Shah-Armens

Beylik
Shah-Armens
1071–1207
Map of the Shah-Armens Beylik ( )
Map of the Shah-Armens Beylik ()
CapitalAhlat
Common languagesTurkish , Western Armenian
Religion
Sunni Islam
GovernmentMonarchy
History 
• Established
1071
• Disestablished
1207

The Shah-Armens[1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12][excessive citations] (lit. 'Kings of Armenia', Turkish: Ermenşahlar), also known as Ahlatshahs (lit. 'Rulers of Ahlat', Turkish: Ahlatşahlar) or Begtimurids, was a Turkoman Sunni Muslim Anatolian beylik of the Seljuk Empire, founded after the Battle of Manzikert (1071) and centred in Ahlat on the northwestern shore of the Lake Van. This region comprised most of modern-day Bitlis and Van, and parts of Muş provinces.

History

The dynasty is sometimes also called Sökmenli in reference to the founder of the principality, Sökmen el-Kutbî, literally "Sökmen the Slave", one of the commanders of the Alp Arslan. The Ahlatshah Sökmenli should not be confused with the Sökmen, which ruled in Hasankeyf during approximately the same period. Another title Sökmen and his descendants assumed, as heirs to the local Armenian princes according to Clifford Edmund Bosworth, was the Persian title Shah-i Arman ("Shah of Armenia"), often rendered as Ermenshahs. This dynastic name, which the rulers adopted, was established through the "ethnic make-up and political history" of the region they ruled, which was primarily Armenian.[13]

Coinage of Sayf al-Din Begtimur ("Seyfettin Beytemür"). AH 579-589 (AD 1183-1193). Probably Ahlat mint. Dated AH (58)9 (AD 1193).

The Beylik was founded by the Sökmen el-Kutbî who took over Ahlat (Khliat or Khilat) in 1100. Ahlatshahs were closely tied to Great Seljuq institutions, although they also followed independent policies like the wars against Georgia in alliance with their neighbours to the north, the Saltukids. They also acquired links with the branch of the Artuqids based in Meyyafarikin (now Silvan), becoming part of a nexus of principalities in Upper Mesopotamia and Eastern Anatolia.

The Ahlatshahs reached their brightest period under the fifty-seven-year reign of Sökmen II (1128–1185). He was married to a female relative (daughter or sister) of the Saltukid ruler Saltuk II.[14] Since Sökmen II was childless, the beylik was seized by a series of slave commanders after his death. In 1207, the beylik was taken over by the Ayyubids, who had long coveted Ahlat. The Ayyubids had come to the city at the invitation of people of Ahlat after the last Sökmenli ruler was killed by Tuğrulshah, the ruler (melik) of Erzurum on behalf of the Sultanate of Rum and brother of Sultan Kayqubad I.

The Ahlatshahs left a large number of historic tombstones in and around the city of Ahlat. Local administrators are currently trying to have the tombstones included in UNESCO's World Heritage List, where they are currently listed tentatively.[15]

Gallery

  • Ahlat Gravestones
    Ahlat Gravestones
  • Ahlat Gravestones
    Ahlat Gravestones
  • Ahlat Gravestone
    Ahlat Gravestone
  • Ahlat gravestone Detail
    Ahlat gravestone Detail
  • Ahlat Gravestone
    Ahlat Gravestone
  • Ahlat Gravestone
    Ahlat Gravestone
  • Ahlat Gravestone
    Ahlat Gravestone
  • Ahlat Gravestone
    Ahlat Gravestone

List of Shah-Armens

Reign[16] Name Son of Note
1100-1111 Sökmen I
1111-1127 Zahireddin İbrahim Sökmen
1127-1128 Ahmet Sökmen
1128-1185[17] Nasireddin Muhammed Sökmen II Ibrahim Died without heirs.
1185-1193 Seyfettin Beytemür The beys from then on were Ghilmans.
1193-1198 Bedreddin Aksungur
1198 Şücaüddin Kutluğ
1198-1206 Melikülmansur Muhammed Beytemür
1206-1207 Izzeddin Balaban

See also

Part of a series on the
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Coat of Arms of Armenia
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References

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Turkey in Asia Minor and Transcaucasia, 1921
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  1. ^ Robert H. Hewsen «Armenia: A Historical Atlas», p. 129:

    As the Georgians gradually became masters of northern Armenia, the south-central parts of the country passed under a Turkish dynasty calling itself the Shah-Armen (1100-1207), a title tantamount to "king of Armenia." Centered at Khilat (Arm. Xlat'; Tk. Ahlat), on the northwest shore of Lake Van, the political situation of the Shah-Armen state changed greatly during the twelfth century in regard to what these shahs held and what was merely subject to them through ties of vassalage.

