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Khanaqin

Khanaqin (Arabic: خانقين;[2] Kurdish: خانەقین, romanized: Xaneqîn[3][4]) is the central city of Khanaqin District in Diyala Governorate, Iraq, near the Iranian border (8 km) on the Alwand tributary of the Diyala River.[1] The town is populated by Kurds who speak the Southern Kurdish dialect.[5] Khanaqin is situated on the main road which Shia pilgrims use when visiting holy Islamic cities.[1] The city is moreover rich in oil and the first Iraqi oil refinery and oil pipeline was built nearby in 1927.[6][7] The main tribes of Khanaqin include Kalhor,[8] Feyli,[9] Zand,[10] Malekshahi[11] Suramiri,[12] Arkavazi[13] and Zangana.[14]

Khanaqin
City
Alwand River in Khanaqin with the historical Alwand Bridge on top of it
Khanaqin
Khanaqin's location inside Iraq
Coordinates: 34°20′N 45°23′E / 34.333°N 45.383°E / 34.333; 45.383Coordinates: 34°20′N 45°23′E / 34.333°N 45.383°E / 34.333; 45.383
Country Iraq
GovernorateDiyala Governorate
DistrictKhanaqin
Elevation
183 m (602 ft)
Population
 (2008)[1]
 • Total175,000

The city experienced Arabization during the Saddam era, but this has been substantially reversed after the fall of the regime in 2003 and remains disputed.[1][15]

History

In the early 11th century, the city was under the Banu Uqayl and later the Annazids until Ibrahim Inal captured the city around 1045.[16]

Khanaqin was part of Baban until the 1850s.[17]

The population of Khanaqin in the mid-19th century was small with only fifty Muslim and five Jewish households, with a significant Kurdish tribal population around the town. It had three mosques and three caravanserais. Khanaqin was a mere caravan station for caravans carrying Shia pilgrims before the Treaty of Erzurum in 1847 which made it a more significant frontier town between the Ottoman Empire and Qajar Iran. An immigration office was established just after the signing of the treaty to manage the growing pilgrimage.[18] A customs house would later be established as well.[19]

During the Persian Campaign, the Ottomans were attacked in Khanaqin on 3 June 1916 by Russian forces led by Nikolai Baratov but managed to push back the Russian cavalry. While the Ottomans lost about 300 men, the Russian casualties were greater.[20] However, the Russians succeeded in capturing the town in April 1917 due to Ottoman weakness and collapse of the Iranian government. Russia received support from the Kurdish tribes and allowed them to govern the area. Nonetheless, the Russian forces had to withdraw from the area in June 1917 due to the Russian Revolution which allowed the Ottomans to retake the town. The United Kingdom captured the city in December 1917 during their Mesopotamian campaign.[21] After the capture, Britain approached the regional Kurdish tribes including Bajalan leader Mustafa Pasha Bajalan to consolidate their control.[22] Khanaqin District was established in 1921.[23]

Khanaqin saw no fighting during World War II but became an important base for Commonwealth forces and a field hospital was constructed in the town. Many Polish prisoners of war, who escaped Russia and attempted to link up with Commonwealth forces in Khanaqin, arrived at the town in September 1942. They would remain in the town but many perished and a cemetery was built in the town for them. Maintenance of the Khanaqin War Cemetery was later abandoned and a memorial was built in Baghdad.[24] In 2020, the cemetery was damaged by 'extremists'.[25]

The town experienced shelling by Iran during Iran–Iraq War in the 1980s[26][27] and its people were displaced.[1] Peshmerga captured the town in March 1991 during the uprisings in Iraq[28] and again in April 2003 during U.S. invasion of Iraq.[29] In the December 2005 parliamentary election, the Democratic Patriotic Alliance of Kurdistan won the city with 99.4%.[30] In the same year, locals protested and wanted Khanaqin to be a part of the Kurdistan Autonomous Region under PUK rule.[31]

In September 2008, Peshmerga withdrew from the city allowing Iraqi police to control the city. The town experienced protests against the shuffle.[32] As part of a compromise, Kurdistan Region was allowed to administer the city with Asayish presence,[33] but Peshmerga would ultimately enter the city again in September 2011.[34] Peshmerga withdrew from the city again in October 2017 which made the city witness frequent security breaches.[35]

