Azerbaijan is the name used for the Iranian region of Azerbaijan and since ca. 20 years ago by the Republic of Azerbaijan. This name originated from pre-Islamic history of [Persia], derived from Atropates, a Persian[1][2][3][4] satrap (governor). This article covers the etymology of the term and also its geographic application in historical as well as modern times.

Etymology

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According to historian Vladimir Minorsky[5] :

According to Xavier Planhol[6]:

According to Professor K. Shippmann[7]:

Pre-Islamic era

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Strabo in Book 11 of his geography gives us one of the earliest accounts of the region and mentions the kingdom of Atropatene.

The Natural History of Pliny states:


Shapur I's inscription in Naqsh-e-Rostam also lists the North Western and Caucasian provinces of Sassanid Iran, amongst them Albania, Atropatene, Armenia, Iberia, Balasgan, and the gate of Alans.[9]

Islamic era

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Various historians and geographers and travelers have given description of the region during the Islamic era and the article. Some of these are listed in chronological order here.

Abdullah Ibn al-Muqaffa (d. 760) a Muslim or Zoroastrian scholar and translator of Persian background is quoted by Ibn Nadeem (d. 988) as incorporating the region of Azerbaijan into the Fahla[10]:

Abu al-Hasan Ali ibn al-Husayn (896-956), the Arab historian states:

Ahmad ibn Yaqubi (d. 897) in his work Al-Buldan (The Countries) writes[12]

Ahmad ibn Yaqubi (d. 897) in his work Al-Tarikh (The History) writes[13]:

Ahmad ibn Yaqubi quoted by the Arabian historian Abul Fida has stated:[14]

Al-Istakhri, in 930, wrote:


Al-Muqaddasi (b. 945) lists the cities of Azerbaijan and Armenia and Aran:[16]

Ibn Hawqal (943-977), the 10th century Arabian traveler gives an eyewitness account of his stay in Azerbaijan, Armenia and Aran.[17] Fakhr ad-din Asad Gorgani, a 11th century poet, who rhymed the pre-Islamic story of Vis o Ramin into new Persian poetry, mentions Azerbaijan, Armenia and Aran in two couplets as the special domain of the princess vis[18] Ḥamd-Allāh ibn Abī Bakr Qazvīnī Mustawfi, in his Nuzhat al-qulub (d. 1339-40) also mentions Azerbaijan, Arran, Mughan, and Shirvan as different provinces.[19]

Bal'ami (946-973), the 10th century Persian court chronicler of Samanids, translated an abridged version of Tabari's history into Persian and wrote his own additional comments. He states[20]:

Bala'ami also states:[21]

Ibn Rusta, a 9th/10th century Persian explorer and geographer traveled to region and has mentioned the names of the districts and provinces. He writes in his famous book al-A'laq Al-Nafisah:


The Hodud al-Alam, finished in 982, "considered Azerbaijan, Arran, and Armenia as the pleasantest of all the Islamic lands.[23] It also states:


Ali ibn al-Athir on the Mongol invasions (1163–1233):


Zakariya ibn Muhammad Qazvini (1208/1209-1283/1284), the writer of Athar Al-Bilad wa Akhbar al-'ibad writes[26]:

Yaqut al-Hamawi (d. 1229), a Syrian born geographer is famous for his geography bible Mu'jam Al-Buldan. He states:

Hamdollah Mostowfi (1281-1349 AD), Persian chronicler who worked for the Ilkhanid administration and was familiar with administrative affairs of his time writes:[28]:


The 17th century Persian dictionary/quasi-encyclopedia Burhan Qati' under the words Aras and Aran gives two definitions[29]

In his book entitled The travels of Sir John Chardin, by the way of the Black Sea, through the countries of Circassia, Mingrelia, the country of the Abcas, Georgia, Armenia, and Media, into Persia proper, Sir John Chardin, a traveller from France who visited the Middle East at the end of the 17th century described Azerbaijan as follows:


