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Emirate of Bukhara

The Emirate of Bukhara (Persian: امارت بخارا, romanizedEmārat-e Bokhārā,[7] Chagatay: بخارا امیرلیگی, romanized: Bukhārā Amirligi) was a Muslim polity in Central Asia[8] that existed from 1785 to 1920 in what is modern-day Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan. It occupied the land between the Amu Darya and Syr Darya rivers, known formerly as Transoxiana. Its core territory was the fertile land along the lower Zarafshon river, and its urban centres were the ancient cities of Samarqand and the emirate's capital, Bukhara. It was contemporaneous with the Khanate of Khiva to the west, in Khwarazm, and the Khanate of Kokand to the east, in Fergana. In 1920, it ended with the establishment of the Bukharan People's Soviet Republic.

Emirate of Bukhara
امارت بخارا (Persian)
Emārat-e Bokhārā (Persian)
بخارا امیرلیگی (Chagatay)
Bukhārā Amirligi (Chagatay)
1785–1920
Flag
The Emirate of Bukhara and main polities in Asia c. 1800
The Emirate of Bukhara under Russian rule c. 1900
Status
CapitalBukhara
Common languages
Religion
Sunni Islam, Shia Islam, Sufism (Naqshbandi), Zoroastrianism, Judaism
GovernmentAbsolute monarchy
Emir 
• 1785–1800
Mir Masum Shah Murad
• 1911–1920
Mir Muhammad Alim Khan
History 
• Manghit control
1747
• Established
1785
• Conquered by Russia
1868
• Russian protectorate
1873
• Disestablished
October 1920
Population
• 1875[4]
c. 2,478,000
• 1911[5]
c. 3,000,000–3,500,000
Currencyfulus, tilla, and tenga.[6]

History

The Emirate of Bukhara was officially created in 1785, upon the assumption of rulership by the Manghit emir, Shah Murad. Shahmurad, formalized the family's dynastic rule (Manghit dynasty), and the khanate became the Emirate of Bukhara.[9]

As one of the few states in Central Asia after the Mongol Empire not ruled by descendants of Genghis Khan (besides the Timurids), it staked its legitimacy on Islamic principles rather than Genghisid blood, as the ruler took the Islamic title of Emir instead of Khan. In the 18th-19th centuries, Khwarazm (Khiva Khanate) was ruled by the Uzbek dynasty of Kungrats.[10]

Over the course of the 18th century, the emirs had slowly gained effective control of the Khanate of Bukhara, from their position as ataliq; and by the 1740s, when the khanate was conquered by Nadir Shah of Persia, it was clear that the emirs held the real power. In 1747, after Nadir Shah's death, the ataliq Muhammad Rahim Bi murdered Abulfayz Khan and his son, ending the Janid dynasty [fa]. From then on the emirs allowed puppet khans to rule until, following the death of Abu l-Ghazi Khan, Shah Murad assumed the throne openly.[11]

Fitzroy Maclean recounts in Eastern Approaches how Charles Stoddart and Arthur Conolly were executed by Nasrullah Khan in the context of The Great Game, and how Joseph Wolff, known as the Eccentric Missionary, escaped their fate when he came looking for them in 1845. He was wearing his full canonical costume, which caused the Emir to burst out laughing, and "Dr Wolff was eventually suffered to leave Bokhara, greatly to the surprise of the populace, who were not accustomed to such clemency."[12]

In 1868, the emirate lost a war with Imperial Russia, which had aspirations of conquest in the region. Russia annexed much of the emirate's territory, including the important city of Samarkand.[13] In 1873, the remainder became a Russian protectorate,[14] and was soon surrounded by the Governorate-General of Turkestan.

Reformists within the Emirate had found the conservative emir, Mohammed Alim Khan, unwilling to loosen his grip on power, and had turned to the Russian Bolshevik revolutionaries for military assistance. The Red Army launched an unsuccessful assault in March 1920, and then a successful one in September of the same year.[15] The Emirate of Bukhara was conquered by the Bolsheviks and replaced with the Bukharan People's Soviet Republic. Today, the territory of the defunct emirate lies mostly in Uzbekistan, with parts in Tajikistan, Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan. In the first half of the 19th century it had some influence in northern Afghanistan, as the emirs of the Chahar Wilayat (Maimana, Sheberghan, Andkhui, Sar-i Pol) nominally accepted Bukharan suzerainty.[16]

Culture

In the era of the Manghyt emirs in Bukhara, a large construction of madrasahs, mosques and palaces was carried out. Located along important trading routes, Bukhara enjoyed a rich cultural mixture, including Persian, Uzbek, and Jewish influences.

