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Emirate of Muhammara

The Emirate of Muhammara or Sheikhdom of Muhammara, sometimes also called the Emirate of Arabistan or Sheikhdom of Arabistan,[1] was an autonomous emirate in modern-day Khuzestan province in Iran. during the late 19th and early 20th centuries, lasting until the Reza Khan re-established full control over the region in 1925.[2] Officially it was part of Qajar Iran, but the broader Khuzestan region had already enjoyed a large degree of autonomy under the previous rule of the Banu Ka'b (1740–1840),[3] under whom it had become thoroughly Arabized (whence the name Arabistan).[4]

Emirate of Muhammara
امارة المحمرة
1812–1925
Map of Arabistan in 1924, showing major tribes and roads
StatusAutonomous Emirate
CapitalAl-Muhammarah
Common languagesArabic
Religion
Islam
History 
• Established
1812
• Discovery of Oil
1908
1925
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part of Iran

In the 1840s, the ruling sheikh of the Banu Ka'b became a vasal of Jabir al-Ka'bi (1780–1881), in his capacity as the sheikh of Muhammara (Khorramshahr),[5] a port city in southern Khuzestan which had risen to prominence in the previous decade.[6] After the Anglo-Persian War of 1856–7, Sheikh Jabir grew completely independent of the Ka'b,[7] though as a member of the Ka'b tribe himself, he did claim the title "Sheikh of the Ka'b".[8] Under Jabir's successors Miz'al ibn Jabir (r. 1881–1897) and Khaz'al ibn Jabir (r. 1897–1924),[9] the power of the Sheikhs of Muhammara grew to such an extent so as to become the most significant power in the southern Khuzestan, notably also receiving some British colonial support.[10]

Ruling from Muhammara as his capital,[11] Sheikh Khaz'al turned to Arab nationalism, and emboldened particularly by the British discovery of oil in the region in 1908, he sought to gain independence from Iran.[12] He staged revolts in 1916 and 1924, the latter of which (called the Sheikh Khaz'al rebellion) led to the final subjugation of the emirate by Iran in November 1924 – January 1925,[13] which became a part of the modern Khuzestan province in 1936.[14] Following the downfall of Sheikh Khaz'al's rule in Arabistan, many Arab Iranians fled to neighboring countries such as (southern) Iraq and Kuwait, as well as to Bahrain and to the al-Ahsa' Governorate in Saudi Arabia, thus also introducing a significant Shi'i population into these countries.[15]

The semi-autonomous rule of Arab sheikhs over Khuzestan during this period is regarded by Arab nationalists as an abortive attempt at Arab independence,[16] while Iranian historians tend to treat it as part of the long-standing British attempts to control the region.[17]

Geography edit

The majority of Arabistan, with the exception of the Bakhtiari lands, fell within the geographical range of Mesopotamia[18] while bordering the Zagros mountains to the East.

History edit

Arabistan, a tract isolated by mountains, rivers and marsh from the Ottoman and Persian Empires, had always maintained a semi-independent position, free from any but sporadic interference from either power.[19]

15th-18th century edit

The rulers of Arabistan had carved out an independent existence since the late seventeenth century by playing the Persians against the Ottomans. Because of Qajar weakness, the Arabistan tribes retained a large measure of autonomy.[20] Until the early seventeenth century, the area east of the Shatt Al-Arab was an Arab emirate ruled by Sheikh Mubarak bin Abdul Muttalib. He ruled his emirate independently of both the Persian and Ottoman Empires. A later ruler, Sheikh Mansour, resisted Shah Abbas's attempts to interfere in his affairs. He also rejected the Shah’ s call to join the Persian forces besieging Baghdad in 1623.

18th-19th century: The rule of the Al Bu Nasir, Princes of Fallahiyah edit

Source:[21]

By the eighteenth century, the Bani Ka'b had constructed one of the gulf's largest seagoing fleets. Different accounts indicate that during this period of transition, the Ka’b recognized Ottoman sovereignty,[22] and that it was only after their post 1720 expansion into Arabistan that the question of their allegiance came to the fore. This was when Nadir Shah (1732–47 ) dispatched Muhammad Husayn Qajar to besiege Quban and the Ka'b sued for peace thereby accepting Persian suzerainty for the first time.[22]

