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Aq Qoyunlu

The Aq Qoyunlu or the White Sheep Turkomans[c] (Azerbaijani: Ağqoyunlular آق قویونلولر; Persian: آق‌ قویونلو) was a culturally Persianate,[15][16] Sunni[8] Turkoman[17][18] tribal confederation. Founded in the Diyarbakir region by Qara Yuluk Uthman Beg,[19][20] they ruled parts of present-day eastern Turkey from 1378 to 1503, and in their last decades also ruled Armenia, Azerbaijan, much of Iran, Iraq, and Oman where the ruler of Hormuz recognised Aq Qoyunlu suzerainty.[21][22] The Aq Qoyunlu empire reached its zenith under Uzun Hasan.[3]

Aq Qoyunlu
آق قویونلو
1378–1503[a]
A flag (sanjak) from the period of the Uzun Hasan's reign (the original here)
Tamga of Bayandur
used by the Aq Qoyunlu[2]
The Aq Qoyunlu confederation at its greatest extent under Uzun Hasan
StatusConfederate Sultanate
Capital
Common languages
Religion
Sunni Islam[8]
GovernmentMonarchy
Ruler 
• 1378–1435
Qara Yuluk Uthman Beg
• 1497–1503
Sultan Murad
Legislature
  • Kengač (legislative)[3]
  • Boy ḵānları (military)[3]
Historical eraMedieval
• First raid on the Trapezuntine Empire by Tur Ali Beg[9]
1340
• Siege of Trebizond[9]
1348
• Established
1378
• Coup by Uzun Hasan[3]
Autumn 1452
• Reunification[3]
1457
• Death of Ahmad Beg, division of the Aq Qoyunlu[3]
December, 1497
• Collapse of the Aq Qoyunlu rule in Iran[3]
Summer 1503
• End of the Aq Qoyunlu rule in Mesopotamia[3]
Autumn 1508
CurrencyAkçe[10]
Ashrafi[10]
Dinar[10]
Tanka[10] Hasanbegî[11] (equal to 2 akçe)
Preceded by
Succeeded by

History edit

Etymology edit

The name Aq Qoyunlu, literally meaning "those with white sheep",[23] is first mentioned in late 14th century sources. It has been suggested that this name refers to old totemic symbols, but according to Rashid al-Din Hamadani, the Turks were forbidden to eat the flesh of their totem-animals, and so this is unlikely given the importance of mutton in the diet of pastoral nomads. Another hypothesis is that the name refers to the predominant color of their flocks.[3]

Origins edit

According to chronicles from the Byzantine Empire, the Aq Qoyunlu are first attested in the district of Bayburt south of the Pontic Mountains from at least the 1340s.[24] In these chronicles, Tur Ali Beg was mentioned as lord of the "Turks of Amid [Diyarbakir]", who had already attained the rank of amir under the Ilkhan Ghazan. Under his leadership, they besieged Trebizond, but failed to take the town.[25] A number of their leaders, including the dynasty's founder, Qara Yuluk Uthman Beg,[26] married Byzantine princesses.[27]

By the end of the Ilkhanid period in the mid-14th century, the Oghuz tribes that comprised the Aq Qoyunlu confederation roamed the summer pastures in Armenia, in particular, the upper reaches of the Tigris river and winter pastures between the towns of Diyarbakır and Sivas. Since the end of the 14th century, Aq Qoyunlu waged constant wars with another tribal confederation of the Oghuz tribes, the Qara Qoyunlu. The leading Aq Qoyunlu tribe was the Bayandur tribe.[23]

Uzun Hasan used to assert the claim that he was an "honorable descendant of Oghuz Khan and his grandson, Bayandur Khan". In a letter dating to the year 1470, which was sent to Şehzade Bayezid, the then-governor of Amasya, Uzun Hasan wrote that those from the Bayandur and Bayat tribes, as well as other tribes that belonged to the "Oghuz il", and formerly inhabited Mangyshlak, Khwarazm and Turkestan, came and served in his court. He also made the tamga (seal) of the Bayandur tribe the symbol of his state. For this reason, the Bayandur tamga is found in Aq Qoyunlu coins, their official documents, inscriptions and flags.[11]

Myth

The Aq Qoyunlu Sultans claimed descent from Bayindir Khan, who was a grandson of Oghuz Khan, the legendary ancestor of Oghuz Turks.[28]

According to Professor G. L. Lewis:[29]

The Ak-koyunlu Sultans claimed descent from Bayindir Khan and it is likely, on the face of it, that the Book of Dede Korkut was composed under their patronage. The snag about this is that in the Ak-koyunlu genealogy Bayindir's father is named as Gok ('Sky') Khan, son of the eponymous Oghuz Khan, whereas in our book he is named as Kam Ghan, a name otherwise unknown. In default of any better explanation, I therefore incline to the belief that the book was composed before Ak-koyunlu rulers had decided who their ancestors were. It was in 1403 that they ceased to be tribal chiefs and became Sultans, so we may assume that their official genealogy was formulated round about that date.

According to the Kitab-i Diyarbakriyya, the ancestors of Uzun Hasan back to the prophet Adam in the 68th generation are listed by name and information is given about them. Among them is Tur Ali Bey, the grandfather of Uzun Hasan's grandfather, who is also mentioned in other sources. But it is difficult to say whether Pehlivan Bey, Ezdi Bey and Idris Bey, who are listed in earlier periods, really existed. Most of the people who are listed as the ancestors of Uzun Hasan are names related to the Oghuz legend and to Oghuz rulers.[30]

Uzun Hasan edit

The Aq Qoyunlu Turkomans first acquired land in 1402, when Timur granted them all of Diyar Bakr in present-day Turkey. For a long time, the Aq Qoyunlu were unable to expand their territory, as the rival Qara Qoyunlu or "Black Sheep Turkomans" kept them at bay. However, this changed with the rule of Uzun Hasan, who defeated the Black Sheep Turkoman leader Jahān Shāh in 1467. After the death of Jahan Shah, his son Hasan Ali, with the help of Timurid Abu Sa'id Mirza, marched on Azerbaijan to meet Uzun Hasan. Deciding to spend the winter in Karabakh, Abu Sa'id was captured and repulsed by Uzun Hasan as the former advanced towards the Aras River.[31][page needed][32]

After the defeat of the Timurid leader, Abu Sa'id Mirza, Uzun Hasan was able to take Baghdad along with territories around the Persian Gulf. He expanded into Iran as far east as Khorasan. However, around this time, the Ottoman Empire sought to expand eastwards, a serious threat that forced the Aq Qoyunlu into an alliance with the Karamanids of central Anatolia.

As early as 1464, Uzun Hasan had requested military aid from one of the Ottoman Empire's strongest enemies, Venice. Despite Venetian promises, this aid never arrived and, as a result, Uzun Hassan was defeated by the Ottomans at the Battle of Otlukbeli in 1473,[33] though this did not destroy the Aq Qoyunlu.

