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Khwarazmian Empire

The Khwarazmian or Khwarezmian Empire[note 2] (English: /kwəˈræzmiən/)[9] was a culturally Persianate, Sunni Muslim empire of Turkic mamluk origin,[10][11] that ruled large parts of present-day Central Asia, Afghanistan, and Iran in the approximate period of 1077 to 1231, first as vassals of the Seljuk Empire[12] and the Qara Khitai (Western Liao dynasty),[13] and from circa 1190 as independent rulers, up until the Mongol conquest in 1219–1221.

Khwarazmian Empire
خوارزمشاهیان
Khwārazmshāhiyān
c. 1077–1231
Territory of the Khwarazmian Empire c. 1215, on the eve of the Mongol conquests
StatusEmpire
CapitalGurganj
(1077–1212)
Samarqand
(1212–1220)
Ghazna
(1220–1221)
Tabriz
(1225–1231)
Largest cityShahr-e Ray
Common languagesPersian (official, court, spoken)[1][2]
Arabic (theology, numismatics[3])
Kipchak Turkic (dynastic, spoken)[4]
Oghuz Turkic (spoken)[5]
Religion
Sunni Islam
GovernmentAbsolute monarchy
Khwarazmshah 
• 1077–1096/7
Anushtegin Gharchai
• 1220–1231
Jalal ad-Din Mingburnu
Historical eraMedieval
• Established
c. 1077
1219–1221
1230
• Disestablished
1231
Area
1210 est.[6] or2,300,000 km2 (890,000 sq mi)
1218 est.[7]3,600,000 km2 (1,400,000 sq mi)
Population
• 1220[8][note 1]
5,000,000
CurrencyDirham

The Khwarazmian Empire eventually became "the most powerful and aggressively expansionist empire in the Persian lands", defeating the Seljuk Empire and the Ghurid Empire, even threatening the Abbasid caliphate. In the beginning of the 13th century, the empire is thought to have become the greatest power in the Muslim world.[14] It is estimated that the empire spanned an area of 2.3 million square kilometers[15] to 3.6 million square kilometers[16] effectively making it one of the largest land empires in history. The empire, which was modelled on the preceding Seljuk Empire, was defended by a huge cavalry army composed largely of Kipchak Turks.[17]

The Khwarezmian Empire was the last Turco-Persian Empire before the Mongol invasion of Central Asia. In 1219, the Mongols under their ruler Genghis Khan invaded the Khwarazmian Empire, successfully conquering the whole of it in just two years. The Mongols exploited existing weaknesses and conflicts in the empire, besieging and plundering the richest cities, while putting its citizens to the sword in one of the bloodiest wars in human history.

The date of the founding of the state of the Khwarazmshahs remains debatable. The dynasty that ruled the empire was founded by Anush Tigin (also known as Gharachai), initially a Turkic slave of the rulers of Gharchistan, later a Mamluk in the service of the Seljuks. However, it was Ala ad-Din Atsiz (r.1127-1156), descendant of Anush Tigin, who achieved Khwarazm's independence from its neighbors.

History

Early history

The title of Khwarazmshah was introduced in 305 AD by the founder of the Afrigid dynasty and existed until 995. After a short interval, the title was reinstated. During the uprising in Khwarazm in 1017, rebels killed the then Khwarazmian ruler Abu'l-Abbas Ma'mun and his wife Khurra-ji, the sister of Ghaznavid sultan Mahmud.[18] In response, Mahmud invaded the region to quell the rebellion. He later installed a new ruler and annexed a portion of Khwarazm. As a result, Khwarazm became a province of the Ghaznavid empire and remained so until 1034.[19]

In 1077, the control of the region, which previously belonged to the Seljuqs from 1042 to 1043, passed into the hands of Anushtegin Gharchai, a Turkic mamluk commander of the Seljuqs.[20] In 1097, the Khwarazm governor of the Turkic origin Ekinchi ibn Qochqar declared independence from the Seljuqs and proclaimed himself the shah of Khwarazm. After a short period of time, however, he was killed by several Seljuq amirs that had risen in revolt. He was subsequently replaced with Anush Tigin Gharachai's son, Qutb al-Din Muhammad by the Seljuqs, who had reconquered the region. Thus, Qutb al-Din became the first hereditary Khwarazmshah.[21]

Rise

Anushtegin Gharachai

 
Mina'i bowl with enthroned figure. Early 13th century, Iran.[22]

Anushtegin Gharachai was a Turkic[note 3] mamluk commander of the Seljuqs[25] and the governor of Khwarazm from approximately 1077 until 1097. He was the first member of his family to rule Khwarazm, and the namesake for the dynasty that would rule the province in the 12th and early 13th centuries.

Anushtegin was put in command together with his master Gumushtegin Bilge-Beg in 1073 by the Seljuq sultan Malik-Shah I to retake territory in northern Greater Khorasan that the Ghaznavids had seized.[26] He was subsequently made the sultan's tasht-dar (Persian: "keeper of the royal vessels"), and, as the revenues from Khwarazm were used to pay for the expenses incurred by this position, he was made governor of the province. The details of his tenure as governor are unclear, but he died by 1097 and the post was briefly given to Ekinchi bin Qochqar before being transferred to his son, Qutb al-Din Muhammad.

Ala ad-Din Atsiz

 
Khwarazmshah Il-Arslan at his coronation, painting from the book Jami' al-Tawarikh (published circa 1300 CE)

Atsiz gained his position following his father Qutb al-Din's death in 1127. During the early part of his reign, he focused on securing Khwarazm against nomad attacks. In 1138, he rebelled against his suzerain, the Seljuq sultan Ahmad Sanjar, but was defeated in Hazarasp and forced to flee. Sanjar installed his nephew Suleiman Shah as ruler of Khwarazm and returned to Merv. Atsiz returned, however, and Suleiman Shah was unable to hold on to the province. Atsiz then attacked Bukhara, but by 1141 he again submitted to Sanjar, who pardoned him and formally returned control of Khwarazm over to him. The same year that Sanjar pardoned Atsiz, the Kara Khitai under Yelü Dashi defeated the Seljuqs in the Battle of Qatwan (1141), near Samarqand. Atsiz took advantage of the defeat to invade Khorasan, occupying Merv and Nishapur. Yelü Dashi, however, sent a force to plunder Khwarazm, forcing Atsiz to pay an annual tribute.[27] In 1142, Atsiz was expelled from Khorasan by Sanjar, who invaded Khwarazm in the following year and forced Atsiz back into vassalage, although he continued to pay tribute to the Kara Khitai until his death. Sanjar undertook another expedition against Atsïz in 1147 when the latter became rebellious again.[28]

Atsiz was a flexible politician and ruler, and was able to maneuver between the powerful Seljuk Sultan Sanjar and the equally powerful Kara Khitai ruler Yelü Dashi. He continued the land-gathering policy initiated by his predecessors, annexing Jand and Mangyshlak to Khwarazm. Many nomadic tribes were dependent on the Khwarazmshah. Towards the end of his life, Atsiz subordinated the entire northwestern part of Central Asia, and in fact, achieved its independence from its neighbors.[29]

Territorial expansion

Il-Arslan and Tekish

 
Mausoleum of Khwarazmshah Il-Arslan, in present-day Turkmenistan

Il-Arslan was the Shah of Khwarazm from 1156 until 1172. He was the son of Atsïz. Initially, Il-Arslan was made governor of Jand, an outpost on the Syr Darya which had recently been reconquered, by his father. In 1156, Atsiz died and Il-Arslan succeeded him as Khwarazmshah. Like his father, he decided to pay tribute to both the Seljuk sultan Sanjar and the Qara Khitai gurkhan.

Sanjar died only a few months after Il-Arslan's ascension, causing Seljuq Khurasan to descend into chaos. This allowed Il-Arslan to effectively break off Seljuk suzerainty, although he remained on friendly terms with Sanjar's successor, Mas'ud. Like his father, Il-Arslan sought to expand his influence in Khurasan.

In 1158, Il-Arslan became involved in the affairs of another Qara Khitai vassal state, the Karakhanids of Samarqand. The Karakhanid Chaghri Khan had been persecuting the Qarluks in his realm, and several Qarluk leaders fled to Khwarazm and sought Il-Arslan's help. He responded by invading the Karakhanid dominions, taking Bukhara and besieging Samarqand, where Chaghri Khan had taken refuge. The latter appealed to both the Turks of the Syr Darya and the Qara Khitai, and the gurkhan sent an army, but its commander hesitated to enter into conflict with the Khwarazmians.

