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Mamluk dynasty (Iraq)

The Mamluk dynasty of Mesopotamia (Arabic: مماليك العراق, romanizedMamālīk al-ʻIrāq) was a dynasty of Georgian Mamluk origin which ruled over Iraq in the 18th and early 19th centuries.[2][3]

Mamluk dynasty of Iraq
مماليك العراق
Mamālīk al-ʻIrāq
1704–1831
Approximate area under Mamluk rule.
StatusNominally part of the Ottoman Empire
CapitalBaghdad
Common languagesOttoman Turkish, Iraqi Arabic
Religion
Sunni Islam (majority),
also Shia Islam (In Najaf and Karbala),[1] Christianity, Mandaeism, Judaism
GovernmentPashalik (autonomous)
Pasha 
• (1704–1723)
Hassan Pasha
• (1816–1831)
Dawud Pasha
History 
• Dynasty formed
1704
1831
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Today part ofIraq

In the Ottoman Empire, Mamluks were freedmen who converted to Islam, were trained in a special school, and then assigned to military and administrative duties. Such Mamluks presided over Ottoman Iraq from 1704 to 1831.

The Mamluk ruling elite, composed principally of Georgian and Circassian origin from Caucasian officers,[4][5] succeeded in asserting autonomy from their Ottoman overlords, and restored order and some degree of economic prosperity in the region. The Ottomans overthrew the Mamluk regime in 1831 and gradually imposed their direct rule over Iraq, which would last until World War I, although the Mamluks continued to be a dominant socio-political force in Iraq, as most of the administrative personnel of note in Baghdad were drawn from former Mamluk households, or comprised a cross-section of the notable class in Mamluk times.[6]

Background

Even before the rise of the Mamluks, Iraq was never fully integrated into the Ottoman administrative system. The Mosul province was placed under the timar system where taxes were farmed out to cavalry officers. Baghdad and Basra were placed the salyane system where taxation was farmed out to the governors. Constant war with Iran weakened Ottoman control further. By the 1700s this problem was becoming worse.[7]

The early 18th century was a time of important changes both in Constantinople and in Baghdad. The reign of Sultan Ahmed III (1703–30) was marked by relative political stability in the capital and by extensive reforms—some of them influenced by European models—implemented during the Tulip Period by Grand Vizier İbrahim Pasha.

As in the previous two centuries, Iraq continued to be a battleground between the rival Ottoman Empire and Safavid Empire. The region also suffered from frequent inter-clan struggles.[8]

Dynasty of Hasan Pasha

The Mamluks ruled the pashaliks of Baghdad, Basrah, and Shahrizor.[9] The pashalik of Mosul was ruled by the Iraqi Jalili dynasty.

  • Hassan Pasha (1704–1723)
  • Ahmad Pasha (1723–1747) son of Hassan
  • Sulayman Abu Layla (1749–1762) son-in-law of Ahmad
  • Omar Pasha (1762–1776) son of Ahmad
  • Abdullah Pasha (1776-1777)
  • Sulayman the Great (1780–1802) son of Omar
  • Ali Al-Kahiya (1802–1807) son of Omar
  • Sulayman the Little (1807–1810) son of Sulayman Great
  • Said Pasha (1813–1816) son of Sulayman Great
  • Dawud Pasha (1816–1831)

Hassan Pasha (1704–1723)

In Baghdad, Hassan Pasha (Georgian: ჰასან ფაშა), the Ottoman governor of Georgian origin sent from Constantinople, and his son Ahmad Pasha (1723–47) established a Georgian Mamluk household, through which they exercised authority and administered the province.

Ahmad Pasha (1723–1747)

Hassan's son and successor, Ahmad (Georgian: აჰმედ ფაშა), continued to recruit the Mamluks and promoted them to key administrative and military positions. Both Hasan and Ahmad rendered a valuable service to the Ottoman Porte by curbing the unruly tribes and securing a steady inflow of taxes to the treasury in Constantinople as well as by defending Iraq against yet another military threat from the Safavids and Afsharids of Iran.

