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Ghazi (warrior)

A ghazi (Arabic: غازي, Arabic pronunciation: [ɣaːziː], plural ġuzāt) is an individual who participated in ghazw (غزو, ġazw), meaning military expeditions or raiding. The latter term was applied in early Islamic literature to expeditions led by the Islamic prophet Muhammad, and later taken up by Turkic military leaders to describe their wars of conquest.[1]

The "Ghazi Sultan" Murad II and Władysław III of Poland.

In the context of the wars between Russia and the Muslim peoples of the Caucasus, starting as early as the late 18th century's Sheikh Mansur's resistance to Russian expansion, the word usually appears in the form gazavat (газават).[2]

In English-language literature, the ghazw often appears as razzia, a borrowing through French from Maghrebi Arabic.

In modern Turkish, gazi is used to refer to veterans, and also as a title for Turkic Muslim champions such as Ertuğrul and Osman I.[3][4]

Ghazw as raid—razzia

In pre-Islamic Bedouin culture, ghazw[a] was a form of limited warfare verging on brigandage that avoided head-on confrontations and instead emphasized raiding and looting, usually of livestock (see cattle raiding). The Umayyad-period Bedouin poet al-Kutami wrote the oft-quoted verses: "Our business is to make raids on the enemy, on our neighbor and our own brother, in the event we find none to raid but a brother."[5][6] William Montgomery Watt hypothesized that Muhammad found it useful to divert this continuous internecine warfare toward his enemies, making it the basis of his war strategy;[7] according to Watt, the celebrated battle of Badr started as one such razzia.[8] As a form of warfare, the razzia was then mimicked by the Christian states of Iberia in their relations with the taifa states;[9] rough synonyms and similar tactics are the Iberian cavalgada and the Anglo-French chevauchée.[10]

The word razzia was used in French colonial context particularly for raids to plunder and capture slaves from among the people of Western and Central Africa, also known as rezzou when practiced by the Tuareg. The word was adopted from ġaziya of Algerian Arabic vernacular and later became a figurative name for any act of pillage, with its verb form razzier.[11]

Historical development

 
Young Akbar assumed the title Badshah Ghazi after leading a Mughal Army of 70,000 during the Second Battle of Panipat, against 30,000 mainly Hindu adversaries led by Hemu.
 
The Ottoman Ghazi's defeat the Crusaders during the Battle of Nicopolis.[12]

Ghazi (Arabic: غازي, ġāzī) is an Arabic word, the active participle of the verb ġazā, meaning 'to carry out a military expedition or raid'; the same verb can also mean 'to strive for' and Ghazi can thus share a similar meaning to Mujahid or "one who struggles". The verbal noun of ġazā is ġazw or ġazawān, with the meaning 'raiding'. A derived singulative in ġazwah refers to a single battle or raid. The term ghāzī dates to at least the Samanid period, where he appears as a mercenary and frontier fighter in Khorasan and Transoxiana. Later, up to 20,000 of them took part in the Indian campaigns of Mahmud of Ghazni.

Ghāzī warriors depended upon plunder for their livelihood, and were prone to brigandage and sedition in times of peace. The corporations into which they organized themselves attracted adventurers, zealots and religious and political dissidents of all ethnicities. In time, though, soldiers of Turkic ethnicity predominated, mirroring the acquisition of Mamluks, Turkic slaves in the Mamluk retinues and guard corps of the caliphs and emirs and in the ranks of the ghazi corporation, some of whom would ultimately rise to military and later political dominance in various Muslim states.

In the west, Turkic ghāzīs made continual incursions along the Byzantine frontier zone, finding in the akritai (akritoi) their Greek counterparts. After the Battle of Manzikert these incursions intensified, and the region's people would see the ghāzī corporations coalesce into semi-chivalric fraternities, with the white cap and the club as their emblems. The height of the organizations would come during the Mongol conquest when many of them fled from Persia and Turkistan into Anatolia.

As organizations, the ghazi corporations were fluid, reflecting their popular character, and individual ghāzī warriors would jump between them depending upon the prestige and success of a particular emir, rather like the mercenary bands around western condottiere. It was from these Anatolian territories conquered during the ghazw that the Ottoman Empire emerged, and in its legendary traditions it is said that its founder, Osman I, came forward as a ghāzī thanks to the inspiration of Shaikh Ede Bali.