Modern (18th, 19th, and 20th centuries)

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William Jones, an English Historian and translator of Mirza Muhammad Mahdi Khan Astrabadi's Tarikh-i Jahangusha-yi Naderi (a history book written about Nader Shah) mentions Azerbaijan and its major cities in the preface, which include Tabriz and Ardabil. It also describes the major cities of Arran and Armenia, and Shirvan and Daghestan, which were Gangia and Erivan, and Baku, Shamakhi, and Derbent respectively.[31] In A System of Geography, published in 1832, the Asiatic Caucasian provinces of Russia are called Daghistan, Shirwan, and Aran. Persia's boundary is limited to the Araxes, and the land below the Araxes is labeled as Azerbaijan.[32]

Keith Abbot, British Consular General in Persia, wrote in the Memorandum on the Country of Azerbaijan in 1863:


Charles Anthon (d. 1888) writes:


Russian Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary, published in 1890, states the following in the article called "Azerbeijan":


The Methodist Magazine and Review (d. 1900) states:


According to the Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland (d. 1901):


'The Nuttall Encyclopædia (d. 1907) states:


The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge (d. 1908) states:


Encyclopaedia Britannica (d. 1911), states the following in the article called "Azerbaijan":


Also, according to The History of the London Society for Promoting Christianity Amongst the Jews (d. 1908),[41] Persia: The Land of the Magi (d. 1913),[42] and The Foreign Doctor: A Biography of Joseph Plumb Cochran, M.D. of Persia (d. 1917),[43] Azerbaijan is described as a province of Persia. In Persian, the word is translatable to both "the treasury" and "the treasurer" of fire.[44]

Maps

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Assessments of modern scholars

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According to Barrington atlas of the Greek and Roman world:


According to Professor of History Muriel Atkin[48]:


According to Professor. George Bourtounian[50]:

According to Vladimir Minorsky:


According to Professor Tadeusz Swietochowski:


According to C.E. Bosworth:


According to Professor Xavier De Planhol:


According to Professor Ben Fowkes:


According Professor Bert. G. Franger[56]:


Azerbaijan as the name of an independent republic

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Tadeusz Swietochowski comments on the Czarist reforms during the 19th century[57]:

With the collapse of Tsarist Russia in 1917, the Musavat Party met in Tbilisi on May 28, 1918 and proclaimed independence of their country with the name Azerbaijan Democratic Republic. Tadeusz Swietochowski also comments on the Iranian reaction and subsequent response from the new government[58]:

He also states:


According to Igor M. Diakonoff:


According to Vladimir Minorsky:


Vasily Bartold has stated:


Terminology today

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Today the name Azerbaijan is used to denote both the Republic of Azerbaijan and the north western provinces of Iran, which are East Azerbaijan, West Azerbaijan, Ardabil, and Zanjan. During the Soviet era, the name 'Southern Azerbaijan' was created and propagated throughout the USSR.[62] The USSR also created two organizations [63] for separating the provinces of East and West Azerbaijan from Iran. Today, the nomenclature South Azerbaijan is used by some politicians in the Republic of Azerbaijan and some groups advocating separatism of Iranian Azerbaijan.[62] At the same time, the heavily Kurdish populated province of West Azerbaijan in Iran has also been called East Kurdistan(Rojhelat) by some Kurdish political groups and this nomenclature has also been used by some western sources.[64]

