Your talking about Amediya or Amid (diyarbakir??)
Diri you're wrong, Hewler is very hard to write too

Strange name for a Turk. What's your source?Piling wrote:The name came from 'Imad ed Dîn Zengî, the Turkmen general who seized the fortress to Hakkari tribes and destroyed it. Then after he rebuild the citadel and it called from his title (or lekeb).

Vladimir wrote:Strange name for a Turk. What's your source?Piling wrote:The name came from 'Imad ed Dîn Zengî, the Turkmen general who seized the fortress to Hakkari tribes and destroyed it. Then after he rebuild the citadel and it called from his title (or lekeb).






Piling wrote:It is a well-known historical event !Zengî (1084-1146) was a famous general, as so famous as Nur ed Dîn (his son) or Salah ed Dîn (his lieutenant), and the history of his conquests and Jihad had been written by many contemporary historians of the period... He fought a lot against Kurds from Hakkari who were very powerful... Later Saladin made alliance with them and it was more a tribal agreement than a vassality...
Zengî was the first to unify Syria and Mesopotamia against Crusaders. After him, his son Nur ed Dîn continued the Jihad, and Salah ed Dîn the Kurd achieved the work : at the beginning of the 13th century all the Middle-East was ruled by the Kurdish Ayyubids's family.
The best modern study about this history was Nikita Elisseef book's : ELISSEEF N. Nur ad Din, un grand prince musulman de Syrie au temps des Croisades, Damas, 1967.
I have not the Islamic encyclopedia at home (alas) but monday I could schedule the history and the bibliography of Amadiyya, with original references.
And it is not a STRANGE name. It is not a name in fact, but a kind of honorific title (lakab) as Salah ed Dîn was not his name (which was Yusuf).
The complete name and titulature of Zengî was (take a breath) :
'Imâd ed Dîn Zengî ibn Qasîm ed Dewla Aqsunqur
He was the son of a Turkish officer of the Seljuk Malikshah, sultan of Iran. And a this time, Arab names (then muslim) were common and very fashionable for high ranked princes.
Concerning the character, Zengî was short, with a dark and ugly face and had lost one eye. He was cruel but a very good general.
Tom : I talk about Amadiyya.
For Amid, it is another story. Amid or Amida is the ancient name of the city, I have forgotten the origin of this name (Urartian ? Armenian ?) but it is a very ancient city.
Diyar Bakr was, until the 18th century the name of the region. All the land of Jezireh-Northern Syria was divided in 3 parts : Diyar Mudar, Diyar Rabi' and Diyar Bakr. It is very lately that the city took the name of its region.
Concerning the city of Arbailu it is really an Assyrian name, but I don't believe that Christians in Kurdistan had all for grand-father Assyrian kings...
And Diri : Hakkari's name is not offended, even for Kurdish nationalist, for it came from the great Hakkari tribe who was very powerful during all the Middle Ages... So when Turks changed the name of Colemerg by Hakkari they just praised historical Kurds (but unwillingly I guessed). Then the one which could refuse the name of Hakkari should be the Christians of the region, who were entirely massacred during the genocide in 1917-1918. Before that, the mountains of Hakkari were half Kurdish half Suryani...










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