In 1470, Uzun selected Abu Bakr Tihrani to compile a history of the Aq Qoyunlu confederation.[34] The Kitab-i Diyarbakriyya, as it was called, referred to Uzun Hasan as sahib-qiran and was the first historical work to assign this title to a non-Timurid ruler.[34]

Uzun Hasan preserved relationships with the members of the popular dervish order whose main inclinations were towards Shi'ism, while promoting the urban religious establishment with donations and confirmations of tax concessions or endowments, and ordering the pursuit of extremist Shiite and antinomist sects. He married one of his daughters to his nephew Haydar, the new head of the Safavid sect in Ardabil.[35]

Sultan Ya'qub edit

 
Miniature of Sultan Ya'qub and his courtiers, Mehmed the Conqueror's album

When Uzun Hasan died early in 1478, he was succeeded by his son Khalil Mirza, but the latter was defeated by a confederation under his younger brother Ya'qub at the battle of Khoy in July.[14]: 128 

Ya'qub, who reigned from 1478 to 1490, sustained the dynasty for a while longer. However, during the first four years of his reign there were seven pretenders to the throne who had to be put down.[14]: 125  Unlike his father, Ya'qub Beg was not interested in popular religious rites and alienated a large part of the people, especially the Turks. Therefore, the vast majority of Turks became involved in the Safawiya order, which became a militant organization with an extreme Shiite ideology led by Sheikh Haydar. Ya'qub initially sent Sheikh Haydar and his followers to a holy war against the Circassians, but soon decided to break the alliance because he feared the military power of Sheikh Haydar and his order. During his march to Georgia, Sheikh Haydar attacked one of Ya'qub's vassals, the Shirvanshahs, in revenge for his father, Sheikh Junayd (assassinated in 1460), and Ya'qub sent troops to the Shirvanshahs, who defeated and killed Haydar and captured his three sons. This event further strengthened the pro-Safavid feeling among Azerbaijani and Anatolian Turkmen.[36][37]

Following Ya'qub's death, civil war again erupted, the Aq Qoyunlus destroyed themselves from within, and they ceased to be a threat to their neighbors. The early Safavids, who were followers of the Safaviyya religious order, began to undermine the allegiance of the Aq Qoyunlu. The Safavids and the Aq Qoyunlu met in battle in the city of Nakhchivan in 1501 and the Safavid leader Ismail I forced the Aq Qoyunlu to withdraw.[38]

In his retreat from the Safavids, the Aq Qoyunlu leader Alwand destroyed an autonomous state of the Aq Qoyunlu in Mardin. The last Aq Qoyunlu leader, Sultan Murad, brother of Alwand, was also defeated by the same Safavid leader. Though Murād briefly established himself in Baghdad in 1501, he soon withdrew back to Diyar Bakr, signaling the end of the Aq Qoyunlu rule.

Ahmad Beg edit

 
Sultan Khalil of the Aq Qoyunlu, 1478.

Amidst the struggle for power between Uzun Hasan's grandsons Baysungur (son of Yaqub) and Rustam (son of Maqsud), their cousin Ahmed Bey appeared on the stage. Ahmed Bey was the son of Uzun Hasan's eldest son Ughurlu Muhammad, who, in 1475, escaped to the Ottoman Empire, where the sultan, Mehmed the Conqueror, received Uğurlu Muhammad with kindness and gave him his daughter in marriage, of whom Ahmed Bey was born.[39]

Baysungur was dethroned in 1491 and expelled from Tabriz. He made several unsuccessful attempts to return before he was killed in 1493. Desiring to reconcile both his religious establishment and the famous Sufi order, Rustam (1478–1490) immediately allowed Sheikh Haydar Safavi's sons to return to Ardabil in 1492. Two years later, Ayba Sultan ordered their re-arrest, as their rise threatened the Ak Koyunlu again, but their youngest son, Ismail, then seven years old, fled and was hidden by supporters in Lahijan.[36][40]

According to Hasan Rumlu's Ahsan al-tavarikh, in 1496–97, Hasan Ali Tarkhani went to the Ottoman Empire to tell Sultan Bayezid II that Azerbaijan and Persian Iraq were defenceless and suggested that Ahmed Bey, heir to that kingdom, should be sent there with Ottoman troops. Bayezid agreed to this idea, and by May 1497 Ahmad Bey faced Rustam near Araxes and defeated him.[39]

After Ahmad's death, the Aq Qoyunlu became even more fragmented. The state was ruled by three sultans: Alvand Mirza in the west, Uzun Hasan's nephew Qasim in an enclave in Diyarbakir, and Alvand's brother Mohammad in Fars and Iraq-Ajam (killed by violence in the summer of 1500 and replaced by Morad Mirza). The collapse of the Aq Qoyunlu state in Iran began in the autumn of 1501 with the defeat at the hands of Ismail Safavi, who had left Lahijan two years earlier and gathered a large audience of Turkmen warriors. He conquered Iraq-Ajami, Fars and Kerman in the summer of 1503, Diyarbakir in 1507–1508 and Mesopotamia in the autumn of 1508. The last Aq Qoyunlu sultan, Morad, who hoped to regain the throne with the help of Ottoman troops, was defeated and killed by Ismail's Qizilbash warriors in the last fortress of Rohada, ending the political rule of the Aq Qoyunlu dynasty.[32][36]

Governance edit

The leaders of Aq Qoyunlu were from the Begundur or Bayandur clan of the Oghuz Turks[41] and were considered descendants of the semi-mythical founding father of the Oghuz, Oghuz Khagan.[42] The Bayandurs behaved like statesmen rather than warlords and gained the support of the merchant and feudal classes of Transcaucasia (present-day Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia).[42] The Aq Qoyunlu, along with the Qara Qoyunlu, were the last Iranian regimes that used their Chinggisid background to establish their legitimacy. Under Ya'qub Beg, the Chinggisid yasa (traditional nomadic laws of the medieval Turco-Mongols of the Eurasian steppe lands) was dissolved.[43]

 
Kasımiye Medrese, completed in 1445 by Kasım, a son of Akkoyunlu sultan Mu'izz-al-Din.

Uzun Hasan's conquest of most of mainland Iran shifted the seat of power to the east, where the Aq Qoyunlu adopted Iranian customs for administration and culture. In the Iranian areas, Uzun Hasan preserved the previous bureaucratic structure along with its secretaries, who belonged to families that had in a number of instances served under different dynasties for several generations.[3] The four top civil posts of the Aq Qoyunlu were all occupied by Iranians, which under Uzun Hasan included; the vizier, who led the great council (divan); the mostawfi al-mamalek, high-ranking financial accountants; the mohrdar, who affixed the state seal; and the marakur "stable master", who supervised the royal court.[3]

Culture flourished under the Aq Qoyunlu, who, although of coming from a Turkic background, sponsored Iranian culture. Uzun Hasan himself adopted it and ruled in the style of an Iranian king. Despite his Turkoman background, he was proud of being an Iranian.[44] At his new capital, Tabriz, he managed a refined Persian court. There he utilized the trappings of pre-Islamic Persian royalty and bureaucrats taken from several earlier Iranian regimes. Through the use of his increasing revenue, Uzun Hasan was able to buy the approval of the ulama (clergy) and the mainly Iranian urban elite, while also taking care of the impoverished rural inhabitants.[43]

In letters from the Ottoman Sultans, when addressing the kings of Aq Qoyunlu, such titles as Arabic: ملك الملوك الأيرانية "King of Iranian Kings", Arabic: سلطان السلاطين الإيرانية "Sultan of Iranian Sultans", Persian: شاهنشاه ایران خدیو عجم Shāhanshāh-e Irān Khadiv-e Ajam "Shahanshah of Iran and Ruler of Persia", Jamshid shawkat va Fereydun rāyat va Dārā derāyat "Powerful like Jamshid, flag of Fereydun and wise like Darius" have been used.[45] Uzun Hassan also held the title Padishah-i Irān "Padishah of Iran", which was re-adopted by his distaff grandson Ismail I, founder of the Safavid Empire.[46]

The Aq Qoyunlu realm was notable for being inhabited by many prominent figures, such as the poets Ali Qushji (died 1474), Baba Fighani Shirazi (died 1519), Ahli Shirazi (died 1535), the poet, scholar and Sufi Jami (died 1492) and the philosopher and theologian, Jalal al-Din Davani (died 1503).[44]

Culture edit

The Aq Qoyunlu patronized Persian belles-lettres which included poets like Ahli Shirazi, Kamāl al-Dīn Banāʾī Haravī, Bābā Fighānī, Shahīdī Qumī.[47] By the reign of Yaʿqūb, the Aq Qoyunlu court held a fondness for Persian poetry.[48] 16th-century Azerbaijani poet Fuzuli was also born and raised under Aq Qoyunlu rule, writing his first known poem for Shah Alvand Mirza.[49]

Nur al-Din 'Abd al-Rahman Jami dedicated his poem, Salāmān va Absāl, which was written in Persian, to Yaʿqūb.[50][51] Yaʿqūb rewarded Jami with a generous gift.[50] Jami also wrote a eulogy, Silsilat al-zahab, which indirectly criticised Yaʿqūb immoral behavior.[47] Yaʿqūb had Persian poems dedicated to him, including Ahli Shirazi's allegorical masnavi on love, Sham' va parvana and Bana'i's 5,000 verse narrative poem, Bahram va Bihruz.[47]