 
Luster star-shaped tile, showing a sultan surrounded by members of the court, dated 1211–12 CE. Kashan, Iran.[30]

In 1172, the Qara Khitai launched a punitive expedition against Il-Arslan, who had not paid the required annual tribute. The Khwarazmian army was defeated, and Il-Arslan died shortly after. Following his death the state briefly became embroiled in turmoil, as the succession was disputed between his sons Tekish and Sultan Shah. Tekish emerged victorious and subsequently ruled the empire from 1172 to 1200.

Tekish stayed with the expansionist policies of his father Il-Arslan. Despite gaining his throne with the help of the Qara Khitai, he later shook off their suzerainty and repulsed the subsequent Qara Khitai invasion of Khwarazm. Tekish maintained close relations with the Oghuz Turkmens and Turkic Qipchak tribes from the vicinity of the Aral Sea, and recruited them at times for his conquest of Iran. A great number of these Turkmens were still pagan, and they were known in Iran for their barbarism and intense ferocity.[31]

In 1194, Tekish defeated the Seljuq sultan of Hamadan, Toghrul III, in an alliance with Caliph Al-Nasir, and conquered his territories. After the war, he broke with the Caliphate and was on the brink of a war with it until the Caliph accepted him as the sultan of Iran, Khorasan, and Turkestan in 1198. Tekish died of a peritonsillar abscess in 1200.[32] and was succeeded by his son, Ala ad-Din Muhammad. His death triggered spontaneous revolts and widespread massacre of the hated Khwarazmian Turkic soldiers stationed in Iran.[33]

Maximum expansion and decline

Ala al-Din Muhammad

 
Ceramic prayer niche from Mosque in Kashan, Iran, dated 1226 CE[34][35]

After his father Tekish died, Muhammad succeeded him. Muhammad led the maximum expansion of the Khwarazmian Empire, extinguishing the Western Kara-Khanid Khanate in 1213, and sweeping aside the Ghurids in 1215 whom they vassalized after the assassination of Muhammad Ghuri. The coins of Muhammad were minted in the Kara-Khanid capitals of Uzgend and Samarkand from 1213.[36]

In 1218, a small contingent of Mongols crossed borders in pursuit of an escaped enemy general. Upon successfully retrieving him, Genghis Khan made contact with the Shah. Genghis was looking to open trade relations, but having heard exaggerated reports of the Mongols, the Shah believed this gesture was only a ploy to invade Khwarazm.

Genghis sent emissaries to Khwarazm to emphasize his hope for a trade road. Muhammad II, in turn, had one of his governors (Inalchuq, his uncle) openly accuse the party of spying, seizing their rich goods and arresting the party.[37]

Trying to maintain diplomacy, Genghis sent an envoy of three men to the shah, to give him a chance to disclaim all knowledge of the governor's actions and hand him over to the Mongols for punishment. The shah executed the envoy (again, some sources claim one man was executed, some claim all three were), and then immediately had the Mongol merchant party (Muslim and Mongol alike) put to death and their goods seized.[38] These events led Genghis to retaliate with a force of 100,000 to 150,000 men that crossed the Jaxartes in 1219 and sacked the cities of Samarqand, Bukhara, Otrar and others. Muhammad's capital city, Gurganj, followed soon after. The Shah Muhammad II of Khwarazm fled and died some weeks later on an island in the Caspian Sea.

Turkan Khatun

 
Terken Khatun, captive of Mongols

On the eve of the Mongol invasion, a diarchy developed in the Khwarazmian Empire. Khwarazmshah Muhammad II was considered the absolute ruler, but the influence of his mother Turkan Khatun (Terken Khatun) was also great. Turkan Khatun even had the laqab: "the Ruler of the World" (Khudavand-e Jahaan), and another one for her decrees: "Protector of peace and faith, Turkan the Great, the ruler of women of both worlds." Turkan Khatun had a separate Diwan, separate palace and the orders of the Sultan were not considered to be effective without her signature. This fact, coupled with her conflicts with Muhammad II might have contributed to the impotence of the Khwarazmian Empire in the face of the Mongol onslaught.

In 1221, she was captured by the troops of Genghis Khan and died in poverty in Mongolia.

Jalal ad-Din Mingburnu

 
Jalal al-Din crossing the Indus River, escaping Genghis Khan and the Mongol army

Jalal al-Din was the last of Khwarazmshahs, who ruled the remnants of the Khwarazmian Empire and northwestern India from 1220 to 1231. He was reportedly the eldest son of Ala ad-Din Muhammad II, while his mother was a Turkmen concubine named Ay Chichek.[39] Due to the low status of Jalal al-Din's mother, his powerful grandmother and Qipchaq princess Terken Khatun refused to support him as heir to the throne, and instead favored his half-brother Uzlagh-Shah, whose mother was also a Qipchaq. Jalal al-Din first appears in historical records in 1215, when Muhammad II divided his empire amongst his sons, giving the southwestern part (part of the former Ghurid Empire) to Jalal al-Din.[40]

He attempted to flee to India, but the Mongols caught up with him before he got there, and he was defeated at the Battle of Indus. He escaped and sought asylum in the Sultanate of Delhi. Iltumish however denied this to him in deference to the relationship with the Abbasid caliphs. Returning to Persia, he gathered an army and re-established a kingdom. He never consolidated his power, however, spending the rest of his days struggling against the Mongols, the Seljuks of Rum, and pretenders to his own throne. He lost his power over Persia in a battle against the Mongols in the Alborz Mountains. Escaping to the Caucasus, he captured Azerbaijan in 1225, setting up his capital at Tabriz. In 1226 he attacked Georgia and sacked Tbilisi. Following on through the Armenian highlands he clashed with the Ayyubids, capturing the town Ahlat along the western shores of Lake Van, which sought the aid of the Seljuq Sultanate of Rûm. Sultan Kayqubad I defeated him at Arzinjan on the Upper Euphrates at the Battle of Yassıçemen in 1230. He escaped to Diyarbakir, while the Mongols conquered Azerbaijan in the ensuing confusion. He was murdered in 1231 by Kurdish highwaymen.[41]

State apparatus

The head of the central state apparatus (al-Majlis al-Ali al-Fahri at-Taji) of Kharazmshahs was a vizier, the first adviser to the head of state. He was the head of the diwan officials (askhab ad-dawawin), who appointed them and established salaries, pensions (arzak), controlling tax administration and the treasury.[42] The most prominent vizier of the Khwarazmian Empire was Al-Harawi, who built a mosque for the Shafi'is in Merv, a huge madrassah, a mosque and a repository of manuscripts in Gurganj. He died at the hands of the Shia Ismailis.[43]

An important position in the state apparatus of the Khwarazmshahs was also held by the senior or great hajib, who most of the time, was a representative of the Turkic nobility. The hajib reported to the Khwarazmshah on issues related to the shah and his family. The Khwarazmshah could have several hajibs, who carried out the "personal" instructions of the sultan.[44]

Capital cities

 
Gurganj (present-day Koneurgench) was the first and most important capital of the Khwarazmian empire.

Initially, the main city of the Khwarazmian Empire was Urganch or Gurganj. A prominent Middle Eastern biographer and geographer, Yaqut al-Hamawi, who visited Gurganj in 1219, wrote, "I have not seen a city greater, richer and more beautiful than Gurganj." Al-Qazvini, a Persian physician, astronomer, geographer and writer of Arab ancestry, states:

"Gurganj is a very beautiful city, surrounded by the attention of angels who represent the city in paradise just like a bride in a groom's house. The inhabitants of the capital were skillful artisans, especially the blacksmiths, carpenters and others. Carvers were famous for their products made of ivory and ebony. Workshops for the production of natural silk operated in the city."[45]

The cities of Samarqand, Ghazna and Tabriz also served as the capital of the later Khwarazmian Empire.

