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{{Short description|Region of West Asia with a historical Kurdish presence}}
{{cleanup-date|December 2005}}
{{Other uses}}
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{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2019}}
{{Infobox country
| conventional_long_name = Kurdistan
| common_name = Kurdistan
| native_name = {{Native name|ku|کوردستان}}
| image_flag =
| alt_flag =
| image_map = Kurdish-inhabited areas (orthographic projection with inset).svg
| languages_type = Main languages
| languages = {{Unbulleted list|]|]|]||]|]}}
| sovereignty_type = Integrated parts {{nobold|of ] and ] with varying degrees of autonomy in ] and ]}}
| area_km2 = 392000
| area_footnote = <ref name=":0"/>
| population_estimate = 25–30 million<ref>{{Cite web |date=12 April 2023 |title=Kurdish People Fast Facts |url=https://edition.cnn.com/2014/08/18/world/kurdish-people-fast-facts/index.html |access-date=24 December 2023 |website=CNN}}</ref>
| image_map_caption = Kurdish-inhabited areas (according to the ], 1992)<ref>{{cite web |title=Kurdish lands |url=https://legacy.lib.utexas.edu/maps/middle_east_and_asia/kurdish_lands_92.jpg |access-date=6 November 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=The Kurdish lands. |url=https://www.loc.gov/item/93682579/ |website=Library of Congress|access-date=6 November 2019}}</ref>
}}


'''Kurdistan''' ({{langx|ku|کوردستان|Kurdistan}}, {{lit|land of the Kurds}}; {{IPA|ku|ˌkʊɾdɪˈstɑːn||Ku-Kurdistan.oga}}),<ref name="BritannicaKurdistan">{{cite encyclopedia |url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Kurdistan |title=Kurdistan |encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica Online |access-date=29 July 2010}}</ref> or '''Greater Kurdistan''',<ref> by '']'', December 25, 2018</ref><ref>{{cite book |last= Kaya|first= Zeynep|date=2020|title= Mapping Kurdistan: Territory, Self-Determination and Nationalism |publisher= Cambridge University Press|pages= 2, 137, 177, 197|quote= }}</ref> is a roughly defined geo-] in ] wherein the ] form a prominent majority population<ref name="Zaken">{{cite book |last1=Zaken |first1=Mordechai |year=2007 |title=Jewish Subjects and Their Tribal Chieftains in Kurdistan: A Study in Survival |quote=Kurdistan was never a sovereign state, though the area with an ethnic and linguistic majority of Kurdish population is defined as Kurdistan. |publisher=BRILL |location=Leiden, The Netherlands |isbn=9789004161900 |pages=1–2}}</ref> and the ], ], and ] have historically been based.<ref>M. T. O'Shea, ''Trapped between the map and reality: geography and perceptions of Kurdistan'', 258 pp., Routledge, 2004. (see p. 77)</ref> Geographically, Kurdistan roughly encompasses the northwestern ] and the eastern ] mountain ranges.<!--The name Kurdistan was used in 1150 by the ] ] for designating a portion of western ].<ref>, accessed: 1 March 2010.</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.institutkurde.org/en/institute/who_are_the_kurds.php |title=Who Are the Kurds? |work=institutkurde.org}}</ref> with connotations of the older toponyms ''Curdia''<ref>Sir Anthony Sherley and His Persian Adventure, Sir Anthony Sherley, ], Published 2004 Routledge (first published 1933), 293 pages, {{ISBN|0-415-34486-7}}, page: 269</ref> and the ancient ]<ref name="A.D. Lee, 1991 pp. 366–374" />-->
:''For the Iranian province of Kurdistan, please see ].''
:''For the former Ottoman province of Kurdistan, see ].''


Kurdistan generally comprises the following four regions: southeastern Turkey (]), northern ] (]), northwestern Iran (]), and northern ] (]).<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|date=2002|title=Kurds, Kurdistān|url=https://referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/encyclopaedia-of-islam-2/kurds-kurdistan-COM_0544?s.num=167&s.start=100|journal=Encyclopaedia of Islam|edition=2|publisher=]|isbn=9789004161214|quote=At present, the different provinces of Kurdistān cover around 190,000 km2 in Turkey, 125,000 km2 in Iran, 65,000 km2 in Irāḳ, and 12,000 km2 in Syria. The total area of Kurdistān can then be estimated at approximately 392,000 km2.|last1=Bois|first1=Th|last2=Minorsky|first2=V.|last3=MacKenzie|first3=D. N.}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last= Bengio |first= Ofra |date=2014 |title= Kurdish Awakening: Nation Building in a Fragmented Homeland |publisher= University of Texas Press |page=2 |quote= Hence the terms: ''rojhalat'' (east, Iran), ''bashur'' (south, Iraq), ''bakur'' (north, Turkey), and ''rojava'' (west, Syria).}}</ref> Some definitions also include parts of southern ].<ref>{{Cite book|date=2014|title=Kurdistan|url=https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780199546091.001.0001/acref-9780199546091-e-6409?rskey=qc0zxh&result=1|journal=World Encyclopedia|edition=1|publisher=]|isbn=9780199546091|quote=Extensive mountainous and plateau region in sw Asia, inhabited by the Kurds and including parts of E Turkey, NE Iran, N Iraq, NE Syria, S Armenia and E Azerbaijan.}}</ref> Certain ] organizations seek to create an independent ] consisting of some or all of these areas with a Kurdish majority, while others campaign for greater autonomy within the existing national boundaries.<ref>Hamit Bozarslan “The Kurdish Question: Can it be solved within Europe?”, in Olivier Roy, ed. ''Turkey Today: A European Country?''.</ref> The delineation of the region remains disputed and varied, with some maps greatly exaggerating its boundaries.
]
]


Historically, the word "Kurdistan" is first attested in 11th century ] chronicles.{{sfn|Mitchell|2010}} Many disparate ] were established from the 8th to 19th centuries. Administratively, the 20th century saw the establishment of the short-lived areas of the ] (1918–1919), ] (1921–1924), ] i.e. "Red Kurdistan" (1923–1929), ] (1927–1930), and ] (1946).
'''Kurdistan''' is both the name of a geographic ] and a ] in the ] named after the ], a large ] living in parts of ], ], ], ], and ]. Most Kurds speak ]. Its borders are hard to define, as none of the states in question acknowledge Kurdistan as a ] or ] region, but it is generally held to include the regions with large Kurdish populations. The boundaries of the modern ethnographic region of Kurdistan (i.e. the region populated by Kurds) overlaps with the historical ethnic homelands of the ], the ] and the ]. According to one account, Kurdistan includes 25 million people in a 190,000 km<sup>2</sup> (74,000 sq. mi) area. Others estimate as many as 40 million Kurds live in Kurdistan, which covers an area as big as ]. The ] in ] and the ] in ] are both included in the usual definition of Kurdistan. Kurdish people are found in regions far from their ancestral homeland. The largest Kurdish enclave outside Kurdistan is the Kurdish region in north ], in north-eastern ]. Other scattered smaller communities are found in the ] mountain range in northern Iran, ] province in northern Iran and ] province in southeastern Iran. (See and )


In Iraq, following the ], the government entered into an ] with the rebellious Kurds, granting Kurds local self-rule. Soon after, however, the agreement ]. Later, during the ], which followed the ], the Iraqi military withdrew from parts of northern Iraq, allowing the Kurds to fill the vacuum and regain lost control in those areas. After the ], and since the creation of the new Iraqi ], the new constitution issued in 2005 recognises ] as a federal region;<ref>Iraqi Constitution, Article 117</ref> even though the constitution does not include the term “autonomy”, it emphasises ] and ], allowing regions and ] to administer local affairs. In practice, however, only Kurdistan Region has exercised this authority granted by the constitution. In September 2017, Iraqi Kurds held a one-sided ], which eventually ] and was abandoned. The subsequent effort by the Iraqi government to punish Kurdistan Region has resulted in the latter losing authorities it had previously possessed,<ref>{{cite web|url= https://dailybrief.oxan.com/Analysis/DB282383/Iraqi-Kurdistan-is-set-to-lose-much-of-its-autonomy |title=Kurdistan Region set to lose much of its autonomy|publisher=Oxford Analytica}}</ref> and the future of Kurdish autonomy in Iraq has been called into question.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/rise-and-fall-kurdish-power-iraq|title=The Rise and Fall of Kurdish Power in Iraq|publisher=Washington Institute for Near East Policy}}</ref> Iraqi Kurdish officials have also complained of efforts by the Iraqi government to return to the pre-2003 ] and dismantle Kurdistan Region altogether.<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.kurdistan24.net/en/story/393869|title= Attacks targeting Kurdistan Region deliberate attempt to dismantle its structure, says PM Barzani
Kurds were first promised an independent nation-state in the ] ]. The Treaty of Sèvres divided the former ] between the ], Turkey, and others. Independence was granted to ] as well. Since that time Kurdish nationalists have continued to seek independence in an area approximating that identified at Sèvres. However, the idea of an independent nation-state came to a halt when the surrounding countries joined to reject the independence of Kurdistan.
|publisher=Kurdistan24}}</ref>


There is also a ] in Iran, which is not self-ruled. Kurds fighting in the ] were able to take control of large sections of northern Syria and establish ] in an ] (commonly called Rojava), where they seek autonomy in a ] after the war.<ref>{{cite news |title=Kurds seek autonomy in democratic Syria |publisher=BBC |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-19291072 |date=16 August 2012}}</ref>
==History==
] flown by ] in parts of ], ], ], ], and ]. .]]
{{main|History of the Kurds}}


== Etymology and delineation ==
Kurds claim descent from various ancient groups; among them the ], ], ] and ]. The Medes came under ] rule during the reign of ] and Darius. Centuries later, Kurdish-inhabited areas in the Middle East witnessed the clash of the two competing super powers of those times, namely the ] and the ]. At their peak, the Romans ruled large ]-inhabited areas, particularly the western and northern Kurdish areas in the Middle East.
Kurdistan means "Land of the Kurds"<ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Vanly|first1=Ismet Chérif|last2=Vanly|first2=Ismet Cheriff|date=1977|title=Coup d'oeil sur la culture nationale Kurde|url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/25816505|journal=Oriente Moderno|volume=57|issue=9/10|pages=445|doi=10.1163/22138617-0570910007|jstor=25816505|issn=0030-5472}}</ref> and was first attested in 11th-century ] chronicles.{{sfn|Mitchell|2010}} The exact origins of the name ''Kurd'' are unclear. The suffix '']'' (]: ـستان, <small>]</small> ''stân'') is ] for land.


"Kurdistan" was also formerly spelled ''Curdistan''.<ref>The Edinburgh Encyclopædia, conducted by D. Brewster—Page 511, Original from Oxford University—published 1830</ref><ref>An Account of the State of Roman-Catholick Religion, Sir Richard Steele, Published 1715</ref> One of the ancient names of this region was '']''.<ref>N. Maxoudian, "Early Armenia as an Empire: The Career of Tigranes III, 95–55 BC", ''Journal of the Royal Central Asian Society'', Vol. 39, Issue 2, April 1952, pp. 156–63.</ref><ref name="A.D. Lee, 1991 pp. 366–374">A.D. Lee, ''The Role of Hostages in Roman Diplomacy with Sasanian Persia'', Historia: Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte, Vol. 40, No. 3 (1991), pp. 366–74 (see p. 371)</ref> The 19th-century ] was the first time that the ] used the term 'Kurdistan' to refer to an ] rather than a geographical region.<ref>{{Cite book|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FJsqDwAAQBAJ&q=kurdistan+eyaleti&pg=PA96|title=The Political Economy of the Kurds of Turkey|isbn=9781107181236|last1=Yadirgi|first1=Veli|date=3 August 2017|publisher=Cambridge University Press }}</ref>
In the 7th century A.D., Arabs conquered most of the Middle East, and Kurds became subjects of Arab ] and ] caliphates. Kurds in the medieval period were living in several semi-independent states called "emirates". A comprehensive history of these states and their relationship with their neighbors is given in the famous textbook of "Sharafnama" written by Prince Sharaf al-Din Bitlisi in 1597 . For a list of these entities see . The famous Kurdish Emirates included Baban, Soran, and Garmiyan in present-day ]; Bakran and Bokhtan (Botan) in ], and Mukriyan and ] in ].


