Donboli

For the village in Iran, see Donboli, Iran.
The Donboli family, 1870. Standing from right to left: Abbas Qoli Khan Mir Panj, Asgar Khan Beglerbegi, Kalb Ali Khan. Sitting from right to left: Mirza Ali Qoli Khan "Eftekhar ol-Molk", Hajj Qolam Ali Khan, Mohammad Esmail Khan (known as Qa'leh Beyg Khan), Mohammad Zaman Khan. Little boys sitting from right to left: Doctor Ali Naghi Eftekhar, Amanollah Khan (Zia' os-Soltan).
Jafar Qoli Khan Donboli
Copper coin of the Donboli khans of Khoy, a Folous of 20 Dinars, c. 1800

Donboli (Persian دنبلى, "Donbolī" and sometimes "Danabele") are a Turkic-speaking sub-ethnic group of Kurds originality in the Khoy khanate and Tabriz khanate regions of West Azarbaijan Province of Iran.[1]

History

The Donboli came from Bokhtan, a Kurdish region between Siirt and Cizre in what is now southeastern Turkey. The first ancestor was a certain Isa Beg, who became in 1378 ruler of Sokmanabad. His descendant Sheikh Ahmad Beg entered service of the Turkmen Aq Quyunlu, and then the family held several post in Persian administration. Ahmad Beg's son Hajji Beg (Hajji Soltan) was governor of Sokmanabad and Khoy under Tahmasp I of the Safavid dynasty who ruled as Shah of Persia 1501-1722. In 1530 the Donboli family could establish an semi-autonomous emirate in that area, including the regions of Churs, Salmas. In the time of Shah Abbas I the family spread into a line in Churs and in Khoy, sometimes fighting for superpower over the other. After the fall of the Safavid dynasty the Donboli governors became in 1736 the hereditary Khans of Khoy and Tabriz. [2] The Doboli clan reigned the Khoy Khanate as well as the Tabriz Khanate as semi-independent rulers for nearly fifty years between the death of Nader Shah Afshar in 1747 and the coronation of Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar in 1796. They allied as well with three succeeding ruling houses, the Afshar dynasty, Zand dynasty and Qajar dynasty of Persia.

The first outstanding emir of this time was Najaf Qoli Khan. After Najaf Qoli Khan's father Shahbaz Khan I was killed in 1731 by his cousin Ayub Khan of Churs, he succeeded him as governor of Churs and Salmas. In 1734 he entered the service of the later Nader Shah Afshar as chief musketeer. He followed the shah on his conquests to India and was made amir ol-'omara (lit. "commander of commanders) and later governor of Khoy. In 1742 he became beglerbegi (lit. "governor of governors", i.e. governor-general) of Tabriz. In 1747 he became ruling Khan of Tabriz and remained in this post also under Nader Shah's successor. In the war of succession between several pretenders to the Persian throne, Najaf Qoli Khan and his nephew Shahbaz Khan II joined in 1750 Fath Ali Khan Afshar-Arashlu of Urmia. The acting rule of Khoy and Salmas was commissioned to Shahbaz Khan II, Najaf Qoli Khan held Tabriz and Churs. After the death of Fath Ali Khan, the Donboli khans pledged their allegiances in 1757 to Mohammad Hassan Khan Qajar, who made his minor son Agha Mohammad Khan ruler of Tabriz and Najaf Qoli Khan the young prince's guardian. In 1762 they allied with Karim Khan Zand, who sent 1763 Shahbaz Khan and Najaf Qoli Khan's son Abdol-Razzaq Beg as hostages to Shiraz. While Najaf Qoli Khan stayed as pacified ruler in his khanate and Shahbaz Khan remained de facto governor of Khoy in Shiraz, the real power in the Donboli domains was Shahbaz' brother Amir Ahmad Khan, who reigned 1763 until his death in 1786 as the strongest Donboli ruler and opponent to Agha Mohammad Khan's claims as overlord of all Persia. Finally in 1786 Ahmad Khan was killed with his eldest son by Shahbaz' sons, maybe on behalf of the Qajar shah. Ahmad Khan's second son Hossein Qoli Khan succeeded his father in 1786. In 1791 he arranged with Agha Mohammad Khan and his Qajar dynasty,and became governor of Tabriz, Khoy and Ardabil. In 1792 Hossein Qoli Khan was entitled amir ol-'omara and beglerbegi of Azerbaijan. He also attended 1792 the shah's coronation on the Mughan steppe, where Agha Mohammad was proclaimed shahanshah and emperor of all of Iran. In 1793 he fell out of favor when he allied 1793 with Ibrahim Khali Khan Javanshir, the ruling khan of Karabakh, and married his daughter. But he was in 1797 reinstated in all posts by Fath Ali Shah Qajar, who married his son Mohammad Taqi Mirza to Hossein Qoli Khan's daughter. After Hossein Qoli Khan's death in 1798 he was succeeded by his younger brother Jafar Qoli Khan who went in open rebellion against the central government, was with 15.000 men defeated by crown prince Abbas Mirza, and finally migrated to Russia in 1800. In addition with the two Russo-Persian wars this terminated the Donboli rule in 1809 and ended their regional dominance in 1827. But members of the family held several government posts in Azerbaijan and other provinces of Iran.

