This is an old revision of this page, as edited by RedPen (talk | contribs) at 00:00, 4 December 2006 (Spell checking. Lots of little rewrites and rearranging of text. Added sections and TOC.). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.
Revision as of 00:00, 4 December 2006 by RedPen (talk | contribs) (Spell checking. Lots of little rewrites and rearranging of text. Added sections and TOC.)(diff) ← Previous revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)This article may require copy editing for grammar, style, cohesion, tone, or spelling. You can assist by editing it. (Learn how and when to remove this message) |
_TOC_
Title Origins and Meanings
Atabeg or Atabey is a title of nobility of Turkic origin, indicating a governor of a nation or province who was subordinate to a monarch.
The word atabeg means "father of the prince." When a Seljuk prince died, leaving minor heirs, a guardian would be appointed to protect and guide the young princes. These guardians would often marry their ward's widowed mothers, thus assuming a sort of surrogate fatherhood.
The title of Atabeg was common during the Seljuk rule of the Near East starting in the twelfth century. It was also common in Mesopotamia (Iraq).
Amongst the Turkmen tribes, as in Persia, the rank was senior to a Khan.
The title atabeg was also in use for officers in Mameluk Egypt; some of them even were proclaimed Sultan before the incorporation into the Ottoman empire. After the end of Seljuk rule, the title was used only intermittently.
In Persian, the style Atabeg-e-Azam ('Supreme Atabeg) was occasionally used as an alternative title for the Shah's Vazir-e-Azam (Grand Vizier), notably in 1916 for a Qajar prince, Major-General Shahzada Sultan 'Abdu'l Majid Mirza.
Atabeg Dynasties
In the Near East
Beginning in the twelfth century the atabegs formed a number of dynasties, and displaced the descendants of the Seljukian amirs in their various principalities. These dynasties were founded by emancipated Mamluks, who had held high office at court and in camp under powerful amirs. When the amirs died, they first became stadtholders for the amirs' descendants, and then usurped the throne of their masters. There was an atabeg dynasty in Damascus founded by Tughtigin (1103-1128).
Other atabeg "kingdoms" sprang up to the north east, founded by Sokman (Sökmen), who established himself at Kaifa in Diyarbakır about 1101, and by his brother Ilghazi called Mardi. The city of Mosul on the Tigris Maudud, was also ruled by atabegs such as Aksunkur and Zengi. Zengi became Atabeg of Mosul in 1128 and soon established himself as an independent ruler of much of northern Mesopotamia and Syria (including Aleppo).
In Azerbaijan
Around the year 1554, Karabagh became a state under the rule of an Atabeg, at first part of Persia, Then part of the Ottoman Empire, until the 1606 founding of the Khanate of Qarabagh (Karabakh).
The northern part of Luristan, formerly known as Lurikuchik ('Little Luristan'), was governed by independent princes of the Khurshidi dynasty, styled atabegs, from the beginning of the 17th century when the last atabeg, Shah Verdi Khan, was removed by Persian Shah Abbas I and the government of the province given to Husain Khan, the chief of a rival tribe. Husain, however, was given the gubernatorial title of vali instead of atabeg. The descendants of Husain Khan retained the title.
Great Luristan, in the southern part of Luristan, was an independent state under the Fazlevieh atabegs from 1160 until 1424. Its capital was Idaj, now only represented by mounds and ruins at Malamir, 60 miles south east of Shushtar.
Sources
- This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
{{cite encyclopedia}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) (passim; details not yet worked in) - Amin Maalouf. Crusades Through Arab Eyes, 1984
- Royal Ark - Qajar dynasty in Iran