Albeit admitting a thorough delineation is difficult, the '']'' delineated Kurdistan as following:<ref name="BRILL">{{Cite journal|date=2002|title=Kurds, Kurdistān|url=https://referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/encyclopaedia-of-islam-2/kurds-kurdistan-COM_0544?s.num=167&s.start=100|journal=Encyclopaedia of Islam|edition=2|publisher=]|doi=10.1163/1573-3912_islam_COM_0544|isbn=9789004161214|last1=Bois|first1=Th|last2=Minorsky|first2=V.|last3=MacKenzie|first3=D. N.}}</ref>{{Blockquote|text=In Turkey, the Kurds inhabit the whole of the eastern region of the country. According to ] (1878), the limit of their extent to the north was the line ]—]—]... The Kurds also occupy the western slopes of Ararat, the districts of ] and ]. On the west they extend in a wide belt beyond the course of the Euphrates, and, in the ], in the districts of ] and Divriği. Equally, the whole region includes areas to the east and south-east of these limits... ] numbers at least 17 of them almost totally: in the north-east, the provinces of ], ] and ]; in the centre, going from west to east and from north to south, the provinces of ], ], ], ], ], Karaköse (]), then ], ], ], ] and ]; Finally, the southern provinces of ], ] and Çölamerik (])...
During the following century, ] (]) wrote "Mem û Zîn", the Kurdish national epic, and he was seen by some as an early advocate of Kurdish nationalism .


inhabit the north-west of Iran. Firstly in the provinces of ], to the east of ]..., the districts of ], ], ], and to the south of the lake, ] (ex-Sabla); in the province of Ardalan, called the ], whose capital is Senna or ], ]; in the province of ], ]...
In the 16th century A.D., the Kurdish inhabited areas were split between ] and the ] after long wars. Before ], most Kurds lived within the boundaries of the ] in the ]. After the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, the ] created several countries within its former boundaries. Originally, Kurdistan along with ] was to be one of them, according to the never-ratified Treaty of Sèvres. However, the reconquest of these areas by ] and other pressing issues caused the Allies to accept the renegotiated ], giving this territory to Turkey and leaving the Kurds without a self-ruled region. Other Kurdish areas were assigned to the new British and French mandated states of ] and ] under both treaties. These boundaries were drawn with more concern for the division of oil resources and influence between different colonial powers and for rewarding pro-Allied Arab leaders than with ethnic distribution.


In Iraq, the Kurds occupy the north and northeast of the country in the liwaʾs or provinces of ]... Left outside their administration are ] and ], peopled by the ]; the liwaʾs of ], ] and ] (entirely Kurdish) and, in the... nahiyas of ] and ], where they are neighbours of the Kurds of Iran to the west of the Zagros.
Since ], Kurds have been divided between several states, in all of which they are minorities. Many Kurds have campaigned for independence or autonomy, often through force of arms. However, there has been no support by any of the regional governments or by outside powers for changes in regional boundaries. A sizable Kurdish ] exists in Western Europe that participates in agitation for Kurdish issues, but most of the governments in the Middle East have historically banned open Kurdish activism.


In Syria, they constitute three distinct belts, in the north of the country and to the south of the highway which forms a frontier and where they are in direct contact with their compatriots in Turkey... n the ];..., to the east of the ] where the river enters Syria near ]; and finally, a belt of 250 km. in length by 30 km. in depth in the ].|author=|title=|source=}}Many of the maps delineating Kurdistan are greatly exaggerated, also incorporating non-Kurdish regions, which has made the subject very controversial.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Sheyholislami |first1=Jaffer |title=Kurdish Identity, Discourse, and New Media |date=6 June 2011 |publisher=Palgrave Macmillan |pages=224–225}}</ref><ref name="Kaya" /><ref>{{cite book |last1=O'Shea |first1=Maria T. |title=Routledge Library Editions: History of the Middle East |date=25 August 2021 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |page=47}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Tinti |first1=Alessandro |title=Oil and National Identity in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq: Conflicts at the Frontier of Petro-Capitalism |date=29 November 2021 |publisher=Taylor & Francis |page=71}}</ref>
In Turkey, Iran, and Iraq, Kurdish ] groups, known in the Kurdish culture as ']', have fought for a Kurdish state. In Northern Iraq, Peshmerga fought against the Iraqi government before and during the ] and now police the ] there. Another militant group, the ] (PKK), has fought an armed campaign in Turkey, Iraq, Syria and Iran for over thirty years. In Turkey, more than 30,000 Turkish and Kurdish people have died as a result of the war between the state and the PKK, with alleged atrocities being committed by both sides. There are also some casualties in Iran, Syria, and Iraq.


== Northern Kurdistan == == History ==
{{Main|History of the Kurds}}
Northern Kurdistan is a geocultural region located in present-day southeastern ]. After the ], ] often referred to "Turko-Kurdish cooperation" during the years of '']'' ("National Struggle"). This was in accord with acts of the ] government such as sending a team of instructors to train the Kurdish rebels, who were then fighting against ] troops in modern day ] under the banner of the ]. It has been argued that ] promised ] in North Kurdistan that he would respect the conditions of the ], implying ] for the Kurdish people in exchange for their crucial help in defeating the Allies (The Turkish Grand National Assembly in Ankara, which was formed in 1920, had rejected the ] within the first weeks of its meetings, hence the doubt).


=== Ancient history ===
As soon as victory over the allies was secured, Kurdish people started uprisings in eastern ], suppression of which resulted in the Turkish government reacting by outlawing the publishing of ] newspapers and speaking of ] on government property, and the starting a "geographical nation policy". Since then, the constitution of the Republic of Turkey calls everybody who lives within the borders of Turkey a "Turk," declares the official language of Turkey (and of Turkish Government) "Turkish," and that education will be made in "Turkish." Kurds were officially referred to as "Mountain Turks".
{{Main|Hurrians|Gutian people|Mannaeans|Corduene|Assyria|Armenians}}
{{multiple image
|total_width = 500
|image1 = Alexander den stores rike, Nordisk familjebok.jpg
|caption1 = Ancient Kurdistan as Kard-uchi, during ]'s Empire, 4th century BCE
|image2 = Near East ancient map.jpg
|caption2 = 19th-century map showing the location of the Kingdom of Corduene in 60 BCE
}}
Various groups, among them the ], ], Mannai (]), and ], lived in this region in antiquity.<ref> {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080501191513/http://kurdistanica.com/english/history/articles-his/his-articles-02.html|date=1 May 2008}}</ref> The original Mannaean homeland was situated east and south of the ], roughly centered around modern-day ].<ref>{{cite encyclopedia |url=https://www.britannica.com/eb/article-9050086 |title=Mahabad |encyclopedia=Britannica Online Encyclopedia |access-date=13 May 2011}}</ref> The region came under ] rule during the reign of ] and ].


The Kingdom of ], which emerged from the declining ], was located to the south and south-east of ] between Persia and Mesopotamia and ruled northern Mesopotamia and southeastern ] from 189 BC to AD 384 as vassals of the vying ] and ] empires. Corduene became a ] state of the ] in 66 BC and remained allied with the Romans until AD 384. After 66 BC, it passed another 5 times between ] and Persia<!-- Do not link to the disambiguation page, "Persian Empire"; link to a specific iteration of this topic -->. Corduene was situated to the east of ], that is, to the east and south of present-day ] in south-eastern Turkey.
Until the ]s and ]s speaking Kurdish was forbidden in all areas of public and private life in Turkey. Since the ]s militant (initially Maoist then Marxist) Kurdish organizations, such as the ], have campaigned for an independent ] state through force of arms, while other Kurdish activists that were campaigning constitutionally for the same ends were suppressed, as the government sought to put down all forms of separatism.


Some historians have correlated a connection between Corduene with the modern names of Kurds and Kurdistan;<ref name="A.D. Lee, 1991 pp. 366–374" /><ref>Rawlinson, George, ''The Seven Great Monarchies of the Ancient Eastern World, Vol. 7'', 1871. </ref><ref>Revue des études arméniennes, vol. 21, 1988–1989, p. 281, by Société des études armeniennes, Fundação Calouste Gulbenkian, Published by Imprimerie nationale, P. Geuthner, 1989.</ref> ''T. A. Sinclair'' and other scholars have dismissed this identification as false,<ref>T. A. Sinclair, "Eastern Turkey, an Architectural and Archaeological Survey", 1989, volume 3, page 360.</ref><ref>Mark Marciak ''Sophene, Gordyene, and Adiabene: Three Regna Minora of Northern Mesopotamia Between East and West'', 2017. pp. 220-221</ref><ref>Victoria Arekelova, Garnik S. Asatryan ''Prolegomena To The Study Of The Kurds'', Iran and The Caucasus, 2009 pp. 82</ref><ref name="I. Gershevitch, 1968. p. 237">I. Gershevitch, ''The Cambridge history of Iran: The Saljuq and Mongol periods'', Vol. 5, 762 pp., Cambridge University Press, 1968. (see p. 237 for "Rawwadids")</ref> while a common association is asserted in the '']''.<ref>, ''The Columbia Encyclopedia'', Sixth Edition, 2001.</ref>
===Forced Relocations in Turkey===
Security forces in Turkey forcibly displaced Kurdish rural communities during the 1980s and 1990s in order to combat the Kurdish Workers’ Party (]) insurgency. By the mid-1990s, more than 3,000 villages had been virtually wiped from the map, and, according to official figures, 378,335 Kurdish villagers had been displaced and left homeless.(see , and .


Some of the ancient districts of Kurdistan and their corresponding modern names:<ref>J. Bell, ''A System of Geography. Popular and Scientific (A Physical, Political, and Statistical Account of the World and Its Various Divisions)'', pp. 133–4, Vol. IV, Fullarton & Co., Glasgow, 1832.</ref>
===The case of Leyla Zana===
# Corduene or Gordyene (], ] and ])
In ], ]--who, three years prior, had been the first Kurdish woman elected to the Turkish parliament--was sentenced to 15 years for "separatist speech". At her inauguration as an MP, she reportedly identified herself as a Kurd. ] reported "She took the oath of loyalty in ], as required by law, then added in ], 'I shall struggle so that the Kurdish and Turkish peoples may live together in a democratic framework.' Parliament erupted with shouts of 'Separatist', 'Terrorist', and 'Arrest her'". In 1994, after she and three other Kurdish MPs (Hatip Dicle, Orhan Dogan and Selim Sadak) joined the newly formed Democracy Party, which was quickly banned by the authorities, her immunity was lifted, and she and the other three were arrested. They were accused of treason and promptly jailed. ,. She was recogized as a "Prisoner of Conscience" by ]. When she was awarded the ]’s ] in 1995, she had been jailed for one year of a 15-year sentence. In 2002, a movie named ''The Back of the World'' examined her case. In 2004, after she had spent 9 years in prison, the ] found shortcomings in her 1994 trial. Under pressure from the ] , she was allowed to collect her Sakharov prize in 2004, while awaiting a new retrial. , , ,,
# ] (Diyarbakır)
While in prison she published a book titled ''Writings from Prison''
# Zabdicene or Bezabde (''Gozarto d'Qardu'' or ''Jazirat Ibn'' or ])
# Basenia (])
# ] (])
# Nephercerta (''Miyafarkin'')
# Artemita (])


One of the earliest records of the phrase ''land of the Kurds'' is found in an ] Christian document of ], describing the stories of Assyrian saints of the ], such as ]. When the ] ] asked Mar Abdisho about his place of origin, he replied that according to his parents, they were originally from ''Hazza,'' a village in ]. However, they were later driven out of Hazza by ], and settled in ''Tamanon,'' which according to Abdisho was in the ''land of the Kurds.'' Tamanon lies just north of the modern Iraq-Turkey border, while Hazza is 12&nbsp;km southwest of modern ]. In another passage in the same document, the region of the ] is also identified as ''land of the Kurds''.<ref>J. T. Walker, ''The Legend of ]: Narrative and Christian Heroism in Late Antique Iraq'' (368 pages), University of California Press, {{ISBN|0-520-24578-4}}, 2006, pp. 26, 52, 108.</ref> According to ] and ], Tamanon was located on the south-western or southern slopes of ] and south of ].<ref>T. A. Sinclair, "Eastern Turkey, an Architectural and Archaeological Survey", Vol. 3, Pindar Press, {{ISBN|978-1-904597-76-6}}, 1989, page 337.</ref> Other geographical references to the Kurds in ] sources appear in ] chronicle, writings of ] and ]. They mention the mountains of Qardu, city of Qardu and country of Qardawaye.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Mouawad |first=R. J. |date=1992 |title=The Kurds and Their Christian Neighbors: The Case of Orthodox Syriacs |journal=Parole de l'Orient |volume=XVII |pages=127–141 }}</ref>
===Arrest of Ocalan===
In ], a joint operation by the ] ], the Turkish ], and the ]i ] located and arrested the leader of the Kurdish paramilitary group PKK, ], in ]. The Turkish Intelligence Agency later declared that he was staying in the Greek embassy in ] with a ] passport, issued in ]. The Greek bureaucrats responsible were forced to resign, and Abdullah 'Apo' Ocalan was tried and sentenced to death, later commuted to life imprisonment in the island of ]. This is the only proven case of Western assistance to the PKK. Earlier, PKK had support from Syria, Iran and various Kurdish clans in Iraq. Ocalan was originally based in Syria but was forced to leave in late 1998 following Turkey's deployment of large numbers of troops on the Syrian border. Remnants of the PKK are based in Northern Iraq who from time to time cross the mountains border into Turkey for attacks.


