Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:390Hits:20025469Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID164902
Title ProperResistance to centralisation in the Ottoman periphery: the Kurdish Baban and Bohtan emirates
LanguageENG
AuthorAtmaca, Metin
Summary / Abstract (Note)Modern Kurdish historiography, which examines resistance to provincial centralisation in Ottoman Kurdistan, focuses largely on Bedir Khan’s Bohtan emirate and his revolt in the 1840s, while ignoring the rest of the other Kurdish emirates such as Baban emirate. While both states, Qajar Iran and Ottoman Empire, were endeavouring to solve their conflicts in the 1840s (a process which culminated in the treaty of Erzurum in 1847) the future of the Baban emirate and its territories emerged as one of the major issues during the course of negotiations. The Baban emirate was the last emirate to give up its struggle against the Sublime Porte’s centralisation reforms. The legacy of the Kurdish emirates is important to understand better the relations between the centre of the Ottoman Empire and its eastern periphery, a much less studied subject in Ottoman historiography. This article will highlight the impact of the centralisation policies in Kurdistan, more specifically on territories of the Bohtan and Baban emirates. It will be demonstrated that the changes wrought by the Tanzimat reforms were partially successful in transforming the Kurdish notables, who later became a part of the state bureaucracy. However, the reform-minded officials, who were appointed after the Kurdish emirs were removed from the region, failed to persuade the locals in favour of the new administration thus transforming their lives.
`In' analytical NoteMiddle Eastern Studies Vol. 55, No.4; Jul 2019: p.519-539
Journal SourceMiddle Eastern Studies Vol: 55 No 4
Key WordsOttoman Empire ;  Tanzimat ;  Qajar Iran ;  Centralisation ;  Baban ;  Bohtan ;  Kurdish Emirates ;  Bedir Khan


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text