan disambiguation Diwan i Am redirects here For the room in the Red Fort of Delhi see Diwan i Am Red Fort A divan or diwan Persian دیوان divan from Sumerian dub clay tablet 1 was a high government ministry in various Islamic states or its chief official see dewan Audience in the Diwan i Khas granted to the French ambassador the vicomte d Andrezel by Ottoman Sultan Ahmed III 10 October 1724 in a contemporary painting by Jean Baptiste van Mour Contents 1 Etymology 2 Creation and development under the early Caliphates 2 1 Establishment and Umayyad period 2 2 Abbasid period 3 Later Islamic dynasties 3 1 Saffarids Ziyarid Sajids Buyids and Samanids 3 2 Seljuks 3 3 Ottoman Tripolitania 4 Government councils 5 Ministerial departments 6 References 7 SourcesEtymology Edit The winter Diwan of a Mughal Nawab painting from 1812 The word recorded in English since 1586 meaning Oriental council of a state comes from Turkish divan from Arabic diwan It is first attested in Middle Persian spelled as dpywʾn and dywʾn itself hearkening back via Old Persian Elamite and Akkadian ultimately to Sumerian dub clay tablet 1 The word was borrowed into Armenian as well as divan on linguistic grounds this is placed after the 3rd century which helps establish the original Middle Persian and eventually New Persian form was divan not devan despite later legends that traced the origin of the word to the latter form The variant pronunciation devan however did exist and is the form surviving to this day in Tajiki Persian 1 In Arabic the term was first used for the army registers then generalized to any register and by metonymy applied to specific government departments 2 The sense of the word evolved to custom house and council chamber then to long cushioned seat such as are found along the walls in Middle Eastern council chambers The latter is the sense that entered European languages as divan furniture The modern French Dutch Spanish and Italian words douane aduana and dogana respectively meaning customs house also come from diwan 3 Creation and development under the early Caliphates EditEstablishment and Umayyad period Edit See also Rashidun Caliphate and Umayyad Caliphate The first diwan was created under Caliph Umar r 634 644 CE in 15 A H 636 7 CE or more likely 20 A H 641 CE It comprised the names of the warriors of Medina who participated in the Muslim conquests and their families and was intended to facilitate the payment of salary ʿaṭaʾ in coin or in rations to them according to their service and their relationship to Muhammad This first army register diwan al jund was soon emulated in other provincial capitals like Basra Kufa and Fustat 2 4 Al Mughira ibn Shu ba a statesman from the Thaqif tribe who was versed in Persian is credited with establishing Basra s diwan during his governorship 636 638 and the diwan of the Caliphate s other garrison centers followed its organization 5 With the advent of the Umayyad Caliphate the number of diwans increased To the diwan al jund the first Umayyad caliph Mu awiya r 661 680 added the bureau of the land tax diwan al kharaj in Damascus which became the main diwan as well as the bureau of correspondence diwan al rasaʾil which drafted the caliph s letters and official documents and the bureau of the seal diwan al khatam which checked and kept copies of all correspondence before sealing and dispatching it 2 6 A number of more specialist departments were also established probably by Mu awiya the diwan al barid in charge of the postal service the bureau of expenditure diwan al nafaqat which most likely indicates the survival of a Byzantine institution the diwan al ṣadaqa was a new foundation with the task of estimating the zakat and ʿushr levies the diwan al mustaghallat administered state property in cities the diwan al ṭiraz controlled the government workshops that made official banners costumes and some furniture 6 7 Aside from the central government there was a local branch of the diwan al kharaj the diwan al jund and the diwan al rasaʾil in every province 8 Under Caliph Abd al Malik r 685 705 the practices of the various departments began to be standardized and Arabized instead of the local languages Greek in Syria Coptic and Greek in Egypt Persian in the former Sasanian lands and the traditional practices of book keeping seals and time keeping only Arabic and the Islamic calendar were to be used henceforth The process of Arabization was gradual in Iraq the transition was carried out by Salih ibn Abd al Rahman under the auspices of the governor al Hajjaj ibn Yusuf in 697 in Syria by Sulayman ibn Sa d al Khushani in 700 in Egypt under Caliph al Walid I s governor Abdallah ibn Abd al Malik in 706 and in Khurasan by Ishaq ibn Tulayq al Nahshali on the orders of Yusuf ibn Umar al Thaqafi governor of Iraq in 741 42 8 9 Abbasid period Edit See also Abbasid Caliphate Under the Abbasid Caliphate the administration partly under the increasing influence of Iranian culture became more elaborate and complex 6 As part of this process the diwans increased in number and sophistication reaching their apogee in the 9th 10th centuries 8 At the same time the office of vizier wazir was also created to coordinate government 8 The administrative history of the Abbasid diwans is complex since many were short lived temporary establishments for specific needs while at times the sections of larger diwan might also be termed diwans and often a single individual was placed in charge of more than one department 10 Caliph al Saffah r 749 754 established a department for the confiscated