  2. ^ Richard G. Hovannisian. The Armenian People from Ancient to Modern Times Vol. I. Chapter 10 «Armenia during the Seljuk and Mongol Periods» by Robert Bedrosian. pp. 241-271:

    The Seljuk Empire of Iran, proclaimed in 1040, lasted little more than one hundred years. It, in turn, was destroyed by another wave of Turkic nomads, the Kara Khitai. In Asia Minor, a variety of states arose during the late eleventh and twelfth centuries, virtually independent of Iran and often inimical toward each other. The most important of these were the Danishmendid state centered at Sebastia/Sivas, the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum (or Iconium) centered at Iconia/Konia and the state of the Shah-Armens centered at Khlat.

  3. ^ George A. Boumoutian «A Concise History of the Armenian People», p. 109:

    The Byzantines, who had destroyed the Bagratuni Kingdom a few years earlier, now lost it to the Turks. Many cities were looted, churches destroyed, trade disrupted and some of the population forcibly converted or enslaved. A number of dynasties such as the Danishmendids, Qaramanids, Shah-Armans, and the Seljuks of Rum emerged in Anatolia.

  4. ^ Encyclopædia Iranica, article: ARMENIA AND IRAN vi. Armeno-Iranian relations in the Islamic period:

    This condition became more accentuated especially during the period of the disintegration of the Saljuq empire, when the atabegs who had assumed great power in border districts, became autonomous. The Danishmandids ruled in Lesser Armenia and Cappadocia 1005-06. Further in the west, in 1077, the Saljuq sultanate of Rum was established. From 1100, in the center of Xlaṭʿ (Aḵlaṭ) in the western part of Greater Armenia, the Sukmanids ruled, calling themselves “Šāh-e Arman”.

  5. ^ Joseph Strayer «Dictionary of the Middle Ages» vol. 1, 1982. P. 505:

    Despite the survival of various minor principalities, the disappearance of the kingdom of Ani marked the end of the last major political unit in Greater Armenia for centuries to come. Nevertheless, some portions of the region recovered following the Seljuk conquest and the final withdrawal of Byzantium. Ani generally prospered under Shaddadid rule (1072–1199) despite, repeated Georgian attacks, as did Xlat under that of the "Philochristian" Armenized Seljuk dynasty of the Sah-i Armen (1100-1207).

  6. ^ Vahan M. Kurkjian «A History of Armenia» p. 168:

    It was not long before two Ortokid dynasties were created in Armenia and Kurdistan, the former by Sokman, the Shah-Armen (or "King of Armenia") and the other by Il-Ghazi.

  7. ^ Clifford Edmund Bosworth "The New Islamic Dynasties: A Chronological and Genealogical Manual". Article «The Shâh-i Armanids», p. 197.
  8. ^ Cambridge History of Iran. Vol. 5 «The Saljuq and Mongol Periods» pp. 111–112:

    The role of the ghulam commanders and the Turkmen begs becomes very prominent in this period, and local Turkmen dynasties begin to form: the sons of Bursuq in Khuzistan; the Artuqids in Diyarbakr; at Khilat the Shah-Armanids, descendants of Isma'Il b. Yaquti's ghulam Sukman al-Qutbl; and shortly afterwards the Zangids, descendants of Aq-Sonqur, in Mosul.

    p. 171:

    In Armenia the Shah-Armanids, descendants of the ghulam Sukman al-Qutbi, were frequently involved in the politics and warfare of Azarbaijan, tending to take the side of Aq-Sonqur II against the Eldigiizids. But when Nasr al-Din Sukman died without an heir in 581/1185, a bloodless struggle for power took place between Pahlavan b. Eldigiiz, who had married a daughter to the aged Shah-Arman in order to acquire a succession claim, and the Ayyubid Saladin. In the end, Pahlavan took over Ahlat, whilst Saladin annexed Mayyafariqin in Diyarbakr, a possession of the Artuqids of Mardin which had been latterly under the protectorship of the Shah-Arman. Mosul and the Jazireh remained under Zangid rule, although the relentless advance of Saladin into the Jazireh posed a serious threat to the Zangids, driving the last Shah-Arman and the atabeg cIzz al-Din Mas'iid b. Qutb al-Din Maudud into an alliance against Ayyubid aggression. After the death of Saladin in 589/1193, the Zangids recaptured most of the towns and fortresses of the Jazireh.

  9. ^ Encyclopaedia of Islam, vol. 9, BRILL 1997. P. 193, article: «Shah-i Arman»:

    SHAH-I ARMAN, "King of the Armenians", denoted the Turcoman rulers of Ahlat [q.v.] from 493/1100 to 604/1207.

  10. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica, vol 20, 1961 by Harry S. Ashmore. P. 310:

    He also gained the city of Khelat with dependencies that in former times had belonged to the Shah-i-Armen, but shortly before had been taken by Jalal ud-Din; this aggression was the cause of the war just mentioned.

  11. ^ Cyrille Toumanoff «Studies in Christian Caucasian history» Georgetown University Press. P. 210:

    But the Mamikonids succeeded in remaining sovereign, under vague Byzantine suzerainty, in the southwestern part of Taraun, round the fortress-city of Arsamosata, and in the neighboring Arzanenian land of Sasun, i.e., in the middle valley of the Arsanias, until their dispossession by the Shah-Armen in 1189/1190 and their migration to Armenia-in-Exile, in Cilicia.

  12. ^ Austen Henry Layard «Discoveries in the Ruins of Nineveh and Babylon». Gorgias Press LLC, 2002. P. 28:

    Shah Armens, i.e. Kings of Armenia, was a title assumed by a dynasty reigning at Ahlat, founded by Sokman Kothby, a slave of the Seljuk prince, Kotbbedin Ismail, who established an independent principality at Ahlat in A.D. 1100, which lasted eighty years.

  13. ^ Pancaroğlu 2013, p. 54.
  14. ^ Cahen, p. 107.
  15. ^ "Tentative World Heritage Sites". UNESCO.
  16. ^ Bosworth 2004, p. 197. sfn error: no target: CITEREFBosworth2004 (help)
  17. ^ Peacock & Yildiz 2013, p. 54. sfn error: no target: CITEREFPeacockYildiz2013 (help)

Sources

  • Claude Cahen, Pre-Ottoman Turkey
  • Pancaroğlu, Oya (2013). "The House of Mengüjek in Divriği: Constructions of Dynastic Identity in the Late Twelfth Century". In Peacock, A.C.S.; Yildiz, Sara Nur (eds.). The Seljuks of Anatolia: Court and Society in the Medieval Middle East. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 978-1848858879.