Population

 
Currency of the Khwarazmian Empire, double dirham, during the reign of Jalal ad-Din

The population of the Kwarazmian Empire consisted mainly of sedentary Iranian and half-nomadic Turkic peoples.[46]

The urban population of the empire was concentrated in a relatively small number of (by medieval standards) very large cities as opposed to a huge number of smaller towns. The population of the empire is estimated at 5 million people on the eve of the Mongol invasion in 1220, making it sparse for the large area it covered.[8][note 1] Historical demographers Tertius Chandler and Gerald Fox give the following estimations for the populations of the empire's major cities at the beginning of the 13th century, which adds up to at least 520,000 and at most 850,000 people:[48]

Culture

 
Lustreware plate painted by Abu Zayd al-Kashani in December 1210 AD (dated AH Jumada II 607), at the time of the Khwarazmian Empire. Iran, Freer Gallery of Art.[50]

Although the Khwarazmshahs had a Turkic origin, just as their Seljuq predecessors, they adopted Persian culture, adhered to the Sunni branch of Islam and had their richest and most populous cities in Khorasan. Thus, the Khwarazmshah era had a dual character, reflecting both its Turkic origin and Persian high culture.

Language

 
The Mausoleum of a sufi of Khwarazm, Najm-ad-Din al-Kubra, in old Gurganj (present-day Kunya-Urgench, Turkmenistan)

During the Khwarazmshah era, Central Asian society was fragmented, unified under one banner only recently. The Khwarazmian military mostly consisted of Turks, while the civilian and administrative element was almost exclusively Persian. The spoken language of the Turkic population of Khwarazm was Kipchak Turkic and Oghuz, the latter being the legacy of the previous masters of the area, Seljuq Turkomans.[51]

However, the dominant language of the era and the one spoken by the majority in the important Khwarazmian cities was Persian. The language of the sedentary diwan was also Persian, and its members had to be well versed in Persian culture, regardless of their ethnic origin. Persian became the official state language of the Khwarazmshahs and served as the language of administration, history, fiction and poetry. The Turkic language was the mother tongue and "home language" of the Anushteginid family, while Arabic served primarily as the language of science, philosophy, and theology.

Ceramics in the Khwarazmian period

The finely decorated Mina'i ceramics were mainly produced in Kashan, in the decades leading up to the Mongol invasion of Persia in 1219, at a time when the Khwarazmian Empire ruled the area, initially under the suzerainty of the Seljuk Empire, and independently from 1190.[52] Some of the "most iconic" productions of stonepaste vessels can be attributed to the Khwarazmian rulers, after the end of Seljuk domination (the Seljuk Empire itself ended in 1194).[53] In general, it is considered that Mina'i ware was manufactured from the late 12th century and the early 13th century, and dated Mina’i wares range from 1186 to 1224.[54] Extensive lusterware also belongs to this period.

Military

 
The Khwarazmian fortress of Kyzyl-Kala, under restoration

It is estimated that the Khwarazmian army, prior to the Mongol invasion, consisted of about 40,000 cavalry, mostly of Turkic origin. Militias existed in Khwarazm's major cities but were of poor quality. With collective populations of around 700,000, the major cities probably had 105,000 to 140,000 healthy males of fighting age in total (15–20% of the population), but only a fraction of these would be part of a formal militia with any notable measure of training and equipment.[59]

Mercenaries

 
Mina'i bowl depicting battle scene in Khalkhal, Iran, early 13th century. Kashan, Iran.[60][61]

After the Mongol invasion of the Khwarazmian Empire, many Khwarazmians survived by employing themselves as mercenaries in northern Iraq. Sultan Jalal ad-Din's followers remained loyal to him even after his death in 1231, and raided the Seljuq lands of Jazira and Syria for the next several years, calling themselves the Khwarazmiyya. Ayyubid Sultan as-Salih Ayyub, in Egypt, later hired them against his uncle as-Salih Ismail. The Khwarazmiyya, heading south from Iraq towards Egypt, invaded Crusader-held Jerusalem along the way, on 11 July 1244 (Siege of Jerusalem (1244)). The city's citadel, the Tower of David, surrendered on 23 August, and the Christian population of the city was expelled. This triggered a call from Europe for the Seventh Crusade, but the Crusaders would never again be successful in retaking Jerusalem. After being conquered by the Khwarazmian forces, the city stayed under Muslim control until 1917, when it was taken from the Ottomans by the British.

After taking Jerusalem, the Khwarazmian forces continued south, and on 17 October 1244 fought on the side of the Ayyubids at the Battle of La Forbie, as the Crusaders used to call Harbiyah, a village northeast of Gaza, destroying the remains of the Crusader army there, with some 1,200 knights killed. It was the largest battle involving the Crusaders since the Battle of the Horns of Hattin in 1187.[62]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Additionally, the population of roughly the same area (Persia and Central Asia) plus some others (Caucasia and northeast Anatolia) is estimated at 5–6 million nearly 400 hundreds later, under the rule of the Safavid dynasty.[47]
  2. ^ Also known as Khwarazm (Persian: خوارزم, romanizedKhwārazm) or the Khwarazmshahs (Persian: خوارزمشاهیان, romanizedKhwārazmshāhiyān)
  3. ^ Medieval historians such as Hafiz-i Abru and Rashid al-Din believed that Anushtegin was of Begdili tribe of Oghuz Turks,[23][24] while Turkish historian Kafesoğlu states that Anushtegin was either of Khalaj or Chigil origin and the Bashkir historian Zeki Velidi Togan believes he was of Qipchaq, Qanghli or Uyghur descent.[25]