=== Post-classical history ===
]/] has been described as a ] group by the ] since 1997 and more recently in 2004 by the ].
{{Main|Shaddadids|Rawadids|Hasanwayhids|Annazids|Marwanids (Diyar Bakr)}}
] (mountains of northeastern Mesopotamia), highlighting "Summer and winter resorts of the Kurds", the Kurdish lands. Redrawn from ], 977 CE.]]
]'s '']'' (1072–74), included Kurdistan.<ref name = "Gunes">{{cite book |editor1-last=Gunes |editor1-first=Cengiz |editor2-last=Bozarslan |editor2-first=Hamit |editor3-last=Yadirgi |editor3-first=Veli |title=The Cambridge History of the Kurds |date=22 April 2021 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |page=31}}</ref>]]


In the tenth and eleventh centuries, several ] emerged in the region: in the north the ] (951–1174) (in east ] between the ] and ] rivers) and the ] (955–1221) (centered on ] and which controlled all of ]), in the east the ] (959–1015) (in Zagros between Shahrizor and ]) and the ] (990–1116) (centered in ]) and in the west the ] (990–1096) to the south of ] and north of ].<ref>Maria T. O'Shea, ''Trapped between the map and reality: geography and perceptions of Kurdistan '', 258 pp., Routledge, 2004. (see p. 68)</ref><ref name="I. Gershevitch, 1968. p. 237"/>
Meanwhile over the last decade, to comply with the European Union's standards to start membership accession talks, the Turkish Government has lifted almost all the bans on Kurdish speech, press, visual/audio production, and education, and also started broadcasting Kurdish language programs in the government TV and radio channels. This, however, did not stop the PKK from breaking its ceasefire of 1999 later in 2001 and in 2005. The PKK has come under pressure fom Kurdish leaders recently to end its campaign, following overtures from Turkish Prime Minister ].


Kurdistan in the ] was a collection of semi-independent and independent states called ]s. It was nominally under indirect political or religious influence of ]s or ]s. A comprehensive history of these states and their relationship with their neighbors is given in the text of ''Sharafnama'', written by Prince ] in 1597.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.mazdapublishers.com/book/sharafnama |title=Sharafnama: History of the Kurdish Nation |publisher=Mazdapublishers.com |access-date=10 December 2017}}</ref><ref>For a list of these entities see {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051118033137/http://www.kurdistanica.com/english/geography/maps/map-03.html |date=18 November 2005 }}</ref> The emirates included ], ], ] and ] in the south; Bakran, Bohtan (or Botan) and ] in the north, and ] and ] in the east.
==Southern Kurdistan==
Southern Kurdistan is a geocultural region located in present-day Northern ]. The southern boundary of the present-day Kurdistan Regional Government &ndash; known as the 'Green Line' &ndash; passes roughly through the middle of the area in which most Iraqi Kurds live, leaving a number of Kurds outside the autonomous zone. On the other hand, this transitional region (which includes the cities of ] and ]) is ethnically quite diverse, as it includes the bulk of Iraqi ] and ]s as well as large numbers of ] and ] ]s.


The earliest medieval attestation of the ] ''Kurdistan'' is found in a 12th-century ] historical text by ]. He described a battle near ] and ] in 1062 as to have taken place in ''Kurdistan''.<ref>Matt'eos Urhayec'i, {{in lang|hy}} ''Ժամանակագրություն'' (Chronicle), ed. by M. Melik-Adamyan et al., Erevan, 1991. (p. 156)</ref><ref>G. Asatrian, ''Prolegomena to the Study of the Kurds'', Iran and the Caucasus, Vol. 13, pp. 1–58, 2009. (see p. 19)</ref> The second record occurs in the prayer from the ] of an Armenian manuscript of the ], written in 1200.<ref>A.S. Mat'evosyan, ''Colophons of the Armenian Manuscripts'', Erevan, 1988. (p. 307)</ref><ref>G. Asatrian, ''Prolegomena to the Study of the Kurds'', Iran and the Caucasus, Vol. 13, pp. 1–58, 2009. (p. 20)</ref>
The ] was designated for three northern provinces in ].


A later use of the term ''Kurdistan'' is found in ] documents in 1336<ref>Zehiroglu, Ahmet M. "Trabzon Imparatorlugu" 2016 ({{ISBN|978-605-4567-52-2}}); p. 169</ref> and in '']'', written by ] in 1340.<ref>G. Asatrian, ''Prolegomena to the Study of the Kurds'', Iran and the Caucasus, Vol. 13, pp. 1–58, 2009. (see p. 20)</ref>], ], for an autonomous region of Kurdistan.]]
===Anfal Genocidal Campaign===
]'', the first Muslim atlas, showing Kurdistan in blue]]
Anfal--"the Spoils"(of War)--is the name of the eighth ] of the ]. It is the name of a operation carried out against ] from ]] until ]], by the former ] regime under command of ] (also known as "Chemical Ali"). It was characterized by the following gross violations of human rights:
According to Sharaf al-Din Bitlisi in his ], the boundaries of the Kurdish land begin at the ] in the ] and stretch on an even line to the end of ] and ].<ref>{{cite book |last=Özoğlu |first=Hakan |date=2004 |title=Kurdish Notables and the Ottoman State |publisher=State University of New York Press |pages=27–28 |isbn=978-0-7914-5993-5}}</ref> ], who traveled in the region between 1640 and 1655, mentioned that Kurdistan includes ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], Derne, Derteng, until ].<ref>{{cite book |last=Özoğlu |first=Hakan |date=2004 |title=Kurdish Notables and the Ottoman State |publisher=State University of New York Press |page=34 |isbn=978-0-7914-5993-5}}</ref>
# Mass summary executions and mass disappearance of many tens of thousands of non-combatants, including large numbers of women and children, and sometimes the entire population of villages;
# The widespread use of ], including ] and the ] GB, or ], against the town of ] as well as dozens of Kurdish villages;
# The wholesale destruction of some 2,000 villages, which are described in government documents as having been "burned," "destroyed," "demolished" and "purified," as well as at least a dozen larger towns and administrative centers (nahyas and qadhas);
# By the most conservative estimates, 50,000 rural Kurds died during Anfal.
# Army engineers destroyed the large Kurdish town of Qala Dizeh (population 70,000)( by the ])


In the 16th century, after prolonged wars, Kurdish-inhabited areas were split between the ] and ] empires. A major division of Kurdistan occurred in the aftermath of the ] in 1514, and was formalized in the 1639 ].<ref>C. Dahlman, "The Political Geography of Kurdistan", ''Eurasian Geography and Economics'', Vol.43, No.4, pp.271–299, 2002.</ref> In a geography textbook of late Ottoman military school by ] Kurdistan span over the cities ], ], ], ], ], ] and ] among others and was one out of six regions of Ottoman Asia.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Özkan |first=Behlül |date=2014-05-04 |title=Making a National Vatan in Turkey: Geography Education in the Late Ottoman and Early Republican Periods |url=https://doi.org/10.1080/00263206.2014.886569 |journal=] |volume=50 |issue=3 |pages=461 |doi=10.1080/00263206.2014.886569 |s2cid=144455272 |issn=0026-3206}}</ref>
==Iranian (Eastern) Kurdistan==
{{main|Iranian Kurdistan}}
This area in northwestern Iran along the borders of Iraq and Turkey spans (Greater parts of) the provinces ], ], ], and ].


=== Modern history ===
A very early record of confrontation between the Kurds and the ] appears in a historical text called the ''Book of the Deeds of Ardashir son of Babak''. The book explains the life of "Ardashir Papagan" or ], the founder of the ] Dynasty, and is written in the ] language. In this book, the author explains the battle between Kurdish King ] and Ardashir. (Chapter 5)
After the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, the ] contrived to split Kurdistan (as detailed in the ultimately unratified ]) among several countries, including Kurdistan, ] and others. However, the reconquest of these areas by the forces of ] (and other pressing issues) caused the Allies to accept the renegotiated ] and the borders of the modern Republic of Turkey, leaving the Kurds without a self-ruled region.<ref>Sardar Aziz (2013). "Re-conceptualizing Kurdistan as a Battlefield." ''"Un mondo senza stati è un mondo senza guerre". Politisch motivierte Gewalt im regionalen Kontext'', ed. by Georg Grote, Hannes Obermair and Günther Rautz (EURAC book 60), Bozen–Bolzano, {{ISBN|978-88-88906-82-9}}, pp. 45–61.</ref> Other Kurdish areas were assigned to the new British and French ] states of ] and ].


]]]
During ] rule, the government tried to extend its control over Kurdish inhabited areas in western Iran. At that time, there were a number of semi-independent Kurdish emirates such as the Mukriyan (]), ] (]), and Shikak tribes around Lake Urmiye and northwest Iran. Kurds resisted this policy and tried to keep some form of self-rule. This led to a series of bloody confrontations between the ] and the Kurds. The Kurds were finally defeated, and as a result the ] decided to punish rebellious Kurds by forced relocation and deportation of Kurds in 15-16th century. This policy began under the reign of the Safavid King ] (r. 1514-1576).
At the ] of 1945, the Kurdish delegation proposed consideration of territory claimed by the Kurds, which encompassed an area extending from the Mediterranean shores near ] to the shores of the ] near ], and included the ] inhabited areas of southern ].<ref>C. Dahlman, ''The Political Geography of Kurdistan'', Eurasian Geography and Economics, Vol.43, No.4, p. 274.</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.akakurdistan.com/kurds/map/map.html |title=The map presented by the Kurdish League Delegation, March 1945 |publisher=Akakurdistan.com |access-date=13 May 2011}}</ref>


The historian ] has identified "Greater Kurdistan" as being one of the "Kurdish myths" that the ] (KDPS) were involved in promoting to Kurds in Syria.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Tejel|first=Jordi|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=5lh9AgAAQBAJ&q=%22Kurdish+myths+%28Kawa+and+%22Greater+Kurdistan%22%29%22|title=Syria's Kurds: History, Politics and Society|publisher=Routledge|year=2008|isbn=9780415613460|location=|pages=92|language=en|quote="The KDPS continued to promote the teaching of the Kurdish language in Latin characters and to cultivate the nationalist doctrine of the Syrian Kurds, using Kurdish myths (Kawa and "Greater Kurdistan")"}}</ref>
Between 1534 and 1535, ] began the systematic destruction of the old Kurdish cities and the countryside. Large numbers of Kurds from these areas found themselves deported to the ] mountains and ] (]), as well as the heights in the central ]; the ] suffered most. At this time the last remnant of the ancient royal Hadhabâni (]) tribe of central Kurdistan was removed from the heartland of Kurdistan and deported to Khorasan, where they are still found today. See and under the title "Khurasani Kurdish Dances".


An academic source published by the ] has described maps of greater Kurdistan created in the 1940s and forward as: "These maps have become some of the most influential propaganda tools for the Kurdish nationalist discourse. They depict a territorially exaggerated version of the territory of Kurdistan, extending into areas with no majority Kurdish populations. Despite their production with political aims related to specific claims on the demographic and ethnographic structure of the region, and their questionable methodologies, they have become 'Kurdistan in the minds of Kurds' and the boundaries they indicate have been readily accepted."<ref name = "Kaya">{{cite book| last =Kaya| first =Zeynep N.| author-link =|title=Mapping Kurdistan: Territory, Self-Determination and Nationalism |publisher=Cambridge University Press| date =2020|pages=108| url =https://books.google.com/books?id=qRzhDwAAQBAJ|isbn =9781108474696}}</ref>
There is a well documented historical account of a long battle in 1609-1610 between Kurds and the ] Empire. The battle took place around a fortress called "Dimdim"(DimDim) located in Beradost region around Lake ] in northwestern ]. In 1609, the ruined structure was rebuilt by "Emîr Xan Lepzêrîn" (Golden Hand Khan), ruler of Beradost, who sought to maintain the independence of his expanding principality in the face of both ] and Safavid penetration into the region. Rebuilding Dimdim was considered a move toward independence that could threaten Safavid power in the northwest. Many Kurds, including the rulers of Mukriyan (]), rallied around Amir Khan. After a long and bloody siege led by the Safavid grand vizier Hatem Beg, which lasted from November 1609 to the summer of 1610, Dimdim was captured. All the defenders were massacred. ] ordered a general massacre in Beradost and Mukriyan (reported by Eskandar Beg Turkoman, Safavid Historian in the Book "Alam Aray-e Abbasi") and resettled the Turkish Afshar tribe in the region while deporting many Kurdish tribes to ]. Although Persian historians (like Eskandar Beg ) depicted the first battle of Dimdim as a result of Kurdish mutiny or treason, in Kurdish oral traditions (Beytî dimdim), literary works (Dzhalilov, pp. 67-72), and histories, it was treated as a struggle of the Kurdish people against foreign domination. In fact, Beytî dimdim is considered a national epic second only to ] by ] (]). The first literary account of this battle is written by ].
(see and
). Also see " O. Dzh. Dzhalilov, Kurdski geroicheski epos "Zlatoruki Khan" (The Kurdish heroic epic "Gold-hand Khan"), Moscow, 1967, pp. 5-26, 37-39, 206.


At the end of the 1991 ], the ] established a ] who would be subjected to Iraqi air attacks. Amid the withdrawal of Iraqi forces from three northern provinces, ] emerged in 1992 as an autonomous entity inside Iraq with its own local government and parliament.<ref>{{cite book|author1=Gareth R. V. Stansfield|title=Iraqi Kurdistan - Political development and emergent democracy|year=2003|isbn=0-415-30278-1|pages=146–152|publisher=RoutledgeCurzon |citeseerx=10.1.1.465.8736}}</ref>
The Khurasani Kurds are a community of nearly 1.7 million people deported from western Kurdistan to Khurasan (northeastern Iran) by Persia during the 16th to 18th centuries. Also see "Izady, Mehrdad, H. ,The Kurds: A Concise Handbook, Crane Russak, 1992". For a map of these areas see .