The reign of Sheikh Salman edit

Thanks to a favorable location and the activities of this fleet, the economy on both sides of the Shatt flourished, and Ka‘b rulers were able to incorporate the Persian lands along the Karun as well as the nominally Ottoman districts of Muhammarah, Haffar, and Tamar, while retaining a degree of autonomy from both the Ottomans and the Persians.[22]

In 1763, the Ottoman authorities, in co-operation with the British, sought to weaken the Bani Ka’ b tribes and a joint Anglo-Ottoman campaign marched on Arabistan. This culminated in victory for the Arab tribes. Two years later, Persia launched a violent and destructive military campaign that led the Arab inhabitants of Arabistan to abandon their capital in Qabban and seek refuge in the village of Al-Fallahiyya. Because of this, Arabistan became fragmented and it divided into scattered tribal groups, the most prominent of which was the Al-Muhaysin. In due course, the capital of Arabistan moved again from the village of Al-Fallahiyya to the city of Al-Muhammara, which had been built by the Bani Ka’ b Arabs near the mouth of the river Karun on the Shatt Al-Arab, and continued to be Arabistan’ s capital until 1925. Al Muhammara was given its name because its soil was red.

19th-20th century: The rule of the Al Bu Kasib, Princes of Mohammerah edit

Since the emergence of Mohammerah in 1812 as an autonomous emirate in Arabistan, it had been a bone of contention between the Persian and Ottoman Empires.[23] The Emirate's strategic and commercial location in the Shatt al Arab accentuated Persian-Ottoman rivalry for control over it. Muhammarah subsequently became a hostage to the two states, until the 1847 Erzurum Treaty allotted it to Persia.[23] Despite the treaty, the emirate continued to be an autonomous entity, and the flow of Arab tribes across the Shatt al Arab preserved the Arab identity of the eastern bank of the Shatt. Thus Richard Frye maintains that the Arabs of Khuzistan and of the seaports of southern Persia were simply an extension of Arab settlements from the western bank.[24]

In 1890, a British consulate was established at Muhammarah.[25]

Relationship with central government edit

At the turn of the twentieth century, Arabistan was still a frontier zone that enjoyed considerable autonomy, and two prominent British observers of the time commented on its sense of separateness.[26] In the words of journalist Valentine Chirol, “The Turk and the Persian are both aliens in the land, equally hated by the Arab population, and both have proved equally unworthy and incompetent stewards of a splendid estate.[26] British imperialist George Curzon remarked that “No love is lost between the two people, the Persian regarding the Arab as an interloper and a dullard, and the Arab regarding the Persian, with some justice in this region, as a plotter and a rogue.[26]

The discovery of oil in Arabistan edit

In 1901 the Persian government had granted William Knox D'Arcy the exclusive right to drill for oil in certain parts of Persia, including the region in which the territories of the ruler of Arabistan were located. But in January 1903, the Shah of Persia, Mozaffar ad-Din Shah Qajar, granted a firman (Imperial edict) to the sheikh using language in which the Qajar government admitted, “at least by implication,” that it had exceeded its powers in conferring certain privileges on D’Arcy. The lands in question had belonged in the past to the sheikh, his tribesmen, and their ancestors.[27]

In 1908, William Knox D'Arcy discovered oil near Masjed Soleiman by contract with its local ruler, Ali-Qoli Khan Bakhtiari.[28][page needed][29]

Strategic importance of Mohammerah edit

Source:[22]

Starting with Colonel Chesney’ s expeditions (1835–37) to prove the navigability of the Tigris and Euphrates, which concluded that Muhammarah should be the center of communications between India and Europe, the East India Company tried to establish a foothold in the region. As Gamazof notes, the scramble over Muhammarah was understandable, for it had many desirable features. These included its anchorage in the deep and broad Haffar Canal; its good weather, safe harbor, and sweet water; the possibility of constructing stores and a wharf, or even a complete port; its strategic command of the Karun and the Shatt and the great rivers forming it; and its proximity to the trade of Baghdad, Basra, and the many local tribes that carried on commerce independently.