References

  1. ^ Babayan 2003, p. 14.
  2. ^ Katouzian 2007, p. 128.
  3. ^ Kuznetsov & Fedorov 2013, p. 145.
  4. ^ Gafurov, B.G. Central Asia:Pre-Historic to Pre-Modern Times, Vol. 2, (Shipra Publications, 1989), p. 359.
  5. ^ Vasilyeva, G.P. "Ethnic processes in origins of Turkmen people." Soviet Ethnography. Publishing house: Nauka, 1969. pp. 81-98.
  6. ^ Turchin, Peter; Adams, Jonathan M.; Hall, Thomas D. (December 2006). "East-West Orientation of Historical Empires". Journal of World-Systems Research. 12 (2): 222. ISSN 1076-156X. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
  7. ^ Rein Taagepera (September 1997). "Expansion and Contraction Patterns of Large Polities: Context for Russia". International Studies Quarterly. 41 (3): 497. doi:10.1111/0020-8833.00053. JSTOR 2600793.
  8. ^ a b John Man, "Genghis Khan: Life, Death, and Resurrection", February 6, 2007. Page 180.
  9. ^ "Khwarazmian: definition". Merriam Webster. n.d. Retrieved 21 October 2010.
  10. ^ Bosworth, C.E. (1 January 1998). History of Civilizations of Central Asia. UNESCO. p. 164. ISBN 978-92-3-103467-1. Mahm ̄ud and Masc ̄ud I of Ghazna had appointed Turkish slave commanders from their own army, Altuntash and his sons, as governors there with the ancient title of Khwarazm Shah." (...) "In order to secure these important regions, Malik Sh ̄ah had appointed the keeper of the royal washing bowls (tast-d ̄ar), his slave commander An ̄ush-tegin Gharcha' ̄ı, as titular governor at least in Khwarazm. During Berkyaruk's reign, the sultan appointed in 1097 another Turkishghul ̄am, Ekinchi b. Kochkar, with the historic title of KhwarazmShah. When, in that same year, Ekinchi was killed, Berkyaruk nominated in his stead An ̄ushtegin's son Qutb al-D ̄ın Muhammad as governor, and Muhammad's tenure of power there (1097–1127) inaugurates the fourth and most brilliant line of hereditary KhwarazmShahs
  11. ^ C. E. Bosworth : Khwarazmshahs i. Descendants of the line of Anuštigin. In Encyclopaedia Iranica, online ed., 2009: "Little specific is known about the internal functioning of the Khwarazmian state, but its bureaucracy, directed as it was by Persian officials, must have followed the Saljuq model. This is the impression gained from the various Khwarazmian chancery and financial documents preserved in the collections of enšāʾdocuments and epistles from this period. The authors of at least three of these collections—Rašid-al-Din Vaṭvāṭ (d. 1182-83 or 1187-88), with his two collections of rasāʾel, and Bahāʾ-al-Din Baḡdādi, compiler of the important Ketāb al-tawaṣṣol elā al-tarassol—were heads of the Khwarazmian chancery. The Khwarazmshahs had viziers as their chief executives, on the traditional pattern, and only as the dynasty approached its end did ʿAlāʾ-al-Din Moḥammad in ca. 615/1218 divide up the office amongst six commissioners (wakildārs; see Kafesoğlu, pp. 5-8, 17; Horst, pp. 10-12, 25, and passim). Nor is much specifically known of court life in Gorgānj under the Khwarazmshahs, but they had, like other rulers of their age, their court eulogists, and as well as being a noted stylist, Rašid-al-Din Vaṭvāṭ also had a considerable reputation as a poet in Persian." Norman M. Naimark, Genocide: A World History (Oxford University Press, 2017), 20 "The Persian-speaking and Islamic Khwarezmian empire, which was founded in Central Asia south of the Aral Sea around its capital of Samarkand, and included such remarkable centers of trade and civilizations as Bukhara and Urgench, ..."
  12. ^ Rene Grousset, The Empire of the Steppes:A History of Central Asia, Transl. Naomi Walford, Rutgers University Press, 1991, page 159.
  13. ^ Biran, Michel, The Empire of the Qara Khitai in Eurasian history, (Cambridge University Press, 2005), 44.
  14. ^ Bosworth, C.E. (1 January 1998). History of Civilizations of Central Asia. UNESCO. p. 164. ISBN 978-92-3-103467-1. This dynasty eventually built up, as the Seljuq empire in the east tottered to its close, the most powerful and aggressively expansionist empire in the Persian lands, in the end defeating their rivals for control of Khurasan, the Ghurids of Afghanistan, threatening western Persia and Iraq and the Abbasid caliphate itself, and only disintegrating under the overwhelming military might of the Mongol invaders in the opening decades of the thirteenth century.
  15. ^ Turchin, Peter; Adams, Jonathan M.; Hall, Thomas D (December 2006). "East-West Orientation of Historical Empires". Journal of World-Systems Research. 12 (2): 222. ISSN 1076-156X. Retrieved 12 September 2016.
  16. ^ Rein Taagepera (September 1997). "Expansion and Contraction Patterns of Large Polities: Context for Russia". International Studies Quarterly. 41 (3): 497. doi:10.1111/0020-8833.00053. JSTOR 2600793.
  17. ^ David Abulafia (2015). The New Cambridge Medieval History: Volume 5, C.1198-c.1300. p. 610.
  18. ^ C.E. Bosworth, The Ghaznavids: 994-1040, Edinburgh University Press, 1963, page 237
  19. ^ Buniyatov, Z. The State of Khwarazmshah-Anushteginids. 1097—1231 М., 1986. pages 41-75.
  20. ^ Biran, Michel, The Empire of the Qara Khitai in Eurasian History, Cambridge University Press, 2005, 44.
  21. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, "Khwarezm-Shah-Dynasty", (LINK)
  22. ^ "Metropolitan Museum of Art". www.metmuseum.org.
  23. ^ Fadlullah, Rashid al-Din (1987). Oghuznameh. Baku: Elm. Similarly, the most distant ancestor of Sultan Muhammad Khwarazmshah was Nushtekin Gharcha, who was a descendant of the Begdili tribe of the Oghuz family.
  24. ^ Buniyatov, Z.M (1986). The State of Khwarazmshah-Anushteginids (1097-1231). Nauka. p. 80.
  25. ^ a b Bosworth 1968.
  26. ^ Bosworth 1968, p. 93.
  27. ^ Biran, 44.
  28. ^ Grousset, Rene, The Empire of the Steppes: A History of Central Asia, (Rutgers University Press, 2002), 160.
  29. ^ Historical and Cultural Heritage of Turkmenistan: Encyclopedic Dictionary. ed. by: Gundogdyeva, O. A.; Muradova R. G. Istanbul: UNDP, 2000. pp 1-381. ISBN 975-97256-0-6
  30. ^ "Metropolitan Museum of Art". www.metmuseum.org.
  31. ^ Bosworth, C.E (1968). The Political and Dynastic History of the Iranian World (A.D. 1000-1217). Vol. V. Cambridge. pp. 181–197.
  32. ^ Juvaini, Ala-ad-Din Ata-Malik, History of the World Conqueror, Manchester University Press, Manchester, 1997. p. 314.
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  37. ^ Svat Soucek (2002). A History of Inner Asia. Cambridge University Press. pp. 106. ISBN 0-521-65704-0.
  38. ^ Man, John (2005). Genghis Khan: Life, Death and Resurrection. Bantam. p. 176. ISBN 978-0-553-81498-9.
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  40. ^ Paul, Jürgen (2018). "Jalāl al-Dīn Mangburnī". Encyclopedia of Islam - 3. p. 142.
  41. ^ . Archived from the original on 6 October 2008. Retrieved 1 March 2006.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  42. ^ Buniyatov, Z.M. (1999). Selected works in three volumes. Vol. 3. Baku. p. 60.
  43. ^ Buniyatov 1999, p. 61.
  44. ^ Buniyatov 1999, p. 62.
  45. ^ Buniyatov 1999, p. 65.
  46. ^ Gafurov, B.G. Central Asia: Pre-Historic to Pre-Modern Times. vol. 2. Shipra Publications, 1989. page 359.
  47. ^ Dale, Stephen Frederic (15 August 2002). Indian Merchants and Eurasian Trade, 1600–1750. p. 19. ISBN 9780521525978. Retrieved 15 April 2016.
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  49. ^ Chandler & Fox, p. 232: Merv, Samarkand, and Nipashur are referred to as "vying for the [title of] largest" among the "Cities of Persia and Turkestan in 1200", implying populations of less than 70,000 for the other cities (Otrar and others do not have precise estimates given). "Turkestan" seems to refer to Central Asian Turkic countries in general in this passage, as Samarkand, Merv, and Nishapur are located in modern Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and northeastern Iran respectively.
  50. ^ Blair, Sheila S. (1 January 2008). "A Brief Biography Of Abu Zayd". Muqarnas, Volume 25. Brill. p. 158. doi:10.1163/ej.9789004173279.i-396.37. ISBN 9789004173279.
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  52. ^ Komaroff, 4; Michelsen and Olafsdotter, 76; Fitzwilliam Museum: "Mina’i, meaning ‘enamelled’ ware, is one of the glories of Islamic ceramics, and was a speciality of the renowned ceramics centre of Kashan in Iran during the decades of the late 12th and early 13th centuries preceding the Mongol invasions".
  53. ^ "While stonepaste vessels are often attributed to the Seljuq period, some of the most iconic productions in the medium took place after this dynasty lost control over its eastern territories to other Central Asian Turkic groups, such as the Khwarezm-Shahis" in Rugiadi, Martina. "Ceramic Technology in the Seljuq Period: Stonepaste in Syria and Iran in the Twelfth and Early Thirteenth Centuries". www.metmuseum.org. Metropolitan Museum of Art (2021). Retrieved 1 February 2023.
  54. ^ The Grove Encyclopedia of Decorative Arts: Mina'i ware. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2006. ISBN 9780195189483.
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  60. ^ Holod, Renata (1 January 2012). "The Freer Gallery's Siege Scene Plate". Ars Orientalis.
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Sources

  • Babayan, K. (2003). Mystics, monarchs, and messiahs: cultural landscapes of early modern Iran. Harvard Center for Middle Eastern Studies.
  • Katouzian, Homa (2007). Iranian History and Politics: The Dialectic of State and Society. Routledge. ISBN 978-0415297547.
  • Kuznetsov, Andrew; Fedorov, Michael (2013). "Late Drachms of the Khwārazmshāh Azkājvār and Imitations of such Drachms". Iran: Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies. Taylor & Francis. 51 (1): 145–149.