By the time Ahmad Pasha died in 1747, his Mamluks had been organized into a powerful, self-perpetuating elite corps of some 2,000 men ("Georgian Guard"). On Ahmad's death, the sultan attempted to prevent these Mamluks from assuming power and sent an outsider as his wali in Baghdad. However, Ahmad's son-in-law Sulayman Abu Layla, already in charge of Basra, marched on Baghdad in the head of his Georgian guard and ousted the Ottoman administrator, thereby inaugurating 84 years of the Mamluk rule in Iraq.[10]

Sulayman Abu Layla (1749–1762)

By 1750, Sulayman Abu Layla had established himself as an undisputed master at Baghdad and had been recognized by the Porte as the first Mamluk Pasha of Iraq. The newly established regime embarked on a campaign to gain more autonomy from the Ottoman government and to curb the resistance of the Arab and Kurdish tribes. They managed to counter Al-Muntafiq threats in the south and brought Basra under their control. They encouraged Omani and European trade and allowed the British East India Company to establish an agency in Basra in 1763.

Omar Pasha (1762–1776)

The successes of Mamluk regime, however, still depended on their ability to cooperate with their Ottoman suzerains and religious elite within Iraq. The Porte sometimes employed force to depose the recalcitrant pashas of Baghdad, but the Mamluks were able to retain their hold of the pashalik, and even enlarged their domains. They failed, however, to secure a regular system of succession and the gradual formation of rival Mamluk households resulted in factionalism and frequent power struggles. Another major menace to the Mamluk rule came from Iran whose resurgent ruler, Karim Khan, invaded Iraq and installed his brother Sadiq Khan in Basra in 1776 after a protracted and stubborn resistance offered by the Mamluk general Sulayman Aga. The Porte hastened to exploit the crisis and replaced Omar Pasha (Georgian: ომარ ფაშა) with a non-Mamluk, who proved incapable of keeping order.[10]

Sulayman the Great (1780–1802)

 
An Mamluk cavalryman, as drawn by Carle Vernet in 1810.

In 1779, Sulayman the Great (Georgian: სულეიმან ბუიუქი) returned from his exile in Shiraz and acquired the governorship of Baghdad, Basrah, and Shahrizor in 1780.[11] This Sulayman the Great is known as Büyük ("the Great" in Turkish), and his rule (1780-1802) was efficient at first, but weakened as he grew older. He imported large numbers of Georgians to strengthen his clan, asserted his supremacy over the factionalized Mamluk households and restricted the influence of Janissaries. He fostered economy and continued to encourage commerce and diplomacy with Europe, which received a major boost in 1798 when Sulayman gave permission for a permanent British agent to be appointed in Baghdad.[12] However, his struggle against the Arab tribes in Northern Iraq was less despite the fact that he brutally crushed the revolters.[11]

Ali Al-kahiya (1802–1807)

The aftermath of Sulayman the Great's death in 1802 was a power struggle between Ali Pasha the Kaymakam, Ahmad Agha leader of the Janissaries, and Selim agha, which was won by Ali Al-kahiya (Georgian: ალი ფაშა), who started a campaign to discipline Kurdish tribes who paid a tribute through their animals, then put down a rebellion by the Yazidis in Sinjar, then rode to Tal Afar and arrested Muhammad beg al Shawi and his brother and executed them both, due to animosity towards them, then he returned to Baghdad to quell disorder there.

Ali Al-kahiya repelled the Wahhabi raids against Najaf and Hillah in 1803 and 1806 but failed to challenge their domination of the desert.

Ali Al-kahiya was assassinated in 1807 by Madar beg al Abadhi and his followers due to personal grudges against him, while Ali was praying, by stabbing, They initially escaped but were apprehended and killed with their bodies sent to Baghdad.[13]

Sulayman the Little (1807–1810)

After Ali's assassination in 1807, his nephew Sulayman the Little took over the government. Inclined to curtail provincial autonomies, Sultan Mahmud II (1808–39) made his first attempt to oust the Mamluks from Baghdad in 1810. Ottoman troops deposed and killed Sulayman, but again failed to maintain control of the country. After yet another bitter internecine feud in 1816, Sulayman's energetic son-in-law Dawud Pasha ousted his rival Said Pasha (Georgian: საიდ ფაშა; 1813–16) and took control of Baghdad. The Ottoman government reluctantly recognized his authority.[10]

Dawud Pasha (1816–1831)