Yaʿqūb's maternal nephew, 'Abd Allah Hatifi, wrote poetry for the five years he spent at the Aq Qoyunlu court.[52]

Uzun Hasan and his son, Khalil,[53] patronized, along with other prominent Sufis, members of the Kobrāvi and Neʿmatallāhi tariqats.[54] According to the Tarikh-e lam-r-ye amini by Fazlallh b. Ruzbehn Khonji Esfahni, the court-commissioned history of Yaqub's reign, Uzun Hasan built close to 400 structures in the Aq Qoyunlu region for the purpose of Sufi communal retreat.[54]

Administration edit

The Aq Qoyunlu administration encompassed of two sections; the military caste, which mostly consisted of Turkomans, but also had Iranian tribesmen in it. The other section was the civil staff, which consisted of officials from established Persian families.[55]

Military structure edit

The organization of the Aq Qoyunlu army was based on the fusion of military traditions from both nomadic and settled cultures. The ethnic background of Aq-Qoyunlu troops were quite heterogeneous as it consisted of 'sarvars' of Azerbaijan, people of Persia and Iraq, Iranzamin askers, dilavers of Kurdistan, Turkmen mekhtars and others.[56][57]

Padishah (Sovereign)Head of Defence Ministry
Tavachi dari
Head of Guards
Qorchu bashi
Chief commander over army units
(Amir al-Umara – Askeri qoshun)
Flag bearer
(Emir alem)
TavachiKadi nazirAmir bitikchi
Royal bodyguard
Boy nuker
Guards
(qorchu)
Engineer corpsChief Horseman
(Emir Ahur)
GarrisonsThe superintendent of the hunt
Amir-i Shikar
ArtilleryMilitary inspector
Ariz-i Lashkar
Road guardsQuartermaster
Bukaul-i Lashkar
Regular army
(Jeri)
Search units
Balarguchi
Nomad units
Mir-i el
Army Inspector
Amiri Jandar
Jandar units
Head of Food Supply
Rikabdar
Head of Auxiliary troops
Yasaul bashi
Yasaul units
Head of Camping
Yurtchu bashi
Yurtchu units
Messenger
Chavush
Jasus
Secret agents / spies
Sahib Habar
Jagdiul
Head of Internal Affairs
Eshik Agasi Bashi

[56][57]

Gallery edit

Coinage edit

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ However some Aq Qoyunlu rump states continued to rule until 1508, before they were absorbed into the Safavid Empire by Ismail I.[1]
  2. ^ ...Persian was primarily the language of poetry in the Aq Qoyunlu court.[5]
  3. ^  • Also referred to as the Aq Qoyunlu confederacy, the Aq Qoyunlu sultanate, the Aq Qoyunlu empire,[3] the White Sheep confederacy.
     • Other spellings includes Ag Qoyunlu, Agh Qoyunlu or Ak Koyunlu.
     • Also mentioned as Bayanduriyye (Bayandurids) in Iranian[12][11] and Ottoman sources.[13]
     • Also known as Tur-'Alids in Mamluk sources.[14]: 34 