In later periods of Islamic history the honorific title of ghāzī was assumed by those Muslim rulers who showed conspicuous success in extending the domains of Islam, and eventually the honorific became exclusive to them, much as the Roman title imperator became the exclusive property of the supreme ruler of the Roman state and his family.

The Ottomans were probably the first to adopt this practice, and in any case the institution of ghazw reaches back to the beginnings of their state:

By early Ottoman times it had become a title of honor and a claim to leadership. In an inscription of 1337 [concerning the building of the Bursa mosque], Orhan, second ruler of the Ottoman line, describes himself as "Sultan, son of the Sultan of the Gazis, Gazi son of Gazi… frontier lord of the horizons."

Ottoman historian Ahmedi in his work explain the meaning of Ghazi:[13]

A Ghazi is the instrument of the religion of Allah, a servant of God who purifies the earth from the filth of polytheism. The Ghazi is the sword of God, he is the protector and the refuge of the believers. If he becomes a martyr in the ways of God, do not believe that he has died, he lives in beatitude with Allah, he has eternal life.

The first nine Ottoman chiefs all used Ghazi as part of their full throne name (as with many other titles, the nomination was added even though it did not fit the office), and often afterwards. However, it never became a formal title within the ruler's formal style, unlike Sultan ul-Mujahidin, used by Sultan Murad Khan II Khoja-Ghazi, 6th Sovereign of the House of Osman (1421–1451), styled 'Abu'l Hayrat, Sultan ul-Mujahidin, Khan of Khans, Grand Sultan of Anatolia and Rumelia, and of the Cities of Adrianople and Philippolis.

Because of the political legitimacy that would accrue to those bearing this title, Muslim rulers vied amongst themselves for preeminence in the ghāziya, with the Ottoman Sultans generally acknowledged as excelling all others in this feat:

For political reasons the Ottoman Sultans — also being the last dynasty of Caliphs — attached the greatest importance to safeguarding and strengthening the reputation which they enjoyed as ghāzīs in the Muslim world. When they won victories in the ghazā in the Balkans they used to send accounts of them (singular, feth-nāme) as well as slaves and booty to eastern Muslim potentates. Christian knights captured by Bāyezīd I at his victory over the Crusaders at Nicopolis in 1396, and sent to Cairo, Baghdad and Tabriz were paraded through the streets, and occasioned great demonstrations in favour of the Ottomans. (Cambridge History of Islam, p. 290)

Ghazi was also used as a title of honor in the Ottoman Empire, generally translated as the Victorious, for military officers of high rank, who distinguished themselves in the field against non-Moslem enemies; thus it was conferred on Osman Pasha after his famous defence of Plevna in Bulgaria[14] and on Mustafa Kemal Pasha (later known as Mustafa Kemal Atatürk) for leading the defense against the Gallipoli campaign.

Some Muslim rulers (in Afghanistan) personally used the subsidiary style Padshah-i-Ghazi.

Muhammad's Ghazwa

Ghazwah, which literally means "campaigns", is typically used by biographers to refer to all the Prophet's journeys from Medina, whether to make peace treaties and preach Islam to the tribes, to go on ʽumrah, to pursue enemies who attacked Medina, or to engage in the nine battles.[15]

Muhammad participated in 27 Ghazwa. The first Ghazwa he participated in was the Invasion of Waddan in August 623,[16][17] he ordered his followers to attack a Quraysh caravan.[16]

Operationally

When performed within the context of Islamic warfare, the ghazw's function was to weaken the enemy's defenses in preparation for his eventual conquest and subjugation. Because the typical ghazw raiding party often did not have the size or strength to seize military or territorial objectives, this usually meant sudden attacks on weakly defended targets (e.g. villages) with the intent of demoralizing the enemy and destroying material which could support their military forces. Though Islam's rules of warfare offered protection to non-combatants such as women, monastics and peasants in that they could not be slain, their property could still be looted or destroyed, and they themselves could be abducted and enslaved (Cambridge History of Islam, p. 269):