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Ancestor
Qutalmish
Founder
Suleyman I
Capital
İznik, then Konya
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Tzachas (1081 - 1092)
Founder
Tzachas
Capital
İzmir
Important centers and extension:
Shah-Armens (1100–1207)
Founder
Sökmen el Kutbi
Capital
Ahlat
Important centers and extension:
Dynasty:
  • Sökmen el Kutbi (1100–1112)
  • Ibrahim bin Sökmen (? - ?)
  • Ahmed bin Ibrahim (? - ?)
  • Sökmen the Second (1128–1185)
  • Seyfeddin Begtimur (1185–1193)
  • Aksungur (1193–1197)
  • Muhammed bin Begtimur (1185–1207)
Important works:
  • Ahlat Tombs
Artuqids (1102 - )
Ancestors
Eksük and his son Artuk, from Döğer Oghuz Türkmen clan
Founder
Muinüddin Sökmen Bey
Capitals
Three branches in Hasankeyf, Mardin and Harput
Important centers and extension:
Hasankeyf Dynasty or Sökmenli Dynasty:
  • Müinüddin Sökmen Bey (1102–1104)
  • Sökmenli Ibrahim Bey (1104–1131)
Mardin Dynasty or Ilgazi Dynasty:
  • Necmeddin Ilgazi (1106–1122)
  • Hüsameddin Timurtaş (1122–1154)
  • Necmeddin Alp (1154–1176)
Harput Dynasty:
  • Belek Bey (1112–1124)
  • Nureddin Muhammed (? - ?)
  • Sökmen the Second (? - ?)
Danishmends (1071–1178)
Founder
Danishmend Gazi
Capitals
Sivas
Niksar
Important centers and extension:
Dynasty:
Mengujekids (1071–1277)
Founder
Mengücek Bey
Capitals
Erzincan, later also Divriği
Important centers and extension:
Dynasty:
Mengücek Bey (1071–1118)
Mengücekli Ishak Bey (1118–1120)
1120–1142
Temporarily incorporated into the Beylik of Danishmends
Erzincan and Kemah Branch
Mengücekli Davud Shah (1142- ?)
1228
Incorporation into the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum
Divriği Branch
Mengücekli Süleyman Shah (1142- ?)
1277
Beylik destroyed by Abaka
Saltukids (1072–1202)
Founder
Saltuk Bey
Capital
Erzurum
Important centers and extension:
Dynasty:
  • Saltuk Bey (1072–1102)
  • Ali bin Ebu'l-Kâsım (1102 - ~1124)
  • Ziyâüddin Gazi (~1124–1132)
  • Izzeddin Saltuk (1132–1168)
  • Nâsırüddin Muhammed (1168–1191)
  • Mama Hatun (1191–1200)
  • Melikshah bin Muhammed (1200–1202)
Aydinids (1307–1425)
Founder
Aydınoğlu Mehmed Bey
Capitals
Birgi, later Ayasluğ
Important centers and extension:
Dynasty:
  • Aydınoğlu Mehmed Bey (1307–1334)
  • Umur Beg (1334–1348)
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  • Aydınoğlu Isa Bey (- 1390)
Events
1390
First period of incorporation (by marriage) into the Ottoman Empire under Bayezid I the Thunderbolt
1402–1414
Second period of Beylik reconstituted by Tamerlane to Aydınoğlu Musa Bey (1402–1403)
Aydınoğlu Umur Bey (1403–1405)
İzmiroğlu Cüneyd Bey (1405–1425 with intervals)
1425
Second and last incorporation (by conquest) into the Ottoman realm under Murad II
Candaroğulları (~1300–1461)
Founder
Şemseddin Yaman Candar, commander descended from Kayı branch of Oghuz Turks in the imperial army of Seljuk Sultanate of Rum
Capital
Kastamonu
Important centers and extension:
Dynasty:
  • Candaroğlu Süleyman Pasha (1309 - ~1340)
  • Candaroğlu Ibrahim Bey (1340–1345)
  • Candaroğlu Adil Bey (1340–1361)
  • Celaleddin Bayezid (1361–1385)
  • Candaroğlu Süleyman Pasha the Second (1384–1392)
Sinop Dynasty or Isfendiyarid Dynasty :
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  • Taceddin Ibrahim Bey (1440–1443)
  • Kemaleddin Ismail Bey (1443–1461)
Chobanids (1227–1309)
Founder
Hüsamettin Çoban Bey, commander from Kayı Oghuz clan of the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum
Capital
Kastamonu
Important centers and extension:
Dynasty:
Dulkadirids (1348- ~1525)
Ancestor
Hasan Dulkadir
Founder
Zeyneddin Karaca Bey
Capital
Elbistan
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Dynasty:
  • Zeyneddin Karaca Bey (1348–1348)