A 2010 US report, written before the instability in Syria and Iraq that exists as of 2014, attested that "Kurdistan may exist by 2030".<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.ekurd.net/mismas/articles/misc2012/12/turkey4356.htm |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130121112352/http://ekurd.net/mismas/articles/misc2012/12/turkey4356.htm |url-status=dead |archive-date=21 January 2013 |title=Turkey may be divided, a Kurdish state could become a reality by 2030: U.S. Intelligence report |work=ekurd.net }}</ref> The weakening of the Iraqi state following the ] by the ] has also presented an opportunity for independence for Iraqi Kurdistan,<ref name="opportunity" /> augmented by Turkey's move towards acceptance of such a state although it opposes moves toward Kurdish autonomy in Turkey and Syria.<ref name="turkey_ok" />
Although Iran had declared its ] in the ], it was occupied by Allied forces. A Kurdish state was created in the city of Mahabad in ] by the Kurdish Movement ] under the leadership of ]. The ], as it is often called, lasted less than a year, as the end of the war and the withdrawal of the occupying Soviet forces allowed the central government to crush the separatists and return Kurdistan to Iran. Another wave of nationalism engulfed eastern Kurdistan after the fall of the ] in the winter of 1979, and as a result ], the new religious leader of Iran, declared a jihad (holy war) against Kurds. The crisis deepened after Kurds were denied seats in the assemblies of experts gathering in 1979, which were responsible for writing the new constitution. Kurds were therefore deprived of their political rights under the new Iranian ], since the majority of them belonged to the ] branch of Islam. In the spring of 1980, government forces under the command of President ] conquered most of the Kurdish cities through a huge military campaign, sending in mechanized military divisions to Kurdish cities including ], ], ], and ] .


==== Northern Kurdistan ====
In the constitution of the ], all language minorities including Kurdish speakers have the right to teach the language in schools and have publications, although these rights are often not respected by the government. Several newspapers have been closed by the Iranian authorities because of alleged "promotion of Kurdish separatism."
{{Main|Kurdish–Turkish conflict (1978–present)|Iraqi–Kurdish conflict}}


] pictured 1997]]
Half of the Kurdish population lives under the administration of the ] ], in which minorities of ethnic Turks and Persians (mainly ]) have held a monopoly on important posts for the last 60 years. These areas were cut off the ] after the Fall of the ] led by ]. Kurds also suffer discrimination in the Iranian legal system, in which ] (which includes most of the Kurds) are barred from standing as candidates for important posts such as the Presidency.
The incorporation into Turkey of the Kurdish-inhabited regions of eastern Anatolia was opposed by many Kurds, and has resulted in a long-running separatist conflict in which tens of thousands of lives have been lost. The region saw several major Kurdish rebellions, including the ] of 1920 against the ], then successive insurrections under the Turkish state, including the 1924 ], the ] in 1927, and the 1937 ]. All were forcefully put down by the authorities. The region was declared a closed military area from which foreigners were banned between 1925 and 1965.<ref>M.M. Gunter, ''The Kurds and the future of Turkey'', 184 pp., Palgrave Macmillan, 1997. (see p. 6)</ref><ref>G. Chaliand, ''A people without a country: the Kurds and Kurdistan'', 259 pp., Interlink Books, 1993. (see p. 250)</ref><ref>Joost Jongerden, ''The settlement issue in Turkey and the Kurds: an analysis of spatial policies, modernity and war'', 354 pp., BRILL Publishers, 2007. (see p. 37)</ref>


In an attempt to ], the Turkish government categorized Kurds as "]" until 1991.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://countrystudies.us/turkey/26.htm |title=Turkey – Linguistic and Ethnic Groups }}</ref><ref>Bartkus, Viva Ona, ''The Dynamic of Secession'', (Cambridge University Press, 1999), pp. 90–1.</ref><ref>{{cite book |last=Çelik |first=Yasemin |title=Contemporary Turkish foreign policy |year=1999 |publisher=Praeger |location=Westport, Conn. |isbn=978-0-275-96590-7 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=y9PXcwFOLNcC&q=mountain+turks&pg=PA3 |edition=1. publ. |page=3}}</ref> The words "Kurds", "Kurdistan", or "Kurdish" were officially banned by the Turkish government.<ref name=bahar /> Following the ], the Kurdish language was officially prohibited in public and private life.<ref name=NYTK>Toumani, Meline. , '']'', 17 February 2008</ref> Many people who spoke, published, or sang in Kurdish were arrested and imprisoned.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Aslan |first1=Senem |title=Nation Building in Turkey and Morocco |date=2014 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-107-05460-8 |page=134 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=wTAWBQAAQBAJ}}</ref> Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, political parties that represented Kurdish interests were banned.<ref name=bahar>{{cite book |last1=Baser |first1=Bahar |title=Diasporas and Homeland Conflicts: A Comparative Perspective |date=2015 |publisher=Ashgate Publishing |isbn=978-1-4724-2562-1 |page=63 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8MTVBgAAQBAJ}}</ref>
===The Shivan Qaderi incident===
On ] ], a Kurdish opposition activist, ] (a.k.a Shwane Qadri or Sayed Kamal Astam) and two other Kurdish men were shot by Iranian security forces in ]. According to witnesses, the security forces then tied Qaderi's body to a Toyata jeep and dragged it through the streets. Iranian authorities confirmed that Qaderi, "who was on the run and wanted by the judiciary", was shot and killed while allegedly evading arrest.


In 1983, the Kurdish provinces were included in the ], which was placed under ] in response to the activities of the militant separatist organization the ] (PKK).<ref name="hue">Kurd, ''The Hutchinson Unabridged Encyclopedia including Atlas'', 2005</ref><ref name="nytimes">", NY Times, 28 September 2007</ref> A ] took place through the 1980s and 1990s in which much of the countryside was evacuated, ], and numerous ]s were carried out by both sides.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Ibrahim |first1=Ferhad |title=The Kurdisch conflict in Turkey : obstacles and chances for peace and democracy |date=2000 |publisher=Lit ; St. Martin's press |location=Münster : New York, N.Y. |isbn=978-3-8258-4744-9 |page=182 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=3kgierPu_7EC}}</ref><ref name=cengiz>{{cite book |last1=Gunes |first1=Cengiz |title=The Kurdish National Movement in Turkey: From Protest to Resistance |date=2013 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-136-58798-6 |page=130 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OMB7pMf8TL4C}}</ref><ref name="ocpw">Martin van Bruinessen, "Kurdistan." ''The Oxford Companion to the Politics of the World'', 2nd edition. Joel Krieger, ed. Oxford University Press, 2001.</ref> Food embargoes were placed on Kurdish villages and towns.<ref name=olson>{{cite book |last1=Olson |first1=Robert |title=The Kurdish nationalist movement in the 1990s: its impact on Turkey and the Middle East |date=1996 |publisher=University Press of Kentucky |location=Lexington, Ky. |isbn=978-0-8131-0896-4 |page= |url=https://archive.org/details/kurdishnationali00olso|url-access=registration }}</ref><ref name=muftah>{{cite web |last1=Shaker |first1=Nadeen |title=After Being Banned for Almost a Century, Turkey's Kurds Are Clamoring to Learn Their Own Language |url=http://muftah.org/turkey-kurds-learning-kurdish-ban/ |publisher=Muftah}}</ref> Tens of thousands were killed in the violence and hundreds of thousands were forced to leave their homes.<ref name="bbc">"", BBC News, 8 May 2007</ref>
For the next six weeks, riots and protests erupted in Kurdish towns and villages throughout Eastern Kurdistan such as ], ] (]), ], ] (]), ] (]), ], ] and ] (and even inspiring protests in southwestern Iran and in ] in eastern Iran) with scores killed and injured, and an untold number arrested without charge. The Iranian authorities also shut down several major Kurdish newspapers arresting reporters and editors.


Turkey has historically feared that a Kurdish state in Northern Iraq would encourage and support Kurdish separatists in the adjacent Turkish provinces, and have therefore historically strongly opposed Kurdish independence in Iraq. However, following the chaos in Iraq after ], Turkey has increasingly worked with the autonomous ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.businessweek.com/news/2014-06-18/half-price-kurdish-oil-threatens-iraq-breakup-with-turkish-help |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140829062511/http://www.businessweek.com/news/2014-06-18/half-price-kurdish-oil-threatens-iraq-breakup-with-turkish-help |url-status=dead |archive-date=29 August 2014 |title=Bloomberg Business |work=Bloomberg.com}}</ref> The word 'Kurdistan', whether written or spoken, can still lead to detention and prosecution in Turkey.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Khalidi|first=Ari|date=1 May 2017|title=Three raising Kurdistan flag during May Day arrested in Turkey|url=https://www.kurdistan24.net/en/news/9e53bc1a-9f82-4ade-8245-f4d1957e38f7/Three-raising-Kurdistan-flag-during-May-Day-arrested-in-Turkey|access-date=2020-10-04|website=www.kurdistan24.net}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|last=English|first=Duvar|date=2021-10-29|title=Police detain Kurdish man for calling Turkey's southeast 'Kurdistan'|url=https://www.duvarenglish.com/police-detain-kurdish-man-for-calling-turkeys-southeast-kurdistan-news-59378|access-date=2022-02-07|website=www.duvarenglish.com |language=tr-TR}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|date=October 2021|title=Police detain citizen who told İYİ Party Chair Akşener 'Kurdistan is denied'|url=https://m.bianet.org/english/human-rights/252577-police-detain-citizen-who-told-iyi-party-chair-aksener-kurdistan-is-denied|access-date=7 February 2022|website=]}}</ref> Kurdistan has been characterized as an "international colony" by the scholar ].<ref>{{cite journal |url=https://merip.org/2020/08/tracing-the-conceptual-genealogy-of-kurdistan-as-international-colony/ |author=Deniz Duruiz |title=Tracing the Conceptual Genealogy of Kurdistan as International Colony |issue=295 |date=Summer 2020 |publisher=] |journal=] |editor1=Ayҫa Alemdaroğlu |editor2=Elif Babül |editor3=Arang Keshavarzian |editor4=Nabil Al-Tikriti |access-date=9 January 2021}}</ref>]}}{{legend|#d2cd7e|Controlled by ]}}{{legend|#b4b2ae|Controlled by the ] (ISIL, ISIS, IS)}}]]
====Links====


==== Iraqi Kurdistan ====
*
The successful ] by the ] (ISIS), and the resultant weakening of the ability of the Iraqi state to project power at the time, also presented a "golden opportunity" for the Kurds to increase their independence and possibly declare an independent Kurdish state.<ref name="opportunity">{{cite web |url=https://www.thecairoreview.com/tahrir-forum/the-rise-of-isis-a-golden-opportunity-for-iraqs-kurds/ |title=The Rise of ISIS, a Golden Opportunity for Iraq's Kurds |work=aucegypt.edu |date=27 June 2014}}</ref> The ], who took more than 80 Turkish persons captive in Mosul during their offensive, is an enemy of Turkey, making Kurdistan useful for Turkey as a buffer state. On 28 June 2014 ], a spokesman for the ruling ] (AKP), made comments to the '']'' indicating Turkey's readiness to accept an independent Kurdistan in northern Iraq.<ref name="turkey_ok">{{cite web |url=http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/turkey-ready-accept-kurdish-state-northern-iraq-1454556 |title=Turkey Ready To Accept Kurdish State in Northern Iraq |work=International Business Times UK |date=28 June 2014}}</ref> This became increasingly less likely, however, when in July 2017, the Iraqi government declared victory in the ] against ISIS in the group’s last stronghold in the country. Following this, in September 2017, Iraqi Kurds held a one-sided ] which eventually triggered a ] wherein the Iraqi government forces attacked the Kurds, defeating them and forcing them to abandon the referendum. A month later, Iraq declared full victory over ISIS and re-established control over all previously occupied territory. Following the Kurds’ failed attempt to achieve independence, the government of Iraq has exacted severe punishment against KRI in a number of punitive measures.<ref>{{cite web|url= https://www.wilsoncenter.org/article/iraq-demise-federalism |title=Iraq: Demise of Federalism|publisher=Wilson Center}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.wilsoncenter.org/article/iraq-and-demise-federalism|title= Iraq and the Demise of Federalism|publisher=Wilson Center}}</ref> Some Kurdish officials in Iraq have described this as evidence of the Iraqi government’s aim to return to a centralised political system and abandon the federal system it adopted in 2005.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.rudaw.net/english/kurdistan/220320243-amp|title=Iraqi court decisions divide Kurdistan’s ruling parties|publisher=Rudaw}}</ref> In a leaked letter published by '']'' in September 2023, ], the prime minister of KRG warned about an imminent collapse of the ] in Iraq (i.e. a return to ]) and urged the United States to intervene, saying: "I write to you now at another critical juncture in our history, one that I fear we may have difficulty overcoming. …e are bleeding economically and hemorrhaging politically. For the first time in my tenure as prime minister, I hold grave concerns that this dishonorable campaign against us may cause the collapse of … the very model of a Federal Iraq that the United States sponsored in 2003 and purported to stand by since."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2023/09/letter-biden-barzani-warns-iraqi-kurdistans-collapse-urges-mediation|title=In letter to Biden, Barzani warns of Iraqi Kurdistan's collapse, urges mediation|publisher=Al-Monitor}}</ref> According to a report published in 2024 by the ], Kurdistan Region's autonomy "hangs in the balance" due to several punitive measures imposed against the former by the government of Iraq in an effort to punish it and ultimately strip it completely of its autonomy.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.washingtoninstitute.org/policy-analysis/house-divided-can-kurdistan-preserve-its-autonomy|title=A House Divided: Can Kurdistan Preserve Its Autonomy?|publisher=Washington Institute}}</ref>