The only way of avoiding the onslaughts of the ghāzīs was to become subjects of the Islamic state. Non-Muslims acquired the status of dhimmīs, living under its protection. Most Christian sources confuse these two stages in the Ottoman conquests. The Ottomans, however, were careful to abide by these rules... Faced with the terrifying onslaught of the ghāzīs, the population living outside the confines of the empire, in the 'abode of war', often renounced the ineffective protection of Christian states, and sought refuge in subjection to the Ottoman Empire. Peasants in open country in particular lost nothing by this change.
Cambridge History of Islam, p. 285

A good source on the conduct of the traditional ghazw raid are the medieval Islamic jurists, whose discussions as to which conduct is allowed and which is forbidden in the course of warfare reveal some of the practices of this institution. One such source is Averroes' Bidāyat al-Mujtahid wa-Nihāyat al-Muqtasid (translated in Peters, Jihad in Classical and Modern Islam: A Reader, Chapter 4).

Use in the modern era

In the 19th century, Muslim fighters in North Caucasus who were resisting the Russian military operations declared a gazawat (understood as holy war) against the Russian Orthodox invasion. Although uncertain, it is believed that Dagestani Islamic scholar Muhammad Yaragskii was the ideologist of this holy war. In 1825, a congress of ulema in the village of Yarag declared gazawat against the Russians. Its first leader was Ghazi Muhammad; after his death, Imam Shamil would eventually continue it.[18]

After the terrorist attacks on Paris in November 2015, the Islamic State group is said to have referred to its actions as "ghazwa".[19]

In modern Turkey, gazi is used to refer to veterans.[20] 19 September is celebrated as Veterans Day in Turkey.[21]

Notable examples

Related terms

  • Akıncı: (Turkish) "raider", a later replacement for ghāzī
  • al-'Awāsim: the Syrio-Anatolian frontier area between the Byzantine and various caliphal empires
  • ribāt: fortified convent used by a militant religious order; most commonly used in North Africa
  • thughūr: an advanced/frontier fortress
  • uc: Turkish term for frontier; uc beği (frontier lord) was a title assumed by early Ottoman rulers; later replaced by serhadd (frontier)
  • Mujahideen

See also

References

  1. ^ Aboul-Enein, H. Yousuf and Zuhur, Sherifa,"Islamic Rulings on Warfare", Strategic Studies Institute, US Army War College, Diane Publishing Co., Darby PA, ISBN 1-4289-1039-5 pg. 6.
  2. ^ The Background of Chechen Independence Movement II: The Sufi Resistance
  3. ^ "Gazi - Türk Dil Kurumu | Sözlük". sozluk.gov.tr (in Turkish). Retrieved 2020-01-31.
  4. ^ "Şehit ve Gazi farkı nedir". Arasındaki Fark (in Turkish). 2014-11-19. Retrieved 2020-01-31.
  5. ^ Paul Wheatley (2001). The places where men pray together: cities in Islamic lands, 7th through the 10th centuries. University of Chicago Press. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-226-89428-7.
  6. ^ A. J. Cameron (1973). Abû Dharr al-Ghifârî: an examination of his image in the hagiography of Islam. Royal Asiatic Society : [distributed] by Luzac. p. 9. ISBN 978-0-7189-0962-8.
  7. ^ William Montgomery Watt; Pierre Cachia (1996). A history of Islamic Spain. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 6–7. ISBN 978-0-7486-0847-8.
  8. ^ William Montgomery Watt (1978). "Muhammad". In Ann Katherine Swynford Lambton; Bernard Lewis (eds.). The central islamic lands from pre-islamic times to the first world war. Cambridge University Press. p. 45. ISBN 978-0-521-29135-4.
  9. ^ Cathal J. Nolan (2006). The age of wars of religion, 1000-1650: an encyclopedia of global warfare and civilization. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 724. ISBN 978-0-313-33734-5.
  10. ^ Cathal J. Nolan (2006). The age of wars of religion, 1000-1650: an encyclopedia of global warfare and civilization. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 718. ISBN 978-0-313-33734-5.
  11. ^ Sessions, J.E. (2017). By Sword and Plow: France and the Conquest of Algeria. Cornell University Press. p. 227. ISBN 978-0-8014-5446-2.
  12. ^ Lokman (1588). . Hünernâme. Archived from the original on 2013-05-29.
  13. ^ Paul Wittek, (2013), The Rise of the Ottoman Empire: Studies in the History of Turkey, thirteenth–fifteenth Centuries Royal Asiatic Society Books, p. 44
  14. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Ghazi". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 916.
  15. ^ Ahmed Al-Dawoody (2011), The Islamic Law of War: Justifications and Regulations, p. 22. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 9780230111608.
  16. ^ a b Sa'd, Ibn (1967). Kitab al-tabaqat al-kabir, By Ibn Sa'd, Volume 2. Pakistan Historical Society. p. 4. ASIN B0007JAWMK. GHAZWAH OF AL-ABWA* Then (occurred) the ghazwah of the Apostle of Allah, may Allah bless him, at al-Abwa in Safar (August 623 AC)
  17. ^ Tabari, Al (2008), The foundation of the community, State University of New York Press, p. 12, ISBN 978-0887063442, In Safar (which began August 4, 623), nearly twelve months after his arrival in Medina on the twelfth of Rabi' al- Awwal, he went out on a raid as far as Waddan
  18. ^ Galina M. Yemelianova (2002). Russia and Islam: a historical survey. Palgrave Macmillan. p. 50. ISBN 978-0-333-68354-5.
  19. ^ Ibrahim, Ayman S. (16 November 2015). "4 ways ISIS grounds its actions in religion, and why it should matter (COMMENTARY)". Washington Post. Retrieved 17 November 2015.
  20. ^ "Gazi - Türk Dil Kurumu | Sözlük". sozluk.gov.tr (in Turkish). Retrieved 2020-01-31.
  21. ^ "Turkey commemorates veterans on Veterans Day - Turkey News".