Dawud Pasha (Georgian: დაუდ ფაშა) was the last of the Mamluk rulers of Iraq. Dawud Pasha initiated important modernization programs that included clearing canals, establishing industries, reforming the army with the help of European instructors, and founding a printing press. He maintained elaborate pomp and circumstance at his court. Besides the usual troubles with the Arab tribes and internal dissensions with sheikhs, he was involved in more serious fighting with the Kurds and the conflict with Iran over the influence in the Kurdish principality of Baban. The conflict culminated in the Iranian invasion of Iraq and the occupation of Sulaymaniyah in 1818. Later, Dawud Pasha capitalized on the destruction of Janissaries at Constantinople in 1826, and eliminated the Janissaries as an independent local force.[10][12]

Meanwhile, the existence of the autonomous regime in Iraq, a long-time source of anxiety at Constantinople, became even more threatening to the Porte when Muhammad Ali Pasha of Egypt began to claim Ottoman Syria. In 1830, the Sultan decreed Dawud Pasha's dismissal, but the emissary carrying the order was arrested at Baghdad and executed. In 1831, the Ottoman army under Ali Riza Pasha marched from Aleppo into Iraq. Devastated by floods and an epidemic of bubonic plague, Baghdad capitulated after a ten-week-long blockade which caused mass-famine. Dawud Pasha, facing opposition from local clergymen within Iraq, surrendered to the Ottomans and was treated with favor. His life ended in 1851, while he was custodian of the shrine at Medina.[10] The arrival of the Sultan's new governor in Baghdad in 1831 signaled the beginning of a direct Ottoman rule in Iraq.[12]

The new Ottoman governor, Ali Ridha Pasha, was forced to come to terms with the still-pervasive Mamluk presence in Baghdad even after the last Mamluk ruler had been deposed.[6] He later married the daughter of former Mamluk governor Sulayman the Little (1807–1810).[6]

See also

References

  1. ^ Nieuwenhuis, Tom (1981). Politics and Society in Early Modern Iraq: Mamlūk Pashas, Tribal Shayks, and Local Rule Between 1802 and 1831. Netherlands: Springer Netherlands. p. 31. Retrieved 12 March 2024.
  2. ^ The Rise and Fall of the Communist Party of Iraq, Tareq Y. Ismael, I. 1.
  3. ^ A Military History of Modern Egypt: From the Ottoman Conquest to the Ramadan War, Andrew James McGregor, p57
  4. ^ Hathaway, Jane; Barbir, Karl (2008). The Arab Lands under Ottoman Rule: 1516-1800. Pearson Education. p. 96. ISBN 9780582418998.
  5. ^ Hathaway, Jane (February 1995). "The Military Household in Ottoman Egypt". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 27 (1): 39–52. doi:10.1017/s0020743800061572. S2CID 62834455.
  6. ^ a b c Fattah, Hala Mundhir (1997). The Politics of Regional Trade in Iraq, Arabia, and the Gulf: 1745-1900. SUNY Press. p. 98. ISBN 9781438402376.
  7. ^ Gökhan Çetinsaya (2006). The Ottoman Administration of Iraq, 1890-190. Routledge. pp. 4–5. ISBN 1134294956.
  8. ^ Litvak, Meir (2002), Shi'i Scholars of Nineteenth-Century Iraq: The 'Ulama' of Najaf and Karbala, pp. 16-17. Cambridge University Press, ISBN 0-521-89296-1.
  9. ^ Coke, Richard (1927). Baghdad, The City of Peace. Taylor & Francis. pp. 232–233.
  10. ^ a b c d e Kissling, H.J. (1969), The Last Great Muslim Empires, pp. 82-85. Brill, ISBN 90-04-02104-3.
  11. ^ a b "Iraq". (2007). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved October 15, 2007, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
  12. ^ a b c "Iraq". (2007). In Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved October 15, 2007, from Encyclopædia Britannica Online.
  13. ^ Taqoosh, Muhammad Saheel (2015). تاريخ العراق (الحديث والمعاصر) [history of Iraq (modern and contemporary)]. Dar al Nafas. p. 55. ISBN 978-9953-18-540-8.
  14. ^ Ghareeb, Edmund A. (2004), Historical Dictionary of Iraq, p. 220. Scarecrow Press, ISBN 0-8108-4330-7.

