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Hakkari (historical region)

Hakkari (Kurdish: هەکاری، Syriac: ܚܟܐܪܝ Ḥakkāri, or ܗܟܐܪܝ Hakkāri), was a historical mountainous region lying to the south of Lake Van,[1] encompassing parts of the modern provinces of Hakkâri, Şırnak, Van[citation needed] in Turkey and Dohuk in Iraq. During the late Ottoman Empire it was a sanjak within the old Vilayet of Van.

Flooded rice fields in Hakkari, c. 1900
Hakkari Assyrians, c. 1900

History Edit

 
A 6th-century Nestorian church, St. John the Arab, in the Assyrian village of Geramon
 
The mountainous Shemsdin district
 
Basket woven bridge across the Zab in Hakkari, c. 1900

The region stretching from Tur Abdin to Hakkari formed the Nairi lands which served as the northern Assyrian frontier and border with their Urartian rivals. The Assyrians of this region were Christians adhering to the Assyrian Church of the East and lived here until 1924, when the last Assyrians who survived the Assyrian genocide and massacres that occurred during 1918 were expelled. Most subsequently moved to the Sapna and Nahla valleys in northern Iraq. Those who went to Simele ended up immigrating further to the Tell Tamer Subdistrict in Syria during the 1930s.

Following the devastation of the urban centres of Mesopotamia at the hands of Timur, a Turkic military leader operating under the guise of restoring the Mongol Empire, he was known as "the Sword of Islam." His conquest of Baghdad and the general area, especially the destruction of Tikrit, affected the Syrian Orthodox Church which sheltered near Nineveh at Mar Mattai Monastery following the destruction of Christians in the region, the Ismailis and Sunni and Shi'a Muslims indiscriminately by Timur during the second part of the 14th century. The few survivors sought refuge among the Assyrians of Hakkari and the surrounding region. This region also produced many bishops and patriarchs as hereditary succession was used to prevent a full ecclesiastical collapse of the church. By the 16th century, the Assyrians disappeared from many cities where they previously thrived, such as in Tabriz and Nisibis. The head of the Church of the East moved from Baghdad to Maragha in Urmia by 1553.[2]

By the 1500s, the Assyrians were concentrated in an older version of the Assyrian triangle, with its points in Diyarbakir (west), Maragha (east). The Church of the East lost some of its members in the few centuries following the Schism of 1552 to the Chaldean Catholic Church, mainly in Diyarbakir. Those living in Hakkari, however, were unaffected by the disputes until 1692 when the Chaldean Archbishop of Diyarbakir Shimun IX Dinkha broke away from Rome and moved to Qudshanis in Hakkari where he reintroduced the Shimun line of hereditary patriarchial succession which continued until 1976.

The Patriarch residing in the Church of Mār Shalīṭa in Qudshanis enjoyed both spiritual and political power over his subjects. Since priests were required to remain celibates the patriarchy moved from uncle to nephew.[2] This system came to be known as Nāṭar Kursyā (ܢܛܪ ܟܘܪܣܝܐ "Guardian of the throne"), and by the 19th century this system was applied to all dioceses of Hakkari.[3] The Assyrians formed intricate alliances with neighbouring Kurdish tribes and their Ottoman lords, and each tribe was led by a Malik (ܡܠܟ) who also functioned as a military leader during wartime.[4]

Kurdish wars Edit

In the 19th century, several competing Kurdish centers began emerging in the region. Mir Muhammed, the Kurdish Emir of the Soran Emirate, situated around Rawanduz was able to depose his rivals and control a region stretching from Mardin to Persian Azerbaijan.[5] He was however defeated in battle when he tried to subdue the Assyrians of Hakkari in 1838. The Ottomans, seeking to consolidate their control of the region, engaged him in a costly war which eventually led to the dissolution of his Emirate.[6]