Demographics

Ethnicity

In 1947, out of the 25,700 people in the town, 20,560 (80%) were Kurds.[36] In the 1957 census, Kurds constituted 74.6% of the population, while Arabs were 23.7% and the Turkmen population stood at 1.6%. In 1965, the numbers stood at 72.1%, 26.2% and 1.7% for Kurds, Arabs and Turkmens, respectively.[37]

During the 1970s, the Arabization efforts by Iraq intensified,[38] and the 1977 census showed that the Arab population had become 47.5% of the population, while Kurds were 45% and Turkmens, 6.1%. In 1987, the Arab population stood at 49.5%, the Kurdish population at 45.8% and the Turkmen population at 4.7%. In 1997, Arabs were 54.7% of the population, while Kurds were 39.4% and Turkmens were 5.8%.[37]

The Arabization of Khanaqin was almost entirely reversed after 2003 by the PUK.[1][38] Khanaqin mayor Muhammad Amin Hassan Hussein stated in 2014 that the Arab population fell to 1% in 2003.[15]

Religion

The majority of Khanaqin are Shia Muslims but a significant Sunni Muslim minority also exists. In 2020, one Christian remained in the city,[39] as well as some Yarsans.[40]

Alwand Bridge

Alwand Bridge is located in the center of Khanaqin and on Alwand River. The Sassanids founded this bridge, which during the Sassanid era was 150 meters wide and 6 meters tall.

The current version of the bridge was built in 1860 by Dowlatshah, the former governor of Kermanshah. He went to Khanaqin in 1855 on his way to visit the Shia holy sites in Karbala and Najaf, but that year he faced a severe flood and decided to spend his travel expenses in addition to the additional costs of building a bridge in Khanaqin. He brought a number of architects from Isfahan to Khanaqin and the bridge was built using walnut wood imported from Iran.[41]

Jewish community

Khanaqin had a Jewish community until the early 1950s when they were forced to migrate to Israel. In the middle of the 19th century, about 20 Jewish families lived in the town. This number increased to 700 individuals shortly after. The languages spoken by the community was Mlahso Aramaic. By the 1920s, the community was introduced to Zionism and most would leave for Israel after the community leader was arrested in August 1949.[42]