References edit

  1. ^ Charles Melville (2021). Safavid Persia in the Age of Empires: The Idea of Iran. Vol. 10. p. 33. Only after five more years did Esma'il and the Qezelbash finally defeat the rump Aq Qoyunlu regimes. In Diyarbakr, the Mowsillu overthrew Zeynal b. Ahmad and then later gave their allegiance to the Safavids when the Safavids invaded in 913/1507. The following year the Safavids conquered Iraq and drove out Soltan-Morad, who fled to Anatolia and was never again able to assert his claim to Aq Qoyunlu rule. It was therefore only in 1508 that the last regions of Aq Qoyunlu power finally fell to Esma'il.
  2. ^ Daniel T. Potts (2014). Nomadism in Iran: From Antiquity to the Modern Era. p. 7. Indeed, the Bayundur clan to which the Aq-qoyunlu rulers belonged, bore the same name and tamgha (symbol) as that of an Oghuz clan.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n "AQ QOYUNLŪ". Encyclopaedia Iranica. 5 August 2011. pp. 163–168.
  4. ^ Arjomand, Saïd Amir (2016). "Unity of the Persianate World under Turko-Mongolian Domination and Divergent Development of Imperial Autocracies in the Sixteenth Century". Journal of Persianate Studies. 9 (1): 11. doi:10.1163/18747167-12341292. The disintegration of Timur's empire into a growing number of Timurid principalities ruled by his sons and grandsons allowed the remarkable rebound of the Ottomans and their westward conquest of Byzantium as well as the rise of rival Turko-Mongolian nomadic empires of the Aq Qoyunlu and Qara Qoyunlu in western Iran, Iraq, and eastern Anatolia. In all of these nomadic empires, however, Persian remained the official court language and the Persianate ideal of kingship prevailed.
  5. ^ a b Erkinov 2015, p. 62.
  6. ^ Lazzarini, Isabella (2015). Communication and Conflict: Italian Diplomacy in the Early Renaissance, 1350-1520. Oxford University Press. p. 244. ISBN 978-0-19-872741-5.
  7. ^ Javadi & Burrill 2012.
  8. ^ a b Michael M. Gunter, Historical dictionary of the Kurds (2010), p. 29
  9. ^ a b Faruk Sümer (1988–2016). "AKKOYUNLULAR XV. yüzyılda Doğu Anadolu, Azerbaycan ve Irak'ta hüküm süren Türkmen hânedanı (1340–1514)". TDV Encyclopedia of Islam (44+2 vols.) (in Turkish). Istanbul: Turkiye Diyanet Foundation, Centre for Islamic Studies.
  10. ^ a b c d "Coins from the tribal federation of Aq Qoyunlu".
  11. ^ a b c Faruk Sümer (1988–2016). "UZUN HASAN (ö. 882/1478) Akkoyunlu hükümdarı (1452–1478).". TDV Encyclopedia of Islam (44+2 vols.) (in Turkish). Istanbul: Turkiye Diyanet Foundation, Centre for Islamic Studies.
  12. ^ Seyfettin Erşahin (2002). Akkoyunlular: siyasal, kültürel, ekonomik ve sosyal tarih (in Turkish). p. 317.
  13. ^ International Journal of Turkish Studies. Vol. 4–5. University of Wisconsin. 1987. p. 272.
  14. ^ a b c Woods, John E. (1999). The Aqquyunlu: Clan, Confederation, Empire. University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City. ISBN 0-87480-565-1.
  15. ^ "Aq Qoyunlu" at Encyclopædia Iranica; "Christian sedentary inhabitants were not totally excluded from the economic, political, and social activities of the Āq Qoyunlū state and that Qara ʿOṯmān had at his command at least a rudimentary bureaucratic apparatus of the Iranian-Islamic type. [...] With the conquest of Iran, not only did the Āq Qoyunlū center of power shift eastward, but Iranian influences were soon brought to bear on their method of government and their culture."
  16. ^ Kaushik Roy, Military Transition in Early Modern Asia, 1400–1750, (Bloomsbury, 2014), 38; "Post-Mongol Persia and Iraq were ruled by two tribal confederations: Akkoyunlu (White Sheep) (1378–1507) and Qaraoyunlu (Black Sheep). They were Persianate Turkoman Confederations of Anatolia (Asia Minor) and Azerbaijan."
  17. ^ Mikaberidze, Alexander (2011). Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World: A Historical Encyclopedia, vol. 1. Santa-Barbara, CA: ABC-Clio. p. 431. ISBN 978-159884-336-1. "His Qizilbash army overcame the massed forces of the dominant Ak Koyunlu (White Sheep) Turkomans at Sharur in 1501...".
  18. ^ The Book of Dede Korkut (F.Sumer, A.Uysal, W.Walker ed.). University of Texas Press. 1972. p. Introduction. ISBN 0-292-70787-8. "Better known as Turkomans... the interim Ak-Koyunlu and Karakoyunlu dynasties..."
  19. ^ Erdem, Ilham. "The Aq-qoyunlu State from the Death of Osman Bey to Uzun Hasan Bey (1435-1456)." (2008). “The creator of the Aq-Qoyunlu principality founded in the region of Diyarbakır was Kara Yülük Osman Bey, a member of the Bayındır tribe of the Oghuz.”
  20. ^ Pines, Yuri, Michal Biran, and Jörg Rüpke, eds. the limits of universal rule: Eurasian empires compared. Cambridge University Press, 2021. "the Aq Qoyunlu, like the Ottomans, began life as a collection of loosely organized band of pastoral nomadic Oghuz raiders in the Diyarbakir region of eastern Anatolia"
    "the dynasty controlled territory in their eastern Anatolian homelands"
  21. ^ Potts, Daniel T. Nomadism in Iran: from antiquity to the modern era. Oxford University Press, 2014.
  22. ^ Wink, André. Indo-Islamic society: 14th-15th centuries. Vol. 3. Brill, 2003.
  23. ^ a b Bosworth, C. E. (1 June 2019). New Islamic Dynasties: A Chronological and Genealogical Manual. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 275–276. ISBN 978-1-4744-6462-8.
  24. ^ Sinclair, T.A. (1989). Eastern Turkey: An Architectural & Archaeological Survey, Volume I. Pindar Press. p. 111. ISBN 978-0907132325.
  25. ^ Jackson, Peter; Lockhart, Lawrence, eds. (1986). The Cambridge History of Iran. Volume 6, The Timurid and Safavid Periods. Cambridge University Press. p. 154.
  26. ^ Minorsky, Vladimir (1955). "The Aq-qoyunlu and Land Reforms (Turkmenica, 11)". Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London. 17 (3): 449. doi:10.1017/S0041977X00112376. S2CID 154166838.
  27. ^ Robert MacHenry. The New Encyclopædia Britannica, Encyclopædia Britannica, 1993, ISBN 0-85229-571-5, p. 184.
  28. ^ Cornell H. Fleischer (1986). Bureaucrat and intellectual in the Ottoman Empire. p. 287.
  29. ^ H. B. Paksoy (1989). Alpamysh: Central Asian Identity Under Russian Rule. p. 84.
  30. ^ İsmail Aka (2005). Makaleler (in Turkish). Vol. 2. Berikan Kitabevi. p. 291.
  31. ^ Eagles 2014.
  32. ^ a b Tihranî, Ebu Bekr-i (2014). Kitab-ı Diyarbekriyye (PDF). Türk Tarih Kurumu. ISBN 978-9751627520.
  33. ^ Eagles 2014, p. 46.
  34. ^ a b Markiewicz 2019, p. 184.
  35. ^ "AKKOYUNLULAR – TDV İslâm Ansiklopedisi". TDV İslam Ansiklopedisi (in Turkish). Retrieved 2022-04-11.
  36. ^ a b c Foundation, Encyclopaedia Iranica. "AQ QOYUNLŪ". iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 2022-04-11.
  37. ^ Woods, John E (1999). The Aqquyunlu: Clan, Confederation, Empire (PDF). University of Utah Press. ISBN 0-87480-565-1.
  38. ^ Thomas & Chesworth 2015, p. 585.
  39. ^ a b Vladimir Minorsky. "The Aq-qoyunlu and Land Reforms (Turkmenica, 11)", Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, 17/3 (1955): 458.
  40. ^ Sarı, Arif (2019). "İran Türk Devletleri Karakoyunlular Akkoyunlular Safeviler". İnsanlığın Serüveni. İstek Yayınları.
  41. ^ C.E. Bosworth and R. Bulliet, The New Islamic Dynasties: A Chronological and Genealogical Manual , Columbia University Press, 1996, ISBN 0-231-10714-5, p. 275.
  42. ^ a b Charles van der Leeuw. Azerbaijan: A Quest of Identity, a Short History, Palgrave Macmillan, ISBN 0-312-21903-2, p. 81
  43. ^ a b Lane 2016.
  44. ^ a b Langaroodi & Negahban 2015.
  45. ^ Muʾayyid S̲ābitī, ʻAlī (1967). Asnad va Namahha-yi Tarikhi (Historical documents and letters from early Islamic period towards the end of Shah Ismaʻil Safavi's reign.). Iranian culture & literature. Kitābkhānah-ʾi Ṭahūrī., pp. 193, 274, 315, 330, 332, 422 and 430. See also: Abdul Hussein Navai, Asnaad o Mokatebaat Tarikhi Iran (Historical sources and letters of Iran), Tehran, Bongaah Tarjomeh and Nashr-e-Ketab, 2536, pp. 578, 657, 701–702 and 707
  46. ^ H.R. Roemer, "The Safavid Period", in Cambridge History of Iran, Vol. VI, Cambridge University Press 1986, p. 339: "Further evidence of a desire to follow in the line of Turkmen rulers is Ismail's assumption of the title 'Padishah-i-Iran', previously held by Uzun Hasan."
  47. ^ a b c Lingwood 2014, p. 26.
  48. ^ Lingwood 2014, p. 111.
  49. ^ Mazıoğlu, Hasibe (1992). Fuzûlî ve Türkçe Divanı'ndan Seçmeler [Fuzûlî and Selections from His Turkish Divan] (in Turkish). Kültür Bakanlığı Yayımlar Dairesi Başkanlığı. p. 4. ISBN 978-975-17-1108-3.
  50. ^ a b Daʿadli 2019, p. 6.
  51. ^ Lingwood 2014, p. 16.
  52. ^ Lingwood 2014, p. 112.
  53. ^ Lingwood 2014, p. 87.
  54. ^ a b Lingwood 2011, p. 235.
  55. ^ V. Minorsky, "A Civil and Military Review in Fars" 881/1476, p. 172
  56. ^ a b Агаев, Юсиф; Ахмедов, Сабухи (2006). Ак-Коюнлу-Османская война (in Russian).
  57. ^ a b Erdem, I. (March 1991). "[Akkoyunlu Ordusunu Oluşturan İnsan Unsuru]". Tarih Araştırmaları Dergisi (in Turkish). 15 (26): 85–92. ISSN 1015-1826.

Sources edit

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  • Javadi, H.; Burrill, K. (May 24, 2012). "Azerbaijan x. Azeri Turkish Literature". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Among the Azeri poets of the 15th century mention should be made of Ḵaṭāʾi Tabrizi. He wrote a maṯnawi entitled Yusof wa Zoleyḵā, and dedicated it to the Aqqoyunlu Sultan Yaʿqub (r. 1478–90), who himself wrote poetry in Azeri Turkish.
  • Daʿadli, Tawfiq (2019). Esoteric Images: Decoding the Late Herat School of Painting. Brill.
  • Eagles, Jonathan (2014). Stephen the Great and Balkan Nationalism: Moldova and Eastern European History. I.B. Tauris. ISBN 978-1780763538.
  • Erkinov, Aftandil (2015). "From Herat to Shiraz: the Unique Manuscript (876/1471) of 'Alī Shīr Nawā'ī's Poetry from Aq Qoyunlu Circle". Cahiers d'Asie centrale. 24. Translated by Bean, Scott: 47–79.
  • Lane, George (2016). "Turkoman confederations, the (Aqqoyunlu and Qaraqoyunlu)". In Dalziel, N.; MacKenzie, J.M. (eds.). The Encyclopedia of Empire. pp. 1–5. doi:10.1002/9781118455074.wbeoe193. ISBN 978-1118455074.
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  • Lingwood, C. G. (2011). "The qebla of Jāmi is None Other than Tabriz": ʿAbd al-Rahmān Jāmi and Naqshbandi Sufism at the Aq Qoyunlu Royal Court". Journal of Persianate Studies. 4 (2): 233–245. doi:10.1163/187471611X600404.
  • Lingwood, Chad G. (2014). Politics, Poetry, and Sufism in Medieval Iran. Brill.
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  • Woods, John E. (1999) The Aqquyunlu: Clan, Confederation, Empire (2nd ed.) University of Utah Press, Salt Lake City, ISBN 0-87480-565-1