Further reading

  • "Ghazw". Encyclopedia of Islam (CD-ROM v. 1.0 ed.). Brill. 1999.
  • "Ghāzī". Encyclopedia of Islam (CD-ROM v. 1.0 ed.). Brill. 1999.
  • Lewis, Bernard (1991). The Political Language of Islam. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-47693-6., p. 74
  • Firestone, Reuven (1999). Jihad: The Origins of Holy War in Islam. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-512580-0., p. 34
  • Peters, Rudolph (1996). Jihad in Classical and Modern Islam: A Reader. Markus Wiener Publishers. ISBN 1-55876-109-8.
    • Averroes, Bidāyat al-Mujtahid wa-Nihāyat al-Muqtasid
  • Wittek, Paul; & Heywood, Colin, translator (2002). The Rise of the Ottoman Empire. Curzon Press. ISBN 0-7007-1500-2. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Holt, Peter M., ed. (1970). The Cambridge History of Islam: Volume 1, The Central Islamic Lands. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-07567-X. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  • Robinson, Chase (2002). Islamic Historiography. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-62936-5.
  • Rid, Thomas (2009). "Razzia: A Turning Point in Modern Strategy". Terrorism and Political Violence. 21 (4): 617–635. doi:10.1080/09546550903153449. S2CID 143516589.
  • Kaziev, Shapi. Imam Shamil. "Molodaya Gvardiya" publishers. Moscow, 2001, 2003, 2006, 2010. ISBN 978-5-235-03332-0
  • Kaziev, Shapi. Akhoulgo. Caucasian War of 19th century. The historical novel. "Epoch", Publishing house. Makhachkala, 2008. ISBN 978-5-98390-047-9
  • Mohammed Bamyeh (2006). "The Nomands of Pre-Islamic Arabia". In Dawn Chatty (ed.). Nomadic societies in the Middle East and North Africa: entering the 21st century. BRILL. pp. 33–49. ISBN 978-90-04-14792-8.

