VersionsAgha, Shaikh and State [English, Schoonhoven, 1978]
Agha, Shaikh and State [English, London, 1992]
Aga, Şeyh ve Devlet: Kürdisîan'ın Sosyal ve Politik Örgütlenmesi [Türkçe, Ankara, ]
Agha, Scheich und Staat: Politik und Gesellschaft Kurdistans [Deutsche, Berlin, 1989]
Agha, Shaikh and State
Martin van Bruinessen
Rijswijk
Martin van Bruinessen was born at Schoonhoven on July 10, 1946. Secondary education (gymnasium ) at the Christelijk Lyceum, Gouda. In 1964 he enrolled at the State University of Utrecht, where he studied mathematics and physics, since 1966 also social anthropology. In 1971 he took his master's degree ("doctoraalexamen") in theoretical physics, cum laude. Previously, in 1970, he had taken a "candidaats" degree in anthropology. From 1971 to 1973 he taught mathematics at a secondary school in Utrecht, then travelled a little. The research for this thesis was carried out from mid-1974 to mid-1976, as a research fellow of the Netherlands Organization for the Advancement of Pure Research (Z.W.O.). Contents
Preface / xi Intyroduction / 1
How this thesis come to be written / 1 Subject of this study / 9 A not e on the written sources / 12 A note on the transcription of oriental words / 14
Chapter I General information on Kurdistan / 16 I. a Geography / 16 I. b Geopolitical situation / 19 I. c Population / 20 I. d Economies: peasant farming, transhumant semi-nomadism, pastoral nomadism / 22 I. e Other economic activities: crafts/industries and trade; development and under-development / 26 I. f Language / 29 I. g Religion / 31 I. h The nationalist war in Iraq / 34
Chapter II Tribes, chieftains and non-tribal groups / 39 II. a The tribe and its subdivisions /40 The household / 42 The village / 47 Corporate action on levels other than the village / 48 II. b Kurdish terms / 52 II. c Blood feuds and other conflicts / 59 Ending feuds by mediation / 63 Marriage type and tribal conflict / 68 Other sorts of conflict / 69 II. d Higher than the tribe? / 70 Units larger than the tribe / 70 Dichotomy of the social universe / 73 II. e Leadership and conflicts / 78 Who becomes the leader? / 79 II. f Leadership: titles and functions / 81 II. g The guest-house (dîwan, dîwanxane) / 82 II. h Economic aspects: tribute to the agha / 88 The Balik tribe as an example / 89 II. i .Leadership among a number of different tribes / 91 Hengûr / 92 Pijder / 94 Hemewend / 97 Dizeyî / 99 II. j Power as o process: colonization of the northern Cezîre / 102 The Hevêrkan confederation and Hoco / 110 II k Subject "non-tribal" peasantry and their relations with tribal Kurds / 117 Economic exploitation of peasantry by tribesmen / 118 Ethnic differences / 119 II. l The Gûron / 122 Conclusion: Gûran and gûran / 129 Intermezzo: religious peculiarities of the Gûran / 130 How Kurdish are the Gûran? / 133 II. m Nomads and peasants: one or two peaples? / 135 Conclusion / 144
Chapter III Tribes and the state III. a Resume of characteristics of the Kurdish tribe; introduction to the discussion in this chapter / 145 III. b Tribes of Kurdistan not autonomous units / 148 III. c Same recurring patterns: tribes and the government of states in the Middle East / 150 III. d Same recurring patterns: centre- periphery relations / 153 The Merwanids / 156 III. e The incorporation of Kurdistan into the Ottoman Empire / 161 Prelude: Qaraqoyunlu and Aqqayunlu / 161 The Safavids / 163 The event s as seen from below / 167 Ottoman-Safavid confrontation / 168 Ottoman policy vis-à-vis the Kurds / 169 III. f Political history of same Kurdish emirates / 172 1. The meliks of Hisnkeyf / 172 2. Hekari and its mirs / 174 3. Çemişkezek / 179 III. g Administrative organization of (Ottoman) Kurdistan in the 16th century / 181 Land regime and administrative organization of the Ottoman Empire (15th - 16th centuries) / 181 The application of Ottoman administrative organization in Kurdistan / 189 III. h Internal organization of the Kurdish emirates / 194 1. Bitlis / 195 2. Baban / 208 III. i Intermezzo: the emigration to northeastern Iran / 215 III. j Political changes in the 19th century / 220 III. k The rise of Bedr Xan Beg and the fall of the emirate of Botan / 222 Botan after the disappearance of the mir / 227 Conclusion / 228 III. l The new land code and its effects / 229 Land policy of the British in Iraqi Kurdistan / 232 III. m The establishment of Kurdish tribal militias: Hamidiye / 233 III. n Changes in the early 20th century / 239 New borders: the further partitioning of Kurdistan / 240 Tribal policies of the successor states / 241 III. o A few remarks to conclude this chapter / 244