After the fall of his main rival Badr Khan of Bohtan sought to extend his dominion by annexing the Assyrian regions in Hakkari.[7] He took advantage of a rift between the patriarch Shimun XVII Abraham and Nur Allah, the Kurdish Emir of Hakkari. Badr Khan allied with Nur Allah and attacked the Assyrians of Hakkari in the summer of 1843 massacring them and taking those who survived as slaves.[8] Another massacre was inflicted in 1846 on the Assyrians of Tiyari, also residing in Hakkari.[8] The western powers, alarmed by the massacres pressured the Ottomans to intervene. Badr Khan was subsequently defeated and exiled to Crete in 1847.[8]

Direct Ottoman control Edit

 
The checkered Christian districts southeast of Lake Van is where the Assyrians of Hakkari lived, while the Christian districts in Blue designate where Armenians lived

Although the region was nominally under Ottoman control since the 16th century, it was in reality administered by its Assyrian and Kurdish inhabitants and their lords. The situation changed after the Badr Khans rule and the Tanzimat reforms as the Ottomans now were able to extend their full control unopposed, and in 1868 the Sanjak of Hakkari was created.[9]

Genocide and exodus Edit

On the eve of the First World War, patriarch Shimun XIX Benyamin was promised preferential treatment in anticipation of the war.[10] Shortly after the war began, however, Assyrian and Armenian settlements to the north of Hakkari were attacked and sacked by Kurdish irregulars allied with the Ottoman Army in the Assyrian genocide.[11][12] Others were forced into labour battalions and later executed.[13]

The turning point was when the patriarch's brother was taken prisoner as he was studying in Constantinople. The Ottomans demanded Assyrian neutrality and executed him as a warning.[14][15] In return, the patriarch declared war on the Ottomans on 10 April 1915.[14]

The Assyrians were immediately attacked by Kurdish irregulars backed by the Ottomans, driving most of the Assyrians of Hakkari to the mountain tops, as those who stayed in their villages were killed.[14] Shimun Benjamin was able to move unnoticed to Urmia, which at the time was under Russian control, and tried to persuade them to send a relief force to the besieged Assyrians.[14] When the Russians replied that the request was unreasonable, he returned to Hakkari and led the surviving 50,000 Assyrians through the mountains to safety in Urmia.[14] Thousands perished from cold and hunger during this march.[14]

After the First World War Edit

During the peace conferences in Paris in 1919, the Assyrians asked for a state in Diyarbekir and northern Mesopotamia in Iraq; others requested a British protectorate in Upper Mesopotamia, northern Mosul, and Urmia.[16] The Assyrians tried to retake the region, but the Turks and Kurds objected to the Nestorian Christians' desire to retake their ancestral lands in Hakkari, and an attempt to occupy the region by Agha Petros failed. In 1924 Turkey formally occupied northern Hakkari and expelled the last Christian inhabitants who still remained in the region,[17] with the exception of the village of Gaznakh which due to Kurdish alliances and their conversion to the Chaldean Catholic Church avoided deportation. Assyrians still live in the southern Hakkari region of Barwari Bala, now straddling fhe Turkey-Iraq border, and in the Sapna and Nahla Valleys of Iraqs Nohadra region.

Economy Edit

As of 1920, Hakkari was producing lead. The lead, which came from a government owned mine, was used to make bullets.[18]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ Aboona 2008, p. 2
  2. ^ a b Alexander 1994, p. 36
  3. ^ Wilmshurst 2000, p. 277
  4. ^ Aboona 2008, p. 35
  5. ^ Aboona 2008, p. 173
  6. ^ Aboona 2008, p. 174
  7. ^ Aboona 2008, p. 179
  8. ^ a b c McDowall 2000, p. 47
  9. ^ Aboona 2008, p. 3
  10. ^ Stafford 2006, p. 23
  11. ^ Stafford 2006, p. 24
  12. ^ Gaunt & Beṯ-Şawoce 2006, p. 134
  13. ^ Gaunt & Beṯ-Şawoce 2006, p. 136
  14. ^ a b c d e f Stafford 2006, p. 25
  15. ^ Yusuf, Malik. "The Assyrian Tragedy". www.aina.org. from the original on October 10, 2018. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
  16. ^ Nisan 2002, p. 187
  17. ^ Nisan 2002, p. 188
  18. ^ Prothero, W. G. (1920). Armenia and Kurdistan. London: H.M. Stationery Office. p. 71. from the original on December 21, 2020. Retrieved September 18, 2013.