A local school of historians developed in the Bukhara emirate. The most famous historians were Mirza Shams Bukhari, Muhammad Yakub ibn Daniyalbiy, Muhammad Mir Olim Bukhari, Ahmad Donish, Mirza Abdalazim Sami, Mirza Salimbek.[17]

The city of Bukhara has a rich history of Persian architecture and literature, traditions that were continued into the Emirate Period. Prominent artists of the period include the poet Kiromi Bukhoroi, the calligrapher Mirza Abd al-Aziz Bukhari and the scholar Rahmat-Allah Bukhari. Throughout this period, the madrasahs of the region were renowned.

Administrative and territorial structure

 
A map of the Khanate of Bukhara's beyliks.
 
Fires in Bukhara during the Red Army's attack, 1 September 1920

Administratively, the Emirate was divided into several beyliks or bekliks:

  1. Baljuvon, (now Khatlon Region, Tajikistan).
  2. Hisar, (now Tajikistan)
  3. Burdalik, (now Lebap Region, Turkmenistan)
  4. Guzar, (now Qashqadaryo Region, Uzbekistan)
  5. Charjuy, (now Lebap Region, Turkmenistan)
  6. Darvaz, (c 1878, now Darvaz district, Tajikistan)
  7. Dehnav, (now Surxondaryo Region, Uzbekistan)
  8. Kabakli, (now Lebap Region, Turkmenistan)
  9. Karakul, (now Bukhara Region, Uzbekistan)
  10. Karategin, (now Rasht district, Tajikistan)
  11. Karshi, (now Qashqadaryo Region, Uzbekistan)
  12. Kattakurgan, (now Samarkand region, Uzbekistan)
  13. Kulyab, (now Khatlon Region, Tajikistan)
  14. Karshi, (now Qashqadaryo Region, Uzbekistan)
  15. Kerki, (now Lebap Region, Turkmenistan)
  16. Nurata, (now Navoiy Region, Uzbekistan)
  17. Panjikent, (now Sughd province, Tajikistan)
  18. Rushan, (now Gorno-Badakhshan Autonomous region, Tajikistan)
  19. Samarkand, (now Samarqand Region, Uzbekistan — part of Russia since 1868
  20. Shahrisabz, (c 1870, now Kashkadarya Region, Uzbekistan)
  21. Urgut, (now Samarqand Region, Uzbekistan)
  22. Falgar, (now Sughd province, Tajikistan)

Amirs/Emirs of Bukhara (1785–1920)

Titular Name Personal Name Reign
Ataliq
اتالیق
Khudayar Bey
خدایار بیگ
?
Ataliq
اتالیق
Muhammad Hakim
محمد حکیم
?–1747
Ataliq
اتالیق
Muhammad Rahim
محمد رحیم
1747–1753
Amir
امیر
Muhammad Rahim
محمد رحیم
1753–1756
Khan
خان
Muhammad Rahim
محمد رحیم
1756–1758
Ataliq
اتالیق
Daniyal Biy
دانیال بیگ
1758–1785
Amir Masum
امیر معصوم
Shahmurad
شاہ مراد بن دانیال بیگ
1785–1800
Amir
امیر
Haydar bin Shahmurad
حیدر تورہ بن شاہ مراد
1800–1826
Amir
امیر
Mir Hussein bin Haydar
حسین بن حیدر تورہ
1826–1827
Amir
امیر
Umar bin Haydar
عمر بن حیدر تورہ
1827
Amir
امیر
Nasr-Allah bin Haydar Tora
نصراللہ بن حیدر تورہ
1827–1860
Amir
امیر
Muzaffar bin Nasrullah
مظفر الدین بن نصراللہ
1860–1886
Amir
امیر
Abdul-Ahad bin Muzaffar al-Din
عبد الأحد بن مظفر الدین
1886–1911
Amir
امیر
Muhammad Alim Khan bin Abdul-Ahad
محمد عالم خان بن عبد الأحد
1911–1920
Overthrow of Emirate of Bukhara by Bukharan People's Soviet Republic.
  • Pink Rows denote progenitor chiefs serving as Tutors (Ataliqs) & Viziers to the Khans of Bukhara.
  • Green Rows denote chiefs who took over reign of government from the Janids and placed puppet Khans.
  • A photo of Mohammed Alim Khan, final emir 1911-1920, is shown at Emir.