  • Dulkadiroğlu Halil Bey (1348–1386)
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  • Shah Budak (?-1492)
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Founder
Eretna Bey, brother-in-law of the Ilkhanid governor for Anatolia, Timurtash
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Sivas, later Kayseri
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Dynasty:
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Founder
Seyfeddin Süleyman Bey, regent to the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum
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Beyşehir
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Dynasty:
  • Seyfeddin Süleyman Bey (1288–1302)
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Germiyanids (1300–1429)
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Kerimüddin Alişir
Founder
Germiyanlı Yakub Bey the First
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Kütahya
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Ancestors
Hamid and his son Ilyas Bey, frontier rulers under Seljuk Sultanate of Rum
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Hamidoğlu Feleküddin Dündar Bey
Capital
Isparta
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Dynasty:
  • Hamidoğlu Feleküddin Dündar Bey (~1280–1324)
  • Hamidoğlu Hızır Bey (1324–1330)
  • Hamidoğlu Necmeddin Ishak Bey (? - ?)
  • Hamidoğlu Muzafferüddin Mustafa Bey (? - ?)
  • Hamidoğlu Hüsameddin Ilyas Bey (? - ?)
  • Hamidoğlu Kemaleddin Hüseyin Bey (? - 1391)
Karamanids (~1250–1487)
Ancestor
Nure Sûfi from Afshar Oghuz clan
Founder
Kerimeddin Karaman Bey
Capitals
successively Ereğli
Ermenek
Larende (Karaman)
Konya
Mut
Dynasty:
Karasids (1303–1360)
Ancestor
Melik Danişmend Gazi
Founder
Karesi Bey
Capital
Balıkesir
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Ladik (~1300–1368)
Ancestor
Germiyanlı Ali Bey
Founder
Inanç Bey
Capital
Denizli
Important centers and extension:
Dynasty:
  • Inanç Bey (~1300 - ~1314)
  • Murad Arslan (~1314 - ?)
  • Inançoğlu Ishak Bey (? - ~1360)
  • Süleyman Bey (1345–1368)
Menteshe (~1261–1424)
Founder
Menteshe Bey
Capitals
Beçin castle and nearby Milas, later also Balat
Important centers and extension
Dynasty:
  • Menteshe Bey (~1261 - ~1282)
  • Mesut (~1282 - ~1320)
  • Orhan (~1320 - ~1340)
  • Ibrahim (~1340 - ~1360)
Pervâneoğlu (1261–1322)
Ancestor
Mühezzibeddin Ali Kâşî (vizier of the Seljuk Sultanate of Rum)
Founder
Süleyman Pervâne
Capital
Sinop
Important centers and extension:
Dynasty:
Ramadanids (1352–1516)
Founder
Ramazan Bey from Yüreğir Oghuz clan
Capitals
Adana
Important centers and extension:
Dynasty:
  • Ibrahim Bey (1344-?)
  • Ahmed Bey (?-1416)
  • Ibrahim Bey (1416–1417)
  • Hamza Bey (1417–1427)
  • Mehmed Bey (1427-?)
  • Eyluk Bey (? - ?)
  • Dündar Bey (? - ?)
  • Omer Bey (?-1490)
  • Giyas al-Din Halil Bey (1490–1511)
  • Hahmud Bey (1511–1516)
  • Selim Bey (?-?)
  • Kubad Bey (1517-?)
Sahib Ataids (1275–1341)
Important centers and extension:
Dynasty
  • Sahib Ata Fahreddin Ali (1275–1288) and sons
  • Nusreddin Ahmed (1288–1341)
Sarukhanids (1302–1410)
Founder
Saruhan Bey
Capital
Manisa
Important centers and extension:
Dynasty
  • Saruhan Bey (1302–1345)
  • Fahreddin Ilyas Bey
  • Muzafferuddin Ishak Bey (-1388)
  • Hızır Shah (1388–1390)
Teke (1301–1423)
Ancestors
Hamidoğlu dynasty
Founder
Tekeoğlu Yunus Bey
Capitals
Antalya
Korkuteli
Important centers and extension:
Dynasty:
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  • Tekeoğlu Mehmud Bey (?-1327)
  • Tekeoğlu Hızır Bey (? - ?)
  • Tekeoğlu Dadı Bey (?-?)
  • Zincirkıran Mehmed Bey (~1360 - ~1375)
  • Tekeoğlu Osman Bey (~1375–1390)
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