External links

  •   Media related to Khwarazmian Empire at Wikimedia Commons

khwarazmian, empire, other, uses, khwarezmian, disambiguation, khwarazmian, khwarezmian, empire, note, english, culturally, persianate, sunni, muslim, empire, turkic, mamluk, origin, that, ruled, large, parts, present, central, asia, afghanistan, iran, approxi. For other uses see Khwarezmian disambiguation The Khwarazmian or Khwarezmian Empire note 2 English k w e ˈ r ae z m i en 9 was a culturally Persianate Sunni Muslim empire of Turkic mamluk origin 10 11 that ruled large parts of present day Central Asia Afghanistan and Iran in the approximate period of 1077 to 1231 first as vassals of the Seljuk Empire 12 and the Qara Khitai Western Liao dynasty 13 and from circa 1190 as independent rulers up until the Mongol conquest in 1219 1221 Khwarazmian Empireخوارزمشاهیان Khwarazmshahiyanc 1077 1231GHURID EMPIRECUMANSKIPCHAKSAYYUBIDSULTANATEABBASIDCALIPHATEZENGIDSDIYAR BAKRGEORGIARUM SELJUKSYADAVASQARA KHITAIKARA KHANIDS Territory of the Khwarazmian Empire c 1215 on the eve of the Mongol conquestsStatusEmpireCapitalGurganj 1077 1212 Samarqand 1212 1220 Ghazna 1220 1221 Tabriz 1225 1231 Largest cityShahr e RayCommon languagesPersian official court spoken 1 2 Arabic theology numismatics 3 Kipchak Turkic dynastic spoken 4 Oghuz Turkic spoken 5 ReligionSunni IslamGovernmentAbsolute monarchyKhwarazmshah 1077 1096 7Anushtegin Gharchai 1220 1231Jalal ad Din MingburnuHistorical eraMedieval Establishedc 1077 Mongol conquest of the Khwarazmian Empire1219 1221 Battle of Yassicemen1230 Disestablished1231Area1210 est 6 or2 300 000 km2 890 000 sq mi 1218 est 7 3 600 000 km2 1 400 000 sq mi Population 1220 8 note 1 5 000 000CurrencyDirhamPreceded by Succeeded bySeljuk EmpireGhurid dynastyQara KhitaiKara Khanid KhanateEldiguzidsAhmadilisBavand dynastyGhaznavids Mongol EmpireThe Khwarazmian Empire eventually became the most powerful and aggressively expansionist empire in the Persian lands defeating the Seljuk Empire and the Ghurid Empire even threatening the Abbasid caliphate In the beginning of the 13th century the empire is thought to have become the greatest power in the Muslim world 14 It is estimated that the empire spanned an area of 2 3 million square kilometers 15 to 3 6 million square kilometers 16 effectively making it one of the largest land empires in history The empire which was modelled on the preceding Seljuk Empire was defended by a huge cavalry army composed largely of Kipchak Turks 17 The Khwarezmian Empire was the last Turco Persian Empire before the Mongol invasion of Central Asia In 1219 the Mongols under their ruler Genghis Khan invaded the Khwarazmian Empire successfully conquering the whole of it in just two years The Mongols exploited existing weaknesses and conflicts in the empire besieging and plundering the richest cities while putting its citizens to the sword in one of the bloodiest wars in human history The date of the founding of the state of the Khwarazmshahs remains debatable The dynasty that ruled the empire was founded by Anush Tigin also known as Gharachai initially a Turkic slave of the rulers of Gharchistan later a Mamluk in the service of the Seljuks However it was Ala ad Din Atsiz r 1127 1156 descendant of Anush Tigin who achieved Khwarazm s independence from its neighbors Contents 1 History 1 1 Early history 1 2 Rise 1 2 1 Anushtegin Gharachai 1 2 2 Ala ad Din Atsiz 1 3 Territorial expansion 1 3 1 Il Arslan and Tekish 1 4 Maximum expansion and decline 1 5 Ala al Din Muhammad 1 5 1 Turkan Khatun 1 5 2 Jalal ad Din Mingburnu 2 State apparatus 3 Capital cities 4 Population 5 Culture 5 1 Language 5 2 Ceramics in the Khwarazmian period 6 Military 6 1 Mercenaries 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 External linksHistory EditEarly history Edit The title of Khwarazmshah was introduced in 305 AD by the founder of the Afrigid dynasty and existed until 995 After a short interval the title was reinstated During the uprising in Khwarazm in 1017 rebels killed the then Khwarazmian ruler Abu l Abbas Ma mun and his wife Khurra ji the sister of Ghaznavid sultan Mahmud 18 In response Mahmud invaded the region to quell the rebellion He later installed a new ruler and annexed a portion of Khwarazm As a result Khwarazm became a province of the Ghaznavid empire and remained so until 1034 19 In 1077 the control of the region which previously belonged to the Seljuqs from 1042 to 1043 passed into the hands of Anushtegin Gharchai a Turkic mamluk commander of the Seljuqs 20 In 1097 the Khwarazm governor of the Turkic origin Ekinchi ibn Qochqar declared independence from the Seljuqs and proclaimed himself the shah of Khwarazm After a short period of time however he was killed by several Seljuq amirs that had risen in revolt He was subsequently replaced with Anush Tigin Gharachai s son Qutb al Din Muhammad by the Seljuqs who had reconquered the region Thus Qutb al Din became the first hereditary Khwarazmshah 21 Rise Edit Anushtegin Gharachai Edit Main article Anushtegin Gharchai Mina i bowl with enthroned figure Early 13th century Iran 22 Anushtegin Gharachai was a Turkic note 3 mamluk commander of the Seljuqs 25 and the governor of Khwarazm from approximately 1077 until 1097 He was the first member of his family to rule Khwarazm and the namesake for the dynasty that would rule the province in the 12th and early 13th centuries Anushtegin was put in command together with his master Gumushtegin Bilge Beg in 1073 by the Seljuq sultan Malik Shah I to retake territory in northern Greater Khorasan that the Ghaznavids had seized 26 He was subsequently made the sultan s tasht dar Persian keeper of the royal vessels and as the revenues from Khwarazm were used to pay for the expenses incurred by this position he was made governor of the province The details of his tenure as governor are unclear but he died by 1097 and the post was briefly given to Ekinchi bin Qochqar before being transferred to his son Qutb al Din Muhammad Ala ad Din Atsiz Edit Main article Atsiz Khwarazmshah Il Arslan at his coronation painting from the book Jami al Tawarikh published circa 1300 CE Atsiz gained his position following his father Qutb al Din s death in 1127 During the early part of his reign he focused on securing Khwarazm against nomad attacks In 1138 he rebelled against his suzerain the Seljuq sultan Ahmad Sanjar but was defeated in Hazarasp and forced to flee Sanjar installed his nephew Suleiman Shah as ruler of Khwarazm and returned to Merv Atsiz returned however and Suleiman Shah was unable to hold on to the province Atsiz then attacked Bukhara but by 1141 he again submitted to Sanjar who pardoned him and formally returned control of Khwarazm over to him The same year that Sanjar pardoned Atsiz the Kara Khitai under Yelu Dashi defeated the Seljuqs in the Battle of Qatwan 1141 near Samarqand Atsiz took advantage of the defeat to invade Khorasan occupying Merv and Nishapur Yelu Dashi however sent a force to plunder Khwarazm forcing Atsiz to pay an annual tribute 27 In 1142 Atsiz was expelled from Khorasan by Sanjar who invaded Khwarazm in the following year and forced Atsiz back into vassalage although he continued to pay tribute to the Kara Khitai until his death Sanjar undertook another expedition against Atsiz in 1147 when the latter became rebellious again 28 Atsiz was a flexible politician and ruler and was able to maneuver between the powerful Seljuk Sultan Sanjar and the equally powerful Kara Khitai ruler Yelu Dashi He continued the land gathering policy initiated by his predecessors annexing Jand and Mangyshlak to Khwarazm Many nomadic tribes were dependent on the Khwarazmshah Towards the end of his life Atsiz subordinated the entire northwestern part of Central Asia and in fact achieved its independence from its neighbors 29 Territorial expansion Edit Il Arslan and Tekish Edit Main article Il Arslan Main article Ala al Din Tekish Mausoleum of Khwarazmshah Il Arslan in present day TurkmenistanIl Arslan was the Shah of Khwarazm from 1156 until 1172 He was the son of Atsiz Initially Il Arslan was made governor of Jand an outpost on the Syr Darya which had recently been reconquered by his father In 1156 Atsiz died and Il Arslan succeeded him as Khwarazmshah Like his father he decided to pay tribute to both the Seljuk sultan Sanjar and the Qara Khitai gurkhan Sanjar died only a few months after Il Arslan s ascension causing Seljuq Khurasan to descend into chaos This allowed Il Arslan to effectively break