Azerbaijani people

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Historically the Turkic-speaking people of Iranian Azerbaijan and the Caucasus often called themselves or were referred to by some neighboring peoples (e.g. Persians) as Turks, and religious identification prevailed over ethnic identification. When Transcaucasia became part of the Russian empire, Russian authorities, who traditionally called all Turkic people Tatars, called them Aderbeijani/Azerbaijani or Caucasian Tatars to distinguish them from other Turkic people, also called Tatars by Russians.[65] The Russian Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary also refers to Azerbaijanis as Aderbeijans in some articles.[66] According to the article "Turko-Tatars" of the above encyclopedia, “some scholars (Yadrintsev, Kharuzin, Chantre) suggested to change the terminology of some Turko-Tatar people, who somatically don’t have much in common with Turks, for instance, to call Aderbaijani Tatars (Iranians by type) Aderbaijans”.[67] The modern ethnonym Azerbaijani/Azeri, in its present form, was accepted in 1930s.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Miniature Empires: A Historical Dictionary of the Newly Independent States by James Minahan, published in 2000, page 20
  2. ^ Livius.org
  3. ^ Chamoux, Francois. Hellenistic Civilization. Blackwell Publishing, published 2003, page 26
  4. ^ Bosworth, A.B., and Baynham, E.J. Alexander the Great in Fact and Fiction. Oxford, published 2002, page 92
  5. ^ a b Minorsky, V.; Minorsky, V. "Ādharbaydjān ( Azarbāydjān ) ." Encyclopaedia of Islam. Edited by: P.Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel and W.P. Heinrichs. Brill, 2007. Brill Online. <http://www.encislam.brill.nl/subscriber/entry?entry=islam_COM-0016>
  6. ^ Encyclopedia Iranica, "Azerbaijan: Geography". X.D. Planhol
  7. ^ Encyclopedia Iranica, "Azerbaijan: Pre-Islamic History", K. Shippmann
  8. ^ The Natural History of Pliny by John Bostock, M.D., F.R.S, and H.T. Riley, Esq., B.A., Vol. II, published in 1890, pages 27-28
  9. ^ Encyclopedia Britannica, Encyclopædia Britannica. 2007. Encyclopædia Britannica Online. 4 May 2007 <http://www.britannica.com/eb/article-32148> :The list of provinces given in the inscription of Ka'be-ye Zardusht defines the extent of the empire under Shapur, in clockwise geographic enumeration: (1) Persis (Fars), (2) Parthia, (3) Susiana (Khuzestan), (4) Maishan (Mesene), (5) Asuristan (southern Mesopotamia), (6) Adiabene, (7) Arabistan (northern Mesopotamia), (8) Atropatene (Azerbaijan), (9) Armenia, (10) Iberia (Georgia), (11) Machelonia, (12) Albania (eastern Caucasus), (13) Balasagan up to the Caucasus Mountains and the Gate of Albania (also known as Gate of the Alans), (14) Patishkhwagar (all of the Elburz Mountains), (15) Media, (16) Hyrcania (Gorgan), (17) Margiana (Merv), (18) Aria, (19) Abarshahr, (20) Carmania (Kerman), (21) Sakastan (Sistan), (22) Turan, (23) Mokran (Makran), (24) Paratan (Paradene), (25) India (probably restricted to the Indus River delta area), (26) Kushanshahr, until as far as Peshawar and until Kashgar and (the borders of) Sogdiana and Tashkent, and (27), on the farther side of the sea, Mazun (Oman)