Further reading

  • Nieuwenhuis, Tom (1982), Politics and Society in Early Modern Iraq: Mamluk Pashas, Tribal Shayks and Local Rule between 1802 and 1831. Springer, ISBN 90-247-2576-3.

mamluk, dynasty, iraq, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, mamluk, dynasty, iraq, news, newspapers, book. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Mamluk dynasty Iraq news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this message The Mamluk dynasty of Mesopotamia Arabic مماليك العراق romanized Mamalik al ʻIraq was a dynasty of Georgian Mamluk origin which ruled over Iraq in the 18th and early 19th centuries 2 3 Mamluk dynasty of Iraqمماليك العراقMamalik al ʻIraq1704 1831Approximate area under Mamluk rule StatusNominally part of the Ottoman EmpireCapitalBaghdadCommon languagesOttoman Turkish Iraqi ArabicReligionSunni Islam majority also Shia Islam In Najaf and Karbala 1 Christianity Mandaeism JudaismGovernmentPashalik autonomous Pasha 1704 1723 Hassan Pasha 1816 1831 Dawud PashaHistory Dynasty formed1704 Ottoman reconquest1831Preceded by Succeeded by Ottoman Iraq Ottoman IraqToday part ofIraq In the Ottoman Empire Mamluks were freedmen who converted to Islam were trained in a special school and then assigned to military and administrative duties Such Mamluks presided over Ottoman Iraq from 1704 to 1831 The Mamluk ruling elite composed principally of Georgian and Circassian origin from Caucasian officers 4 5 succeeded in asserting autonomy from their Ottoman overlords and restored order and some degree of economic prosperity in the region The Ottomans overthrew the Mamluk regime in 1831 and gradually imposed their direct rule over Iraq which would last until World War I although the Mamluks continued to be a dominant socio political force in Iraq as most of the administrative personnel of note in Baghdad were drawn from former Mamluk households or comprised a cross section of the notable class in Mamluk times 6 Contents 1 Background 2 Dynasty of Hasan Pasha 2 1 Hassan Pasha 1704 1723 2 2 Ahmad Pasha 1723 1747 2 3 Sulayman Abu Layla 1749 1762 2 4 Omar Pasha 1762 1776 2 5 Sulayman the Great 1780 1802 2 6 Ali Al kahiya 1802 1807 2 7 Sulayman the Little 1807 1810 2 8 Dawud Pasha 1816 1831 3 See also 4 References 5 Further readingBackgroundEven before the rise of the Mamluks Iraq was never fully integrated into the Ottoman administrative system The Mosul province was placed under the timar system where taxes were farmed out to cavalry officers Baghdad and Basra were placed the salyane system where taxation was farmed out to the governors Constant war with Iran weakened Ottoman control further By the 1700s this problem was becoming worse 7 The early 18th century was a time of important changes both in Constantinople and in Baghdad The reign of Sultan Ahmed III 1703 30 was marked by relative political stability in the capital and by extensive reforms some of them influenced by European models implemented during the Tulip Period by Grand Vizier Ibrahim Pasha As in the previous two centuries Iraq continued to be a battleground between the rival Ottoman Empire and Safavid Empire The region also suffered from frequent inter clan struggles 8 Dynasty of Hasan PashaThe Mamluks ruled the pashaliks of Baghdad Basrah and Shahrizor 9 The pashalik of Mosul was ruled by the Iraqi Jalili dynasty Hassan Pasha 1704 1723 Ahmad Pasha 1723 1747 son of Hassan Sulayman Abu Layla 1749 1762 son in law of Ahmad Omar Pasha 1762 1776 son of Ahmad Abdullah Pasha 1776 1777 Sulayman the Great 1780 1802 son of Omar Ali Al Kahiya 1802 1807 son of Omar Sulayman the Little 1807 1810 son of Sulayman Great Said Pasha 1813 1816 son of Sulayman Great Dawud Pasha 1816 1831 Hassan Pasha 1704 1723 In Baghdad Hassan Pasha Georgian ჰასან ფაშა the Ottoman governor of Georgian origin sent from Constantinople and his son Ahmad Pasha 1723 47 established a Georgian Mamluk household through which they exercised authority and administered the province Ahmad Pasha 1723 1747 Hassan s son and successor Ahmad Georgian აჰმედ ფაშა continued to recruit the Mamluks and promoted them to key administrative and military positions Both Hasan and Ahmad rendered a valuable service to the Ottoman Porte by curbing the unruly tribes and securing a steady inflow of taxes to the treasury in Constantinople as well as by defending Iraq against yet another