History of the Kurds
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Kurds are one of the Iranian peoples and speak a north-western Iranian
language related to Persian.With regard to the origin of the Kurds,
it was formerly considered sufficient to describe them as the descendants
of the Carduchi, who opposed the retreat of the Ten Thousand through
the mountains in the 4th century BC. But modern research traces them
far beyond the period of the Greeks. In their own histories, they
are proud to mention the Hurrian period in the mid third millennium
BC as the earliest documented period. The 3rd millennium was the time
of the Guti and Hattians, the 2nd and 1st the time of the Kassites,
Mitanni, Mannai, Urartu, and Mushku. It should be mentioned that the
Kurds are an Indo-European people, whereas the above groups are thought
to have been non Indo-Europeans, apart from the original Mitanni leadership.
However, Kurds consider themselves as much Indo-European as they do
any of these.
At the dawn of history the mountains overhanging Assyria were held
by a people named Gutii, a title which signified "a warrior",
and which was rendered in Assyrian by the synonym of Gardu or Kardu,
the precise term quoted by Strabo to explain the name of the Cardaces.
These Gutii were a tribe of such power as to be placed in the early
Cuneiform records on an equality with the other nations of western
Asia, that is, with the Syrians and Hittites, the Susians, Elamites,
and Akkadians of Babylonia; and during the whole period of the Assyrian
Empire they seem to have preserved a more-or-less independent political
position.
After the fall of Nineveh the Gutii coalesced with the Medes, and,
in common with all the nations inhabiting the high plateaus of Asia
Minor, Armenia and Persia, became gradually Aryanised, owing to the
immigration at this period of history of tribes in overwhelming numbers
who, from whatever quarter they may have sprung, belonged certainly
to the Aryan family.
The Gutii or Kurdu were reduced to subjection by Cyrus before he descended
upon Babylon, and furnished a contingent of fighting men to his successors,
being thus mentioned under the names of "Saspirians" and
"Alarodians" in the muster roll of the army of Xerxes which
Herodotus has preserved.
In later times they passed successively under the sway of the Macedonians,
the Parthians, and Sassanids, being especially befriended, if we may
judge from tradition as well as from the remains still existing in
the country, by the Arsacid monarchs, who were probably of a cognate
race. Gotarzes indeed, whose name may perhaps be translated "chief
of the Gutii", was traditionally believed to be the founder of
the Gurans, the principal tribe of southern Kurdistan, and his name
and titles are still preserved in a Greek inscription at Behistun
near the Kurdish capital of Kermanshah.
Under the caliphs of Baghdad the Kurds were always giving trouble
in one quarter or another. In AD 838, and again in 905, formidable
insurrections occurred in northern Kurdistan; the amir, Aqpd-addaula,
was obliged to lead the forces of the caliphate against the southern
Kurds, capturing the famous fortress of Sermaj, of which the ruins
are to be seen at the present day near Behistun, and reducing the
province of Shahrizor with its capital city now marked by the great
mound of Yassin Teppeh.
The most flourishing period of Kurdish power was probably during the
12th century, when the great Saladin, who belonged to the Rawendi
branch of the Hadabani tribe, founded the Ayyubite dynasty of Syria,
and Kurdish chieftainhips were established, not only to the east and
west of the Kurdistan mountains, but as far as Khorasan upon one side
and Egypt and Yemen on the other.
During the Mongol and Tatar domination of western Asia the Kurds in
the mountains remained for the most part passive, yielding a reluctant
obedience to the provincial governors of the plains. When Sultan Selim
I, after defeating Shah Ismail I in 1514, annexed Armenia and Kurdistan,
he entrusted the organisation of the conquered territories to Idris,
the historian, who was a Kurd of Bitlis. Idris found Kurdistan bristling
with castles, held by hereditary tribal chiefs of Kurd, Arab, and
Armenian descent, who were practically independent, and passed their
time in tribal warfare or in raiding the agricultural population.
He divided the territory into sanjaks or districts, and, making no
attempt to interfere with the principle of heredity, installed the
local chiefs as governors. He also resettled the rich pastoral country
between Erzerum and Erivan, which had lain waste since the passage
of Timur, with Kurds from the Hakkiari and Bohtan districts.
The system of administration introduced by Idris remained unchanged
until the close of the Russo-Turkish War of 1828-29. But the Kurds,
owing to the remoteness of their country from the capital and the
decline of Turkey, had greatly increased in influence and power, and
had spread westwards over the country as far as Angora.
After the war the Kurds attempted to free themselves from Turkish
control, and in 1834, after the Bedirkhan clan uprising, it became
necessary to reduce them to subjection. This was done by Reshid Pasha.
The principal towns were strongly garrisoned, and many of the Kurd
beys were replaced by Turkish governors. A rising under Bedr Khan
Bey in 1843 was firmly repressed, and after the Crimean War the Turks
strengthened their hold on the country. The Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78
was followed by the attempt of Sheikh Obaidullah in 1880 - 1881 to
found an independent Kurd principality under the protection of Turkey.
The attempt, at first encouraged by the Porte, as a reply to the projected
creation of an Armenian state under the suzerainty of Russia, collapsed
after Obaidullah's raid into Persia, when various circumstances led
the central government to reassert its supreme authority. Until the
Russo-Turkish War of 1828-29 there had been little hostile feeling
between the Kurds and the Armenians, and as late as 1877 - 1878 the
mountaineers of both races had co-existed fairly well together. Both
suffered from Turkey, both dreaded Russia. But the national movement
amongst the Armenians, and its encouragement by Russia after the latest
war, gradually aroused race hatred and fanaticism.
In 1891 the activity of the Armenian Committees induced the Porte
to strengthen the position of the Kurds by raising a body of Kurdish
irregular cavalry, which was well-armed and called Hamidieh after
the Sultan Abd-ul-Hamid II. The opportunities thus offered for plunder
and the gratification of race hatred brought out the worst qualities
of the Kurds. Minor disturbances constantly occurred, and were soon
followed by the massacre of Armenians at Sasun and other places, 1894
- 1896, in which the Kurds took an active part.
Many Kurds died at Turkish hands between 1915 and the end of World
War I, but despite the trend to self-determination and the championing
in the Treaty of Sèvres of Kurdish autonomy in the aftermath
of World War I, Turkish resurgence under Kemal Atatürk prevented
the achievement of Kurdish national independence. Turkey suppressed
Kurdish revolts in