  10. ^ Kitab al-Fihrist mit Anmerkungen hrsg. von Gustav Flügel, t vols., Leipzig 1871. Original Arabic: فأما الفهلوية فمنسوب إلى فهله اسم يقع على خمسة بلدان وهي أصفهان والري وهمدان وماه نهاوند وأذربيجان
  11. ^ (Al Mas'udi, Kitab al-Tanbih wa-l-Ishraf, De Goeje, M.J. (ed.), Leiden, Brill, 1894, pp. 77-8). Original Arabic from www.alwaraq.net: فالفرس أمة حد بلادها الجبال من الماهات وغيرها وآذربيجان إلى ما يلي بلاد أرمينية وأران والبيلقان إلى دربند وهو الباب والأبواب والري وطبرستن والمسقط والشابران وجرجان وابرشهر، وهي نيسابور، وهراة ومرو وغير ذلك من بلاد خراسان وسجستان وكرمان وفارس والأهواز، وما اتصل بذلك من أرض الأعاجم في هذا الوقت وكل هذه البلاد كانت مملكة واحدة ملكها ملك واحد ولسانها واحد، إلا أنهم كانوا يتباينون في شيء يسير من اللغات وذلك أن اللغة إنما تكون واحدة بأن تكون حروفها التي تكتب واحدة وتأليف حروفها تأليف واحد، وإن اختلفت بعد ذلك في سائر الأشياء الأخر كالفهلوية والدرية والآذرية وغيرها من لغات الفرس.
  12. ^ Yaʻqūbī, Aḥmad ibn Abī Yaʻqūb, d. 897?, Les pays, tr. par Gaston Wiet. Publications de l’Institut français d’archéologie orientale du Caire. Textes et traductions d’auteurs orientaux ; t. 1, Le Caire, 1937.
  13. ^ Ibn-Wadhih qui dicitur al-Jaʻqubi historiae. Edidit indicesque adjecit M. Th. Houtsma, Leiden, E. J. Brill, 1969., pg 203
  14. ^ Yaʻqubi, Aḥmad ibn Abi Yaʻqub, d. 897?, Les pays, tr. par Gaston Wiet.,Publications de l’Institut français d’archéologie orientale du Caire. Textes et traductions d’auteurs orientaux ; t. 1, Le Caire, 1937. pg 232
  15. ^ In Russian, text states: Язык в Адербейджане, Армении и Арране персидский и арабский, исключая области города Дабиля: вокруг него говорят по-армянски: в стране Берда'а язык арранский.
  16. ^ Al-Muqaddasi, ‘The Best Divisions for Knowledge of the Regions’, a translation of his Ahsan at-taqasim fi Ma'rifat al-Aqalim by B.A. Collins, Centre for Muslim Contribution to Civilization, Garnet Publishing Limited,1994, pg 329-331 [1] Original Arabic from www.alwaraq.net which has Muqaddasi online: فأما الران فإنها تكون نحو الثلث من الإقليم في مثل جزيرة بين البحيرة ونهر الرس ونهر الملك يشمقها طولاً، قصبتها برذعة ومن مدنها: تفليس، القلعة، خنان، شمكور، جنزة، يرديج، الشما خية، شروان، باكوه، الشا بران، باب الأبواب،الأبخان، قبلة، شكي، ملازكرد، تبلا. وأما أرمينية فإنها كورة جليلة رسمها أرميني بن كنظر بن يافث بن نوح ومنها ترتفع الستور والزلالي الرفيعة كثيرة الخصائص قصبتها دبيل ومن مدنها: بدليس، خلاط، أرجيش، بركري، خوي، سلماس، أرمية، داخرقان، مراغة، أهر، مرند، سنجان، قاليقلا، قندرية، قلعة يونس، نورين. وأما آذربيجان فإنها كورة اختطها اذرباذ بن بيوراسف بن الأسود بن سام بن نوح عليه السلام قصبتها وهي مصر الإقليم أردبيل بها جبل مساحته مائة وأربعون فرسخاً كله قرى ومزارع يقال أن به سبعين لساناً كثرة خيرات أردبيل منه. أكثر بيوتهم تحت الأرض ومن مدنها: رسبة، تبريز، جابروان، خونج، الميا نج، السراة، بروى، ورثان، موقان، ميمذ، برزند. فإن زعم زاعم أن بدليس من إقليم أقور واستدل بأنها كانت في ولايات بني حمدان أجيب بأنه لما ادعاها أهل الإقليمين جعلناها من هذا لانا وجدنا لها نظيراً في الاسم وهي تفليس، وأما الولايات فليست حجة في هذا الباب الا ترى أن سيف الدولة كانت له قنسرين والرقة ولم يقل أحد أن الرقة من الشام.