Chapter IV Shaikhs: mystics, saints and politicians / 249 IV a Introductory remarks / 249 IV b The dervish and sufi orders / 259 IV c Sufi and dervish orders: organized popular mysticism / 262 IV d History of the Qadiri order as an example / 269 IV e Other saints of Kurdistan / 275 IV f Qadiri shaikhs in Kurdistan / 277 Şex Hehmûd's revolts / 278 The Talebani shaikhs / 280 IV. g The Naqshbandi tariqa and the Naqshbandi order / 281 IV. h Why did the Naqshbandi order spread so rapidly? / 284 IV i Rituals of the Qadiri order / 296 IV. j The Naqshbandi ritual / 305 The meditations in the Naqshbandi ritual / 308 Orthodoxy and heterodoxy / 312 IV. k Shaikh and khalifa; relations with other shaikhs / 313 IV. l The shaikh and his followers / 315 IV. m The economic power of shaikhs / 318 IV. n Two shaikhs: Şex Osman of Durû and Şex Saida of Cezire / 319 Şex Osman / 319 Şex Saida / 324 IV. o Massianism / 327 IV. p Lass of influence of shaikhs / 333 IV. q Islamic revival: nurculuk / 338
Appendix to Chapter IV / 340 I. Branches of the Berzenci family / 341 II. The Sedate Nehri and the Barzani family / 345 III. The sheikhs of Biyare/Tawêla and of Palû / 348 IV. Other important Naqshbandi families / 349 V. More influential Naqshbandi sheikhs / 350
Chapter V Șêx Seîd's revolt / 353 V. a Introduction / 353 A note on the sources for this chapter / 354 V. b History of Kurdish national consciousness / 356 Periods in nationalism / 357 Kurds: a nation? / 358 Nationalist currents in the Ottoman Empire / 360 V. c End of the Ottoman Empire and birth of the Republic of Turkey / 362 Armenian massacres and Russian invasion / 362 Armistice and partition of the Empire / 363 The Turkish War of Independence / 364 The Republic of Turkey / 367 The Mosul question / 368 V. d The first Kurdish political organizations / 369 Nationalist organizations after the war and the kemalists / 373 Azadî / 376 V. e Şex Seid's revolt / 378 The religious factor / 378 A contemporary view of the state of affairs in 1924 / 380 Ehsan Nûrî's mutiny and desertion / 382 New plans for the revolt / 383 Outbreak of the revolt / 385 Suppression of the revolt / 389 V. f External and internal support for the revolt / 394 British aid ? / 394 Arms / 395 Turkish opposition / 395 V. g Participation among the Kurds / 397 Non-tribal Kurds / 399 Urban notables / 400 Urban lower classes / 401 V. h The Naqshbandî order and the revolt / 401 V. i Religious vs. nationalist character of the revolt / 404
Chapter VI / 407
Some oriental terms occurring in this book / 422 Notes / 425 Bibliography / 449 Index / 460 Beknopte samenvatting (short summary in Dutch) / 463
List of maps and figures
Map 1 (general map) / ix Map 2 The Kurds in the Middle East / 17 Map 3 Oil installations and international transport routes in Kurdistan / 20 Map 4 Dialects spoken in Kurdistan / 31 Map 5 Places and tribes mentioned in Chapter II / 58 Map 6 The northern Cezîre / 103 Map 7 Qaraqoyunlu and Safavid empires / 165 Map 8 Location of the most important emirates / 190 Map 9 Bitlîs and its surroundings / 197 Map 10 Baban and its surroundings 209 Map 11 Khorasan / 219 Map 12 The emirate of Botan at the period of greatest expansion (1846) / 223 Map 13 Important centres of propagation of the Naqshbandî order / 283 Map 14 The areas affected by Şêx Seîd's revolt / 386 Map 15 The districts in revolt (after the daily Cumhuriyet, March 27, 1925) / 388
Fig. 1 Segmentary lineage structure / 42 Fig. 2 Consistent father's brother's daughter marriage / 69 Fig. 3 Partial family tree of the Dûrikî aghas (mala Ebbas) / 105 Fig. 4 Partial family tree of the Hevêrkan aghas (mala Osman) / 112 Fig. 5 Social stratification of Kurdish society / 143 Fig. 6 Growth of the administrative network and the breaking up of large autonomous units in the periphery / 245 Fig. 7 As the administrative network is refined, local units become smaller and less complex / 247 Fig. 8 Structure and phases of development of the Oadirî and Naqshbandî orders in Kurdistan / 287