See also

References

  1. ^ Roy (2000), The new Central Asia: the creation of nations, p.70
  2. ^ "About the national delimitation in Central Asia"
  3. ^ Grenoble, Lenore (2003). Language Policy of the Soviet Union. Kluwer Academic Publishers. p. 143. ISBN 1-4020-1298-5.
  4. ^
  5. ^ Olufsen, Ole (1911). The emir of Bokhara and his country; journeys and studies in Bokhara. Gyldendal: Nordisk forlag. p. 282.
  6. ^ ANS Magazine. "The Coinage of the Mangit Dynasty of Bukhara" 15 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine by Peter Donovan. Retrieved: 16 July 2017.
  7. ^ "نگاهی به امارت بخارا در صد سالگی انقلاب اکتبر". BBC News.
  8. ^ Golden, Peter B. (2011). Central Asia in World History. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press. p. 115.
  9. ^ Soucek, Svat. A History of Inner Asia (2000), p. 180.
  10. ^ Bregel, Y. The new Uzbek states: Bukhara, Khiva and Khoqand: C. 1750–1886. In N. Di Cosmo, A. Frank, & P. Golden (Eds.), The Cambridge History of Inner Asia: The Chinggisid Age (pp. 392-411). Cambridge: Cambridge University Press 2009
  11. ^ Soucek (2000), pp. 179–180
  12. ^ Eastern Approaches ch 6 "Bokhara the Noble"
  13. ^ Soucek (2000), p. 198
  14. ^ Russo-Bukharan War 1868, Armed Conflict Events Database, OnWar.com
  15. ^ Soucek (2000), pp. 221–222
  16. ^ Lee, Jonathan L. (1 January 1996). The "Ancient Supremacy": Bukhara, Afghanistan and the Battle for Balkh, 1731-1901. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-10399-3.
  17. ^ Anke fon Kyugel'gen, Legitimizatsiya sredneaziatskoy dinastii mangitov v proizvedeniyakh ikh istorikov (XVIII-XIX vv.). Almaty: Dayk press, 2004

Bibliography

Literature

  • Malikov A., The Russian conquest of the Bukharan Emirate: military and diplomatic aspects in Central Asian Survey, Volume 33, issue 2, 2014, p. 180-198