  17. ^ Muhammad ibn Haukal, The Oriental Geography of Ebn Haukal, an Arabian Traveller of the Tenth Century, Translated by William Ouseley, Adamant Media Corporation, 2001, pages 156-165 (description of Armenia, Aran and Azerbaijan). Some quotes from Ibn Hawqal: The borders of Azerbaijan extent from Tarem to Zangan to Deinel and Howlan and to Shehrzour, to the river Dejleh (Tigris), and back to the borders of Armenia...On one side of Derband is a great mountain called Adeib; on this they assemble every year, and make many fires, that they may confound and dispere their enemies from the borders of Azerbaijan, and Armenia, and Arran...Armenia is an extensive and fertile region, bounded by the sea and full of delightful situations: the towns are Misan, Khounah, Bervanan, Khoy, Selmas, Neshoui, Marend, abriz, Berzend, Derban, Moukan and Khaberan; and several smaller towns...Ardabil is the most considerable city in Azerbaijan...Maragheh is nearly the same size as Ardebil..Deinel is a larger city than Ardabil, and the chief town of Armenia. The place of the governor is there, as at Barda, the capital of Aran...There is a lake in Azerbaijan called the lake of Urmia...Throughout this country the Persian and Arabian languages are understood. The inhabitants of Ardebil use also the Armenian tongue; in the mountainous country belong to Berdaa, the people use a different dialect. In Azerbaijan, and Aran, and Armenia, gold and silver coins are current.
  18. ^ Mohammad Roshan, Vis o Ramin, Critical edition with introduction and commentary, Seda Muasir Publishers, Tehran, 2001 منبع: ويس و رامين با مقدمه و تصحيح و تحشيه‌ي محمد روشن، انتشارات صداي معاصر ،تهران ۱۳۸۱ جهان در دست ويس دلستان بود / وليكن خاصش آذربايگان بود هميدون كشور ارّان و ارمن / سراسر بد به دست آن سمن‌تن (بخش ۱۲۴:نشستن رامين بر تخت پادشاهي، ص ۳۶۹) Translation:The world was at the hand of heart-grabbing princess Vis, But her choice was the land of Azerbaijan, And also the countries of Aran and Armenia, All these lands were at hand of that flower-bodies princess
  19. ^ Nuzhat al-qulūb by Ḥamd-Allāh ibn Abī Bakr Qazvīnī Mustawfi 1339-40, republished in 1919 as The Geographical Part of the Nuzhat-al-qulūb page 24: Thus the provinces of the two Iraqs, Adharbayjan, Arran and Mughan, Shirvan, Ghushtasfi and in part of Gurjistan, and in the whole of Kurdistan, Qumis, Mazandaran, Tabaristan, Jilanat and in part also of Khurasan, it is necessary when you would stand facing the Qiblah that the north pole should be behind...
  20. ^ Bal'ami, Abu Ali Muhammad. Tarikh Ba'lami. Mohammad Gonabadi in accordance with the corrected edition of Bahar. Second Edition, Tehran, Zavar Publishers, 1974. Volume I, pg 48-49 Original Persian: زمين مغرب و روم و سقلاب و آذربايگان و اران و كرج تماميت مرسلم را داد و او را قيصر نام كرد.
  21. ^ Abu Alimuhammad ibne Muhammad Bal’ami; Tarikhnaame Tabari, Volume 1, Tehran 1366 (1987), Xabare gushaadane Azerbaijan ve Darbande Khazaran (The news of conquer of Azerbaijan and Darband), page 529.
  22. ^ Abi Ali Ahmad ibn Umar ibn Rustah, al-A'laq Al-Nafisah, Tab'ah 1,Bayrut : Dar al-Kutub al-ʻIlmiyah, 1998, pg 96-98.
  23. ^ Encyclopaedia Iranica: Aran C. E. Bosworth