military threat from the Safavids and Afsharids of Iran By the time Ahmad Pasha died in 1747 his Mamluks had been organized into a powerful self perpetuating elite corps of some 2 000 men Georgian Guard On Ahmad s death the sultan attempted to prevent these Mamluks from assuming power and sent an outsider as his wali in Baghdad However Ahmad s son in law Sulayman Abu Layla already in charge of Basra marched on Baghdad in the head of his Georgian guard and ousted the Ottoman administrator thereby inaugurating 84 years of the Mamluk rule in Iraq 10 Sulayman Abu Layla 1749 1762 By 1750 Sulayman Abu Layla had established himself as an undisputed master at Baghdad and had been recognized by the Porte as the first Mamluk Pasha of Iraq The newly established regime embarked on a campaign to gain more autonomy from the Ottoman government and to curb the resistance of the Arab and Kurdish tribes They managed to counter Al Muntafiq threats in the south and brought Basra under their control They encouraged Omani and European trade and allowed the British East India Company to establish an agency in Basra in 1763 Omar Pasha 1762 1776 The successes of Mamluk regime however still depended on their ability to cooperate with their Ottoman suzerains and religious elite within Iraq The Porte sometimes employed force to depose the recalcitrant pashas of Baghdad but the Mamluks were able to retain their hold of the pashalik and even enlarged their domains They failed however to secure a regular system of succession and the gradual formation of rival Mamluk households resulted in factionalism and frequent power struggles Another major menace to the Mamluk rule came from Iran whose resurgent ruler Karim Khan invaded Iraq and installed his brother Sadiq Khan in Basra in 1776 after a protracted and stubborn resistance offered by the Mamluk general Sulayman Aga The Porte hastened to exploit the crisis and replaced Omar Pasha Georgian ომარ ფაშა with a non Mamluk who proved incapable of keeping order 10 Sulayman the Great 1780 1802 nbsp An Mamluk cavalryman as drawn by Carle Vernet in 1810 In 1779 Sulayman the Great Georgian სულეიმან ბუიუქი returned from his exile in Shiraz and acquired the governorship of Baghdad Basrah and Shahrizor in 1780 11 This Sulayman the Great is known as Buyuk the Great in Turkish and his rule 1780 1802 was efficient at first but weakened as he grew older He imported large numbers of Georgians to strengthen his clan asserted his supremacy over the factionalized Mamluk households and restricted the influence of Janissaries He fostered economy and continued to encourage commerce and diplomacy with Europe which received a major boost in 1798 when Sulayman gave permission for a permanent British agent to be appointed in Baghdad 12 However his struggle against the Arab tribes in Northern Iraq was less despite the fact that he brutally crushed the revolters 11 Ali Al kahiya 1802 1807 The aftermath of Sulayman the Great s death in 1802 was a power struggle between Ali Pasha the Kaymakam Ahmad Agha leader of the Janissaries and Selim agha which was won by Ali Al kahiya Georgian ალი ფაშა who started a campaign to discipline Kurdish tribes who paid a tribute through their animals then put down a rebellion by the Yazidis in Sinjar then rode to Tal Afar and arrested Muhammad beg al Shawi and his brother and executed them both due to animosity towards them then he returned to Baghdad to quell disorder there Ali Al kahiya repelled the Wahhabi raids against Najaf and Hillah in 1803 and 1806 but failed to challenge their domination of the desert Ali Al kahiya was assassinated in 1807 by Madar beg al Abadhi and his followers due to personal grudges against him while Ali was praying by stabbing They initially escaped but were apprehended and killed with their bodies sent to Baghdad 13 Sulayman the Little 1807 1810 After Ali s assassination in 1807 his nephew Sulayman the Little took over the government Inclined to curtail provincial autonomies Sultan Mahmud II 1808 39 made his first attempt to oust the Mamluks from Baghdad in 1810 Ottoman troops deposed and killed Sulayman but again failed to maintain control of the country After yet another bitter internecine feud in 1816 Sulayman s energetic son in law Dawud Pasha ousted his rival Said Pasha Georgian საიდ ფაშა 1813 16 and took control of Baghdad The Ottoman government