qoyunlu, white, sheep, turkomans, azerbaijani, ağqoyunlular, آق, قویونلولر, persian, آق, قویونلو, culturally, persianate, sunni, turkoman, tribal, confederation, founded, diyarbakir, region, qara, yuluk, uthman, they, ruled, parts, present, eastern, turkey, fr. The Aq Qoyunlu or the White Sheep Turkomans c Azerbaijani Agqoyunlular آق قویونلولر Persian آق قویونلو was a culturally Persianate 15 16 Sunni 8 Turkoman 17 18 tribal confederation Founded in the Diyarbakir region by Qara Yuluk Uthman Beg 19 20 they ruled parts of present day eastern Turkey from 1378 to 1503 and in their last decades also ruled Armenia Azerbaijan much of Iran Iraq and Oman where the ruler of Hormuz recognised Aq Qoyunlu suzerainty 21 22 The Aq Qoyunlu empire reached its zenith under Uzun Hasan 3 Aq Qoyunluآق قویونلو1378 1503 a A flag sanjak from the period of the Uzun Hasan s reign the original here Tamga of Bayandurused by the Aq Qoyunlu 2 The Aq Qoyunlu confederation at its greatest extent under Uzun HasanStatusConfederate SultanateCapitalBayburt summer pastures 3 Palu Ergani winter pastures 3 Diyarbakir 1403 April 1468 Tabriz 1468 January 6 1478 Common languagesPersian official court language poetry 4 b 5 Azerbaijani dynastic poetry 6 7 ReligionSunni Islam 8 GovernmentMonarchyRuler 1378 1435Qara Yuluk Uthman Beg 1497 1503Sultan MuradLegislatureKengac legislative 3 Boy ḵanlari military 3 Historical eraMedieval First raid on the Trapezuntine Empire by Tur Ali Beg 9 1340 Siege of Trebizond 9 1348 Established1378 Coup by Uzun Hasan 3 Autumn 1452 Reunification 3 1457 Death of Ahmad Beg division of the Aq Qoyunlu 3 December 1497 Collapse of the Aq Qoyunlu rule in Iran 3 Summer 1503 End of the Aq Qoyunlu rule in Mesopotamia 3 Autumn 1508CurrencyAkce 10 Ashrafi 10 Dinar 10 Tanka 10 Hasanbegi 11 equal to 2 akce Preceded by Succeeded by Qara Qoyunlu Safavid Empire Ottoman Empire Contents 1 History 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Origins 1 3 Uzun Hasan 1 4 Sultan Ya qub 1 5 Ahmad Beg 2 Governance 3 Culture 4 Administration 5 Military structure 6 Gallery 7 Coinage 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 SourcesHistory editEtymology edit The name Aq Qoyunlu literally meaning those with white sheep 23 is first mentioned in late 14th century sources It has been suggested that this name refers to old totemic symbols but according to Rashid al Din Hamadani the Turks were forbidden to eat the flesh of their totem animals and so this is unlikely given the importance of mutton in the diet of pastoral nomads Another hypothesis is that the name refers to the predominant color of their flocks 3 Origins edit Main article Bayandur tribe According to chronicles from the Byzantine Empire the Aq Qoyunlu are first attested in the district of Bayburt south of the Pontic Mountains from at least the 1340s 24 In these chronicles Tur Ali Beg was mentioned as lord of the Turks of Amid Diyarbakir who had already attained the rank of amir under the Ilkhan Ghazan Under his leadership they besieged Trebizond but failed to take the town 25 A number of their leaders including the dynasty s founder Qara Yuluk Uthman Beg 26 married Byzantine princesses 27 By the end of the Ilkhanid period in the mid 14th century the Oghuz tribes that comprised the Aq Qoyunlu confederation roamed the summer pastures in Armenia in particular the upper reaches of the Tigris river and winter pastures between the towns of Diyarbakir and Sivas Since the end of the 14th century Aq Qoyunlu waged constant wars with another tribal confederation of the Oghuz tribes the Qara Qoyunlu The leading Aq Qoyunlu tribe was the Bayandur tribe 23 Uzun Hasan used to assert the claim that he was an honorable descendant of Oghuz Khan and his grandson Bayandur Khan In a letter dating to the year 1470 which was sent to Sehzade Bayezid the then governor of Amasya Uzun Hasan wrote that those from the Bayandur and Bayat tribes as well as other tribes that belonged to the Oghuz il and formerly inhabited Mangyshlak Khwarazm and Turkestan came and served in his court He also made the tamga seal of the Bayandur tribe the symbol of his state For this reason the Bayandur tamga is found in Aq Qoyunlu coins their official documents inscriptions and flags 11 Myth The Aq Qoyunlu Sultans claimed descent from Bayindir Khan who was a grandson of Oghuz Khan the legendary ancestor of Oghuz Turks 28 According to Professor G L Lewis 29 The Ak koyunlu Sultans claimed descent from Bayindir Khan and it is likely on the face of it that the Book of Dede Korkut was composed under their patronage The snag about this is that in the Ak koyunlu genealogy Bayindir s father is named as Gok Sky Khan son of the eponymous Oghuz Khan whereas in our book he is named as Kam Ghan a name otherwise unknown In default of any better explanation I therefore incline to the belief that the book was composed before Ak koyunlu rulers had decided who their ancestors were It was in 1403 that they ceased to be tribal chiefs and became Sultans so we may assume that their official genealogy was formulated round about that date According to the Kitab i Diyarbakriyya the ancestors of Uzun Hasan back to the prophet Adam in the 68th generation are listed by name and information is given about them Among them is Tur Ali Bey the grandfather of Uzun Hasan s grandfather who is also mentioned in other sources But it is difficult to say whether Pehlivan Bey Ezdi Bey and Idris Bey who are listed in earlier periods really existed Most of the people who are listed as the ancestors of Uzun Hasan are names related to the Oghuz legend and to Oghuz rulers 30 Uzun Hasan edit Main article Uzun Hasan The Aq Qoyunlu Turkomans first acquired land in 1402 when Timur granted them all of Diyar Bakr in present day Turkey For a long time the Aq Qoyunlu were unable to expand their territory as the rival Qara Qoyunlu or Black Sheep Turkomans kept them at bay However this changed with the rule of Uzun Hasan who defeated the Black Sheep Turkoman leader Jahan Shah in 1467 After the death of Jahan Shah his son Hasan Ali with the help of Timurid Abu Sa id Mirza marched on Azerbaijan to meet Uzun Hasan Deciding to spend the winter in Karabakh Abu Sa id was captured and repulsed by Uzun Hasan as the former advanced towards the Aras River 31 page needed 32 After the defeat of the Timurid leader Abu Sa id Mirza Uzun Hasan was able to take Baghdad along with territories around the Persian Gulf He expanded into Iran as far east as Khorasan However around this time the Ottoman Empire sought to expand eastwards a serious threat that forced the Aq Qoyunlu into an alliance with the Karamanids of central Anatolia As early as 1464 Uzun Hasan had requested military aid from one of the Ottoman Empire s strongest enemies Venice Despite Venetian promises this aid never arrived and as a result Uzun Hassan was defeated by the Ottomans at the Battle of Otlukbeli in 1473 33 though this did not destroy the Aq Qoyunlu In 1470 Uzun selected Abu Bakr Tihrani to compile a history of the Aq Qoyunlu confederation 34 The Kitab i Diyarbakriyya as it was called referred to Uzun Hasan as sahib qiran and was the first historical work to assign this title to a non Timurid ruler 34 Uzun Hasan preserved relationships with the members of the popular dervish order whose main inclinations were towards