The same conditions also protected them from intrusive Iranian interference, while acceptance of the suzerainty of Iran ’ s rulers further ensured independence from Ottoman interference. Yet acceptance of suzerainty did not necessarily mean recognition of sovereignty, and the multiple claims of suzerainty over them, which continued through the second half of the nineteenth century, gave them even more room to maneuver.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Using various spellings and transliterations, the following names are used. Emirate of Muhammara: Franzén 2021, p. 256. Sheikhdom of Muhammara: Ehlers & Nejatian 2022. Emirate of Arabistan: Altaie 1993, p. 541; Takriti 2018, p. 100; Ward 2014, p. 76 . Sheikhdom of Arabistan: Herb 2015, p. 75; Minahan 2016, p. 481. Principality of Arabistan: Strunk 1977.
  2. ^ Franzén 2021, p. 256
  3. ^ Floor 2006. The Ka'b ruled over most of Khuzestan (Floor 2006, p. 302).
  4. ^ Elling 2013, p. 37, referring to Soucek 1984.
  5. ^ Floor 2006, p. 278.
  6. ^ It was already treated as a direct trade partner by the Government of India: see Floor 2006, p. 300.
  7. ^ Floor 2006, p. 295.
  8. ^ Floor 2006, p. 296.
  9. ^ Soucek 1984, p. 206.
  10. ^ Floor 2006, p. 307; cf. Altaie 1993, p. 541; Elling 2013, pp. 37–38, 105.
  11. ^ Altaie 1993, p. 541; Herb 2015, p. 75, referring to Lorimer 1908, pp. 129, 356.
  12. ^ Soucek 1984, pp. 206–207; Elling 2013, p. 37.
  13. ^ Soucek 1984, p. 207; Elling 2013, pp. 37–38.
  14. ^ Takriti 2018, p. 100.
  15. ^ Al-Naqeeb 2012, p. 73.
  16. ^ Franzén 2021, p. 256; Elling 2013, p. 105.
  17. ^ Elling 2013, p. 105.
  18. ^ Friedman, Isaiah (2018-04-17). Palestine A Twice-Promised Land?. Routledge. p. 48. doi:10.4324/9781351290081. ISBN 978-1-351-29008-1.
  19. ^ Mesopotamia, Bell, Gertrude Lowthian, 1868-1926 Rich, P. J. (Rich, Paul John) Bell, Gertrude Lowthian, 1868-1926. Asiatic Turkey Bell, Gertrude Lowthian, 1868-1926. Arab of (2008). Iraq and Gertrude Bell's The Arab of Mesopotamia. Lexington Books. p. 73. ISBN 978-0-7391-2561-8. OCLC 486979300.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  20. ^ Ward 2014, p. 76.
  21. ^ Shahnavaz, Shahbaz (2005). British and South West Persia. RoutledgeCurzon. p. 5.
  22. ^ a b c d Ateş, Sabri (2013). Ottoman-Iranian Borderlands : Making a Boundary 1843-1914. Cambridge University Press.
  23. ^ a b Mohammad), Abdulghani, J. M. (Jasim (2011). Iraq & Iran the years of crisis. Routledge. p. 123. ISBN 978-1-280-67016-9. OCLC 1162444426.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  24. ^ Frye, Richard Nelson (2003). The golden age of Persia : the Arabs in the East. Phonix. p. 236. ISBN 1-84212-011-5. OCLC 918277520.
  25. ^ Olson, Ani, Robert W. Salman H. (1987). Islamic and Middle Eastern societies. Michigan: Amana Books. p. 155.
  26. ^ a b c Potter., Lawrence G. (2004). The Evolution of the Iran-Iraq Boundary. p. 63.
  27. ^ Shafiee, Katayoun (9 March 2018). Machineries of oil : an infrastructural history of BP in Iran. p. 35. ISBN 978-0-262-34484-5. OCLC 1028747467.
  28. ^ Vassiliou, M. S. Historical Dictionary of the Petroleum Industry. Lanham, MD: Scarecrow, 2009. Print.
  29. ^ Peter Frangipan (2015). The Silk Roads: A New History of the World. Alfred A. Knopf. p. 319. ISBN 9781101946336.