reluctantly recognized his authority 10 Dawud Pasha 1816 1831 Main article Dawud Pasha of Baghdad Dawud Pasha Georgian დაუდ ფაშა was the last of the Mamluk rulers of Iraq Dawud Pasha initiated important modernization programs that included clearing canals establishing industries reforming the army with the help of European instructors and founding a printing press He maintained elaborate pomp and circumstance at his court Besides the usual troubles with the Arab tribes and internal dissensions with sheikhs he was involved in more serious fighting with the Kurds and the conflict with Iran over the influence in the Kurdish principality of Baban The conflict culminated in the Iranian invasion of Iraq and the occupation of Sulaymaniyah in 1818 Later Dawud Pasha capitalized on the destruction of Janissaries at Constantinople in 1826 and eliminated the Janissaries as an independent local force 10 12 Meanwhile the existence of the autonomous regime in Iraq a long time source of anxiety at Constantinople became even more threatening to the Porte when Muhammad Ali Pasha of Egypt began to claim Ottoman Syria In 1830 the Sultan decreed Dawud Pasha s dismissal but the emissary carrying the order was arrested at Baghdad and executed In 1831 the Ottoman army under Ali Riza Pasha marched from Aleppo into Iraq Devastated by floods and an epidemic of bubonic plague Baghdad capitulated after a ten week long blockade which caused mass famine Dawud Pasha facing opposition from local clergymen within Iraq surrendered to the Ottomans and was treated with favor His life ended in 1851 while he was custodian of the shrine at Medina 10 The arrival of the Sultan s new governor in Baghdad in 1831 signaled the beginning of a direct Ottoman rule in Iraq 12 The new Ottoman governor Ali Ridha Pasha was forced to come to terms with the still pervasive Mamluk presence in Baghdad even after the last Mamluk ruler had been deposed 6 He later married the daughter of former Mamluk governor Sulayman the Little 1807 1810 6 See alsoList of Ottoman governors of Baghdad Jalili dynasty rulers of the pashalik of Mosul in this period Naji Shawkat Prime Minister of Iraq from 1932 to 1933 who was the scion of one of the Georgian Mamluk clans 14 History of Baghdad 1831 1917References Nieuwenhuis Tom 1981 Politics and Society in Early Modern Iraq Mamluk Pashas Tribal Shayks and Local Rule Between 1802 and 1831 Netherlands Springer Netherlands p 31 Retrieved 12 March 2024 The Rise and Fall of the Communist Party of Iraq Tareq Y Ismael I 1 A Military History of Modern Egypt From the Ottoman Conquest to the Ramadan War Andrew James McGregor p57 Hathaway Jane Barbir Karl 2008 The Arab Lands under Ottoman Rule 1516 1800 Pearson Education p 96 ISBN 9780582418998 Hathaway Jane February 1995 The Military Household in Ottoman Egypt International Journal of Middle East Studies 27 1 39 52 doi 10 1017 s0020743800061572 S2CID 62834455 a b c Fattah Hala Mundhir 1997 The Politics of Regional Trade in Iraq Arabia and the Gulf 1745 1900 SUNY Press p 98 ISBN 9781438402376 Gokhan Cetinsaya 2006 The Ottoman Administration of Iraq 1890 190 Routledge pp 4 5 ISBN 1134294956 Litvak Meir 2002 Shi i Scholars of Nineteenth Century Iraq The Ulama of Najaf and Karbala pp 16 17 Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 89296 1 Coke Richard 1927 Baghdad The City of Peace Taylor amp Francis pp 232 233 a b c d e Kissling H J 1969 The Last Great Muslim Empires pp 82 85 Brill ISBN 90 04 02104 3 a b Iraq 2007 In Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved October 15 2007 from Encyclopaedia Britannica Online a b c Iraq 2007 In Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved October 15 2007 from Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Taqoosh Muhammad Saheel 2015 تاريخ العراق الحديث والمعاصر history of Iraq modern and contemporary Dar al Nafas p 55 ISBN 978 9953 18 540 8 Ghareeb Edmund A 2004 Historical Dictionary of Iraq p 220 Scarecrow Press ISBN 0 8108 4330 7 Further readingNieuwenhuis Tom 1982 Politics and Society in Early Modern Iraq Mamluk Pashas Tribal Shayks and Local Rule between 1802 and 1831 Springer ISBN 90 247 2576 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mamluk dynasty Iraq amp oldid 1217247773 Omar Pasha 1762 1776, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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