Shi ism while promoting the urban religious establishment with donations and confirmations of tax concessions or endowments and ordering the pursuit of extremist Shiite and antinomist sects He married one of his daughters to his nephew Haydar the new head of the Safavid sect in Ardabil 35 Sultan Ya qub edit Main article Sultan Ya qub nbsp Miniature of Sultan Ya qub and his courtiers Mehmed the Conqueror s album When Uzun Hasan died early in 1478 he was succeeded by his son Khalil Mirza but the latter was defeated by a confederation under his younger brother Ya qub at the battle of Khoy in July 14 128 Ya qub who reigned from 1478 to 1490 sustained the dynasty for a while longer However during the first four years of his reign there were seven pretenders to the throne who had to be put down 14 125 Unlike his father Ya qub Beg was not interested in popular religious rites and alienated a large part of the people especially the Turks Therefore the vast majority of Turks became involved in the Safawiya order which became a militant organization with an extreme Shiite ideology led by Sheikh Haydar Ya qub initially sent Sheikh Haydar and his followers to a holy war against the Circassians but soon decided to break the alliance because he feared the military power of Sheikh Haydar and his order During his march to Georgia Sheikh Haydar attacked one of Ya qub s vassals the Shirvanshahs in revenge for his father Sheikh Junayd assassinated in 1460 and Ya qub sent troops to the Shirvanshahs who defeated and killed Haydar and captured his three sons This event further strengthened the pro Safavid feeling among Azerbaijani and Anatolian Turkmen 36 37 Following Ya qub s death civil war again erupted the Aq Qoyunlus destroyed themselves from within and they ceased to be a threat to their neighbors The early Safavids who were followers of the Safaviyya religious order began to undermine the allegiance of the Aq Qoyunlu The Safavids and the Aq Qoyunlu met in battle in the city of Nakhchivan in 1501 and the Safavid leader Ismail I forced the Aq Qoyunlu to withdraw 38 In his retreat from the Safavids the Aq Qoyunlu leader Alwand destroyed an autonomous state of the Aq Qoyunlu in Mardin The last Aq Qoyunlu leader Sultan Murad brother of Alwand was also defeated by the same Safavid leader Though Murad briefly established himself in Baghdad in 1501 he soon withdrew back to Diyar Bakr signaling the end of the Aq Qoyunlu rule Ahmad Beg edit Main article Ahmad Beg nbsp Sultan Khalil of the Aq Qoyunlu 1478 Amidst the struggle for power between Uzun Hasan s grandsons Baysungur son of Yaqub and Rustam son of Maqsud their cousin Ahmed Bey appeared on the stage Ahmed Bey was the son of Uzun Hasan s eldest son Ughurlu Muhammad who in 1475 escaped to the Ottoman Empire where the sultan Mehmed the Conqueror received Ugurlu Muhammad with kindness and gave him his daughter in marriage of whom Ahmed Bey was born 39 Baysungur was dethroned in 1491 and expelled from Tabriz He made several unsuccessful attempts to return before he was killed in 1493 Desiring to reconcile both his religious establishment and the famous Sufi order Rustam 1478 1490 immediately allowed Sheikh Haydar Safavi s sons to return to Ardabil in 1492 Two years later Ayba Sultan ordered their re arrest as their rise threatened the Ak Koyunlu again but their youngest son Ismail then seven years old fled and was hidden by supporters in Lahijan 36 40 According to Hasan Rumlu s Ahsan al tavarikh in 1496 97 Hasan Ali Tarkhani went to the Ottoman Empire to tell Sultan Bayezid II that Azerbaijan and Persian Iraq were defenceless and suggested that Ahmed Bey heir to that kingdom should be sent there with Ottoman troops Bayezid agreed to this idea and by May 1497 Ahmad Bey faced Rustam near Araxes and defeated him 39 After Ahmad s death the Aq Qoyunlu became even more fragmented The state was ruled by three sultans Alvand Mirza in the west Uzun Hasan s nephew Qasim in an enclave in Diyarbakir and Alvand s brother Mohammad in Fars and Iraq Ajam killed by violence in the summer of 1500 and replaced by Morad Mirza The collapse of the Aq Qoyunlu state in Iran began in the autumn of 1501 with the defeat at the hands of Ismail Safavi who had left Lahijan two years earlier and gathered a large audience of Turkmen warriors He conquered Iraq Ajami Fars and Kerman in the summer of 1503 Diyarbakir in 1507 1508 and Mesopotamia in the autumn of 1508 The last Aq Qoyunlu sultan Morad who hoped to regain the throne with the help of Ottoman troops was defeated and killed by Ismail s Qizilbash warriors in the last fortress of Rohada ending the political rule of the Aq Qoyunlu dynasty 32 36 Governance editThe leaders of Aq Qoyunlu were from the Begundur or Bayandur clan of the Oghuz Turks 41 and were considered descendants of the semi mythical founding father of the Oghuz Oghuz Khagan 42 The Bayandurs behaved like statesmen rather than warlords and gained the support of the merchant and feudal classes of Transcaucasia present day Armenia Azerbaijan and Georgia 42 The Aq Qoyunlu along with the Qara Qoyunlu were the last Iranian regimes that used their Chinggisid background to establish their legitimacy Under Ya qub Beg the Chinggisid yasa traditional nomadic laws of the medieval Turco Mongols of the Eurasian steppe lands was dissolved 43 nbsp Kasimiye Medrese completed in 1445 by Kasim a son of Akkoyunlu sultan Mu izz al Din Uzun Hasan s conquest of most of mainland Iran shifted the seat of power to the east where the Aq Qoyunlu adopted Iranian customs for administration and culture In the Iranian areas Uzun Hasan preserved the previous bureaucratic structure along with its secretaries who belonged to families that had in a number of instances served under different dynasties for several generations 3 The four top civil posts of the Aq Qoyunlu were all occupied by Iranians which under Uzun Hasan included the vizier who led the great council divan the mostawfi al mamalek high ranking financial accountants the mohrdar who affixed the state seal and the marakur stable master who supervised the royal court 3 Culture flourished under the Aq Qoyunlu who although of coming from a Turkic background sponsored Iranian culture Uzun Hasan himself adopted it and ruled in the style of an Iranian king Despite his Turkoman background he was proud of being an Iranian 44 At his new capital Tabriz he managed a refined Persian court There he utilized the trappings of pre Islamic Persian royalty and bureaucrats taken from several earlier Iranian regimes Through the use of his increasing revenue Uzun Hasan was able to buy the approval of the ulama clergy and the mainly Iranian urban elite while also taking care of the impoverished rural inhabitants 43 In letters from the Ottoman Sultans when addressing the kings of Aq Qoyunlu such titles as Arabic ملك الملوك الأيرانية King of Iranian Kings Arabic سلطان السلاطين الإيرانية Sultan of Iranian Sultans Persian شاهنشاه ایران خدیو عجم Shahanshah e Iran Khadiv e Ajam Shahanshah of Iran and Ruler of Persia Jamshid shawkat va Fereydun rayat va Dara derayat Powerful like Jamshid flag of Fereydun and wise like Darius have been used 45 Uzun Hassan also held the title Padishah i Iran Padishah of Iran which was re adopted by his distaff grandson Ismail I founder of the Safavid Empire 46 