off Seljuk suzerainty although he remained on friendly terms with Sanjar s successor Mas ud Like his father Il Arslan sought to expand his influence in Khurasan In 1158 Il Arslan became involved in the affairs of another Qara Khitai vassal state the Karakhanids of Samarqand The Karakhanid Chaghri Khan had been persecuting the Qarluks in his realm and several Qarluk leaders fled to Khwarazm and sought Il Arslan s help He responded by invading the Karakhanid dominions taking Bukhara and besieging Samarqand where Chaghri Khan had taken refuge The latter appealed to both the Turks of the Syr Darya and the Qara Khitai and the gurkhan sent an army but its commander hesitated to enter into conflict with the Khwarazmians Luster star shaped tile showing a sultan surrounded by members of the court dated 1211 12 CE Kashan Iran 30 In 1172 the Qara Khitai launched a punitive expedition against Il Arslan who had not paid the required annual tribute The Khwarazmian army was defeated and Il Arslan died shortly after Following his death the state briefly became embroiled in turmoil as the succession was disputed between his sons Tekish and Sultan Shah Tekish emerged victorious and subsequently ruled the empire from 1172 to 1200 Tekish stayed with the expansionist policies of his father Il Arslan Despite gaining his throne with the help of the Qara Khitai he later shook off their suzerainty and repulsed the subsequent Qara Khitai invasion of Khwarazm Tekish maintained close relations with the Oghuz Turkmens and Turkic Qipchak tribes from the vicinity of the Aral Sea and recruited them at times for his conquest of Iran A great number of these Turkmens were still pagan and they were known in Iran for their barbarism and intense ferocity 31 In 1194 Tekish defeated the Seljuq sultan of Hamadan Toghrul III in an alliance with Caliph Al Nasir and conquered his territories After the war he broke with the Caliphate and was on the brink of a war with it until the Caliph accepted him as the sultan of Iran Khorasan and Turkestan in 1198 Tekish died of a peritonsillar abscess in 1200 32 and was succeeded by his son Ala ad Din Muhammad His death triggered spontaneous revolts and widespread massacre of the hated Khwarazmian Turkic soldiers stationed in Iran 33 Maximum expansion and decline Edit Ala al Din Muhammad Edit Main article Muhammad II of Khwarazm See also Battle of Andkhud Ceramic prayer niche from Mosque in Kashan Iran dated 1226 CE 34 35 After his father Tekish died Muhammad succeeded him Muhammad led the maximum expansion of the Khwarazmian Empire extinguishing the Western Kara Khanid Khanate in 1213 and sweeping aside the Ghurids in 1215 whom they vassalized after the assassination of Muhammad Ghuri The coins of Muhammad were minted in the Kara Khanid capitals of Uzgend and Samarkand from 1213 36 In 1218 a small contingent of Mongols crossed borders in pursuit of an escaped enemy general Upon successfully retrieving him Genghis Khan made contact with the Shah Genghis was looking to open trade relations but having heard exaggerated reports of the Mongols the Shah believed this gesture was only a ploy to invade Khwarazm Genghis sent emissaries to Khwarazm to emphasize his hope for a trade road Muhammad II in turn had one of his governors Inalchuq his uncle openly accuse the party of spying seizing their rich goods and arresting the party 37 Trying to maintain diplomacy Genghis sent an envoy of three men to the shah to give him a chance to disclaim all knowledge of the governor s actions and hand him over to the Mongols for punishment The shah executed the envoy again some sources claim one man was executed some claim all three were and then immediately had the Mongol merchant party Muslim and Mongol alike put to death and their goods seized 38 These events led Genghis to retaliate with a force of 100 000 to 150 000 men that crossed the Jaxartes in 1219 and sacked the cities of Samarqand Bukhara Otrar and others Muhammad s capital city Gurganj followed soon after The Shah Muhammad II of Khwarazm fled and died some weeks later on an island in the Caspian Sea Turkan Khatun Edit Terken Khatun captive of MongolsMain article Terken Khatun wife of Ala ad Din Tekish On the eve of the Mongol invasion a diarchy developed in the Khwarazmian Empire Khwarazmshah Muhammad II was considered the absolute ruler but the influence of his mother Turkan Khatun Terken Khatun was also great Turkan Khatun even had the laqab the Ruler of the World Khudavand e Jahaan and another one for her decrees Protector of peace and faith Turkan the Great the ruler of women of both worlds Turkan Khatun had a separate Diwan separate palace and the orders of the Sultan were not considered to be effective without her signature This fact coupled with her conflicts with Muhammad II might have contributed to the impotence of the Khwarazmian Empire in the face of the Mongol onslaught In 1221 she was captured by the troops of Genghis Khan and died in poverty in Mongolia Jalal ad Din Mingburnu Edit Jalal al Din crossing the Indus River escaping Genghis Khan and the Mongol armyMain article Jalal al Din Mangburni Jalal al Din was the last of Khwarazmshahs who ruled the remnants of the Khwarazmian Empire and northwestern India from 1220 to 1231 He was reportedly the eldest son of Ala ad Din Muhammad II while his mother was a Turkmen concubine named Ay Chichek 39 Due to the low status of Jalal al Din s mother his powerful grandmother and Qipchaq princess Terken Khatun refused to support him as heir to the throne and instead favored his half brother Uzlagh Shah whose mother was also a Qipchaq Jalal al Din first appears in historical records in 1215 when Muhammad II divided his empire amongst his sons giving the southwestern part part of the former Ghurid Empire to Jalal al Din 40 He attempted to flee to India but the Mongols caught up with him before he got there and he was defeated at the Battle of Indus He escaped and sought asylum in the Sultanate of Delhi Iltumish however denied this to him in deference to the relationship with the Abbasid caliphs Returning to Persia he gathered an army and re established a kingdom He never consolidated his power however spending the rest of his days struggling against the Mongols the Seljuks of Rum and pretenders to his own throne He lost his power over Persia in a battle against the Mongols in the Alborz Mountains Escaping to the Caucasus he captured Azerbaijan in 1225 setting up his capital at Tabriz In 1226 he attacked Georgia and sacked Tbilisi Following on through the Armenian highlands he clashed with the Ayyubids capturing the town Ahlat along the western shores of Lake Van which sought the aid of the Seljuq Sultanate of Rum Sultan Kayqubad I defeated him at Arzinjan on the Upper Euphrates at the Battle of Yassicemen in 1230 He escaped to Diyarbakir while the Mongols conquered Azerbaijan in the ensuing confusion He was murdered in 1231 by Kurdish highwaymen 41 State apparatus EditThe head of the central state apparatus al Majlis al Ali al Fahri at Taji of Kharazmshahs was a vizier the first adviser to the head of state He was the head of the diwan officials askhab ad dawawin who appointed them and established salaries pensions arzak controlling tax administration and the treasury 42 The most prominent vizier of the Khwarazmian Empire was Al Harawi who built a mosque for the Shafi is in Merv a huge madrassah a mosque and a repository of manuscripts in Gurganj He died at the hands of the Shia Ismailis 43 An important position in the state apparatus of the Khwarazmshahs was also held by the senior or great hajib who most of the time was a representative of the Turkic nobility The hajib reported to the Khwarazmshah on issues related to the shah and his family The Khwarazmshah could have several hajibs who carried out the personal instructions of the sultan 44 Capital cities Edit Gurganj present day Koneurgench was the first and most important capital of the Khwarazmian empire Initially the main city of the Khwarazmian Empire was Urganch or Gurganj A prominent Middle Eastern biographer and geographer Yaqut al Hamawi who visited Gurganj in 1219 wrote I have not seen a city greater richer and more beautiful than Gurganj Al Qazvini a Persian physician astronomer geographer and writer of Arab ancestry states Gurganj is a very beautiful city surrounded by the attention of angels who represent the city in paradise just like a bride in a groom s house The inhabitants of the capital were skillful artisans especially