ghazi, warrior, ghazw, redirects, here, related, terms, razzia, disambiguation, ghazis, redirects, here, other, uses, ghazi, disambiguation, gazi, redirects, here, other, uses, gazi, disambiguation, ghaza, redirects, here, city, gaza, strip, gaza, city, ghazi,. Ghazw redirects here for related terms see Razzia disambiguation Ghazis redirects here for other uses see Ghazi disambiguation Gazi redirects here for other uses see Gazi disambiguation Ghaza redirects here for the city in the Gaza Strip see Gaza City A ghazi Arabic غازي Arabic pronunciation ɣaːziː plural ġuzat is an individual who participated in ghazw غزو ġazw meaning military expeditions or raiding The latter term was applied in early Islamic literature to expeditions led by the Islamic prophet Muhammad and later taken up by Turkic military leaders to describe their wars of conquest 1 The Ghazi Sultan Murad II and Wladyslaw III of Poland In the context of the wars between Russia and the Muslim peoples of the Caucasus starting as early as the late 18th century s Sheikh Mansur s resistance to Russian expansion the word usually appears in the form gazavat gazavat 2 In English language literature the ghazw often appears as razzia a borrowing through French from Maghrebi Arabic In modern Turkish gazi is used to refer to veterans and also as a title for Turkic Muslim champions such as Ertugrul and Osman I 3 4 Contents 1 Ghazw as raid razzia 2 Historical development 3 Muhammad s Ghazwa 3 1 Operationally 4 Use in the modern era 5 Notable examples 6 Related terms 7 See also 8 References 9 Further readingGhazw as raid razzia EditIn pre Islamic Bedouin culture ghazw a was a form of limited warfare verging on brigandage that avoided head on confrontations and instead emphasized raiding and looting usually of livestock see cattle raiding The Umayyad period Bedouin poet al Kutami wrote the oft quoted verses Our business is to make raids on the enemy on our neighbor and our own brother in the event we find none to raid but a brother 5 6 William Montgomery Watt hypothesized that Muhammad found it useful to divert this continuous internecine warfare toward his enemies making it the basis of his war strategy 7 according to Watt the celebrated battle of Badr started as one such razzia 8 As a form of warfare the razzia was then mimicked by the Christian states of Iberia in their relations with the taifa states 9 rough synonyms and similar tactics are the Iberian cavalgada and the Anglo French chevauchee 10 The word razzia was used in French colonial context particularly for raids to plunder and capture slaves from among the people of Western and Central Africa also known as rezzou when practiced by the Tuareg The word was adopted from ġaziya of Algerian Arabic vernacular and later became a figurative name for any act of pillage with its verb form razzier 11 Historical development EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed May 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Young Akbar assumed the title Badshah Ghazi after leading a Mughal Army of 70 000 during the Second Battle of Panipat against 30 000 mainly Hindu adversaries led by Hemu The Ottoman Ghazi s defeat the Crusaders during the Battle of Nicopolis 12 Ghazi Arabic غازي ġazi is an Arabic word the active participle of the verb ġaza meaning to carry out a military expedition or raid the same verb can also mean to strive for and Ghazi can thus share a similar meaning to Mujahid or one who struggles The verbal noun of ġaza is ġazw or ġazawan with the meaning raiding A derived singulative in ġazwah refers to a single battle or raid The term ghazi dates to at least the Samanid period where he appears as a mercenary and frontier fighter in Khorasan and Transoxiana Later up to 20 000 of them took part in the Indian campaigns of Mahmud of Ghazni Ghazi warriors depended upon plunder for their livelihood and were prone to brigandage and sedition in times of peace The corporations into which they organized themselves attracted adventurers zealots and religious and political dissidents of all ethnicities In time though soldiers of Turkic ethnicity predominated mirroring the acquisition of Mamluks Turkic slaves in the Mamluk retinues and guard corps of the caliphs and emirs and in the ranks of the ghazi corporation some of whom would ultimately rise to military and later political dominance in various Muslim states In the west Turkic ghazis made continual incursions along the Byzantine frontier zone finding in the akritai akritoi their Greek counterparts After the Battle of Manzikert these incursions intensified and the region s people would see