References Edit

  • Aboona, H (2008), Assyrians, Kurds, and Ottomans: intercommunal relations on the periphery of the Ottoman Empire, Cambria Press, ISBN 978-1-60497-583-3.
  • Alexander, V (1994) [1994], The First Civilization, Victor Alexander, ISBN 978-1-4486-7089-5.
  • Chevalier, Michel (1985). Les montagnards chrétiens du Hakkâri et du Kurdistan septentrional (in French). Dép. de géographie de l'Université de Paris-Sorbonne. ISBN 978-2-901165-13-2.
  • Gaunt, D; Beṯ-Şawoce, J (2006), Massacres, resistance, protectors: Muslim-Christian relations in Eastern Anatolia during World War I, Gorgias Press, ISBN 978-1-59333-301-0.
  • McDowall, D (2000), A modern history of the Kurds, I.B. Tauris, ISBN 978-1-85043-416-0.
  • Nisan, M (2002) [1991], Minorities in the Middle East: a history of struggle and self-expression, McFarland, ISBN 978-0-7864-1375-1.
  • Stafford, R (2006) [1935], The Tragedy of the Assyrians, Gorgias Press, ISBN 978-1-59333-413-0.
  • Wilmshurst, D (2000), The ecclesiastical organisation of the Church of the East, 1318-1913, Volume 582, Cambria Press, ISBN 978-90-429-0876-5.