properties of the Umayyads after his victory in the Abbasid Revolution This was probably the antecedent of the later diwan al ḍiyaʿ administering the caliph s personal domains 8 Similarly under al Mansur r 754 775 there was a bureau of confiscations diwan al muṣadara as well as a diwan al aḥsham probably in charge of palace service personnel and a bureau of petitions to the Caliph diwan al riḳaʿ 8 Caliph al Mahdi r 775 785 created a parallel diwan al zimam control bureau for every one of the existing diwans as well as a central control bureau zimam al azimma These acted as comptrollers as well as coordinators between the various bureaus or between individual diwans and the vizier 8 In addition a diwan al maẓalim was created staffed by judges to hear complaints against government officials 8 The remit of the diwan al kharaj now included all land taxes kharaj zakat and jizya both in money and in kind while another department the diwan al ṣadaqa dealt with assessing the zakat of cattle The correspondence of the diwan al kharaj was checked by another department the diwan al khatam 11 As in Umayyad times miniature copies of the diwan al kharaj the diwan al jund and the diwan al rasaʾil existed in every province but by the mid 9th century each province also maintained a branch of its diwan al kharaj in the capital 8 The treasury department bayt al mal or diwan al sami kept the records of revenue and expenditure both in money and in kind with specialized diwans for each category of the latter e g cereals cloth etc Its secretary had to mark all orders of payment to make them valid and it drew up monthly and yearly balance sheets 10 The diwan al jahbad ha responsible for the treasury s balance sheets was eventually branched off from it while the treasury domains were placed under the diwan al ḍiyaʿ of which there appear at times to have been several 10 In addition a department of confiscated property diwan al musadarin and confiscated estates diwan al ḍiyaʿ al maqbuḍa existed 10 Caliph al Mu tadid r 892 902 grouped the branches of the provincial diwans present in the capital into a new department the diwan al dar bureau of the palace or diwan al dar al kabir great bureau of the palace where al dar probably meant the vizier s palace 8 At the same time the various zimam bureaux were combined into a single diwan al zimam which re checked all assessments payments and receipts against its own records and according to the 11th century scholar al Mawardi was the guardian of the rights of bayt al mal the treasury and the people 10 The diwan al nafaḳat played a similar role with regards to expenses by the individual diwans but by the end of the 9th century its role was mostly restricted to the finances of the caliphal palace 10 Under al Muktafi r 902 908 the diwan al dar was broken up into three departments the bureaux of the eastern provinces diwan al mashriq of the western provinces diwan al maghrib and of the Iraq diwan al sawad although under al Muqtadir r 908 932 the diwan al dar still existed with the three territorial departments considered sections of the latter 8 In 913 4 the vizier Ali ibn Isa established a new department for charitable endowments diwan al birr whose revenue went to the upkeep of holy places the two holy cities of Mecca and Medina and on volunteers fighting in the holy war against the Byzantine Empire 10 Under Caliph al Mutawakkil r 847 861 a bureau of servants and pages diwan al mawali wa l ghilman possibly an evolution of the diwan al aḥsham existed for the huge number of slaves and other attendants of the palace 8 In addition the diwan al khatam now also known as the diwan al sirr bureau of confidential affairs grew in importance 8 Miskawayh also mentions the existence of a diwan al ḥaram which supervised the women s quarters of the palace 10 Later Islamic dynasties EditFurther information Anarchy at Samarra Abbasid civil war 865 866 Zanj Rebellion and Kharijite Rebellion 866 896 As the Abbasid Caliphate began to fragment in the mid 9th century its administrative machinery was copied by the emergent successor dynasties with the already extant local diwan branches likely providing the base on which the new administrations were formed 6 Saffarids Ziyarid Sajids Buyids and Samanids Edit Further information Anarchy at Samarra and Al Muti The administrative machinery of the Tahirid governors of Khurasan is almost unknown except that their treasury was located in their capital of Nishapur 6 Ya qub al Saffar r 867 879 the founder of the Saffarid dynasty who supplanted the Tahirids is known to have had a bureau of the army diwan al ʿarḍ for keeping the lists and supervising the payment of the troops at his capital Zarang Under his successor Amr ibn al Layth r 879 901 there were two further treasuries the mal e khaṣṣa and an unnamed bureau under the chief secretary corresponding to a chancery diwan al rasaʾil or diwan al inshaʾ 6 The Buyids who took over Baghdad and the remains of the Abbasid Caliphate in 946 drew partly on the established Abbasid practice but was adapted to suit the nature of the rather decentralized Buyid confederation of autonomous emirates 12 The Buyid bureaucracy was headed by three great departments the diwan al wazir charged with finances the diwan al rasaʾil as the state chancery and the diwan al jaysh for the army 12 The Buyid regime was a military regime its ruling caste composed of Turkish and Daylamite troops As a result the army department was of particular importance and its head the ʿariḍ al jaysh is frequently mentioned in the sources of the