the ghazi corporations coalesce into semi chivalric fraternities with the white cap and the club as their emblems The height of the organizations would come during the Mongol conquest when many of them fled from Persia and Turkistan into Anatolia As organizations the ghazi corporations were fluid reflecting their popular character and individual ghazi warriors would jump between them depending upon the prestige and success of a particular emir rather like the mercenary bands around western condottiere It was from these Anatolian territories conquered during the ghazw that the Ottoman Empire emerged and in its legendary traditions it is said that its founder Osman I came forward as a ghazi thanks to the inspiration of Shaikh Ede Bali In later periods of Islamic history the honorific title of ghazi was assumed by those Muslim rulers who showed conspicuous success in extending the domains of Islam and eventually the honorific became exclusive to them much as the Roman title imperator became the exclusive property of the supreme ruler of the Roman state and his family The Ottomans were probably the first to adopt this practice and in any case the institution of ghazw reaches back to the beginnings of their state By early Ottoman times it had become a title of honor and a claim to leadership In an inscription of 1337 concerning the building of the Bursa mosque Orhan second ruler of the Ottoman line describes himself as Sultan son of the Sultan of the Gazis Gazi son of Gazi frontier lord of the horizons Ottoman historian Ahmedi in his work explain the meaning of Ghazi 13 A Ghazi is the instrument of the religion of Allah a servant of God who purifies the earth from the filth of polytheism The Ghazi is the sword of God he is the protector and the refuge of the believers If he becomes a martyr in the ways of God do not believe that he has died he lives in beatitude with Allah he has eternal life The first nine Ottoman chiefs all used Ghazi as part of their full throne name as with many other titles the nomination was added even though it did not fit the office and often afterwards However it never became a formal title within the ruler s formal style unlike Sultan ul Mujahidin used by Sultan Murad Khan II Khoja Ghazi 6th Sovereign of the House of Osman 1421 1451 styled Abu l Hayrat Sultan ul Mujahidin Khan of Khans Grand Sultan of Anatolia and Rumelia and of the Cities of Adrianople and Philippolis Because of the political legitimacy that would accrue to those bearing this title Muslim rulers vied amongst themselves for preeminence in the ghaziya with the Ottoman Sultans generally acknowledged as excelling all others in this feat For political reasons the Ottoman Sultans also being the last dynasty of Caliphs attached the greatest importance to safeguarding and strengthening the reputation which they enjoyed as ghazis in the Muslim world When they won victories in the ghaza in the Balkans they used to send accounts of them singular feth name as well as slaves and booty to eastern Muslim potentates Christian knights captured by Bayezid I at his victory over the Crusaders at Nicopolis in 1396 and sent to Cairo Baghdad and Tabriz were paraded through the streets and occasioned great demonstrations in favour of the Ottomans Cambridge History of Islam p 290 Ghazi was also used as a title of honor in the Ottoman Empire generally translated as the Victorious for military officers of high rank who distinguished themselves in the field against non Moslem enemies thus it was conferred on Osman Pasha after his famous defence of Plevna in Bulgaria 14 and on Mustafa Kemal Pasha later known as Mustafa Kemal Ataturk for leading the defense against the Gallipoli campaign Some Muslim rulers in Afghanistan personally used the subsidiary style Padshah i Ghazi Muhammad s Ghazwa EditMain article List of battles of Muhammad Ghazwah which literally means campaigns is typically used by biographers to refer to all the Prophet s journeys from Medina whether to make peace treaties and preach Islam to the tribes to go on ʽumrah to pursue enemies who attacked Medina or to engage in the nine battles 15 Muhammad participated in 27 Ghazwa The first Ghazwa he participated in was the Invasion of Waddan in August 623 16 17 he ordered his followers to attack a Quraysh caravan 16 Operationally Edit When performed within the context of Islamic warfare the ghazw s function was to weaken the enemy s defenses in preparation for his eventual conquest and subjugation Because the typical ghazw raiding party often did not have the size or strength to seize military or territorial objectives this usually meant