Sources edit

  • Al-Naqeeb, Khaldoun Nassan (2012) [1990]. Society and State in the Gulf and Arab Peninsula: A Different Perspective. New York: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-62396-4.
    • Review: Altaie, Ali (1993). "Khaldoun Hasan Al-Naqeeb, Society and State in the Gulf and Arab Peninsula: A Different Perspective, trans. L. M. Kenny, emended by Ibrahim Hayani, under the aegis of the Project of Translation from Arabic (London: Routledge, 1990). Pp. 227". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 25 (3): 539–541. doi:10.1017/S0020743800059122. S2CID 204465945.
  • Ansari, Mostafa (1974). The History of Khuzistan, 1878–1925 (Unpublished PhD dissertation). Chicago: University of Chicago.
  • Ehlers, Eckart; Nejatian, Mohammad Hossein (2022). "Khorramshahr". Encyclopaedia Iranica Online. doi:10.1163/2330-4804_EIRO_COM_365070.
  • Elling, Rasmus Christian (2013). Minorities in Iran: Nationalism and Ethnicity after Khomeini. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. doi:10.1057/9781137047809. ISBN 978-1-137-04780-9.
  • Floor, Willem (2006). "The Rise and Fall of the Banū Kaʿb. A Borderer State in Southern Khuzestan". Iran: Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies. 44 (1): 277–315. doi:10.1080/05786967.2006.11834690. S2CID 192691234.
  • Franzén, Johan (2021). Pride and Power: A Modern History of Iraq. London: Hurst & Company. ISBN 9781787383951.
  • Herb, Michael (2015). The Wages of Oil: Parliaments and Economic Development in Kuwait and the UAE. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. doi:10.7591/9780801454691. ISBN 9780801454691.
  • Lorimer, John G. (1908). Gazetteer of the Persian Gulf, Oman, and Central Arabia, Vol. 2A: Geo-graphical and Statistical. Calcutta: Superintendent of Government Printing.
  • Minahan, James B. (2016). Encyclopedia of Stateless Nations: Ethnic and National Groups around the World (2nd ed.). Santa Barbara: Greenwood. ISBN 978-1-61069-953-2.
  • Shahnavaz, Shahbaz (2013). "Ḵazʿal Khan". Encyclopædia Iranica. Vol. XVI, Fasc. 2. pp. 188–197.
  • Soucek, Svat (1984). "Arabistan or Khuzistan". Iranian Studies. 17 (2–3): 195–213. doi:10.1080/00210868408701628. JSTOR 4310441.
  • Strunk, William Theodore (1977). The Reign of Shaykh Khaz'al Ibn Jābir and the Suppression of the Principality of 'Arabistān: A Study in British Imperialism in Southwestern Iran, 1897–1925 (Unpublished PhD dissertation). Indianapolis: Indiana University.
  • Takriti, Abdel Razzaq (2018). "Political Praxis in the Gulf: Ahmad al-Khatib and the Movement of Arab Nationalists, 1948–1969". In Hanssen, Jens; Weiss, Max (eds.). Arabic Thought against the Authoritarian Age: Towards an Intellectual History of the Present. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 86–112. doi:10.1017/9781108147781.007. ISBN 978-1-107-19338-3.
  • Ward, Steven R. (2014). Immortal: A Military History of Iran and Its Armed Forces. Georgetown University Press. ISBN 9781589012585. OCLC 869095274.