hakkari, historical, region, hakkari, kurdish, هەکاری, syriac, ܚܟܐܪܝ, Ḥakkāri, ܗܟܐܪܝ, hakkāri, historical, mountainous, region, lying, south, lake, encompassing, parts, modern, provinces, hakkâri, şırnak, citation, needed, turkey, dohuk, iraq, during, late, ot. Hakkari Kurdish هەکاری Syriac ܚܟܐܪܝ Ḥakkari or ܗܟܐܪܝ Hakkari was a historical mountainous region lying to the south of Lake Van 1 encompassing parts of the modern provinces of Hakkari Sirnak Van citation needed in Turkey and Dohuk in Iraq During the late Ottoman Empire it was a sanjak within the old Vilayet of Van Flooded rice fields in Hakkari c 1900 Hakkari Assyrians c 1900Contents 1 History 1 1 Kurdish wars 1 2 Direct Ottoman control 1 3 Genocide and exodus 1 4 After the First World War 2 Economy 3 See also 4 Notes 5 ReferencesHistory Edit nbsp A 6th century Nestorian church St John the Arab in the Assyrian village of Geramon nbsp The mountainous Shemsdin district nbsp Basket woven bridge across the Zab in Hakkari c 1900The region stretching from Tur Abdin to Hakkari formed the Nairi lands which served as the northern Assyrian frontier and border with their Urartian rivals The Assyrians of this region were Christians adhering to the Assyrian Church of the East and lived here until 1924 when the last Assyrians who survived the Assyrian genocide and massacres that occurred during 1918 were expelled Most subsequently moved to the Sapna and Nahla valleys in northern Iraq Those who went to Simele ended up immigrating further to the Tell Tamer Subdistrict in Syria during the 1930s Following the devastation of the urban centres of Mesopotamia at the hands of Timur a Turkic military leader operating under the guise of restoring the Mongol Empire he was known as the Sword of Islam His conquest of Baghdad and the general area especially the destruction of Tikrit affected the Syrian Orthodox Church which sheltered near Nineveh at Mar Mattai Monastery following the destruction of Christians in the region the Ismailis and Sunni and Shi a Muslims indiscriminately by Timur during the second part of the 14th century The few survivors sought refuge among the Assyrians of Hakkari and the surrounding region This region also produced many bishops and patriarchs as hereditary succession was used to prevent a full ecclesiastical collapse of the church By the 16th century the Assyrians disappeared from many cities where they previously thrived such as in Tabriz and Nisibis The head of the Church of the East moved from Baghdad to Maragha in Urmia by 1553 2 By the 1500s the Assyrians were concentrated in an older version of the Assyrian triangle with its points in Diyarbakir west Maragha east The Church of the East lost some of its members in the few centuries following the Schism of 1552 to the Chaldean Catholic Church mainly in Diyarbakir Those living in Hakkari however were unaffected by the disputes until 1692 when the Chaldean Archbishop of Diyarbakir Shimun IX Dinkha broke away from Rome and moved to Qudshanis in Hakkari where he reintroduced the Shimun line of hereditary patriarchial succession which continued until 1976 The Patriarch residing in the Church of Mar Shaliṭa in Qudshanis enjoyed both spiritual and political power over his subjects Since priests were required to remain celibates the patriarchy moved from uncle to nephew 2 This system came to be known as Naṭar Kursya ܢܛܪ ܟܘܪܣܝܐ Guardian of the throne and by the 19th century this system was applied to all dioceses of Hakkari 3 The Assyrians formed intricate alliances with neighbouring Kurdish tribes and their Ottoman lords and each tribe was led by a Malik ܡܠܟ who also functioned as a military leader during wartime 4 Kurdish wars Edit Main article Massacres of Badr Khan In the 19th century several competing Kurdish centers began emerging in the region Mir Muhammed the Kurdish Emir of the Soran Emirate situated around Rawanduz was able to depose his rivals and control a region stretching from Mardin to Persian Azerbaijan 5 He was however defeated in battle when he tried to subdue the Assyrians of Hakkari in 1838 The Ottomans seeking to consolidate their control of the region engaged him in a costly war which eventually led to the dissolution of his Emirate 6 After the fall of his main rival Badr Khan of Bohtan sought to extend his dominion by annexing the Assyrian regions in Hakkari 7 He took advantage of a rift between the patriarch Shimun XVII Abraham and Nur Allah the Kurdish Emir of Hakkari Badr Khan allied with Nur Allah and attacked the Assyrians of Hakkari in the summer of 1843 massacring them and taking those who survived as slaves 8 Another massacre was inflicted in 1846 on the Assyrians of Tiyari also residing in Hakkari 8 The western powers alarmed by the massacres pressured the Ottomans to intervene Badr Khan was subsequently defeated and exiled to Crete in 1847 8 Direct Ottoman control Edit nbsp The checkered Christian districts southeast of Lake Van is where the Assyrians of Hakkari lived while