PREFACE
Research may be a solitary affair, and the book that results from it may bear the name of o single person, but there are many others who contribute to it in essential ways. It is o pleasure to think of all those who have helped me and to thank them at this place. The research on which this thesis is based was made possible through o research fellowship of the Netherlands Organization for the Advancement of Pure Research (Z.W.O.), nr 52-120. I am grateful to this organization for the open-mindedness with which it continued to sponsor my research also when the original research proposal could not be carried through.
Many thanks are due to Professor von 8001, my first teacher in anthropology, who was a great support in all stages of the research and the writing. Although his and my theoretical interests and political attitudes diverge, he left me more freedom to pursue my research as i wished than many of his more congenial colleagues might have done. His critical discussion of my findings and of my analyses was often illuminating. Discussions with Professor Thoden van Velzen were also stimulating. He mode several interesting suggestions and aided me in viewing my data from different angles.
Many others have contributed in important ways to my research and to the book that grew ultimately out of it. First of all, of course, the Kurds themselves. if it were not for the proverbial Kurdish hospitality, i would not have been able even to visit many of the places I write about. The leadership of the Kurdish national movement in Iraq were the only authorities that gave me official permission to pursue my research. The freedom of movement they left me was remarkable under the circumstances. Many Kurdish friends went to great trouble in order to make my investigations possible. They took me to places where I would otherwise not have been able to go, introduced me to persons I wished to interview, and took core of my physical security. Discussion with them gave me many new ideas. It may be better not to mention their names; let me thank them all anonymously here, and dedicate to them this book, that would not have been written without their help.
Thanks are due also to Sandy Morton, assistant-director of the British Institute of Persian Studies at Tehran, for his hospitality and help at essential moments; I have profitably mode use of his great knowledge of things Persian. Each return to the Institute after o period in the field was like o home-coming, to which Margaret Karapetian, the secretary, greatly contributed.
Parts of the manuscript of this book were read and commented upon by Rik Boeschoten, Mark van Damme, Chiel Kiel, Jiya Nuri and J.D.J. Waardenburg. Mark Harvey, who applied himself to the arduous task of improving the English of my text, was olso o critical reader and mode many useful comments. Needless to say, the responsibility for all opinions expressed, as well as for all mistakes that remain in the text, is entirely mine.
Thanks, finally, to Sally Tenney and Annelies Bruin for patiently typing my difficult manuscript, and suffering the lost-minute alterations I made.
Martin van Bruinessen
Agha, Shaikh and State On the Social and Political Organization of Kurdistan
Rijswijk
Rijswijk Proefschrift Ter Verkrijging van de graad van doctor in de sociale wetenschappen aan de rijksuniversiteit te Utrecrt, op gezag van de rector magnificus Prof. Dr. A. Verhoeff, volgens besluit van het college van decanen in het openbaar te verdedigen op vrijdag 6 October 1978 des namiddags te 4.15 uur Door Maarten Martinus van Bruinessen Geboren Op 10 Juli 1946 Te Scroonhoven
Promotores Prof. Dr. J. Van Baal Prof. Dr. H.U.E. Thoden Van Velzen
cover designed by Henk van Reeuwijk the photographs represent Mistefa Pașa (of the Miran), Şêx Ziyadin (the Hezret of Nûrșin), and a peshmerga (Kurdish guerrilla fighter) from Iraq. printed on recycled paper by Enroprint / Secondprint, Rijswijk. |