External links

  •   Media related to Emirate of Bukhara at Wikimedia Commons

emirate, bukhara, persian, امارت, بخارا, romanized, emārat, bokhārā, chagatay, بخارا, امیرلیگی, romanized, bukhārā, amirligi, muslim, polity, central, asia, that, existed, from, 1785, 1920, what, modern, uzbekistan, tajikistan, turkmenistan, kazakhstan, occupi. The Emirate of Bukhara Persian امارت بخارا romanized Emarat e Bokhara 7 Chagatay بخارا امیرلیگی romanized Bukhara Amirligi was a Muslim polity in Central Asia 8 that existed from 1785 to 1920 in what is modern day Uzbekistan Tajikistan Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan It occupied the land between the Amu Darya and Syr Darya rivers known formerly as Transoxiana Its core territory was the fertile land along the lower Zarafshon river and its urban centres were the ancient cities of Samarqand and the emirate s capital Bukhara It was contemporaneous with the Khanate of Khiva to the west in Khwarazm and the Khanate of Kokand to the east in Fergana In 1920 it ended with the establishment of the Bukharan People s Soviet Republic Emirate of Bukharaامارت بخارا Persian Emarat e Bokhara Persian بخارا امیرلیگی Chagatay Bukhara Amirligi Chagatay 1785 1920Flag1800QING EMPIREMARATHAEMPIREQAJAREMPIREOTTOMANEMPIREKHIVAKHANATEBUKHARAEMIRATEKOKANDKUMULDURRANIEMPIREKALATKAZAKH KHANATERUSSIAN EMPIREJO SEONDAIVIETSIAMKINGDOM The Emirate of Bukhara and main polities in Asia c 1800The Emirate of Bukhara under Russian rule c 1900StatusIndependent emirate 1785 1873 Quasi independent Russian protectorate 1873 1920 CapitalBukharaCommon languagesPersian official 1 2 Chagatai Turkic 3 ReligionSunni Islam Shia Islam Sufism Naqshbandi Zoroastrianism JudaismGovernmentAbsolute monarchyEmir 1785 1800Mir Masum Shah Murad 1911 1920Mir Muhammad Alim KhanHistory Manghit control1747 Established1785 Conquered by Russia1868 Russian protectorate1873 DisestablishedOctober 1920Population 1875 4 c 2 478 000 1911 5 c 3 000 000 3 500 000Currencyfulus tilla and tenga 6 Preceded by Succeeded byKhanate of Bukhara Bukharan People s Soviet Republic Contents 1 History 2 Culture 3 Administrative and territorial structure 4 Amirs Emirs of Bukhara 1785 1920 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Bibliography 7 Literature 8 External linksHistory EditSee also Bukharan Revolution and Bukhara operation 1920 The Emirate of Bukhara was officially created in 1785 upon the assumption of rulership by the Manghit emir Shah Murad Shahmurad formalized the family s dynastic rule Manghit dynasty and the khanate became the Emirate of Bukhara 9 As one of the few states in Central Asia after the Mongol Empire not ruled by descendants of Genghis Khan besides the Timurids it staked its legitimacy on Islamic principles rather than Genghisid blood as the ruler took the Islamic title of Emir instead of Khan In the 18th 19th centuries Khwarazm Khiva Khanate was ruled by the Uzbek dynasty of Kungrats 10 Over the course of the 18th century the emirs had slowly gained effective control of the Khanate of Bukhara from their position as ataliq and by the 1740s when the khanate was conquered by Nadir Shah of Persia it was clear that the emirs held the real power In 1747 after Nadir Shah s death the ataliq Muhammad Rahim Bi murdered Abulfayz Khan and his son ending the Janid dynasty fa From then on the emirs allowed puppet khans to rule until following the death of Abu l Ghazi Khan Shah Murad assumed the throne openly 11 Fitzroy Maclean recounts in Eastern Approaches how Charles Stoddart and Arthur Conolly were executed by Nasrullah Khan in the context of The Great Game and how Joseph Wolff known as the Eccentric Missionary escaped their fate when he came looking for them in 1845 He was wearing his full canonical costume which caused the Emir to burst out laughing and Dr Wolff was eventually suffered to leave Bokhara greatly to the surprise of the populace who were not accustomed to such clemency 12 In 1868 the emirate lost a war with Imperial Russia which had aspirations of conquest in the region Russia annexed much of the emirate s territory including the important city of Samarkand 13 In 1873 the remainder became a Russian protectorate 14 and was soon surrounded by the Governorate General of Turkestan Reformists within the Emirate had found the conservative emir Mohammed Alim Khan unwilling to loosen his grip on power and had turned to the Russian Bolshevik revolutionaries for military assistance The Red Army launched an unsuccessful assault in March 1920 and then a successful one in September of the same year 15 The Emirate of Bukhara was conquered by the Bolsheviks and replaced with the Bukharan People s Soviet Republic Today the territory of the defunct emirate lies mostly in Uzbekistan with parts in Tajikistan Turkmenistan and Kazakhstan In the first half of the 19th century it had some influence in northern Afghanistan as the emirs of the Chahar Wilayat Maimana Sheberghan Andkhui Sar i Pol nominally accepted Bukharan suzerainty 16 Culture EditIn the era of the Manghyt emirs in Bukhara a large construction of madrasahs mosques and palaces was carried out Located along important trading routes Bukhara enjoyed a rich cultural mixture including Persian Uzbek and Jewish influences A local school of historians developed in the Bukhara