emirate, muhammara, sheikhdom, muhammara, sometimes, also, called, emirate, arabistan, sheikhdom, arabistan, autonomous, emirate, modern, khuzestan, province, iran, during, late, 19th, early, 20th, centuries, lasting, until, reza, khan, established, full, cont. The Emirate of Muhammara or Sheikhdom of Muhammara sometimes also called the Emirate of Arabistan or Sheikhdom of Arabistan 1 was an autonomous emirate in modern day Khuzestan province in Iran during the late 19th and early 20th centuries lasting until the Reza Khan re established full control over the region in 1925 2 Officially it was part of Qajar Iran but the broader Khuzestan region had already enjoyed a large degree of autonomy under the previous rule of the Banu Ka b 1740 1840 3 under whom it had become thoroughly Arabized whence the name Arabistan 4 Emirate of Muhammaraامارة المحمرة1812 1925Map of Arabistan in 1924 showing major tribes and roadsStatusAutonomous EmirateCapitalAl MuhammarahCommon languagesArabicReligionIslamHistory Established1812 Discovery of Oil1908 Sheikh Khazal rebellion1925Preceded by Succeeded byBanu Ka b Qajar IranToday part of IranIn the 1840s the ruling sheikh of the Banu Ka b became a vasal of Jabir al Ka bi 1780 1881 in his capacity as the sheikh of Muhammara Khorramshahr 5 a port city in southern Khuzestan which had risen to prominence in the previous decade 6 After the Anglo Persian War of 1856 7 Sheikh Jabir grew completely independent of the Ka b 7 though as a member of the Ka b tribe himself he did claim the title Sheikh of the Ka b 8 Under Jabir s successors Miz al ibn Jabir r 1881 1897 and Khaz al ibn Jabir r 1897 1924 9 the power of the Sheikhs of Muhammara grew to such an extent so as to become the most significant power in the southern Khuzestan notably also receiving some British colonial support 10 Ruling from Muhammara as his capital 11 Sheikh Khaz al turned to Arab nationalism and emboldened particularly by the British discovery of oil in the region in 1908 he sought to gain independence from Iran 12 He staged revolts in 1916 and 1924 the latter of which called the Sheikh Khaz al rebellion led to the final subjugation of the emirate by Iran in November 1924 January 1925 13 which became a part of the modern Khuzestan province in 1936 14 Following the downfall of Sheikh Khaz al s rule in Arabistan many Arab Iranians fled to neighboring countries such as southern Iraq and Kuwait as well as to Bahrain and to the al Ahsa Governorate in Saudi Arabia thus also introducing a significant Shi i population into these countries 15 The semi autonomous rule of Arab sheikhs over Khuzestan during this period is regarded by Arab nationalists as an abortive attempt at Arab independence 16 while Iranian historians tend to treat it as part of the long standing British attempts to control the region 17 Contents 1 Geography 2 History 2 1 15th 18th century 2 2 18th 19th century The rule of the Al Bu Nasir Princes of Fallahiyah 2 2 1 The reign of Sheikh Salman 2 3 19th 20th century The rule of the Al Bu Kasib Princes of Mohammerah 2 3 1 Relationship with central government 2 3 2 The discovery of oil in Arabistan 2 3 3 Strategic importance of Mohammerah 3 See also 4 References 4 1 SourcesGeography editThe majority of Arabistan with the exception of the Bakhtiari lands fell within the geographical range of Mesopotamia 18 while bordering the Zagros mountains to the East History editArabistan a tract isolated by mountains rivers and marsh from the Ottoman and Persian Empires had always maintained a semi independent position free from any but sporadic interference from either power 19 15th 18th century edit The rulers of Arabistan had carved out an independent existence since the late seventeenth century by playing the Persians against the Ottomans Because of Qajar weakness the Arabistan tribes retained a large measure of autonomy 20 Until the early seventeenth century the area east of the Shatt Al Arab was an Arab emirate ruled by Sheikh Mubarak bin Abdul Muttalib He ruled his emirate independently of both the Persian and Ottoman Empires A later ruler Sheikh Mansour resisted Shah Abbas s attempts to interfere in his affairs He also rejected the Shah s call to join the Persian forces besieging Baghdad in 1623 18th 19th century The rule of the Al Bu Nasir Princes of Fallahiyah edit Source 21 By the eighteenth century the Bani Ka b had constructed one of the gulf s largest seagoing fleets Different accounts indicate that during this period of transition the Ka b recognized Ottoman sovereignty 22 and that it was only after their post 1720 expansion into Arabistan that the question of their allegiance came to the fore This was when Nadir Shah 1732 47 dispatched Muhammad Husayn Qajar to besiege Quban and the Ka b sued for peace thereby accepting Persian suzerainty for the first time 22 The reign of Sheikh Salman edit Thanks to a favorable location and the activities of this fleet the economy on both sides of the Shatt flourished and Ka b