Another branch of the Donboli went to Kashan, and its most prominent member became Fath Ali Khan Saba Donboli "Malek al-Sho'ara", poet laureate and painter of Fath Ali Shah.[3]

Genealogy

First Line

Line of Khans of Khoy

Line of Khans of Tabriz

Line of Amir Aslan Khan Donboli

References

  1. Oberling, Pierre. "KURDISH TRIBES". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2009-09-06.
  2. Oberling, Pierre. "DONBOLI". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2011-11-29.
  3. Mahboub and Sakineh Mahdaviyan: Donboli, the Ruling Tribe in Khoy, Adv. Environ. Biol., 8(12), 1285-1290, 2014.
  4. Oberling, Pierre. "DONBOLI". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2011-11-29.; Mahboub Mahdaviyan and Sakineh Mahdaviyan: Donboli, the ruling Tribe in Khoy, Adv. Environ. Biol., 8(12), 1285-1290, 2014, (the internet, 2015); Manoutchehr M. Eskandari-Qajar: Life at the Court of the Early Qajar Shahs, transl. and edit. from "Tarikh-e 'Azodi" by Soltan Ahmad Mirza 'Azod al-Dowleh, Mage Publishers, Washington 2014, pp. 140 ff.;The Donboli Family page, http://www.donboli.info/mashahir.htm, internet 2015.

Sources

  • M.-J. Rǖbayānī, “Emārat wa farmān-ravaʾī-e Donbolīān dar Tabrīz wa manāṭeq-e arbaʿa,” in Majmūʿa-ye soḵan-rānīhā-ye šešomīn kongera-ye taḥqīqāt-e īrānī II, Tabrīz, 1357 Š./1978, pp. 352–77.
  • ʿAbd-al-ʿAzīz Jawāher-al-Kalām “Omarā-ye Danābela dar Ḵoy wa Āḏarbāyjān,” in Āṯār al-Šīʿa al-emāmīya, Tehrān, 1307 Š./1928, pp. 205–17.
  • ʿAbd-al-Razzāq Beg Donbolī, Tajrebat al-aḥrār wa taslīat al-abrār, 2 vols., Tabrīz,ed. Ḥ. Qāżī Ṭabāṭabāʾī, 1349-50 Š./1970-71.
  • J. R. Perry, Karim Khan Zand, Chicago, 1979.
  • E. Pakravan, Abbas Mirza. Un prince réformateur, Tehran, 1337 Š./1958.
  • http://donboli.com
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