The Aq Qoyunlu realm was notable for being inhabited by many prominent figures such as the poets Ali Qushji died 1474 Baba Fighani Shirazi died 1519 Ahli Shirazi died 1535 the poet scholar and Sufi Jami died 1492 and the philosopher and theologian Jalal al Din Davani died 1503 44 Culture edit nbsp 1500MOGHULISTANPHAGMODRUPASCHAM PASIBIR KHANATECRIMEANKHANATELITHUANIAGRAND DUCHYKHAZANKHANATEASTRA KHANMUSCOVYNOGAISKAZAKH KHANATEMINGDYNASTYFOUROIRATSNORTHERN YUANWHITE SHEEPTURKSVIJAYA NAGARASHAYBA NIDSTIMURIDEMPIREDELHISULTANATETungusAVALANXANGOTTOMANEMPIREMAMLUKSULTANATEJO SEONMALACCA class notpageimage The Aq Qoyunlu White Sheep Turks and main contemporary polities c 1500 The Aq Qoyunlu patronized Persian belles lettres which included poets like Ahli Shirazi Kamal al Din Banaʾi Haravi Baba Fighani Shahidi Qumi 47 By the reign of Yaʿqub the Aq Qoyunlu court held a fondness for Persian poetry 48 16th century Azerbaijani poet Fuzuli was also born and raised under Aq Qoyunlu rule writing his first known poem for Shah Alvand Mirza 49 Nur al Din Abd al Rahman Jami dedicated his poem Salaman va Absal which was written in Persian to Yaʿqub 50 51 Yaʿqub rewarded Jami with a generous gift 50 Jami also wrote a eulogy Silsilat al zahab which indirectly criticised Yaʿqub immoral behavior 47 Yaʿqub had Persian poems dedicated to him including Ahli Shirazi s allegorical masnavi on love Sham va parvana and Bana i s 5 000 verse narrative poem Bahram va Bihruz 47 Yaʿqub s maternal nephew Abd Allah Hatifi wrote poetry for the five years he spent at the Aq Qoyunlu court 52 Uzun Hasan and his son Khalil 53 patronized along with other prominent Sufis members of the Kobravi and Neʿmatallahi tariqats 54 According to the Tarikh e lam r ye amini by Fazlallh b Ruzbehn Khonji Esfahni the court commissioned history of Yaqub s reign Uzun Hasan built close to 400 structures in the Aq Qoyunlu region for the purpose of Sufi communal retreat 54 Administration editThe Aq Qoyunlu administration encompassed of two sections the military caste which mostly consisted of Turkomans but also had Iranian tribesmen in it The other section was the civil staff which consisted of officials from established Persian families 55 Military structure editThe organization of the Aq Qoyunlu army was based on the fusion of military traditions from both nomadic and settled cultures The ethnic background of Aq Qoyunlu troops were quite heterogeneous as it consisted of sarvars of Azerbaijan people of Persia and Iraq Iranzamin askers dilavers of Kurdistan Turkmen mekhtars and others 56 57 Padishah Sovereign Head of Defence MinistryTavachi dari Head of GuardsQorchu bashiChief commander over army units Amir al Umara Askeri qoshun Flag bearer Emir alem TavachiKadi nazirAmir bitikchi Royal bodyguardBoy nukerGuards qorchu Engineer corpsChief Horseman Emir Ahur GarrisonsThe superintendent of the huntAmir i Shikar ArtilleryMilitary inspectorAriz i Lashkar Road guardsQuartermasterBukaul i Lashkar Regular army Jeri Search unitsBalarguchi Nomad unitsMir i elArmy InspectorAmiri JandarJandar units Head of Food SupplyRikabdar Head of Auxiliary troopsYasaul bashiYasaul units Head of CampingYurtchu bashiYurtchu units MessengerChavush Jasus Secret agents spiesSahib Habar Jagdiul Head of Internal AffairsEshik Agasi Bashi 56 57 Gallery edit nbsp A flag sanjak belonging to Aq Qoyunlu during Uzun Hassan s reign Topkapi Palace museum nbsp Book of Dede Korkut nbsp Zeynel Bey Mausoleum formerly located in Hasankeyf nbsp Mehmed II and Ughurlu Muhammed Hunername nbsp Kasimiye MedreseCoinage edit nbsp Jahangir s coin after 1444 AD nbsp Uzun Hasan s coin minted in Amid Diyarbakir c 1453 1478 AD nbsp Sultan Yaqub s coin c 1479 1490 AD nbsp Baysunghur s coin minted in Tabriz c 1490 1493 AD nbsp Sultan Rustam s coin 1495 AD nbsp Sultan Ahmad s coin minted in Tabriz 1497 AD nbsp Coin of Sultan Muhammad nbsp Sultan Alwand s coin nbsp Sultan Murad s coin See also editList of rulers of Aq Qoyunlu Turkmen invasions of Georgia BozulusNotes edit However some Aq Qoyunlu rump states continued to rule until 1508 before they were absorbed into the Safavid Empire by Ismail I 1 Persian was primarily the language of poetry in the Aq Qoyunlu court 5 Also referred to as the Aq Qoyunlu confederacy the Aq Qoyunlu sultanate the Aq Qoyunlu empire 3 the White Sheep confederacy Other spellings includes Ag Qoyunlu Agh Qoyunlu or Ak Koyunlu Also mentioned as Bayanduriyye Bayandurids in Iranian 12 11 and Ottoman sources 13 Also known as Tur Alids in Mamluk sources 14 34 References edit Charles Melville 2021 Safavid Persia in the Age of Empires The Idea of Iran Vol 10 p 33 Only after five more years did Esma il and the Qezelbash finally defeat the rump Aq Qoyunlu regimes In Diyarbakr the Mowsillu overthrew Zeynal b Ahmad and then later gave their allegiance to the Safavids when the Safavids invaded in 913 1507 The following year the Safavids conquered Iraq and drove out Soltan Morad who fled to Anatolia and was never again able to assert his claim to Aq Qoyunlu rule It was therefore only in 1508 that the last regions of Aq Qoyunlu power finally fell to Esma il Daniel T Potts 2014 Nomadism in Iran From Antiquity to the Modern Era p 7 Indeed the Bayundur clan to which the Aq qoyunlu rulers belonged bore the same name and tamgha symbol as that of an Oghuz clan a b c d e f g h i j k l m n AQ QOYUNLu Encyclopaedia Iranica 5 August 2011 pp 163 168 Arjomand Said Amir 2016 Unity of the Persianate World under Turko Mongolian Domination and Divergent Development of Imperial Autocracies in the Sixteenth Century Journal of Persianate Studies 9 1 11 doi 10 1163 18747167 12341292 The disintegration of Timur s empire into a growing number of Timurid principalities ruled by his sons and grandsons allowed the remarkable rebound of the Ottomans and their westward conquest of Byzantium as well as the rise of rival Turko Mongolian nomadic empires of the Aq Qoyunlu and Qara Qoyunlu in western Iran Iraq and eastern Anatolia In all of these nomadic empires however Persian remained the official court language and the Persianate ideal of kingship prevailed a b Erkinov 2015 p 62 Lazzarini Isabella 2015 Communication and Conflict Italian Diplomacy in the Early Renaissance 1350 1520 Oxford University Press p 244 ISBN 978 0 19 872741 5 Javadi amp Burrill 2012 a b Michael M Gunter Historical dictionary of the Kurds 2010 p 29 a b Faruk Sumer 1988 2016 AKKOYUNLULAR XV yuzyilda Dogu Anadolu Azerbaycan ve Irak ta hukum suren Turkmen hanedani 1340 1514 TDV Encyclopedia of Islam 44 2 vols in Turkish Istanbul Turkiye Diyanet Foundation Centre for Islamic Studies a b c d Coins from the tribal federation of Aq Qoyunlu a b c Faruk Sumer 1988 2016 UZUN HASAN o 882 1478 Akkoyunlu hukumdari 1452 1478 TDV Encyclopedia of Islam 44 2 vols in Turkish Istanbul Turkiye Diyanet Foundation Centre for Islamic Studies Seyfettin Ersahin 2002 Akkoyunlular siyasal kulturel ekonomik ve sosyal tarih in Turkish p 317 International Journal of Turkish Studies Vol 4 5 University of Wisconsin 1987 p 272 a b c Woods John E 1999 The Aqquyunlu Clan Confederation Empire University of Utah Press Salt Lake City ISBN 0 87480 565 1 Aq Qoyunlu at Encyclopaedia Iranica Christian sedentary inhabitants were not totally excluded from the economic political and social activities of the Aq Qoyunlu