rulers were able to incorporate the Persian lands along the Karun as well as the nominally Ottoman districts of Muhammarah Haffar and Tamar while retaining a degree of autonomy from both the Ottomans and the Persians 22 In 1763 the Ottoman authorities in co operation with the British sought to weaken the Bani Ka b tribes and a joint Anglo Ottoman campaign marched on Arabistan This culminated in victory for the Arab tribes Two years later Persia launched a violent and destructive military campaign that led the Arab inhabitants of Arabistan to abandon their capital in Qabban and seek refuge in the village of Al Fallahiyya Because of this Arabistan became fragmented and it divided into scattered tribal groups the most prominent of which was the Al Muhaysin In due course the capital of Arabistan moved again from the village of Al Fallahiyya to the city of Al Muhammara which had been built by the Bani Ka b Arabs near the mouth of the river Karun on the Shatt Al Arab and continued to be Arabistan s capital until 1925 Al Muhammara was given its name because its soil was red 19th 20th century The rule of the Al Bu Kasib Princes of Mohammerah edit Since the emergence of Mohammerah in 1812 as an autonomous emirate in Arabistan it had been a bone of contention between the Persian and Ottoman Empires 23 The Emirate s strategic and commercial location in the Shatt al Arab accentuated Persian Ottoman rivalry for control over it Muhammarah subsequently became a hostage to the two states until the 1847 Erzurum Treaty allotted it to Persia 23 Despite the treaty the emirate continued to be an autonomous entity and the flow of Arab tribes across the Shatt al Arab preserved the Arab identity of the eastern bank of the Shatt Thus Richard Frye maintains that the Arabs of Khuzistan and of the seaports of southern Persia were simply an extension of Arab settlements from the western bank 24 In 1890 a British consulate was established at Muhammarah 25 Relationship with central government edit At the turn of the twentieth century Arabistan was still a frontier zone that enjoyed considerable autonomy and two prominent British observers of the time commented on its sense of separateness 26 In the words of journalist Valentine Chirol The Turk and the Persian are both aliens in the land equally hated by the Arab population and both have proved equally unworthy and incompetent stewards of a splendid estate 26 British imperialist George Curzon remarked that No love is lost between the two people the Persian regarding the Arab as an interloper and a dullard and the Arab regarding the Persian with some justice in this region as a plotter and a rogue 26 The discovery of oil in Arabistan edit In 1901 the Persian government had granted William Knox D Arcy the exclusive right to drill for oil in certain parts of Persia including the region in which the territories of the ruler of Arabistan were located But in January 1903 the Shah of Persia Mozaffar ad Din Shah Qajar granted a firman Imperial edict to the sheikh using language in which the Qajar government admitted at least by implication that it had exceeded its powers in conferring certain privileges on D Arcy The lands in question had belonged in the past to the sheikh his tribesmen and their ancestors 27 In 1908 William Knox D Arcy discovered oil near Masjed Soleiman by contract with its local ruler Ali Qoli Khan Bakhtiari 28 page needed 29 Strategic importance of Mohammerah edit Source 22 Starting with Colonel Chesney s expeditions 1835 37 to prove the navigability of the Tigris and Euphrates which concluded that Muhammarah should be the center of communications between India and Europe the East India Company tried to establish a foothold in the region As Gamazof notes the scramble over Muhammarah was understandable for it had many desirable features These included its anchorage in the deep and broad Haffar Canal its good weather safe harbor and sweet water the possibility of constructing stores and a wharf or even a complete port its strategic command of the Karun and the Shatt and the great rivers forming it and its proximity to the trade of Baghdad Basra and the many local tribes that carried on commerce independently The same conditions also protected them from intrusive Iranian interference while acceptance of the suzerainty of Iran s rulers further ensured independence from Ottoman interference Yet acceptance of suzerainty did not necessarily mean recognition of sovereignty and the multiple claims of suzerainty over them which continued through the second half of the nineteenth century gave them even more room to maneuver See also editSheikhdomReferences edit Using various spellings and transliterations the following names are used Emirate of Muhammara Franzen 2021 p 256 Sheikhdom of Muhammara Ehlers amp Nejatian 2022 Emirate of Arabistan Altaie 1993 p 541 Takriti 2018 p 100 Ward 2014 p 76 Sheikhdom of Arabistan Herb 2015 p 75 Minahan 2016 p 481 Principality of Arabistan Strunk 1977 