sudden attacks on weakly defended targets e g villages with the intent of demoralizing the enemy and destroying material which could support their military forces Though Islam s rules of warfare offered protection to non combatants such as women monastics and peasants in that they could not be slain their property could still be looted or destroyed and they themselves could be abducted and enslaved Cambridge History of Islam p 269 The only way of avoiding the onslaughts of the ghazis was to become subjects of the Islamic state Non Muslims acquired the status of dhimmis living under its protection Most Christian sources confuse these two stages in the Ottoman conquests The Ottomans however were careful to abide by these rules Faced with the terrifying onslaught of the ghazis the population living outside the confines of the empire in the abode of war often renounced the ineffective protection of Christian states and sought refuge in subjection to the Ottoman Empire Peasants in open country in particular lost nothing by this change Cambridge History of Islam p 285A good source on the conduct of the traditional ghazw raid are the medieval Islamic jurists whose discussions as to which conduct is allowed and which is forbidden in the course of warfare reveal some of the practices of this institution One such source is Averroes Bidayat al Mujtahid wa Nihayat al Muqtasid translated in Peters Jihad in Classical and Modern Islam A Reader Chapter 4 Use in the modern era EditFurther information Caucasian War In the 19th century Muslim fighters in North Caucasus who were resisting the Russian military operations declared a gazawat understood as holy war against the Russian Orthodox invasion Although uncertain it is believed that Dagestani Islamic scholar Muhammad Yaragskii was the ideologist of this holy war In 1825 a congress of ulema in the village of Yarag declared gazawat against the Russians Its first leader was Ghazi Muhammad after his death Imam Shamil would eventually continue it 18 After the terrorist attacks on Paris in November 2015 the Islamic State group is said to have referred to its actions as ghazwa 19 In modern Turkey gazi is used to refer to veterans 20 19 September is celebrated as Veterans Day in Turkey 21 Notable examples EditBattal Ghazi 8th century Arab military commander Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al Ghazi 16th century general and Imam of the Adal Sultanate Belek Ghazi Bey of the Artuqids Gazi Gumushtigin second ruler of the Danishmendids Danishmend Gazi 12th century founder of the Danishmendids Ertugrul Gazi 13th century leader of the Kayi tribe father of Osman I Osman Gazi 1299 1326 founder of the Ottoman Empire Orhan Gazi 1281 1362 second Ottoman Sultan Ghazavat i Sultan Murad sixth Ottoman Sultan Gazi Chelebi 14th century pirate and ruler of Sinop Turkey Gazi Evrenos 1288 1417 Ottoman military commander Sikandar Khan Ghazi a military commander during the 1303 Conquest of Sylhet Haydar Ghazi second wazir of Sylhet who fought in the 1303 Conquest of Sylhet Ikhtiyaruddin Ghazi Shah 14th century Sultan of Sonargaon Shahzada Danyal Dulal Ghazi Prince of Bengal who fought in the 1498 Conquest of Kamata Gazi Husrev Beg an Ottoman bey of Bosnian origin 1480 1541 Ghazi Khan 15th century Baloch Chief from Dera Ghazi Khan India Gazi I Giray 16th century Crimean Tatar khan Gazi Osman Pasha 1832 1897 Ottoman field marshal Ghazi Saiyyad Salar Masud 1014 1034 Ghaznavid military commander Gazi Saiyyed Salar Sahu early 11th century Ghaznavid military commander Ghazi Mustafa Kemal 1881 1938 Turkish field marshal first president of Turkey Ghazi Amanullah Khan King who launched Afghanistan s Independence war in 1919 resulting in the first independence of a country from Britain since the American Revolution of 1776 Ghazi Umara Khan of Jandool Afghan Napoleon who led the famous rebellion from Chitral against the British Empire Nasir I of Kalat 18th century King of Balochistan with surname Ghazi e Din Abdul Rashid GhaziRelated terms EditAkinci Turkish raider a later replacement for ghazi al Awasim the Syrio Anatolian frontier area between the Byzantine and various caliphal empires ribat fortified convent used by a militant religious order most commonly used in North Africa thughur an advanced frontier fortress uc Turkish term for frontier uc begi frontier lord was a title assumed by early Ottoman rulers later replaced by serhadd frontier MujahideenSee also EditGaza Thesis Jihad ism Fedayeen Janissary Spread of Islam Muslim conquests Battle of Hamra al Asad Anatolian BeyliksReferences Edit Aboul Enein H Yousuf and Zuhur Sherifa Islamic