Notable people

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Khanaqin". Britannica. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
  2. ^ "خانقين صورة حية عن التعايش السلمي في العراق". Kirkuknow (in Arabic). 1 February 2020. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
  3. ^ "Daişê li Gulale û Xaneqîn hêriş kirin ser hêzên Îraqê" (in Kurdish). Retrieved 20 December 2019.
  4. ^ "چەتەکانی داعش لە دیالە و خانەقین دەستیان بە هێرش کردووەتەوە". ANF News (in Kurdish). Retrieved 20 December 2019.
  5. ^ Chaman Ara, Behrooz; Amiri, Cyrus (12 March 2018). "Gurani: practical language or Kurdish literary idiom?". British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. 45 (4): 627–643. doi:10.1080/13530194.2018.1430536. S2CID 148611170.
  6. ^ "Diyala (ديالى)". ISW - Institute for the study of war. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
  7. ^ Sorkhabi, Rasoul (2009). "Oil from Babylon to Iraq". Geo ExPro. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
  8. ^ Chaman Ara, Behrooz; Amiri, Cyrus (12 March 2018). "Gurani: practical language or Kurdish literary idiom?". British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. 45 (4): 627–643. doi:10.1080/13530194.2018.1430536. S2CID 148611170.
  9. ^ Adel Soheil (March 2019). The Iraqi Ba'th Regime's Atrocities Against the Faylee Kurds: Nation-State. pp. 83–84. ISBN 978-91-7785-892-8.
  10. ^ Archibald Roosevelt (1944). "Kurdish tribal map of Iraq : showing the Iraq portion of Kurdistan and the major Kurdish tribal divisions within Iraq". Yale University.
  11. ^ Fattah, Ismaïl Kamandâr (2000). Les dialectes kurdes méridionaux. Acta Iranica 37. pp. 30–31.
  12. ^ "ایل سوره میری (سوره مهری یا سرخه مهری)". April 4, 1396.
  13. ^ "ایل ارکوازی - معنی در دیکشنری آبادیس". abadis.ir. Retrieved 2022-09-03.
  14. ^ Refugees, United Nations High Commissioner for. "Refworld | Genocide in Iraq: The Anfal Campaign Against the Kurds". Refworld. Retrieved 2022-09-03.
  15. ^ a b "Khanaqin, once known as 'city of tolerance,' still open to Arab refugees". Rûdaw. 3 December 2014. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
  16. ^ Aḥmad, K. M. (1985). "ʿANNAZIDS". Iranica Online. II.
  17. ^ Rasoul, Rasoul Muhammed (2017). "History of Kirkuk from the Beginning of the Nineteenth Century until Becoming Part of the Iraqi Monarchy in 1925" (PDF). University of Erfurt. p. 91.
  18. ^ Tomoko, Morikawa (2014). "Pilgrims beyond the border: Immigration at Khanaqin and its procedures in the nineteenth century". Pilgrims Beyond the Border: Immigration at Khanaqin and Its Procedures in the Nineteenth Century. 72: 100–102.
  19. ^ Tomoko, Morikawa (2014). "Pilgrims beyond the border: Immigration at Khanaqin and its procedures in the nineteenth century". Pilgrims Beyond the Border: Immigration at Khanaqin and Its Procedures in the Nineteenth Century. 72: 117.
  20. ^ Dowling, Timothy C. (2014). Russia at War: From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan, Chechnya, and Beyond. ABC-CLIO. p. 409. ISBN 9781598849486.
  21. ^ Eppel, Michael (2016). A People Without a State: The Kurds from the Rise of Islam to the Dawn of Nationalism. University of Texas Press. p. 111. ISBN 9781477311073.
  22. ^ Jwaideh, Wadie (2006). The Kurdish National Movement: Its Origins and Development. Syracuse University Press. p. 160. ISBN 9780815630937.
  23. ^ Ihsan, Mohammad, Administrative Changes in Kirkuk and Disputed Areas in Iraq 1968-2003, p. 43
  24. ^ "Baghdad (North Fate) (Khanaqin) memorial". Commonwealth War Graves. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
  25. ^ "Extremists damage graveyard of Polish people in Khanaqin". Kirkuknow. 1 March 2020.
  26. ^ "A year of Iran-Iraq war seems to bring impasse". New York Times. 23 September 1981. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
  27. ^ "Big battle erupts in Iran-Iraq war". New York Times. 17 February 1984. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
  28. ^ "AFTER THE WAR: Iraq; Iraqi Loyalists Pound Shiite Mosques, Rebels Say". New York Times. 12 March 1991.
  29. ^ "Kurds to be removed from Kirkuk over Turkey anger". The Irish Times. 10 April 2003. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
  30. ^ Kane, Sean (2011). "Iraq's Disputed Territories" (PDF). p. 35. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
  31. ^ "Bombings Expose Khanaqin Tensions". iwpr.net.
  32. ^ "Diyala town's allegiance: Iraq or Kurdistan?". Stars and Stripes. 8 September 2008. Retrieved 23 October 2020.
  33. ^ Cordesman, Anthony H.; Mausner, Adam (2009). Withdrawal from Iraq: Assessing the Readiness of Iraqi Security Forces. CSIS. p. 126. ISBN 9780892065530.
  34. ^ "Khanaqin warns Iraq gov't of revolution outbreak if Kurdistan flag is lowered". 14 October 2011. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
  35. ^ "Meeting results in recommendation to return Peshmerga to Khanaqin". Shafaq. 17 May 2020. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
  36. ^ C. J. Edmonds (1957). Kurds, Turks and Arabs, Politics, Travel and Research in North-Eastern Iraq, 1919-1925. Oxford University Press. p. 440. Retrieved 17 November 2019.
  37. ^ a b Ihsan, Mohammad, Administrative Changes in Kirkuk and Disputed Areas in Iraq 1968-2003, pp. 44–49
  38. ^ a b "III. Background: Forced Displacement and Arabization of Northern Iraq". Human Rights Watch. 2004. Retrieved 22 October 2020.
  39. ^ "Only Christian in Iraq's Khanaqin". Reuters Archive Licensing. Retrieved 2022-04-12.
  40. ^ "Kaka'is - The men with big moustaches ‌". www.pukmedia.com.
  41. ^ پل الون هدیه یک دختر قاجاری به شهر خانقین. در: آکانیوز. بازدید: سپتامبر ۲۰۰۹.
  42. ^ "Khanaqin". Jewish Virtual Library. Retrieved 23 October 2020.