Franzen 2021 p 256 Floor 2006 The Ka b ruled over most of Khuzestan Floor 2006 p 302 Elling 2013 p 37 referring to Soucek 1984 Floor 2006 p 278 It was already treated as a direct trade partner by the Government of India see Floor 2006 p 300 Floor 2006 p 295 Floor 2006 p 296 Soucek 1984 p 206 Floor 2006 p 307 cf Altaie 1993 p 541 Elling 2013 pp 37 38 105 Altaie 1993 p 541 Herb 2015 p 75 referring to Lorimer 1908 pp 129 356 Soucek 1984 pp 206 207 Elling 2013 p 37 Soucek 1984 p 207 Elling 2013 pp 37 38 Takriti 2018 p 100 Al Naqeeb 2012 p 73 Franzen 2021 p 256 Elling 2013 p 105 Elling 2013 p 105 Friedman Isaiah 2018 04 17 Palestine A Twice Promised Land Routledge p 48 doi 10 4324 9781351290081 ISBN 978 1 351 29008 1 Mesopotamia Bell Gertrude Lowthian 1868 1926 Rich P J Rich Paul John Bell Gertrude Lowthian 1868 1926 Asiatic Turkey Bell Gertrude Lowthian 1868 1926 Arab of 2008 Iraq and Gertrude Bell s The Arab of Mesopotamia Lexington Books p 73 ISBN 978 0 7391 2561 8 OCLC 486979300 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link CS1 maint numeric names authors list link Ward 2014 p 76 Shahnavaz Shahbaz 2005 British and South West Persia RoutledgeCurzon p 5 a b c d Ates Sabri 2013 Ottoman Iranian Borderlands Making a Boundary 1843 1914 Cambridge University Press a b Mohammad Abdulghani J M Jasim 2011 Iraq amp Iran the years of crisis Routledge p 123 ISBN 978 1 280 67016 9 OCLC 1162444426 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Frye Richard Nelson 2003 The golden age of Persia the Arabs in the East Phonix p 236 ISBN 1 84212 011 5 OCLC 918277520 Olson Ani Robert W Salman H 1987 Islamic and Middle Eastern societies Michigan Amana Books p 155 a b c Potter Lawrence G 2004 The Evolution of the Iran Iraq Boundary p 63 Shafiee Katayoun 9 March 2018 Machineries of oil an infrastructural history of BP in Iran p 35 ISBN 978 0 262 34484 5 OCLC 1028747467 Vassiliou M S Historical Dictionary of the Petroleum Industry Lanham MD Scarecrow 2009 Print Peter Frangipan 2015 The Silk Roads A New History of the World Alfred A Knopf p 319 ISBN 9781101946336 Sources edit Al Naqeeb Khaldoun Nassan 2012 1990 Society and State in the Gulf and Arab Peninsula A Different Perspective New York Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 62396 4 Review Altaie Ali 1993 Khaldoun Hasan Al Naqeeb Society and State in the Gulf and Arab Peninsula A Different Perspective trans L M Kenny emended by Ibrahim Hayani under the aegis of the Project of Translation from Arabic London Routledge 1990 Pp 227 International Journal of Middle East Studies 25 3 539 541 doi 10 1017 S0020743800059122 S2CID 204465945 Ansari Mostafa 1974 The History of Khuzistan 1878 1925 Unpublished PhD dissertation Chicago University of Chicago Ehlers Eckart Nejatian Mohammad Hossein 2022 Khorramshahr Encyclopaedia Iranica Online doi 10 1163 2330 4804 EIRO COM 365070 Elling Rasmus Christian 2013 Minorities in Iran Nationalism and Ethnicity after Khomeini New York Palgrave Macmillan doi 10 1057 9781137047809 ISBN 978 1 137 04780 9 Floor Willem 2006 The Rise and Fall of the Banu Kaʿb A Borderer State in Southern Khuzestan Iran Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies 44 1 277 315 doi 10 1080 05786967 2006 11834690 S2CID 192691234 Franzen Johan 2021 Pride and Power A Modern History of Iraq London Hurst amp Company ISBN 9781787383951 Herb Michael 2015 The Wages of Oil Parliaments and Economic Development in Kuwait and the UAE Ithaca Cornell University Press doi 10 7591 9780801454691 ISBN 9780801454691 Lorimer John G 1908 Gazetteer of the Persian Gulf Oman and Central Arabia Vol 2A Geo graphical and Statistical Calcutta Superintendent of Government Printing Minahan James B 2016 Encyclopedia of Stateless Nations Ethnic and National Groups around the World 2nd ed Santa Barbara Greenwood ISBN 978 1 61069 953 2 Shahnavaz Shahbaz 2013 Ḵazʿal Khan Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol XVI Fasc 2 pp 188 197 Soucek Svat 1984 Arabistan or Khuzistan Iranian Studies 17 2 3 195 213 doi 10 1080 00210868408701628 JSTOR 4310441 Strunk William Theodore 1977 The Reign of Shaykh Khaz al Ibn Jabir and the Suppression of the Principality of Arabistan A Study in British Imperialism in Southwestern Iran 1897 1925 Unpublished PhD dissertation Indianapolis Indiana University Takriti Abdel Razzaq 2018 Political Praxis in the Gulf Ahmad al Khatib and the Movement of Arab Nationalists 1948 1969 In Hanssen Jens Weiss Max eds Arabic Thought against the Authoritarian Age Towards an Intellectual History of the Present Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 86 112 doi 10 1017 9781108147781 007 ISBN 978 1 107 19338 3 Ward Steven R 2014 Immortal A Military History of Iran and Its Armed Forces Georgetown University Press ISBN 9781589012585 OCLC 869095274 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Emirate of Muhammara amp oldid 1213761750, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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