the blacksmiths carpenters and others Carvers were famous for their products made of ivory and ebony Workshops for the production of natural silk operated in the city 45 The cities of Samarqand Ghazna and Tabriz also served as the capital of the later Khwarazmian Empire Population Edit Currency of the Khwarazmian Empire double dirham during the reign of Jalal ad DinThe population of the Kwarazmian Empire consisted mainly of sedentary Iranian and half nomadic Turkic peoples 46 The urban population of the empire was concentrated in a relatively small number of by medieval standards very large cities as opposed to a huge number of smaller towns The population of the empire is estimated at 5 million people on the eve of the Mongol invasion in 1220 making it sparse for the large area it covered 8 note 1 Historical demographers Tertius Chandler and Gerald Fox give the following estimations for the populations of the empire s major cities at the beginning of the 13th century which adds up to at least 520 000 and at most 850 000 people 48 Samarqand 80 000 100 000 Nishapur 70 000 Rayy Rey 100 000 Isfahan 80 000 Merv 70 000 Balkh c 30 000 Bost c 40 000 Herat c 40 000 Otrar Urgench and Bukhara unknown but less than 70 000 49 Culture Edit Lustreware plate painted by Abu Zayd al Kashani in December 1210 AD dated AH Jumada II 607 at the time of the Khwarazmian Empire Iran Freer Gallery of Art 50 Although the Khwarazmshahs had a Turkic origin just as their Seljuq predecessors they adopted Persian culture adhered to the Sunni branch of Islam and had their richest and most populous cities in Khorasan Thus the Khwarazmshah era had a dual character reflecting both its Turkic origin and Persian high culture Language Edit The Mausoleum of a sufi of Khwarazm Najm ad Din al Kubra in old Gurganj present day Kunya Urgench Turkmenistan During the Khwarazmshah era Central Asian society was fragmented unified under one banner only recently The Khwarazmian military mostly consisted of Turks while the civilian and administrative element was almost exclusively Persian The spoken language of the Turkic population of Khwarazm was Kipchak Turkic and Oghuz the latter being the legacy of the previous masters of the area Seljuq Turkomans 51 However the dominant language of the era and the one spoken by the majority in the important Khwarazmian cities was Persian The language of the sedentary diwan was also Persian and its members had to be well versed in Persian culture regardless of their ethnic origin Persian became the official state language of the Khwarazmshahs and served as the language of administration history fiction and poetry The Turkic language was the mother tongue and home language of the Anushteginid family while Arabic served primarily as the language of science philosophy and theology Ceramics in the Khwarazmian period Edit Main articles Mina i ware and Lusterware The finely decorated Mina i ceramics were mainly produced in Kashan in the decades leading up to the Mongol invasion of Persia in 1219 at a time when the Khwarazmian Empire ruled the area initially under the suzerainty of the Seljuk Empire and independently from 1190 52 Some of the most iconic productions of stonepaste vessels can be attributed to the Khwarazmian rulers after the end of Seljuk domination the Seljuk Empire itself ended in 1194 53 In general it is considered that Mina i ware was manufactured from the late 12th century and the early 13th century and dated Mina i wares range from 1186 to 1224 54 Extensive lusterware also belongs to this period Horsemen Mina i ware early 13th century Iran 55 Mina i Bowl with horserider early 13th century Iran 56 Mina i Lobed bowl early 13th century Iran 57 Lusterware bowl with leopard early 13th century Kashan Iran 58 Dated examples are also known Military Edit The Khwarazmian fortress of Kyzyl Kala under restoration 1215KHWARAZMIANEMPIRECUMAN KHANATESKIEVANRUS MONGOLCONFEDERATIONKIPCHACKSQARA KHITAIQOCHOGHURID EMPIREZENGIDSABBASIDCALIPHATEYADAVASJINDYNASTYXI XIASONGDYNASTYPAGANDALIKHMERAYYUBIDSULTANATESULTANATEOF RUMGO RYEO class notpageimage The Khwarazmian Empire and the Mongol Confederation c 1215 on the eve of the Mongol conquest of the Qara Khitai 1218 and the Mongol invasion of the Khwarazmian Empire 1219 1222 It is estimated that the Khwarazmian army prior to the Mongol invasion consisted of about 40 000 cavalry mostly of Turkic origin Militias existed in Khwarazm s major cities but were of poor quality With collective populations of around 700 000 the major cities probably had 105 000 to 140 000 healthy males of fighting age in total 15 20 of the population but only a fraction of these would be part of a formal militia with any notable measure of training and equipment 59 Mercenaries Edit Main article Khwarazmian army between 1231 and 1246 Mina i bowl depicting battle scene in Khalkhal Iran early 13th century Kashan Iran 60 61 After the Mongol invasion of the Khwarazmian Empire many Khwarazmians survived by employing themselves as mercenaries in northern Iraq Sultan Jalal ad Din s followers remained loyal to him even after his death in 1231 and raided the Seljuq lands of Jazira and Syria for the next several years calling themselves the Khwarazmiyya Ayyubid Sultan as Salih Ayyub in Egypt later hired them against his uncle as Salih Ismail The Khwarazmiyya heading south from Iraq towards Egypt invaded Crusader held Jerusalem along the way on 11 July 1244 Siege of Jerusalem 1244 The city s citadel the Tower of David surrendered on 23 August and the Christian population of the city was expelled This triggered a call from Europe for the Seventh Crusade but the Crusaders would never again be successful in retaking Jerusalem After being conquered by the Khwarazmian forces the city stayed under Muslim control until 1917 when it was taken from the Ottomans by the British After taking Jerusalem the Khwarazmian forces continued south and on 17 October 1244 fought on the side of the Ayyubids at the Battle of La Forbie as the Crusaders used to call Harbiyah a village northeast of Gaza destroying the remains of the Crusader army there with some 1 200 knights killed It was the largest battle involving the Crusaders since the Battle of the Horns of Hattin in 1187 62 See also EditList of Sunni Muslim dynastiesNotes Edit a b Additionally the population of roughly the same area Persia and Central Asia plus some others Caucasia and northeast Anatolia is estimated at 5 6 million nearly 400 hundreds later under the rule of the Safavid dynasty 47 Also known as Khwarazm Persian خوارزم romanized Khwarazm or the Khwarazmshahs Persian خوارزمشاهیان romanized Khwarazmshahiyan Medieval historians such as Hafiz i Abru and Rashid al Din believed that Anushtegin was of Begdili tribe of Oghuz Turks 23 24 while Turkish historian Kafesoglu states that Anushtegin was either of Khalaj or Chigil origin and the Bashkir historian Zeki Velidi Togan believes he was of Qipchaq Qanghli or Uyghur descent 25 References Edit Babayan 2003 p 14 Katouzian 2007 p 128 Kuznetsov amp Fedorov 2013 p 145 Gafurov B G Central Asia Pre Historic to Pre Modern Times Vol 2 Shipra Publications 1989 p 359 Vasilyeva G P Ethnic processes in origins of Turkmen people Soviet Ethnography Publishing house Nauka 1969 pp 81 98 Turchin Peter Adams Jonathan M Hall Thomas D December 2006 East West Orientation of Historical Empires Journal of World Systems Research 12 2 222 ISSN 1076 156X Retrieved 12 September 2016 Rein Taagepera September 1997 Expansion and Contraction Patterns of Large Polities Context for Russia International Studies Quarterly 41 3 497 doi 10 1111 0020 8833 00053 JSTOR 2600793 a b John Man Genghis Khan Life Death and Resurrection February 6 2007 Page 180 Khwarazmian definition Merriam Webster n d Retrieved 21 October 2010 Bosworth C E 1 January 1998 History of Civilizations of Central Asia UNESCO p 164 ISBN 978 92 3 103467 1 Mahm ud and Masc ud I of Ghazna had appointed Turkish slave commanders from their own army Altuntash and his sons as governors there with the ancient title of Khwarazm Shah In order to secure these important regions Malik Sh ah had appointed the keeper of the royal washing bowls tast d ar his slave commander An ush tegin Gharcha i as titular governor at least in Khwarazm During Berkyaruk s reign the sultan appointed in 1097 another Turkishghul am Ekinchi b Kochkar with the historic title of KhwarazmShah When in that same year Ekinchi was killed Berkyaruk nominated in his stead An ushtegin s son Qutb al D in