period Indeed at the turn of the 11th century there were two ʿariḍs one for the Turks and one for the Daylamites hence the department was often called department of the two armies diwan al jayshayn 12 A number of junior departments like the diwan al zimam the diwan al ḍiyaʿ or the diwan al barid were directly inherited from the Abbasid government Under Adud al Dawla r 978 983 however the diwan al sawad which oversaw the rich lands of lower Iraq was moved from Baghdad to Shiraz In addition a diwan al khilafa was established to oversee the affairs of the Abbasid caliphs who continued to reside in Baghdad as puppets of the Buyid emirs 12 Seljuks Edit See also Seljuk Sultanate Seljuk dynasty and Al Muqtadi The Great Seljuks tended to cherish their nomadic origins with their sultans leading a peripatetic court to their various capitals Coupled with their frequent absence on campaign the vizier assumed an even greater prominence concentrating the direction of civil military and religious affairs in his own bureau the supreme diwan diwan al aʿla 12 The diwan al aʿla was further subdivided into a chancery diwan al inshaʾ wa l ṭughra also called diwan al rasaʾil under the ṭughraʾi or munshi al mamalik an accounting department diwan al zimam wa l istifaʾ under the mustawfi al mamalik a fiscal oversight office diwan al ishraf or diwan al muʿamalat under the mushrif al mamalik and the army department diwan al ʿarḍ or diwan al jaysh under the ʿariḍ further divided into the recruitment and supply bureau diwan al rawatib and the salary and land grants bureau diwan al iqṭaʾ 13 14 A number of lesser departments is also attested although they may not have existed at the same time the office charged with the redress of grievances diwan al maẓalim the state treasury bayt al mal and the sultan s private treasury bayt al mal al khaṣṣ confiscations diwan al muṣadara the land tax office diwan al kharaj and the department of religious endowments or waqfs diwan al awqaf A postal department diwan al barid also existed but fell into disuse 14 15 The system was apparently partly copied in provincial centres as well 15 Ottoman Tripolitania Edit See also Government of the Classical Ottoman Empire Ottoman Algeria and Ottoman Tunisia Following the Ottoman conquest of North Africa the Maghreb was divided into three provinces Algiers Tunis and Tripoli After 1565 administrative authority in Tripoli was vested in a Pasha directly appointed by the Sultan in Constantinople The sultan provided the pasha with a corps of Janissaries which was in turn divided into a number of companies under the command of a junior officer or Bey The Janissaries quickly became the dominant force in Ottoman Libya As a self governing military guild answerable only to their own laws and protected by a Divan in this context a council of senior officers who advised the Pasha the Janissaries soon reduced the Pasha to a largely ceremonial role Government councils EditThe Divan i Humayun or Sublime Porte was for many years the council of ministers of the Ottoman Empire It consisted of the Grand Vizier who presided and the other viziers the kadi askers the nisanci and the defterdars The Assemblies of the Danubian Principalities under Ottoman rule were also called divan Divanuri in Romanian see Akkerman Convention ad hoc Divan In Javanese and related languages the cognate Dewan is the standard word for chamber as in the Dewan Perwakilan Rakyat or Chamber of People s Representatives Ministerial departments EditIn the sultanate of Morocco several portfolio Ministries had a title based on Diwan Diwan al Alaf Ministry of War Diwan al Bahr Ministry of the Sea i e overseas Foreign Ministry Diwan al Shikayat or Chikayat Ministry of Complaints Ombudsman References Edit a b c de Blois 1995 p 432 a b c Duri 1991 p 323 Holt Lambton amp Lewis 1977 p 533 Bosworth 1995 pp 432 433 Wellhausen 1927 pp 115 116 a b c d e f Bosworth 1995 p 433 Duri 1991 pp 323 324 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Duri 1991 p 324 Sprengling 1939 pp 211 214 a b c d e f g h Duri 1991 p 325 Duri 1991 pp 324 325 a b c d e Bosworth 1995 p 434 Lambton 1988 pp 28 29 a b Korobeinikov 2014 p 84 a b Bosworth 1995 p 435 Sources EditBosworth C E 1995 DiVAN ii GOVERNMENT OFFICE In Yarshater Ehsan ed Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol VII pp 432 438 de Blois Francois 1995 DiVAN i THE TERM In Yarshater Ehsan ed Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol VII p 432 Duri A A 1991 Diwan i The caliphate The Encyclopedia of Islam New Edition Volume II C G Leiden and New York BRILL pp 323 327 ISBN 90 04 07026 5 Holt P M Lambton Ann K S Lewis Bernard eds 1977 The Cambridge History of Islam Volume 2B Islamic Society and Civilization Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 29138 5 Korobeinikov Dimitri 2014 Byzantium and the Turks in the Thirteenth Century Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 870826 1 Lambton Ann K S 1988 Continuity and Change in Medieval Persia Albany New York State University of New York Press ISBN 0 88706 133 8 Sprengling M April 1939 From Persian to Arabic The American Journal of Semitic Languages and Literatures The University of Chicago Press 56 2 175 224 doi 10 1086 370538 JSTOR 528934 Wellhausen Julius 1927 The Arab Kingdom and its Fall Translated by Margaret Graham Weir Calcutta University of Calcutta OCLC 752790641 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Divan amp oldid 1115608269, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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