==== Syrian Civil War ====
==Western Kurdistan==
{{See also|Rojava conflict|Syrian Kurdish–Islamist conflict (2013–present)}}
Western Kurdistan or Syrian Kurdistan ("Kurdistana Binxetê" in ]) is a geocultural region located in present-day north-eastern ]. It covers the province of "Hesaka" or ]. The main cities in this region are ] (or "Qamişlû" in ]) and ] (or "Hesaka" in ]). ] make up around 9% to 10% of the population in Syria. (see ] and ).
Various sources have reported that ] has issued a ] calling for Kurdish women and children in Syria to be killed,<ref>See * "President Masoud Barzani of Iraqi Kurdistan has pledged protection for Syrian Kurds from al-Nusra, a terrorist organization, which issued a ] calling for the killing of Kurdish women and children"
According to ], there are 142,465 Kurds (by the government's count), and well over 200,000 Kurds (according to Kurdish sources), who have been arbitrarily denied the right to Syrian nationality in violation of international law. They are not permitted to own land, housing or businesses. They cannot be employed at government agencies and state-owned enterprises, and cannot practice as doctors or engineers. They may not legally marry Syrian citizens. Kurds with "foreigner" status, as they are called, do not have the right to vote in elections or referenda, or run for public office. They are not issued passports or other travel documents, and thus may not legally leave or return to Syria.
* "Al-Nusra Front, Syria's Al-Qaeda affiliate, issued a fatwa condoning the killing of Kurdish women and children"
* "A fatwa (edict) has been issued permitting the shedding of the blood of the Kurds and they called from the mosque loudspeakers that the shedding of the Kurdish blood is halal"</ref> and the fighting in Syria has led tens of thousands of refugees to flee to ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.unhcr.org/521360479.html |title=Some 30,000 Syrians flee to Iraq's Kurdistan region, more expected |date=20 August 2013 |publisher=UNHCR}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/aug/18/syrian-kurds-refugees-iraq |title=Syrian Kurds continue to flee to Iraq in their thousands |author=Martin Chulov |date=19 August 2013 |work=The Guardian}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.rferl.org/media/photogallery/iraq-syria-refugees-/25080506.html |title=Syrian Kurds Flee To Iraq by the Thousands |date=20 August 2013 |work=Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty}}</ref> As of 2015, Turkey was actively supporting Al-Nusra,<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/syria-crisis-turkey-and-saudi-arabia-shock-western-countries-by-supporting-antiassad-jihadists-10242747.html |title=Turkey and Saudi Arabia alarm the West by backing Islamist extremists the Americans had bombed in Syria |author=Kim Sengupta |newspaper=The Independent |date=12 May 2015}}</ref> but as of January 2017, Turkey's foreign ministry has said that Al-Nusra is a terrorist group and has acted accordingly.<ref>{{Cite news |url=https://www.reuters.com/article/us-mideast-crisis-syria-turkey-nusra/turkey-sees-nusra-front-as-terrorist-group-acts-accordingly-source-idUSKBN15A12U |title=Turkey sees Nusra Front as terrorist group, acts accordingly: source Reuters Staff |author= |date=26 January 2017 |work=Reuters |access-date=26 September 2017}}</ref>


== People ==
Suppression of ethnic identity of Kurds in ] include: various bans on the use of the ] language; refusal to register children with Kurdish names; replacement of Kurdish place names with new names in ]; prohibition of businesses that do not have Arabic names; not permitting Kurdish private schools; and the prohibition of books and other materials written in Kurdish. (see , and )
{{For|the demographics of the Kurdistand Region of the Republic of Iraq|Kurdistan Region#Demographics}}
According to 2016 estimate ], total population of Kurdistan is around 34.5 million, and Kurds making 86% of population of Northern Kurdistan.<ref name=":2">{{Cite web |title=The Kurdish population |url=https://www.institutkurde.org/en/info/the-kurdish-population-1232551004 |access-date=15 June 2023 |website=]}}</ref> There are ], ], ] (Syriac), ] and ] minorities in Northern Kurdistan.<ref name=":2" /> In Southern Kurdistan there are ] (Assyrian and Armenian) and Turkish (Turkmen) minorities as well.<ref name=":2" /> ] and ] share close ties with Turkish people and do not identify with the ] of ] and ].<ref name="Peyrouse2015">{{cite book |last=Peyrouse |first=Sebastien |title=Turkmenistan: Strategies of Power, Dilemmas of Development |publisher=] |year=2015 |isbn=978-0-230-11552-1 |page=62}}</ref><ref name="TheNewYorkTimes">{{cite news |author=The New York Times |author-link=The New York Times |year=2015 |title=Who Are the Turkmens of Syria? |newspaper=] |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/25/world/middleeast/who-are-the-turkmens-of-syria.html?_r=1 |url-status=live |access-date=3 March 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170114085556/https://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/25/world/middleeast/who-are-the-turkmens-of-syria.html?_r=1 |archive-date=14 January 2017}}</ref><ref name="Kushner1987p202">{{cite journal |last=Kushner |first=David |year=1987 |title=Pan-Turkism Today: Contemporary Turkey and the "Outside Turks" |journal=Asian and African Studies: Journal of the Israel Oriental Society |volume=21 |issue=2 |page=202 |issn=0066-8281 |quote=}}</ref>{{sfn|Triana|2017|p=168}}<ref name="Bassem2016">{{cite web |last=Bassem |first=Wassim |year=2016 |title=Iraq's Turkmens call for independent province |url=http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2016/10/turkmens-iraq-mosul-tal-afar.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210912130041/https://www.al-monitor.com/originals/2016/10/turkmens-iraq-mosul-tal-afar.html |archive-date=12 September 2021 |publisher=] |quote=Iraqi Turkmens, who are citizens of Iraq with Turkish origins, have been calling for their own independent province in the Tal Afar district west of Mosul, located in the center of the Ninevah province...Turkmens are a mix of Sunnis and Shiites and are the third-largest ethnicity in Iraq after Arabs and Kurds, numbering around 3 million out of the total population of about 34.7 million, according to 2013 data from the Iraqi Ministry of Planning.}}</ref> Kurdistan has also significant Caucasian population, Caucasians of Kurdistan included ] and ] in ],<ref name="checheningush2">{{cite book |title=Caucasian battlefields: A History of the Wars on the Turco-Caucasian Border, 1828–1921 |date=2011-02-17 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |isbn=978-1-108-01335-2 |page=104}}</ref> ] in ]<ref name="Gorman2">{{cite book |author1=Anthony Gorman |title=Diasporas of the Modern Middle East |date=2015-05-29 |isbn=978-0-7486-8611-7}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Çerkes fıkraları |date=1994 |publisher=University of Wisconsin – Madison |page=10 |language=tr}}</ref> and ]. From early stage on, these Caucasians went through a process of ] and thereby had Kurdish as their mother tongue.<ref>Ahmet Buran Ph.D., Türkiye'de Diller ve Etnik Gruplar, 2012</ref><ref name="cerkes">{{cite book |author1=Yeldar Barış Kalkan |title=Çerkes halkı ve sorunları: Çerkes tarih, kültür, coğrafya ve siyasetine sınıfsal yaklaşım |date=2006 |page=175}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |author1=Dursun Gümüşoğlu |title=Anadolu'da bir köy: Eskikonak : antropolojik inceleme |date=2008}}</ref>


==See also== == Geography ==
]]]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]


According to the '']'', Kurdistan covers about 190,000&nbsp;km<sup>2</sup> (or 73,000 square miles), and its chief towns are ] (Amed), ] (Bedlîs) and ] (Wan) in Turkey, ] (Hewlêr) and ] in Iraq, and ] (Kirmanşan), ] (Sine), ] and ] (Mehabad) in Iran.<ref>, '']''</ref> According to the ], Kurdistan covers around {{convert|190,000|km2|sqmi|abbr=on}} in Turkey, {{convert|125,000|km2|sqmi|abbr=on}} in Iran, {{convert|65,000|km2|sqmi|abbr=on}} in Iraq, and {{convert|12,000|km2|sqmi|abbr=on}} in Syria, with a total area of approximately {{convert|392,000|km2|sqmi|abbr=on}}.<ref name=":0" />
==External links==
*
*
*
* Mehrdad R. Izady, Taylor & Francis Group, September 1992 ISBN 0844817279
*
*
* ISSN 1370-7205
* The Kurdish Library, 345 Park Place, Brooklyn, New York 11238
*
* &mdash; Kurd and Kurdistan News - United Kurdish Voice
*
*
*
Julia Duin, WorldandI.com, October 2004
* by
* ] ]]
*] reports on atrocities committed against Kurdish girls in Turkey]
* ] ]
* Ali Tawfik-Shukor ] ]
* ]]
*
* ]


] encompasses a large area of ] and ] of Turkey and it is home to an estimated 6 to 8 million Kurds.<ref>{{cite news |last=Myrie |first=Clive |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/middle_east/7062971.stm |title=Middle East &#124; Kurds show coded support for PKK |work=BBC News |date=26 October 2007 |access-date=13 May 2011}}</ref>
]

]
=== Subdivisions (Upper and Lower Kurdistan) ===
]
In ''A Dictionary of Scripture Geography'' (published 1846), John Miles describes Upper and Lower Kurdistan as following:
]
]
]
{{blockquote|Modern Curdistan is of much greater extent than the ancient Assyria, and is composed of two parts the Upper and Lower. In the former is the province of Ardelan, the ancient Arropachatis, now nominally a part of Irak Ajami, and belonging to the north west division called Al Jobal. It contains five others namely, Betlis, the ancient Carduchia, lying to the south and south west of the lake Van. East and south east of Betlis is the principality of Julamerick, south west of it is the principality of Amadia. the fourth is Jeezera ul Omar, a city on an island in the Tigris, and corresponding to the ancient Bezabde. the fifth and largest is Kara Djiolan, with a capital of the same name. The pashalics of Kirkook and Solimania also comprise part of Upper Curdistan. Lower Curdistan comprises all the level tract to the east of the Tigris, and the minor ranges immediately bounding the plains and reaching thence to the foot of the great range, which may justly be denominated the Alps of western Asia.<ref name="auto">A Dictionary of Scripture Geography, p 57, by John Miles, 486 pages, Published 1846, Original from Harvard University</ref>}}
]

]
The northern, northwestern and northeastern parts of Kurdistan are referred to as upper Kurdistan, and includes the areas from west of Amed to Lake Urmia.
]

]
The lowlands of southern Kurdistan are called lower Kurdistan. The main cities in this area are Kirkuk and Arbil.
]

]
=== Climate ===
]
Much of the region is typified by a ] – hot in the summer, cold in the winter. Despite this, much of the region is fertile and has historically exported ] and ]. Precipitation varies between 200 and 400&nbsp;mm a year in the plains, and between 700 and 3,000&nbsp;mm a year on the high plateau between mountain chains.<ref name=":0" /> The mountainous zone along the borders with Iran and Turkey experiences ], rainy and sometimes snowy winters, and damp springs, while to the south the climate progressively transitions toward ] and ] zones.
]

]
=== Flora and fauna===
]
Kurdistan is one of the most mountainous regions in the world with a ] receiving annual ] adequate to sustain temperate forests and ]. Mountain chains harbor pastures and forested valleys, totaling approximately 16 million hectares (160,000&nbsp;km<sup>2</sup>), including ]s and countryside is mostly ]s, ], ], ], ] and, to the west of Kurdistan, ].<ref name=":0" />
]

]
The region north of the mountainous region on the border with Iran and Turkey features meadow grasses and such wild trees as, ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ]s, ], ]s, ] and ]. The desert in the south is mostly ] and would feature ] plants such as ], ], ], ], ], ] and ].<ref>Village on the Euphrates: From Foraging to Farming at Abu Hureyra, by A.M.T Moore, G.C. Hillman and A.J. Legge, Published 2000, Oxford University Press</ref><ref name="auto"/> The ] and desert in the south, by contrast, have such species as ] and ].
]

]
Animals found in the region include the ], ], ], the ], ], the ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and the ].<ref>Al-Sheikhly, O.F.; and Nader, I.A. (2013). '''' IUCN Otter Spec. Group Bull. 30(1).</ref> Birds include, the ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ], ] and ], among others.<ref>{{cite web |title=Iraq's Marshes Show Progress toward Recovery |url=http://www.wildlifeextra.com/go/news/good-iraqimarshes.html#cr |publisher=Wildlife Extra |access-date=7 August 2010 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100509195006/http://www.wildlifeextra.com/go/news/good-iraqimarshes.html#cr |archive-date=9 May 2010 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
]