khanaqin, arabic, خانقين, kurdish, خانەقین, romanized, xaneqîn, central, city, district, diyala, governorate, iraq, near, iranian, border, alwand, tributary, diyala, river, town, populated, kurds, speak, southern, kurdish, dialect, situated, main, road, which,. Khanaqin Arabic خانقين 2 Kurdish خانەقین romanized Xaneqin 3 4 is the central city of Khanaqin District in Diyala Governorate Iraq near the Iranian border 8 km on the Alwand tributary of the Diyala River 1 The town is populated by Kurds who speak the Southern Kurdish dialect 5 Khanaqin is situated on the main road which Shia pilgrims use when visiting holy Islamic cities 1 The city is moreover rich in oil and the first Iraqi oil refinery and oil pipeline was built nearby in 1927 6 7 The main tribes of Khanaqin include Kalhor 8 Feyli 9 Zand 10 Malekshahi 11 Suramiri 12 Arkavazi 13 and Zangana 14 KhanaqinCityAlwand River in Khanaqin with the historical Alwand Bridge on top of itKhanaqinKhanaqin s location inside IraqCoordinates 34 20 N 45 23 E 34 333 N 45 383 E 34 333 45 383 Coordinates 34 20 N 45 23 E 34 333 N 45 383 E 34 333 45 383Country IraqGovernorateDiyala GovernorateDistrictKhanaqinElevation183 m 602 ft Population 2008 1 Total175 000The city experienced Arabization during the Saddam era but this has been substantially reversed after the fall of the regime in 2003 and remains disputed 1 15 Contents 1 History 2 Demographics 2 1 Ethnicity 2 2 Religion 3 Alwand Bridge 4 Jewish community 5 Notable people 6 See also 7 ReferencesHistoryIn the early 11th century the city was under the Banu Uqayl and later the Annazids until Ibrahim Inal captured the city around 1045 16 Khanaqin was part of Baban until the 1850s 17 The population of Khanaqin in the mid 19th century was small with only fifty Muslim and five Jewish households with a significant Kurdish tribal population around the town It had three mosques and three caravanserais Khanaqin was a mere caravan station for caravans carrying Shia pilgrims before the Treaty of Erzurum in 1847 which made it a more significant frontier town between the Ottoman Empire and Qajar Iran An immigration office was established just after the signing of the treaty to manage the growing pilgrimage 18 A customs house would later be established as well 19 During the Persian Campaign the Ottomans were attacked in Khanaqin on 3 June 1916 by Russian forces led by Nikolai Baratov but managed to push back the Russian cavalry While the Ottomans lost about 300 men the Russian casualties were greater 20 However the Russians succeeded in capturing the town in April 1917 due to Ottoman weakness and collapse of the Iranian government Russia received support from the Kurdish tribes and allowed them to govern the area Nonetheless the Russian forces had to withdraw from the area in June 1917 due to the Russian Revolution which allowed the Ottomans to retake the town The United Kingdom captured the city in December 1917 during their Mesopotamian campaign 21 After the capture Britain approached the regional Kurdish tribes including Bajalan leader Mustafa Pasha Bajalan to consolidate their control 22 Khanaqin District was established in 1921 23 Khanaqin saw no fighting during World War II but became an important base for Commonwealth forces and a field hospital was constructed in the town Many Polish prisoners of war who escaped Russia and attempted to link up with Commonwealth forces in Khanaqin arrived at the town in September 1942 They would remain in the town but many perished and a cemetery was built in the town for them Maintenance of the Khanaqin War Cemetery was later abandoned and a memorial was built in Baghdad 24 In 2020 the cemetery was damaged by extremists 25 The town experienced shelling by Iran during Iran Iraq War in the 1980s 26 27 and its people were displaced 1 Peshmerga captured the town in March 1991 during the uprisings in Iraq 28 and again in April 2003 during U S invasion of Iraq 29 In the