the Christian districts in Blue designate where Armenians livedAlthough the region was nominally under Ottoman control since the 16th century it was in reality administered by its Assyrian and Kurdish inhabitants and their lords The situation changed after the Badr Khans rule and the Tanzimat reforms as the Ottomans now were able to extend their full control unopposed and in 1868 the Sanjak of Hakkari was created 9 Genocide and exodus Edit Main article Sayfo Hakkari On the eve of the First World War patriarch Shimun XIX Benyamin was promised preferential treatment in anticipation of the war 10 Shortly after the war began however Assyrian and Armenian settlements to the north of Hakkari were attacked and sacked by Kurdish irregulars allied with the Ottoman Army in the Assyrian genocide 11 12 Others were forced into labour battalions and later executed 13 The turning point was when the patriarch s brother was taken prisoner as he was studying in Constantinople The Ottomans demanded Assyrian neutrality and executed him as a warning 14 15 In return the patriarch declared war on the Ottomans on 10 April 1915 14 The Assyrians were immediately attacked by Kurdish irregulars backed by the Ottomans driving most of the Assyrians of Hakkari to the mountain tops as those who stayed in their villages were killed 14 Shimun Benjamin was able to move unnoticed to Urmia which at the time was under Russian control and tried to persuade them to send a relief force to the besieged Assyrians 14 When the Russians replied that the request was unreasonable he returned to Hakkari and led the surviving 50 000 Assyrians through the mountains to safety in Urmia 14 Thousands perished from cold and hunger during this march 14 After the First World War Edit During the peace conferences in Paris in 1919 the Assyrians asked for a state in Diyarbekir and northern Mesopotamia in Iraq others requested a British protectorate in Upper Mesopotamia northern Mosul and Urmia 16 The Assyrians tried to retake the region but the Turks and Kurds objected to the Nestorian Christians desire to retake their ancestral lands in Hakkari and an attempt to occupy the region by Agha Petros failed In 1924 Turkey formally occupied northern Hakkari and expelled the last Christian inhabitants who still remained in the region 17 with the exception of the village of Gaznakh which due to Kurdish alliances and their conversion to the Chaldean Catholic Church avoided deportation Assyrians still live in the southern Hakkari region of Barwari Bala now straddling fhe Turkey Iraq border and in the Sapna and Nahla Valleys of Iraqs Nohadra region Economy EditAs of 1920 Hakkari was producing lead The lead which came from a government owned mine was used to make bullets 18 See also EditList of Assyrian tribes Tyari Barwari Shemsdin East Syriac ecclesiastical province Assyrian homelandNotes Edit Aboona 2008 p 2 a b Alexander 1994 p 36 Wilmshurst 2000 p 277 Aboona 2008 p 35 Aboona 2008 p 173 Aboona 2008 p 174 Aboona 2008 p 179 a b c McDowall 2000 p 47 Aboona 2008 p 3 Stafford 2006 p 23 Stafford 2006 p 24 Gaunt amp Beṯ Sawoce 2006 p 134 Gaunt amp Beṯ Sawoce 2006 p 136 a b c d e f Stafford 2006 p 25 Yusuf Malik The Assyrian Tragedy www aina org Archived from the original on October 10 2018 Retrieved May 20 2020 Nisan 2002 p 187 Nisan 2002 p 188 Prothero W G 1920 Armenia and Kurdistan London H M Stationery Office p 71 Archived from the original on December 21 2020 Retrieved September 18 2013 References EditAboona H 2008 Assyrians Kurds and Ottomans intercommunal relations on the periphery of the Ottoman Empire Cambria Press ISBN 978 1 60497 583 3 Alexander V 1994 1994 The First Civilization Victor Alexander ISBN 978 1 4486 7089 5 Chevalier Michel 1985 Les montagnards chretiens du Hakkari et du Kurdistan septentrional in French Dep de geographie de l Universite de Paris Sorbonne ISBN 978 2 901165 13 2 Gaunt D Beṯ Sawoce J 2006 Massacres resistance protectors Muslim Christian relations in Eastern Anatolia during World War I Gorgias Press ISBN 978 1 59333 301 0 McDowall D 2000 A modern history of the Kurds I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 85043 416 0 Nisan M 2002 1991 Minorities in the Middle East a history of struggle and self expression McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 1375 1 Stafford R 2006 1935 The Tragedy of the Assyrians Gorgias Press ISBN 978 1 59333 413 0 Wilmshurst D 2000 The ecclesiastical organisation of the Church of the East 1318 1913 Volume 582 Cambria Press ISBN 978 90 429 0876 5 nbsp This article contains Syriac text written from right to left in a cursive style with some letters joined Without proper rendering support you may see unjoined Syriac letters or other symbols instead of Syriac text Portals nbsp Geography nbsp Turkey Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hakkari historical region amp oldid 1170634765, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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