]
=== Mountains ===
]
Mountains are important geographical and symbolic features of Kurdish life, as evidenced by the saying "Kurds have no friends but the mountains."<ref>John Bulloch and Harvey Morris, ''No Friends but the Mountains: The Tragic History of the Kurds'', {{ISBN|0-19-508075-0}}</ref> Mountains are regarded as ] by the ].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-l-phillips/iraqi-kurds-no-friend-but_b_4045389.html |title=Iraqi Kurds: "No Friend but the Mountains" |work=The Huffington Post |date=7 October 2013}}</ref> Included in the region are ] and ] (both prominent in Kurdish folklore), ], ], ], ], ], ], Shaho, Gabar, ], and ].
]

]
=== Water resources ===
]
Iraqi Kurdistan is a region relatively rich in water, especially for countries in the ] region. It is the source for much of the water supply for neighboring countries. It means that political stability and peace in the region are important to the water supply of the region and preventing wars.<ref>{{cite web |last1=King |first1=Marcus |title=A Watershed Moment for Iraqi Kurdistan: Subnational Hydropolitics and Regional Stability |url=https://www.newsecuritybeat.org/2018/05/watershed-moment-iraqi-kurdistan-subnational-hydropolitics-regional-stability/ |website=Environmental Change and Security Program Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars |date=22 May 2018 |access-date=24 May 2019}}</ref> Many think that for conserving the water "returning to traditional water-conserving cultivation techniques" will be needed, as well as "communal economy"<ref>{{cite web |last1=Keller |first1=Sean |title=Agriculture and Autonomy in the Middle East |url=https://www.localfutures.org/agriculture-autonomy-middle-east/ |website=Local Futures – Economics of Happiness |publisher=International Society for Ecology and Culture |access-date=24 May 2019|date=6 February 2018 }}</ref>

'''Rivers'''

The plateaus and mountains of Kurdistan, which are characterized by heavy rain and snow fall, act as a water reservoir for the Near and Middle East, forming the source of the ] and ] rivers, as well as other numerous smaller rivers, such as the ], ], Tharthar, Ceyhan, ], Kura, Sefidrud, Karkha, and Hezil. Among rivers of historical importance to Kurds are the ] (Arasān) and Buhtān rivers in Turkey; the Peshkhābur, the ], the ], and the ] in Iraq; and the Jaghatu (Zarrinarud), the Tātā'u (Siminarud), the Zohāb (Zahāb), and the Gāmāsiyāb in Iran.<ref name=":1" />

These rivers, which flow from heights of three to four thousand meters above sea level, are significant both as water sources and for the production of energy. Iraq and Syria dammed many of these rivers and their tributaries. Turkey has an extensive dam system under construction as part of the ]; though incomplete, the GAP already supplies a significant proportion of Turkey's electrical energy needs.<ref name=":1" /> Due to the extraordinary archaeological richness of the region, almost any dam impacts historic sites.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |date=2018-10-11 |title=The Water |url=https://kurdistanica.com/494/the-water/ |access-date=2022-11-05 |website=Kurdistanica, The Encyclopedia of Kurdistan |language=en-US}}</ref> With the outbreak of the ], Turkey was accused of withholding water from the reservoir ] in Syria, while filling the ] in Turkey.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2020-08-11 |title=Turkish dams threaten northeast Syria with ecological and economic blight |url=https://syriadirect.org/turkish-dams-threaten-northeast-syria-with-ecological-and-economic-blight/ |access-date=2022-11-05 |website=Syria Direct |language=en-US}}</ref>

'''Lakes'''

Kurdistan extends to ] in Iran on the east. The region includes Lake Van, the largest body of water in Turkey; the only lake in the Middle East with a larger surface is Lake Urmia – though not nearly as deep as Lake Van, which has a much larger volume. ], ], as well as ] west of ], and ] near the city of ], are frequented by tourists.<ref name="Kurdistanica">{{cite web |title=Economy: Water |url=http://www.kurdistanica.com/?q=node/113 |access-date=14 December 2017 |publisher=The Encyclopædia of Kurdistan}}</ref>

=== Petroleum and mineral resources ===
] is estimated to contain around {{convert|45|Goilbbl}} of oil, making it the sixth largest reserve in the world. Extraction of these reserves began in 2007.

] province, also known as ] region, has geopolitical importance of ] and is suitable for agricultural lands.

In November 2011, ] challenged the Iraqi central government's authority with the signing of oil and gas contracts for exploration rights to six parcels of land in Kurdistan, including one contract in the disputed territories, just east of the Kirkuk mega-field.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.westernzagros.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/121126_operator_activity_EXTERNAL.pdf|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131109173803/http://www.westernzagros.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/121126_operator_activity_EXTERNAL.pdf|url-status=dead|title=westernzagros.com|archive-date=9 November 2013}}</ref> This act caused Baghdad to threaten to revoke Exxon's contract in its southern fields, most notably the ] Phase 1 project.<ref>{{cite news |title=Exxon's Kurdistan |url=http://www.zawya.com/story/ZAWYA20120304053739/ |access-date=31 December 2012 |newspaper=Zawya |date=4 March 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120417231147/http://www.zawya.com/story/ZAWYA20120304053739/ |archive-date=17 April 2012}}</ref> Exxon responded by announcing its intention to leave the West-Qurna project.<ref>{{cite news |title=Iraq says expects Exxon to finish West Qurna Sale by December |url=https://news.yahoo.com/iraq-says-expects-exxon-finish-west-qurna-sale-104523440--finance.html |agency=Reuters |access-date=31 December 2012}}</ref>

As of July 2007, the Kurdish government solicited foreign companies to invest in 40 new oil sites, with the hope of increasing regional oil production over the following five years by a factor of five, to about {{convert|1|Moilbbl/d|m3/d}}.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.iraqupdates.com/p_articles.php/article/19228 |title=Iraqi Kurds open 40 new oil sites to foreign investors |publisher=Iraq Updates |date=9 July 2007 |access-date=13 May 2011 |archive-date=12 October 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071012181216/http://iraqupdates.com/p_articles.php/article/19228 |url-status=dead }}</ref> Gas and associated gas reserves are in excess of {{convert|100|e12cuft|km3|abbr=on|order=flip}}. Notable companies active in Kurdistan include ], ], ], ], ], ], ], and ].<ref>{{cite web |title=Kurdistan Oil and Gas Activity Map |url=http://www.westernzagros.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/121126_operator_activity_EXTERNAL.pdf |publisher=Western Zagros |access-date=31 December 2012 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131109173803/http://www.westernzagros.com/wp-content/uploads/2012/12/121126_operator_activity_EXTERNAL.pdf |archive-date=9 November 2013 }}</ref>

Other mineral resources that exist in significant quantities in the region include ], ], ], ], ] (which is used to produce ]), ], and ]. The world's largest deposit of rock sulfur is located just southwest of ].<ref>{{usurped|1=}}, Kurdistan Development Corporation.</ref>

In July 2012, Turkey and the Kurdistan Region signed an agreement by which Turkey would regularly supply the KRG with refined petroleum products in exchange for crude oil.<ref>{{cite web |title=First Shipment of Kurdistan Crude Arrives in Turkey |url=http://www.brightwire.com/news/229205-first-shipment-of-kurdistan-crude-arrives-in-turkey |publisher=BrightWire |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://archive.today/20130118132757/http://www.brightwire.com/news/229205-first-shipment-of-kurdistan-crude-arrives-in-turkey |archive-date=18 January 2013 }}</ref>

== Media ==
{{expand section|date=March 2023}}

=== Television ===
*'']''

== Gallery ==
<gallery widths="200" heights="200">
File:Newen village in Hawraman 2015.jpg|A typical Kurdish village in ], Kurdistan
File:Canyon, north eastern Kurdistan.jpg|Canyon in ] in northern Iraqi Kurdistan
File:Zebar valley.jpg|Zê river in Zebari region, Iraqi Kurdistan.
File:Piranshahr2014.jpg|The ], center of Mokrian district, northwestern Iran
File:Batman(city).jpg|The ], Northern Kurdistan (eastern Turkey)
File:20190510 174828.Sargallu.Sulaymaniyah.Kurdistan.jpg|Countryside in ]
File:Afrin,south.jpg|A picture of the city of ], taken in 2009 from the southern side. (])
</gallery>

== See also ==
* '']'' by David McDowall
* ] of ] or ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
* ]
** ]

== References ==
{{reflist
| colwidth = 30em
| refs =
}}

== Sources ==
* {{cite encyclopedia | title = Kurdistan | last = Mitchell | first = Colin Paul | editor-last = Bjork | editor-first = Robert E. | url = https://www.oxfordreference.com/view/10.1093/acref/9780198662624.001.0001/acref-9780198662624-e-3359?rskey=2GHfaB&result=2 | encyclopedia = The Oxford Dictionary of the Middle Ages | publisher = Oxford University Press| year = 2010 | isbn = 978-0199574834}}
* {{cite book |last=Triana |first=María |title=Managing Diversity in Organizations: A Global Perspective |year=2017 |publisher=] |isbn=978-1-317-42368-3}}

== Further reading ==
* ]. ''Selected Writings Kurdistan and Turkish Colonialism''. London: Published jointly by Kurdistan Solidarity Committee and Kurdistan Information Centre, 1991. 44 p. Without ISBN
* {{cite book|last=Beşikçi|first=İsmail|title=International Colony Kurdistan|publisher=]|place=London|date=2015|isbn=978-1-909382-20-6}}
* King, Diane E. ''Kurdistan on the Global Stage: Kinship, Land, and Community in Iraq'' (Rutgers University Press; 2014) 267 pages; Scholarly study of traditional social networks, such as patron-client relations, as well as technologically mediated communication, in a study of gender, kinship, and social life in Iraqi Kurdistan.
* ]. ''Interviews and Speeches ''. London: Published jointly by Kurdistan Solidarity Committee and Kurdistan Information Centre, 1991. 46 p. Without ISBN
* Reed, Fred A. ''Anatolia Junction: a Journey into Hidden Turkey''. Burnaby, B.C.: Talonbooks , 1999. 320 p., ill. with b&w photos. ''N.B''.: Includes a significant coverage of the Turkish sector of historic Kurdistan, the Kurds, and their resistance movement. {{ISBN|0-88922-426-9}}

== External links ==
{{EB1911 poster|Kūrdistān}}
* {{Commons category-inline|Kurdistan|'''Kurdistan'''}}
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{{Portalbar|Asia|Geography|Kurdistan}}

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Latest revision as of 13:10, 12 January 2025

Region of West Asia with a historical Kurdish presence For other uses, see Kurdistan (disambiguation).

Kurdistanکوردستان (Kurdish)
Kurdish-inhabited areas (according to the CIA, 1992)Kurdish-inhabited areas (according to the CIA, 1992)
Main languages
Integrated parts of Iran and Turkey with varying degrees of autonomy in Iraq and Syria
Area
• Total392,000 km (151,000 sq mi)
Population
• Estimate25–30 million

Kurdistan (Kurdish: کوردستان, romanizedKurdistan, lit. 'land of the Kurds'; [ˌkʊɾdɪˈstɑːn] ), or Greater Kurdistan, is a roughly defined geo-cultural region in West Asia wherein the Kurds form a prominent majority population and the Kurdish culture, languages, and national identity have historically been based. Geographically, Kurdistan roughly encompasses the northwestern Zagros and the eastern Taurus mountain ranges.

Kurdistan generally comprises the following four regions: southeastern Turkey (Northern Kurdistan), northern Iraq (Southern Kurdistan), northwestern Iran (Eastern Kurdistan), and northern Syria (Western Kurdistan). Some definitions also include parts of southern Transcaucasia. Certain Kurdish nationalist organizations seek to create an independent nation state consisting of some or all of these areas with a Kurdish majority, while others campaign for greater autonomy within the existing national boundaries. The delineation of the region remains disputed and varied, with some maps greatly exaggerating its boundaries.

Historically, the word "Kurdistan" is first attested in 11th century Seljuk chronicles. Many disparate Kurdish dynasties, emirates, principalities, and chiefdoms were established from the 8th to 19th centuries. Administratively, the 20th century saw the establishment of the short-lived areas of the Kurdish state (1918–1919), Kingdom of Kurdistan (1921–1924), Kurdistansky Uyezd i.e. "Red Kurdistan" (1923–1929), Republic of Ararat (1927–1930), and Republic of Mahabad (1946).

In Iraq, following the Aylūl Revolt, the government entered into an agreement with the rebellious Kurds, granting Kurds local self-rule. Soon after, however, the agreement collapsed. Later, during the Iraqi no-fly zones conflict, which followed the Gulf War, the Iraqi military withdrew from parts of northern Iraq, allowing the Kurds to fill the vacuum and regain lost control in those areas. After the invasion of Iraq, and since the creation of the new Iraqi federal state, the new constitution issued in 2005 recognises Kurdistan Region as a federal region; even though the constitution does not include the term “autonomy”, it emphasises decentralisation and devolution, allowing regions and governorates to administer local affairs. In practice, however, only Kurdistan Region has exercised this authority granted by the constitution. In September 2017, Iraqi Kurds held a one-sided independence referendum, which eventually failed and was abandoned. The subsequent effort by the Iraqi government to punish Kurdistan Region has resulted in the latter losing authorities it had previously possessed, and the future of Kurdish autonomy in Iraq has been called into question. Iraqi Kurdish officials have also complained of efforts by the Iraqi government to return to the pre-2003 centralized government and dismantle Kurdistan Region altogether.