Rulings on Warfare Strategic Studies Institute US Army War College Diane Publishing Co Darby PA ISBN 1 4289 1039 5 pg 6 The Background of Chechen Independence Movement II The Sufi Resistance Gazi Turk Dil Kurumu Sozluk sozluk gov tr in Turkish Retrieved 2020 01 31 Sehit ve Gazi farki nedir Arasindaki Fark in Turkish 2014 11 19 Retrieved 2020 01 31 Paul Wheatley 2001 The places where men pray together cities in Islamic lands 7th through the 10th centuries University of Chicago Press p 11 ISBN 978 0 226 89428 7 A J Cameron 1973 Abu Dharr al Ghifari an examination of his image in the hagiography of Islam Royal Asiatic Society distributed by Luzac p 9 ISBN 978 0 7189 0962 8 William Montgomery Watt Pierre Cachia 1996 A history of Islamic Spain Edinburgh University Press pp 6 7 ISBN 978 0 7486 0847 8 William Montgomery Watt 1978 Muhammad In Ann Katherine Swynford Lambton Bernard Lewis eds The central islamic lands from pre islamic times to the first world war Cambridge University Press p 45 ISBN 978 0 521 29135 4 Cathal J Nolan 2006 The age of wars of religion 1000 1650 an encyclopedia of global warfare and civilization Greenwood Publishing Group p 724 ISBN 978 0 313 33734 5 Cathal J Nolan 2006 The age of wars of religion 1000 1650 an encyclopedia of global warfare and civilization Greenwood Publishing Group p 718 ISBN 978 0 313 33734 5 Sessions J E 2017 By Sword and Plow France and the Conquest of Algeria Cornell University Press p 227 ISBN 978 0 8014 5446 2 Lokman 1588 Battle of Nicopolis 1396 Hunername Archived from the original on 2013 05 29 Paul Wittek 2013 The Rise of the Ottoman Empire Studies in the History of Turkey thirteenth fifteenth Centuries Royal Asiatic Society Books p 44 One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Ghazi Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 916 Ahmed Al Dawoody 2011 The Islamic Law of War Justifications and Regulations p 22 Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9780230111608 a b Sa d Ibn 1967 Kitab al tabaqat al kabir By Ibn Sa d Volume 2 Pakistan Historical Society p 4 ASIN B0007JAWMK GHAZWAH OF AL ABWA Then occurred the ghazwah of the Apostle of Allah may Allah bless him at al Abwa in Safar August 623 AC Tabari Al 2008 The foundation of the community State University of New York Press p 12 ISBN 978 0887063442 In Safar which began August 4 623 nearly twelve months after his arrival in Medina on the twelfth of Rabi al Awwal he went out on a raid as far as Waddan Galina M Yemelianova 2002 Russia and Islam a historical survey Palgrave Macmillan p 50 ISBN 978 0 333 68354 5 Ibrahim Ayman S 16 November 2015 4 ways ISIS grounds its actions in religion and why it should matter COMMENTARY Washington Post Retrieved 17 November 2015 Gazi Turk Dil Kurumu Sozluk sozluk gov tr in Turkish Retrieved 2020 01 31 Turkey commemorates veterans on Veterans Day Turkey News Further reading Edit Ghazw Encyclopedia of Islam CD ROM v 1 0 ed Brill 1999 Ghazi Encyclopedia of Islam CD ROM v 1 0 ed Brill 1999 Lewis Bernard 1991 The Political Language of Islam University of Chicago Press ISBN 0 226 47693 6 p 74 Firestone Reuven 1999 Jihad The Origins of Holy War in Islam Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 512580 0 p 34 Peters Rudolph 1996 Jihad in Classical and Modern Islam A Reader Markus Wiener Publishers ISBN 1 55876 109 8 Averroes Bidayat al Mujtahid wa Nihayat al Muqtasid Wittek Paul amp Heywood Colin translator 2002 The Rise of the Ottoman Empire Curzon Press ISBN 0 7007 1500 2 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Holt Peter M ed 1970 The Cambridge History of Islam Volume 1 The Central Islamic Lands Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 07567 X a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Robinson Chase 2002 Islamic Historiography Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 62936 5 Rid Thomas 2009 Razzia A Turning Point in Modern Strategy Terrorism and Political Violence 21 4 617 635 doi 10 1080 09546550903153449 S2CID 143516589 Kaziev Shapi Imam Shamil Molodaya Gvardiya publishers Moscow 2001 2003 2006 2010 ISBN 978 5 235 03332 0 Kaziev Shapi Akhoulgo Caucasian War of 19th century The historical novel Epoch Publishing house Makhachkala 2008 ISBN 978 5 98390 047 9 Mohammed Bamyeh 2006 The Nomands of Pre Islamic Arabia In Dawn Chatty ed Nomadic societies in the Middle East and North Africa entering the 21st century BRILL pp 33 49 ISBN 978 90 04 14792 8 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ghazi warrior amp oldid 1149595007, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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