state and that Qara ʿOṯman had at his command at least a rudimentary bureaucratic apparatus of the Iranian Islamic type With the conquest of Iran not only did the Aq Qoyunlu center of power shift eastward but Iranian influences were soon brought to bear on their method of government and their culture Kaushik Roy Military Transition in Early Modern Asia 1400 1750 Bloomsbury 2014 38 Post Mongol Persia and Iraq were ruled by two tribal confederations Akkoyunlu White Sheep 1378 1507 and Qaraoyunlu Black Sheep They were Persianate Turkoman Confederations of Anatolia Asia Minor and Azerbaijan Mikaberidze Alexander 2011 Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World A Historical Encyclopedia vol 1 Santa Barbara CA ABC Clio p 431 ISBN 978 159884 336 1 His Qizilbash army overcame the massed forces of the dominant Ak Koyunlu White Sheep Turkomans at Sharur in 1501 The Book of Dede Korkut F Sumer A Uysal W Walker ed University of Texas Press 1972 p Introduction ISBN 0 292 70787 8 Better known as Turkomans the interim Ak Koyunlu and Karakoyunlu dynasties Erdem Ilham The Aq qoyunlu State from the Death of Osman Bey to Uzun Hasan Bey 1435 1456 2008 The creator of the Aq Qoyunlu principality founded in the region of Diyarbakir was Kara Yuluk Osman Bey a member of the Bayindir tribe of the Oghuz Pines Yuri Michal Biran and Jorg Rupke eds the limits of universal rule Eurasian empires compared Cambridge University Press 2021 the Aq Qoyunlu like the Ottomans began life as a collection of loosely organized band of pastoral nomadic Oghuz raiders in the Diyarbakir region of eastern Anatolia the dynasty controlled territory in their eastern Anatolian homelands Potts Daniel T Nomadism in Iran from antiquity to the modern era Oxford University Press 2014 Wink Andre Indo Islamic society 14th 15th centuries Vol 3 Brill 2003 a b Bosworth C E 1 June 2019 New Islamic Dynasties A Chronological and Genealogical Manual Edinburgh University Press pp 275 276 ISBN 978 1 4744 6462 8 Sinclair T A 1989 Eastern Turkey An Architectural amp Archaeological Survey Volume I Pindar Press p 111 ISBN 978 0907132325 Jackson Peter Lockhart Lawrence eds 1986 The Cambridge History of Iran Volume 6 The Timurid and Safavid Periods Cambridge University Press p 154 Minorsky Vladimir 1955 The Aq qoyunlu and Land Reforms Turkmenica 11 Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London 17 3 449 doi 10 1017 S0041977X00112376 S2CID 154166838 Robert MacHenry The New Encyclopaedia Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica 1993 ISBN 0 85229 571 5 p 184 Cornell H Fleischer 1986 Bureaucrat and intellectual in the Ottoman Empire p 287 H B Paksoy 1989 Alpamysh Central Asian Identity Under Russian Rule p 84 Ismail Aka 2005 Makaleler in Turkish Vol 2 Berikan Kitabevi p 291 Eagles 2014 a b Tihrani Ebu Bekr i 2014 Kitab i Diyarbekriyye PDF Turk Tarih Kurumu ISBN 978 9751627520 Eagles 2014 p 46 a b Markiewicz 2019 p 184 AKKOYUNLULAR TDV Islam Ansiklopedisi TDV Islam Ansiklopedisi in Turkish Retrieved 2022 04 11 a b c Foundation Encyclopaedia Iranica AQ QOYUNLu iranicaonline org Retrieved 2022 04 11 Woods John E 1999 The Aqquyunlu Clan Confederation Empire PDF University of Utah Press ISBN 0 87480 565 1 Thomas amp Chesworth 2015 p 585 a b Vladimir Minorsky The Aq qoyunlu and Land Reforms Turkmenica 11 Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies University of London 17 3 1955 458 Sari Arif 2019 Iran Turk Devletleri Karakoyunlular Akkoyunlular Safeviler Insanligin Seruveni Istek Yayinlari C E Bosworth and R Bulliet The New Islamic Dynasties A Chronological and Genealogical Manual Columbia University Press 1996 ISBN 0 231 10714 5 p 275 a b Charles van der Leeuw Azerbaijan A Quest of Identity a Short History Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 0 312 21903 2 p 81 a b Lane 2016 a b Langaroodi amp Negahban 2015 Muʾayyid S abiti ʻAli 1967 Asnad va Namahha yi Tarikhi Historical documents and letters from early Islamic period towards the end of Shah Ismaʻil Safavi s reign Iranian culture amp literature Kitabkhanah ʾi Ṭahuri pp 193 274 315 330 332 422 and 430 See also Abdul Hussein Navai Asnaad o Mokatebaat Tarikhi Iran Historical sources and letters of Iran Tehran Bongaah Tarjomeh and Nashr e Ketab 2536 pp 578 657 701 702 and 707 H R Roemer The Safavid Period in Cambridge History of Iran Vol VI Cambridge University Press 1986 p 339 Further evidence of a desire to follow in the line of Turkmen rulers is Ismail s assumption of the title Padishah i Iran previously held by Uzun Hasan a b c Lingwood 2014 p 26 Lingwood 2014 p 111 Mazioglu Hasibe 1992 Fuzuli ve Turkce Divani ndan Secmeler Fuzuli and Selections from His Turkish Divan in Turkish Kultur Bakanligi Yayimlar Dairesi Baskanligi p 4 ISBN 978 975 17 1108 3 a b Daʿadli 2019 p 6 Lingwood 2014 p 16 Lingwood 2014 p 112 Lingwood 2014 p 87 a b Lingwood 2011 p 235 V Minorsky A Civil and Military Review in Fars 881 1476 p 172 a b Agaev Yusif Ahmedov Sabuhi 2006 Ak Koyunlu Osmanskaya vojna in Russian a b Erdem I March 1991 Akkoyunlu Ordusunu Olusturan Insan Unsuru Tarih Arastirmalari Dergisi in Turkish 15 26 85 92 ISSN 1015 1826 Sources editBosworth Clifford 1996 The New Islamic Dynasties A Chronological and Genealogical Manual 2nd ed Columbia University Press New York ISBN 0 231 10714 5 Javadi H Burrill K May 24 2012 Azerbaijan x Azeri Turkish Literature Encyclopaedia Iranica Among the Azeri poets of the 15th century mention should be made of Ḵaṭaʾi Tabrizi He wrote a maṯnawi entitled Yusof wa Zoleyḵa and dedicated it to the Aqqoyunlu Sultan Yaʿqub r 1478 90 who himself wrote poetry in Azeri Turkish Daʿadli Tawfiq 2019 Esoteric Images Decoding the Late Herat School of Painting Brill Eagles Jonathan 2014 Stephen the Great and Balkan Nationalism Moldova and Eastern European History I B Tauris ISBN 978 1780763538 Erkinov Aftandil 2015 From Herat to Shiraz the Unique Manuscript 876 1471 of Ali Shir Nawa i s Poetry from Aq Qoyunlu Circle Cahiers d Asie centrale 24 Translated by Bean Scott 47 79 Lane George 2016 Turkoman confederations the Aqqoyunlu and Qaraqoyunlu In Dalziel N MacKenzie J M eds The Encyclopedia of Empire pp 1 5 doi 10 1002 9781118455074 wbeoe193 ISBN 978 1118455074 Langaroodi Reza Rezazadeh Negahban Farzin 2015 Aq quyunlu In Madelung Wilferd Daftary Farhad eds Encyclopaedia Islamica Online Brill Online ISSN 1875 9831 Lingwood C G 2011 The qebla of Jami is None Other than Tabriz ʿAbd al Rahman Jami and Naqshbandi Sufism at the Aq Qoyunlu Royal Court Journal of Persianate Studies 4 2 233 245 doi 10 1163 187471611X600404 Lingwood Chad G 2014 Politics Poetry and Sufism in Medieval Iran Brill Markiewicz Christopher 2019 The Crisis of Kingship in Late Medieval Islam Persian Emigres and the Making of Ottoman Sovereignty Cambridge University Press ISBN missing Morby John 2002 Dynasties of the World A Chronological and Genealogical Handbook 2nd ed Oxford University Press Oxford England ISBN 0 19 860473 4 Thomas David Chesworth John A eds 2015 Christian Muslim Relations A Bibliographical History Central and Eastern Europe Asia Africa and South America Vol 7 Brill ISBN missing Woods John E 1999 The Aqquyunlu Clan Confederation Empire 2nd ed University of Utah Press Salt Lake City ISBN 0 87480 565 1 Retrieved from https en 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