December 2005 parliamentary election the Democratic Patriotic Alliance of Kurdistan won the city with 99 4 30 In the same year locals protested and wanted Khanaqin to be a part of the Kurdistan Autonomous Region under PUK rule 31 In September 2008 Peshmerga withdrew from the city allowing Iraqi police to control the city The town experienced protests against the shuffle 32 As part of a compromise Kurdistan Region was allowed to administer the city with Asayish presence 33 but Peshmerga would ultimately enter the city again in September 2011 34 Peshmerga withdrew from the city again in October 2017 which made the city witness frequent security breaches 35 DemographicsEthnicity In 1947 out of the 25 700 people in the town 20 560 80 were Kurds 36 In the 1957 census Kurds constituted 74 6 of the population while Arabs were 23 7 and the Turkmen population stood at 1 6 In 1965 the numbers stood at 72 1 26 2 and 1 7 for Kurds Arabs and Turkmens respectively 37 During the 1970s the Arabization efforts by Iraq intensified 38 and the 1977 census showed that the Arab population had become 47 5 of the population while Kurds were 45 and Turkmens 6 1 In 1987 the Arab population stood at 49 5 the Kurdish population at 45 8 and the Turkmen population at 4 7 In 1997 Arabs were 54 7 of the population while Kurds were 39 4 and Turkmens were 5 8 37 The Arabization of Khanaqin was almost entirely reversed after 2003 by the PUK 1 38 Khanaqin mayor Muhammad Amin Hassan Hussein stated in 2014 that the Arab population fell to 1 in 2003 15 Religion The majority of Khanaqin are Shia Muslims but a significant Sunni Muslim minority also exists In 2020 one Christian remained in the city 39 as well as some Yarsans 40 Alwand BridgeAlwand Bridge is located in the center of Khanaqin and on Alwand River The Sassanids founded this bridge which during the Sassanid era was 150 meters wide and 6 meters tall The current version of the bridge was built in 1860 by Dowlatshah the former governor of Kermanshah He went to Khanaqin in 1855 on his way to visit the Shia holy sites in Karbala and Najaf but that year he faced a severe flood and decided to spend his travel expenses in addition to the additional costs of building a bridge in Khanaqin He brought a number of architects from Isfahan to Khanaqin and the bridge was built using walnut wood imported from Iran 41 Jewish communitySee also History of the Jews in Iraq and History of the Jews in Kurdistan Khanaqin had a Jewish community until the early 1950s when they were forced to migrate to Israel In the middle of the 19th century about 20 Jewish families lived in the town This number increased to 700 individuals shortly after The languages spoken by the community was Mlahso Aramaic By the 1920s the community was introduced to Zionism and most would leave for Israel after the community leader was arrested in August 1949 42 Notable peopleFuad Hussein Leyla Qasim Mala Bakhtiyar Ovadia Eli Imad Ahmad SayfourSee alsoList of largest cities in Iraq KhosraviReferences a b c d e f Khanaqin Britannica Retrieved 23 October 2020 خانقين صورة حية عن التعايش السلمي في العراق Kirkuknow in Arabic 1 February 2020 Retrieved 23 October 2020 Daise li Gulale u Xaneqin heris kirin ser hezen Iraqe in Kurdish Retrieved 20 December 2019 چەتەکانی داعش لە دیالە و خانەقین دەستیان بە هێرش کردووەتەوە ANF News in Kurdish Retrieved 20 December 2019 Chaman Ara Behrooz Amiri Cyrus 12 March 2018 Gurani practical language or Kurdish literary idiom British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 45 4 627 643 doi 10 1080 13530194 2018 1430536 S2CID 148611170 Diyala ديالى ISW Institute for the study of war Retrieved 23 October 2020 Sorkhabi Rasoul 2009 Oil from Babylon to Iraq Geo ExPro Retrieved 23 October 2020 Chaman Ara Behrooz Amiri Cyrus 12 March 2018 Gurani practical language or Kurdish literary idiom British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies 45 4 627 643 doi 10 1080 13530194 