There is also a Kurdistan Province in Iran, which is not self-ruled. Kurds fighting in the Syrian civil war were able to take control of large sections of northern Syria and establish self-governing regions in an Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria (commonly called Rojava), where they seek autonomy in a federal Syria after the war.

Etymology and delineation

Kurdistan means "Land of the Kurds" and was first attested in 11th-century Seljuk chronicles. The exact origins of the name Kurd are unclear. The suffix -stan (Persian: ـستان, translit. stân) is Persian for land.

"Kurdistan" was also formerly spelled Curdistan. One of the ancient names of this region was Corduene. The 19th-century Kurdistan Eyalet was the first time that the Ottoman Empire used the term 'Kurdistan' to refer to an administrative unit rather than a geographical region.

Albeit admitting a thorough delineation is difficult, the Encyclopaedia of Islam delineated Kurdistan as following:

In Turkey, the Kurds inhabit the whole of the eastern region of the country. According to Trotter (1878), the limit of their extent to the north was the line DivriğiErzurumKars... The Kurds also occupy the western slopes of Ararat, the districts of Kağızman and Tuzluca. On the west they extend in a wide belt beyond the course of the Euphrates, and, in the region of Sivas, in the districts of Kangal and Divriği. Equally, the whole region includes areas to the east and south-east of these limits... Turkish Kurdistan numbers at least 17 of them almost totally: in the north-east, the provinces of Erzincan, Erzurum and Kars; in the centre, going from west to east and from north to south, the provinces of Malatya, Tunceli, Elazığ, Bingöl, Muş, Karaköse (Ağrı), then Adıyaman, Diyarbakır, Siirt, Bitlis and Van; Finally, the southern provinces of Şanlıurfa, Mardin and Çölamerik (Hakkarî)...

inhabit the north-west of Iran. Firstly in the provinces of West Azerbaijan, to the east of Lake Rida'iyya..., the districts of Maku, Kotur, Shahpur, and to the south of the lake, Mahabad (ex-Sabla); in the province of Ardalan, called the province of Kurdistan, whose capital is Senna or Sanandaj, Hawraman; in the province of Kermanshah, Qasr-e Shirin...

In Iraq, the Kurds occupy the north and northeast of the country in the liwaʾs or provinces of Duhok... Left outside their administration are Sinjar and Shekhan, peopled by the Yazidis; the liwaʾs of Kirkuk, Arbil and Sulaymaniyah (entirely Kurdish) and, in the... nahiyas of Khanaqin and Mandali, where they are neighbours of the Kurds of Iran to the west of the Zagros.

In Syria, they constitute three distinct belts, in the north of the country and to the south of the highway which forms a frontier and where they are in direct contact with their compatriots in Turkey... n the Kurd Dagh;..., to the east of the Euphrates where the river enters Syria near Jarablus; and finally, a belt of 250 km. in length by 30 km. in depth in the Jazira.

Many of the maps delineating Kurdistan are greatly exaggerated, also incorporating non-Kurdish regions, which has made the subject very controversial.

History

Main article: History of the Kurds

Ancient history

Main articles: Hurrians, Gutian people, Mannaeans, Corduene, Assyria, and Armenians Ancient Kurdistan as Kard-uchi, during Alexander the Great's Empire, 4th century BCE19th-century map showing the location of the Kingdom of Corduene in 60 BCE

Various groups, among them the Guti, Hurrians, Mannai (Mannaeans), and Armenians, lived in this region in antiquity. The original Mannaean homeland was situated east and south of the Lake Urmia, roughly centered around modern-day Mahabad. The region came under Persian rule during the reign of Cyrus the Great and Darius I.

The Kingdom of Corduene, which emerged from the declining Seleucid Empire, was located to the south and south-east of Lake Van between Persia and Mesopotamia and ruled northern Mesopotamia and southeastern Anatolia from 189 BC to AD 384 as vassals of the vying Parthian and Roman empires. Corduene became a vassal state of the Roman Republic in 66 BC and remained allied with the Romans until AD 384. After 66 BC, it passed another 5 times between Rome and Persia. Corduene was situated to the east of Tigranocerta, that is, to the east and south of present-day Diyarbakır in south-eastern Turkey.

Some historians have correlated a connection between Corduene with the modern names of Kurds and Kurdistan; T. A. Sinclair and other scholars have dismissed this identification as false, while a common association is asserted in the Columbia Encyclopedia.

Some of the ancient districts of Kurdistan and their corresponding modern names:

  1. Corduene or Gordyene (Siirt, Bitlis and Şırnak)
  2. Sophene (Diyarbakır)
  3. Zabdicene or Bezabde (Gozarto d'Qardu or Jazirat Ibn or Cizre)
  4. Basenia (Bayazid)
  5. Moxoene (Muş)
  6. Nephercerta (Miyafarkin)
  7. Artemita (Van)

One of the earliest records of the phrase land of the Kurds is found in an Assyrian Christian document of late antiquity, describing the stories of Assyrian saints of the Middle East, such as Abdisho. When the Sasanian Marzban asked Mar Abdisho about his place of origin, he replied that according to his parents, they were originally from Hazza, a village in Assyria. However, they were later driven out of Hazza by pagans, and settled in Tamanon, which according to Abdisho was in the land of the Kurds. Tamanon lies just north of the modern Iraq-Turkey border, while Hazza is 12 km southwest of modern Erbil. In another passage in the same document, the region of the Khabur River is also identified as land of the Kurds. According to Al-Muqaddasi and Yaqut al-Hamawi, Tamanon was located on the south-western or southern slopes of Mount Judi and south of Cizre. Other geographical references to the Kurds in Syriac sources appear in Zuqnin chronicle, writings of Michael the Syrian and Bar Hebraeus. They mention the mountains of Qardu, city of Qardu and country of Qardawaye.

Post-classical history

Main articles: Shaddadids, Rawadids, Hasanwayhids, Annazids, and Marwanids (Diyar Bakr)
Map of Jibal (mountains of northeastern Mesopotamia), highlighting "Summer and winter resorts of the Kurds", the Kurdish lands. Redrawn from Ibn Hawqal, 977 CE.
The map from Mahmud al-Kashgari's Dīwān Lughāt al-Turk (1072–74), included Kurdistan.

In the tenth and eleventh centuries, several Kurdish principalities emerged in the region: in the north the Shaddadids (951–1174) (in east Transcaucasia between the Kur and Araxes rivers) and the Rawadids (955–1221) (centered on Tabriz and which controlled all of Azerbaijan), in the east the Hasanwayhids (959–1015) (in Zagros between Shahrizor and Khuzistan) and the Annazids (990–1116) (centered in Hulwan) and in the west the Marwanids (990–1096) to the south of Diyarbakır and north of Jazira.

Kurdistan in the Middle Ages was a collection of semi-independent and independent states called emirates. It was nominally under indirect political or religious influence of Khalifs or Shahs. A comprehensive history of these states and their relationship with their neighbors is given in the text of Sharafnama, written by Prince Sharaf al-Din Bitlisi in 1597. The emirates included Baban, Soran, Badinan and Garmiyan in the south; Bakran, Bohtan (or Botan) and Badlis in the north, and Mukriyan and Ardalan in the east.

The earliest medieval attestation of the toponym Kurdistan is found in a 12th-century Armenian historical text by Matteos Urhayeci. He described a battle near Amid and Siverek in 1062 as to have taken place in Kurdistan. The second record occurs in the prayer from the colophon of an Armenian manuscript of the Gospels, written in 1200.

A later use of the term Kurdistan is found in Empire of Trebizond documents in 1336 and in Nuzhat al-Qulub, written by Hamdallah Mustawfi in 1340.

British Government 1921 proposal from the Colonial Secretary, Winston Churchill, for an autonomous region of Kurdistan.
1803 map from the Cedid Atlas, the first Muslim atlas, showing Kurdistan in blue

According to Sharaf al-Din Bitlisi in his Sharafnama, the boundaries of the Kurdish land begin at the Strait of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf and stretch on an even line to the end of Malatya and Marash. Evliya Çelebi, who traveled in the region between 1640 and 1655, mentioned that Kurdistan includes Erzurum, Van, Hakkari, Cizre, Imaddiya, Mosul, Shahrizor, Harir, Ardalan, Baghdad, Derne, Derteng, until Basra.

In the 16th century, after prolonged wars, Kurdish-inhabited areas were split between the Safavid and Ottoman empires. A major division of Kurdistan occurred in the aftermath of the Battle of Chaldiran in 1514, and was formalized in the 1639 Treaty of Zuhab. In a geography textbook of late Ottoman military school by Ahmet Cevad Kurdistan span over the cities Erzurum, Van, Urfa, Sulaymanyah, Kirkuk, Mosul and Diyarbakir among others and was one out of six regions of Ottoman Asia.

Modern history

After the collapse of the Ottoman Empire, the Allies contrived to split Kurdistan (as detailed in the ultimately unratified Treaty of Sèvres) among several countries, including Kurdistan, Armenia and others. However, the reconquest of these areas by the forces of Kemal Atatürk (and other pressing issues) caused the Allies to accept the renegotiated Treaty of Lausanne (1923) and the borders of the modern Republic of Turkey, leaving the Kurds without a self-ruled region. Other Kurdish areas were assigned to the new British and French mandated states of Iraq and Syria.

Kurdistan (shaded area) as suggested by the Treaty of Sèvres

At the San Francisco Peace Conference of 1945, the Kurdish delegation proposed consideration of territory claimed by the Kurds, which encompassed an area extending from the Mediterranean shores near Adana to the shores of the Persian Gulf near Bushehr, and included the Lur inhabited areas of southern Zagros.

The historian Jordi Tejel has identified "Greater Kurdistan" as being one of the "Kurdish myths" that the Kurdistan Democratic Party of Syria (KDPS) were involved in promoting to Kurds in Syria.

An academic source published by the University of Cambridge has described maps of greater Kurdistan created in the 1940s and forward as: "These maps have become some of the most influential propaganda tools for the Kurdish nationalist discourse. They depict a territorially exaggerated version of the territory of Kurdistan, extending into areas with no majority Kurdish populations. Despite their production with political aims related to specific claims on the demographic and ethnographic structure of the region, and their questionable methodologies, they have become 'Kurdistan in the minds of Kurds' and the boundaries they indicate have been readily accepted."

At the end of the 1991 Gulf War, the Coalition established a no-fly zone over northern Iraq to provide humanitarian relief to and safeguard the Kurds who would be subjected to Iraqi air attacks. Amid the withdrawal of Iraqi forces from three northern provinces, Kurdistan Region emerged in 1992 as an autonomous entity inside Iraq with its own local government and parliament.

A 2010 US report, written before the instability in Syria and Iraq that exists as of 2014, attested that "Kurdistan may exist by 2030". The weakening of the Iraqi state following the 2014 Northern Iraq offensive by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant has also presented an opportunity for independence for Iraqi Kurdistan, augmented by Turkey's move towards acceptance of such a state although it opposes moves toward Kurdish autonomy in Turkey and Syria.

Northern Kurdistan

Main articles: Kurdish–Turkish conflict (1978–present) and Iraqi–Kurdish conflict
Abdullah Öcalan pictured 1997

The incorporation into Turkey of the Kurdish-inhabited regions of eastern Anatolia was opposed by many Kurds, and has resulted in a long-running separatist conflict in which tens of thousands of lives have been lost. The region saw several major Kurdish rebellions, including the Koçgiri rebellion of 1920 against the Grand National Assembly, then successive insurrections under the Turkish state, including the 1924 Sheikh Said rebellion, the Republic of Ararat in 1927, and the 1937 Dersim rebellion. All were forcefully put down by the authorities. The region was declared a closed military area from which foreigners were banned between 1925 and 1965.

In an attempt to deny their existence, the Turkish government categorized Kurds as "Mountain Turks" until 1991. The words "Kurds", "Kurdistan", or "Kurdish" were officially banned by the Turkish government. Following the military coup of 1980, the Kurdish language was officially prohibited in public and private life. Many people who spoke, published, or sang in Kurdish were arrested and imprisoned. Throughout the 1990s and early 2000s, political parties that represented Kurdish interests were banned.

In 1983, the Kurdish provinces were included in the state of emergency region, which was placed under martial law in response to the activities of the militant separatist organization the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK). A guerrilla war took place through the 1980s and 1990s in which much of the countryside was evacuated, thousands of Kurdish villages were destroyed by the government, and numerous summary executions were carried out by both sides. Food embargoes were placed on Kurdish villages and towns. Tens of thousands were killed in the violence and hundreds of thousands were forced to leave their homes.

Turkey has historically feared that a Kurdish state in Northern Iraq would encourage and support Kurdish separatists in the adjacent Turkish provinces, and have therefore historically strongly opposed Kurdish independence in Iraq. However, following the chaos in Iraq after the US invasion, Turkey has increasingly worked with the autonomous Kurdistan Regional Government. The word 'Kurdistan', whether written or spoken, can still lead to detention and prosecution in Turkey. Kurdistan has been characterized as an "international colony" by the scholar Ismail Besikci.