Muhammad as governor and Muhammad s tenure of power there 1097 1127 inaugurates the fourth and most brilliant line of hereditary KhwarazmShahs C E Bosworth Khwarazmshahs i Descendants of the line of Anustigin In Encyclopaedia Iranica online ed 2009 Little specific is known about the internal functioning of the Khwarazmian state but its bureaucracy directed as it was by Persian officials must have followed the Saljuq model This is the impression gained from the various Khwarazmian chancery and financial documents preserved in the collections of ensaʾdocuments and epistles from this period The authors of at least three of these collections Rasid al Din Vaṭvaṭ d 1182 83 or 1187 88 with his two collections of rasaʾel and Bahaʾ al Din Baḡdadi compiler of the important Ketab al tawaṣṣol ela al tarassol were heads of the Khwarazmian chancery The Khwarazmshahs had viziers as their chief executives on the traditional pattern and only as the dynasty approached its end did ʿAlaʾ al Din Moḥammad in ca 615 1218 divide up the office amongst six commissioners wakildars see Kafesoglu pp 5 8 17 Horst pp 10 12 25 and passim Nor is much specifically known of court life in Gorganj under the Khwarazmshahs but they had like other rulers of their age their court eulogists and as well as being a noted stylist Rasid al Din Vaṭvaṭ also had a considerable reputation as a poet in Persian Norman M Naimark Genocide A World History Oxford University Press 2017 20 The Persian speaking and Islamic Khwarezmian empire which was founded in Central Asia south of the Aral Sea around its capital of Samarkand and included such remarkable centers of trade and civilizations as Bukhara and Urgench Rene Grousset The Empire of the Steppes A History of Central Asia Transl Naomi Walford Rutgers University Press 1991 page 159 Biran Michel The Empire of the Qara Khitai in Eurasian history Cambridge University Press 2005 44 Bosworth C E 1 January 1998 History of Civilizations of Central Asia UNESCO p 164 ISBN 978 92 3 103467 1 This dynasty eventually built up as the Seljuq empire in the east tottered to its close the most powerful and aggressively expansionist empire in the Persian lands in the end defeating their rivals for control of Khurasan the Ghurids of Afghanistan threatening western Persia and Iraq and the Abbasid caliphate itself and only disintegrating under the overwhelming military might of the Mongol invaders in the opening decades of the thirteenth century Turchin Peter Adams Jonathan M Hall Thomas D December 2006 East West Orientation of Historical Empires Journal of World Systems Research 12 2 222 ISSN 1076 156X Retrieved 12 September 2016 Rein Taagepera September 1997 Expansion and Contraction Patterns of Large Polities Context for Russia International Studies Quarterly 41 3 497 doi 10 1111 0020 8833 00053 JSTOR 2600793 David Abulafia 2015 The New Cambridge Medieval History Volume 5 C 1198 c 1300 p 610 C E Bosworth The Ghaznavids 994 1040 Edinburgh University Press 1963 page 237 Buniyatov Z The State of Khwarazmshah Anushteginids 1097 1231 M 1986 pages 41 75 Biran Michel The Empire of the Qara Khitai in Eurasian History Cambridge University Press 2005 44 Encyclopaedia Britannica Khwarezm Shah Dynasty LINK Metropolitan Museum of Art www metmuseum org Fadlullah Rashid al Din 1987 Oghuznameh Baku Elm Similarly the most distant ancestor of Sultan Muhammad Khwarazmshah was Nushtekin Gharcha who was a descendant of the Begdili tribe of the Oghuz family Buniyatov Z M 1986 The State of Khwarazmshah Anushteginids 1097 1231 Nauka p 80 a b Bosworth 1968 Bosworth 1968 p 93 Biran 44 Grousset Rene The Empire of the Steppes A History of Central Asia Rutgers University Press 2002 160 Historical and Cultural Heritage of Turkmenistan Encyclopedic Dictionary ed by Gundogdyeva O A Muradova R G Istanbul UNDP 2000 pp 1 381 ISBN 975 97256 0 6 Metropolitan Museum of Art www metmuseum org Bosworth C E 1968 The Political and Dynastic History of the Iranian World A D 1000 1217 Vol V Cambridge pp 181 197 Juvaini Ala ad Din Ata Malik History of the World Conqueror Manchester University Press Manchester 1997 p 314 Kafesoglu Ibrahim 1956 The History of the State of Khwarazmshah 485 617 1092 1229 in Turkish Ankara Turk Tarih Kurumu pp 83 146 Gebetsnische Baukeramik Recherche Staatliche Museen zu Berlin recherche smb museum Bast Oliver 11 August 2020 GERMANY Plate IV Encyclopaedia Iranica Online Brill Gafurov Bobodzhan Gafurovich 2005 Central Asia Pre historic to Pre modern Times Shipra Publications ISBN 978 81 7541 245 3 In Uzgend the capital of the largest principality of the Karakhanids and in Samarkand the capital of the Karakhanid state were minted coins in 1213 with the name of Mohammad Khwarezm Shah This confirmed the complete annihilation of the dynasty of the Kharakanids Svat Soucek 2002 A History of Inner Asia Cambridge University Press pp 106 ISBN 0 521 65704 0 Man John 2005 Genghis Khan Life Death and Resurrection Bantam p 176 ISBN 978 0 553 81498 9 Gundogdiyev O Historical and Cultural Heritage of Turkmenistan Encyclopedic Dictionary Istanbul 2000 page 381 ISBN 9789759725600 Paul Jurgen 2018 Jalal al Din Mangburni Encyclopedia of Islam 3 p 142 Archived copy Archived from the original on 6 October 2008 Retrieved 1 March 2006 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Buniyatov Z M 1999 Selected works in three volumes Vol 3 Baku p 60 Buniyatov 1999 p 61 Buniyatov 1999 p 62 Buniyatov 1999 p 65 Gafurov B G Central Asia Pre Historic to Pre Modern Times vol 2 Shipra Publications 1989 page 359 Dale Stephen Frederic 15 August 2002 Indian Merchants and Eurasian Trade 1600 1750 p 19 ISBN 9780521525978 Retrieved 15 April 2016 Tertius Chandler amp Gerald Fox 3000 Years of Urban Growth pp 232 236 Chandler amp Fox p 232 Merv Samarkand and Nipashur are referred to as vying for the title of largest among the Cities of Persia and Turkestan in 1200 implying populations of less than 70 000 for the other cities Otrar and others do not have precise estimates given Turkestan seems to refer to Central Asian Turkic countries in general in this passage as Samarkand Merv and Nishapur are located in modern Uzbekistan Turkmenistan and northeastern Iran respectively Blair Sheila S 1 January 2008 A Brief Biography Of Abu Zayd Muqarnas Volume 25 Brill p 158 doi 10 1163 ej 9789004173279 i 396 37 ISBN 9789004173279 Vasilyeva G P 1969 Ethnic processes in origins of Turkmen people Soviet Ethnography in Russian Nauka Science pp 81 98 Komaroff 4 Michelsen and Olafsdotter 76 Fitzwilliam Museum Mina i meaning enamelled ware is one of the glories of Islamic ceramics and was a speciality of the renowned ceramics centre of Kashan in Iran during the decades of the late 12th and early 13th centuries preceding the Mongol invasions While stonepaste vessels are often attributed to the Seljuq period some of the most iconic productions in the medium took place after this dynasty lost control over its eastern territories to other Central Asian Turkic groups such as the Khwarezm Shahis in Rugiadi Martina Ceramic Technology in the Seljuq Period Stonepaste in Syria and Iran in the Twelfth and Early Thirteenth Centuries www metmuseum org Metropolitan Museum of Art 2021 Retrieved 1 February 2023 The Grove Encyclopedia of Decorative Arts Mina i ware Oxford Oxford University Press 2006 ISBN 9780195189483 Metropolitan Museum of Art www metmuseum org Metropolitan Museum of Art www metmuseum org Metropolitan Museum of Art www metmuseum org Metropolitan Museum of Art www metmuseum org Sverdrup Carl The Mongol Conquests The Military Operations of Genghis Khan and Sube etei Helion and Company 2017 pages 148 150 Holod Renata 1 January 2012 The Freer Gallery s Siege Scene Plate Ars Orientalis Bowl Smithsonian s National Museum of Asian Art Riley Smith The Crusades p 191Sources EditBabayan K 2003 Mystics monarchs and messiahs cultural landscapes of early modern Iran Harvard Center for Middle Eastern Studies Katouzian Homa 2007 Iranian History and Politics The Dialectic of State and Society Routledge ISBN 978 0415297547 Kuznetsov Andrew Fedorov Michael 2013 Late Drachms of the Khwarazmshah Azkajvar and Imitations of such Drachms Iran Journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies Taylor amp Francis 51 1 145 149 External links Edit Media related to Khwarazmian Empire at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khwarazmian Empire amp oldid 1169487556, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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