emirate The most famous historians were Mirza Shams Bukhari Muhammad Yakub ibn Daniyalbiy Muhammad Mir Olim Bukhari Ahmad Donish Mirza Abdalazim Sami Mirza Salimbek 17 The city of Bukhara has a rich history of Persian architecture and literature traditions that were continued into the Emirate Period Prominent artists of the period include the poet Kiromi Bukhoroi the calligrapher Mirza Abd al Aziz Bukhari and the scholar Rahmat Allah Bukhari Throughout this period the madrasahs of the region were renowned The Emir of Bukhara and the notables of the city watch how the heads of Russian soldiers are impaled on poles Samarkand Chor Minor Madrasah Bukhara built in 1807 A bureaucrat in Bukhara ca 1910 Large Medallion Suzani textile from Bukhara mid 18th century Administrative and territorial structure Edit A map of the Khanate of Bukhara s beyliks Fires in Bukhara during the Red Army s attack 1 September 1920 Administratively the Emirate was divided into several beyliks or bekliks Baljuvon now Khatlon Region Tajikistan Hisar now Tajikistan Burdalik now Lebap Region Turkmenistan Guzar now Qashqadaryo Region Uzbekistan Charjuy now Lebap Region Turkmenistan Darvaz c 1878 now Darvaz district Tajikistan Dehnav now Surxondaryo Region Uzbekistan Kabakli now Lebap Region Turkmenistan Karakul now Bukhara Region Uzbekistan Karategin now Rasht district Tajikistan Karshi now Qashqadaryo Region Uzbekistan Kattakurgan now Samarkand region Uzbekistan Kulyab now Khatlon Region Tajikistan Karshi now Qashqadaryo Region Uzbekistan Kerki now Lebap Region Turkmenistan Nurata now Navoiy Region Uzbekistan Panjikent now Sughd province Tajikistan Rushan now Gorno Badakhshan Autonomous region Tajikistan Samarkand now Samarqand Region Uzbekistan part of Russia since 1868 Shahrisabz c 1870 now Kashkadarya Region Uzbekistan Urgut now Samarqand Region Uzbekistan Falgar now Sughd province Tajikistan Amirs Emirs of Bukhara 1785 1920 EditTitular Name Personal Name ReignAtaliqاتالیق Khudayar Beyخدایار بیگ Ataliqاتالیق Muhammad Hakimمحمد حکیم 1747Ataliqاتالیق Muhammad Rahim محمد رحیم 1747 1753Amirامیر Muhammad Rahimمحمد رحیم 1753 1756Khanخان Muhammad Rahimمحمد رحیم 1756 1758Ataliqاتالیق Daniyal Biyدانیال بیگ 1758 1785Amir Masumامیر معصوم Shahmuradشاہ مراد بن دانیال بیگ 1785 1800Amirامیر Haydar bin Shahmuradحیدر تورہ بن شاہ مراد 1800 1826Amirامیر Mir Hussein bin Haydarحسین بن حیدر تورہ 1826 1827Amirامیر Umar bin Haydarعمر بن حیدر تورہ 1827Amirامیر Nasr Allah bin Haydar Tora نصراللہ بن حیدر تورہ 1827 1860Amirامیر Muzaffar bin Nasrullahمظفر الدین بن نصراللہ 1860 1886Amirامیر Abdul Ahad bin Muzaffar al Dinعبد الأحد بن مظفر الدین 1886 1911Amirامیر Muhammad Alim Khan bin Abdul Ahadمحمد عالم خان بن عبد الأحد 1911 1920Overthrow of Emirate of Bukhara by Bukharan People s Soviet Republic Pink Rows denote progenitor chiefs serving as Tutors Ataliqs amp Viziers to the Khans of Bukhara Green Rows denote chiefs who took over reign of government from the Janids and placed puppet Khans A photo of Mohammed Alim Khan final emir 1911 1920 is shown at Emir See also EditTimeline of the UzbeksReferences Edit Roy 2000 The new Central Asia the creation of nations p 70 About the national delimitation in Central Asia Grenoble Lenore 2003 Language Policy of the Soviet Union Kluwer Academic Publishers p 143 ISBN 1 4020 1298 5 Meyendorf E K Travel from Orenburg to Bukhara Foreword N A Halfin Moscow The main edition of the eastern literature of the publishing house Science 1975 in Russian Mejendorf E K Puteshestvie iz Orenburga v Buharu Predisl N A Halfina M Glavnaya redakciya vostochnoj literatury izdatelstva Nauka 1975 Olufsen Ole 1911 The emir of Bokhara and his country journeys and studies in Bokhara Gyldendal Nordisk forlag p 282 ANS Magazine The Coinage of the Mangit Dynasty of Bukhara Archived 15 July 2020 at the Wayback Machine by Peter Donovan Retrieved 16 July 2017 نگاهی به امارت بخارا در صد سالگی انقلاب اکتبر BBC News Golden Peter B 2011 Central Asia in World History Oxford UK Oxford University Press p 115 Soucek Svat A History of Inner Asia 2000 p 180 Bregel Y The new Uzbek states Bukhara Khiva and Khoqand C 1750 1886 In N Di Cosmo A Frank amp P Golden Eds The Cambridge History of Inner Asia The Chinggisid Age pp 392 411 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2009 Soucek 2000 pp 179 180 Eastern Approaches ch 6 Bokhara the Noble Soucek 2000 p 198 Russo Bukharan War 1868 Armed Conflict Events Database OnWar com Soucek 2000 pp 221 222 Lee Jonathan L 1 January 1996 The Ancient Supremacy Bukhara Afghanistan and the Battle for Balkh 1731 1901 BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 10399 3 Anke fon Kyugel gen Legitimizatsiya sredneaziatskoy dinastii mangitov v proizvedeniyakh ikh istorikov XVIII XIX vv Almaty Dayk press 2004 Bibliography Edit Soucek Svat 2000 A History of Inner Asia Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521657044 Literature EditMalikov A The Russian conquest of the Bukharan Emirate military and diplomatic aspects in Central Asian Survey Volume 33 issue 2 2014 p 180 198External links Edit Media related to Emirate of Bukhara at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emirate of Bukhara amp oldid 1146717565, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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