Military situation on August 27, 2019:
  Controlled by Syrian Kurds  Controlled by Iraqi Kurds  Controlled by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIL, ISIS, IS)

Iraqi Kurdistan

The successful 2014 Northern Iraq offensive by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS), and the resultant weakening of the ability of the Iraqi state to project power at the time, also presented a "golden opportunity" for the Kurds to increase their independence and possibly declare an independent Kurdish state. The Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant, who took more than 80 Turkish persons captive in Mosul during their offensive, is an enemy of Turkey, making Kurdistan useful for Turkey as a buffer state. On 28 June 2014 Hüseyin Çelik, a spokesman for the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP), made comments to the Financial Times indicating Turkey's readiness to accept an independent Kurdistan in northern Iraq. This became increasingly less likely, however, when in July 2017, the Iraqi government declared victory in the Battle of Mosul against ISIS in the group’s last stronghold in the country. Following this, in September 2017, Iraqi Kurds held a one-sided independence referendum which eventually triggered a military operation wherein the Iraqi government forces attacked the Kurds, defeating them and forcing them to abandon the referendum. A month later, Iraq declared full victory over ISIS and re-established control over all previously occupied territory. Following the Kurds’ failed attempt to achieve independence, the government of Iraq has exacted severe punishment against KRI in a number of punitive measures. Some Kurdish officials in Iraq have described this as evidence of the Iraqi government’s aim to return to a centralised political system and abandon the federal system it adopted in 2005. In a leaked letter published by Al-Monitor in September 2023, Masrour Barzani, the prime minister of KRG warned about an imminent collapse of the federal model in Iraq (i.e. a return to centralism) and urged the United States to intervene, saying: "I write to you now at another critical juncture in our history, one that I fear we may have difficulty overcoming. …e are bleeding economically and hemorrhaging politically. For the first time in my tenure as prime minister, I hold grave concerns that this dishonorable campaign against us may cause the collapse of … the very model of a Federal Iraq that the United States sponsored in 2003 and purported to stand by since." According to a report published in 2024 by the Washington Institute for Near East Policy, Kurdistan Region's autonomy "hangs in the balance" due to several punitive measures imposed against the former by the government of Iraq in an effort to punish it and ultimately strip it completely of its autonomy.

Syrian Civil War

See also: Rojava conflict and Syrian Kurdish–Islamist conflict (2013–present)

Various sources have reported that Al-Nusra has issued a fatwā calling for Kurdish women and children in Syria to be killed, and the fighting in Syria has led tens of thousands of refugees to flee to Iraq's Kurdistan region. As of 2015, Turkey was actively supporting Al-Nusra, but as of January 2017, Turkey's foreign ministry has said that Al-Nusra is a terrorist group and has acted accordingly.

People

For the demographics of the Kurdistand Region of the Republic of Iraq, see Kurdistan Region § Demographics.

According to 2016 estimate Kurdish Institute of Paris, total population of Kurdistan is around 34.5 million, and Kurds making 86% of population of Northern Kurdistan. There are Arab, Turkic, Assyrian (Syriac), Armenian and Azerbaijani minorities in Northern Kurdistan. In Southern Kurdistan there are Christian (Assyrian and Armenian) and Turkish (Turkmen) minorities as well. Iraqi and Syrian Turkmen share close ties with Turkish people and do not identify with the Turkmen of Turkmenistan and Central Asia. Kurdistan has also significant Caucasian population, Caucasians of Kurdistan included Chechens and Ingushes in Varto, Ossetians in Ahlat and Circassians. From early stage on, these Caucasians went through a process of Kurdification and thereby had Kurdish as their mother tongue.

Geography

Historic map from 1721 showing borders of Curdistan provinces in Persia

According to the Encyclopædia Britannica, Kurdistan covers about 190,000 km (or 73,000 square miles), and its chief towns are Diyarbakır (Amed), Bitlis (Bedlîs) and Van (Wan) in Turkey, Erbil (Hewlêr) and Sulaymaniyah in Iraq, and Kermanshah (Kirmanşan), Sanandaj (Sine), Ilam and Mahabad (Mehabad) in Iran. According to the Encyclopaedia of Islam, Kurdistan covers around 190,000 km (73,000 sq mi) in Turkey, 125,000 km (48,000 sq mi) in Iran, 65,000 km (25,000 sq mi) in Iraq, and 12,000 km (4,600 sq mi) in Syria, with a total area of approximately 392,000 km (151,000 sq mi).

Turkish Kurdistan encompasses a large area of Eastern Anatolia Region and southeastern Anatolia of Turkey and it is home to an estimated 6 to 8 million Kurds.

Subdivisions (Upper and Lower Kurdistan)

In A Dictionary of Scripture Geography (published 1846), John Miles describes Upper and Lower Kurdistan as following:

The States outlined in red are two Kurdish States named Hakkiari and Mosul in this 1902 map. They are referred to as Upper Kurdistan and Lower Kurdistan respectively.

Modern Curdistan is of much greater extent than the ancient Assyria, and is composed of two parts the Upper and Lower. In the former is the province of Ardelan, the ancient Arropachatis, now nominally a part of Irak Ajami, and belonging to the north west division called Al Jobal. It contains five others namely, Betlis, the ancient Carduchia, lying to the south and south west of the lake Van. East and south east of Betlis is the principality of Julamerick, south west of it is the principality of Amadia. the fourth is Jeezera ul Omar, a city on an island in the Tigris, and corresponding to the ancient Bezabde. the fifth and largest is Kara Djiolan, with a capital of the same name. The pashalics of Kirkook and Solimania also comprise part of Upper Curdistan. Lower Curdistan comprises all the level tract to the east of the Tigris, and the minor ranges immediately bounding the plains and reaching thence to the foot of the great range, which may justly be denominated the Alps of western Asia.

The northern, northwestern and northeastern parts of Kurdistan are referred to as upper Kurdistan, and includes the areas from west of Amed to Lake Urmia.

The lowlands of southern Kurdistan are called lower Kurdistan. The main cities in this area are Kirkuk and Arbil.

Climate

Much of the region is typified by a continental climate – hot in the summer, cold in the winter. Despite this, much of the region is fertile and has historically exported grain and livestock. Precipitation varies between 200 and 400 mm a year in the plains, and between 700 and 3,000 mm a year on the high plateau between mountain chains. The mountainous zone along the borders with Iran and Turkey experiences dry summers, rainy and sometimes snowy winters, and damp springs, while to the south the climate progressively transitions toward semi-arid and desert zones.

Flora and fauna

Kurdistan is one of the most mountainous regions in the world with a cold climate receiving annual precipitation adequate to sustain temperate forests and shrubs. Mountain chains harbor pastures and forested valleys, totaling approximately 16 million hectares (160,000 km), including firs and countryside is mostly oaks, conifers, platanus, willow, poplar and, to the west of Kurdistan, olive trees.

The region north of the mountainous region on the border with Iran and Turkey features meadow grasses and such wild trees as, Abies cilicica, Fagus sylvatica, Quercus calliprinos, Quercus brantii, Quercus infectoria, Quercus ithaburensis, Quercus macranthera, Cupressus sempervirens, Platanus orientalis, Pinus brutia, Juniperus foetidissima, Juniperus excelsa, Juniperus oxycedrus, Prunus cerasus, Salix alba, Fraxinus excelsior, Paliurus spina-christi, Olea europaea, Ficus carica, Populus euphratica, Populus nigra, Crataegus monogyna, Crataegus azarolus, Prunus cerasifera, rose hips, Cercis siliquastrum, pistachio trees, pear and Sorbus graeca. The desert in the south is mostly steppe and would feature xeric plants such as palm trees, tamarix, date palm, fraxinus, poa, white wormwood and chenopodiaceae. The steppe and desert in the south, by contrast, have such species as palm trees and date palm.

Animals found in the region include the Syrian brown bear, wild boar, gray wolf, the golden jackal, Indian crested porcupine, the red fox, goitered gazelle, Eurasian otter, striped hyena, Persian fallow deer, long-eared hedgehog, onager, mangar and the Euphrates softshell turtle. Birds include, the hooded crow, common starling, Eurasian magpie, European robin, water pipit, spotted flycatcher, namaqua dove, saker falcon, griffon vulture, little crake and collared pratincole, among others.

Mountains

Mountains are important geographical and symbolic features of Kurdish life, as evidenced by the saying "Kurds have no friends but the mountains." Mountains are regarded as sacred by the Kurds. Included in the region are Mount Judi and Ararat (both prominent in Kurdish folklore), Zagros, Qandil, Shingal, Mount Abdulaziz, Kurd Mountains, Jabal al-Akrad, Shaho, Gabar, Hamrin, and Nisir.

Water resources

Iraqi Kurdistan is a region relatively rich in water, especially for countries in the Middle East region. It is the source for much of the water supply for neighboring countries. It means that political stability and peace in the region are important to the water supply of the region and preventing wars. Many think that for conserving the water "returning to traditional water-conserving cultivation techniques" will be needed, as well as "communal economy"

Rivers

The plateaus and mountains of Kurdistan, which are characterized by heavy rain and snow fall, act as a water reservoir for the Near and Middle East, forming the source of the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, as well as other numerous smaller rivers, such as the Little Khabur, Khabur, Tharthar, Ceyhan, Araxes, Kura, Sefidrud, Karkha, and Hezil. Among rivers of historical importance to Kurds are the Murat (Arasān) and Buhtān rivers in Turkey; the Peshkhābur, the Little Zab, the Great Zab, and the Diyala in Iraq; and the Jaghatu (Zarrinarud), the Tātā'u (Siminarud), the Zohāb (Zahāb), and the Gāmāsiyāb in Iran.

These rivers, which flow from heights of three to four thousand meters above sea level, are significant both as water sources and for the production of energy. Iraq and Syria dammed many of these rivers and their tributaries. Turkey has an extensive dam system under construction as part of the GAP (Southeast Anatolia Project); though incomplete, the GAP already supplies a significant proportion of Turkey's electrical energy needs. Due to the extraordinary archaeological richness of the region, almost any dam impacts historic sites. With the outbreak of the Syrian civil war, Turkey was accused of withholding water from the reservoir Lake Assad in Syria, while filling the Atatürk dam in Turkey.

Lakes

Kurdistan extends to Lake Urmia in Iran on the east. The region includes Lake Van, the largest body of water in Turkey; the only lake in the Middle East with a larger surface is Lake Urmia – though not nearly as deep as Lake Van, which has a much larger volume. Urmia, Van, as well as Zarivar Lake west of Marivan, and Lake Dukan near the city of Sulaymaniyah, are frequented by tourists.

Petroleum and mineral resources

Kurdistan Region is estimated to contain around 45 billion barrels (7.2×10^ m) of oil, making it the sixth largest reserve in the world. Extraction of these reserves began in 2007.

Al-Hasakah province, also known as Jazira region, has geopolitical importance of oil and is suitable for agricultural lands.

In November 2011, Exxon challenged the Iraqi central government's authority with the signing of oil and gas contracts for exploration rights to six parcels of land in Kurdistan, including one contract in the disputed territories, just east of the Kirkuk mega-field. This act caused Baghdad to threaten to revoke Exxon's contract in its southern fields, most notably the West-Qurna Phase 1 project. Exxon responded by announcing its intention to leave the West-Qurna project.

As of July 2007, the Kurdish government solicited foreign companies to invest in 40 new oil sites, with the hope of increasing regional oil production over the following five years by a factor of five, to about 1 million barrels per day (160,000 m/d). Gas and associated gas reserves are in excess of 2,800 km (100×10^ cu ft). Notable companies active in Kurdistan include ExxonMobil, Total, Chevron, Talisman Energy, Genel Energy, Hunt Oil, Gulf Keystone Petroleum, and Marathon Oil.

Other mineral resources that exist in significant quantities in the region include coal, copper, gold, iron, limestone (which is used to produce cement), marble, and zinc. The world's largest deposit of rock sulfur is located just southwest of Erbil.

In July 2012, Turkey and the Kurdistan Region signed an agreement by which Turkey would regularly supply the KRG with refined petroleum products in exchange for crude oil.

Media

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Television

Gallery

See also

References

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Sources

Further reading

  • Beşikçi, İsmail. Selected Writings Kurdistan and Turkish Colonialism. London: Published jointly by Kurdistan Solidarity Committee and Kurdistan Information Centre, 1991. 44 p. Without ISBN
  • Beşikçi, İsmail (2015). International Colony Kurdistan. London: Gomidas Institute. ISBN 978-1-909382-20-6.
  • King, Diane E. Kurdistan on the Global Stage: Kinship, Land, and Community in Iraq (Rutgers University Press; 2014) 267 pages; Scholarly study of traditional social networks, such as patron-client relations, as well as technologically mediated communication, in a study of gender, kinship, and social life in Iraqi Kurdistan.
  • Öcalan, Abdullah. Interviews and Speeches . London: Published jointly by Kurdistan Solidarity Committee and Kurdistan Information Centre, 1991. 46 p. Without ISBN
  • Reed, Fred A. Anatolia Junction: a Journey into Hidden Turkey. Burnaby, B.C.: Talonbooks , 1999. 320 p., ill. with b&w photos. N.B.: Includes a significant coverage of the Turkish sector of historic Kurdistan, the Kurds, and their resistance movement. ISBN 0-88922-426-9

External links

  • Media related to Kurdistan at Wikimedia Commons
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