2018 1430536 S2CID 148611170 Adel Soheil March 2019 The Iraqi Ba th Regime s Atrocities Against the Faylee Kurds Nation State pp 83 84 ISBN 978 91 7785 892 8 Archibald Roosevelt 1944 Kurdish tribal map of Iraq showing the Iraq portion of Kurdistan and the major Kurdish tribal divisions within Iraq Yale University Fattah Ismail Kamandar 2000 Les dialectes kurdes meridionaux Acta Iranica 37 pp 30 31 ایل سوره میری سوره مهری یا سرخه مهری April 4 1396 ایل ارکوازی معنی در دیکشنری آبادیس abadis ir Retrieved 2022 09 03 Refugees United Nations High Commissioner for Refworld Genocide in Iraq The Anfal Campaign Against the Kurds Refworld Retrieved 2022 09 03 a b Khanaqin once known as city of tolerance still open to Arab refugees Rudaw 3 December 2014 Retrieved 24 October 2020 Aḥmad K M 1985 ʿANNAZIDS Iranica Online II Rasoul Rasoul Muhammed 2017 History of Kirkuk from the Beginning of the Nineteenth Century until Becoming Part of the Iraqi Monarchy in 1925 PDF University of Erfurt p 91 Tomoko Morikawa 2014 Pilgrims beyond the border Immigration at Khanaqin and its procedures in the nineteenth century Pilgrims Beyond the Border Immigration at Khanaqin and Its Procedures in the Nineteenth Century 72 100 102 Tomoko Morikawa 2014 Pilgrims beyond the border Immigration at Khanaqin and its procedures in the nineteenth century Pilgrims Beyond the Border Immigration at Khanaqin and Its Procedures in the Nineteenth Century 72 117 Dowling Timothy C 2014 Russia at War From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan Chechnya and Beyond ABC CLIO p 409 ISBN 9781598849486 Eppel Michael 2016 A People Without a State The Kurds from the Rise of Islam to the Dawn of Nationalism University of Texas Press p 111 ISBN 9781477311073 Jwaideh Wadie 2006 The Kurdish National Movement Its Origins and Development Syracuse University Press p 160 ISBN 9780815630937 Ihsan Mohammad Administrative Changes in Kirkuk and Disputed Areas in Iraq 1968 2003 p 43 Baghdad North Fate Khanaqin memorial Commonwealth War Graves Retrieved 24 October 2020 Extremists damage graveyard of Polish people in Khanaqin Kirkuknow 1 March 2020 A year of Iran Iraq war seems to bring impasse New York Times 23 September 1981 Retrieved 24 October 2020 Big battle erupts in Iran Iraq war New York Times 17 February 1984 Retrieved 24 October 2020 AFTER THE WAR Iraq Iraqi Loyalists Pound Shiite Mosques Rebels Say New York Times 12 March 1991 Kurds to be removed from Kirkuk over Turkey anger The Irish Times 10 April 2003 Retrieved 23 October 2020 Kane Sean 2011 Iraq s Disputed Territories PDF p 35 Retrieved 24 October 2020 Bombings Expose Khanaqin Tensions iwpr net Diyala town s allegiance Iraq or Kurdistan Stars and Stripes 8 September 2008 Retrieved 23 October 2020 Cordesman Anthony H Mausner Adam 2009 Withdrawal from Iraq Assessing the Readiness of Iraqi Security Forces CSIS p 126 ISBN 9780892065530 Khanaqin warns Iraq gov t of revolution outbreak if Kurdistan flag is lowered 14 October 2011 Retrieved 24 October 2020 Meeting results in recommendation to return Peshmerga to Khanaqin Shafaq 17 May 2020 Retrieved 24 October 2020 C J Edmonds 1957 Kurds Turks and Arabs Politics Travel and Research in North Eastern Iraq 1919 1925 Oxford University Press p 440 Retrieved 17 November 2019 a b Ihsan Mohammad Administrative Changes in Kirkuk and Disputed Areas in Iraq 1968 2003 pp 44 49 a b III Background Forced Displacement and Arabization of Northern Iraq Human Rights Watch 2004 Retrieved 22 October 2020 Only Christian in Iraq s Khanaqin Reuters Archive Licensing Retrieved 2022 04 12 Kaka is The men with big moustaches www pukmedia com پل الون هدیه یک دختر قاجاری به شهر خانقین در آکانیوز بازدید سپتامبر ۲۰۰۹ Khanaqin Jewish Virtual Library Retrieved 23 October 2020 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khanaqin amp oldid 1152017059, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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