  24. ^ Hudud al-Alam ("the regions of the world"): a Persian geography, 372 A.H.-982 A.D., translated and explained by V. Minorsky; with the preface by V.V. Barthold. Karachi : Indus Publications, 1980. pg 77
  25. ^ On the Tartars by Ibn al-Athir, from Edward G. Browne, A Literary History of Persia, (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1902), Vol. II, pp. 427-431.
  26. ^ Qazwini, Zakariyya ibn Muhammad. Bayrut : Dār Bayrūt, 1984, pg 284: Original Arabic: آذربیجان: ناحیة واسعة بین قهستان و اران
  27. ^ Shihab al-Din ibn ʻAbd Allah Yaqut ibn ʻAbd Allah al-Hamawi al-Rumi al-Baghdadi, Muʻjam al-buldan, Bayrut : Dar Ṣadir, 1984 Original Arabic under Fahlaw for the first quote: فَهْلَو: بالفتح ثم السكون ولام ويقال فهلة. قال حمزة الأصبهاني في كتاب التنبيه كان كلام الفرس قديماً يجري على خمسة ألسنة وهي الفهلوية والدرية والفارسية والخوزية والسريانية فأما الفهلوية فكان يجري بها كلام الملوك في مجالسهم وهي لغة منسوبة إلى فهلة. وهو اسم يقع على خمسة بلدان أصبهان والري وهمذان وماء نهاوند وأذربيجان، Original Arabic for the second quote: أرانُ: بالفتح وتشديد الراء وألف ونون، إسمَ أعجمي لولاية واسعة وبلاد كثيرة منها جَنزة وهي التي تسميها العامة كَنجة وبرذَعة وشَمكور وبَيلَقان وبين أذربيجان وأزان نهر يقال له الرس كلما جاورهُ من ناحية المغرب والشمال فهو من أران وما كان من جهة المشرق فهو من أذربيجان. Original Arabic for the third quote: بل أذر اسم النار بالفهلوية وبايكان معناه الحافظ والخازن فكان معناه بيت النار أو خازن النار وهذا أشبه بالحق وأحرى به لأن بيوت النار في هذه الناحية كانت كثيرة جداً، وحد أذربيجان من برزذَعة مشرقاً إلى أرزنجان مغرباً ويتصل حدها من جهة الشمال ببلاد الديلم والجيل والطرم وهو إقليم واسع ومن مشهور مدائنها تبريز وهي اليوم قصبتها وأكبر مُدُنها وكانت قصبتها قديما المراغة ومن مدنها خُوَي وسَلماس وأرمية وأردَبيل ومَرَند وغير ذلك،
  28. ^ The geographical part of the Nuzhat-al-qulub composed by Hamd-Allāh Mustawfī of Qazwīn in 740 (1340), edited and translated by G. Le Strange and printed for the trustees of the "E. J. W. Gibb memorial.
  29. ^ Muhammad Husayn Ibn Khalaf Tabrizi, Muʾassasah-ʾi Maṭbu'ati- Faridun-i 'Ilmi Burhan, 1965. Original Persian for Aras: ارس بفتح اول و ثانی و سکون سين بی نقطه نام رود خانه ای است مشهور که از کنار تفليس و مابين آذربايجان و آران می گذرد. Original Persian for Aran: ولایتی است ازآذربایجان که گنجه و بردع از اعمال آن است
  30. ^ Chardin, John. "The travels of Sir John Chardin, by the way of the Black Sea, through the countries of Circassia, Mingrelia, the country of the Abcas, Georgia, Armenia, and Media, into Persia proper: 1643-1713." Voyages and Travels in All Parts of the World. Ed. John Pinkerton. Vol. 9., p. 155. London: Strahan and Preston, 1811 ISBN 37131055371074
  31. ^ William Jones, Esq., The history of the life of Nader Shah, King of, Prinded by J. Richardson, MDCCLXXIII (1773). Some quotes from the book: AZARBIGIAN*, or Media, ARRAN or Atropatia, and ARMENA, or Armenia, are considered by some Eastern Geographers as One Province or Kingdom, and we may, therefore, describe them together. They are bounded on the east by part of Cuhistan, and the Caspian provinces, on the west, by Rum, or the lower Asia; on the north they have Georgia and Circassia, on the south, a canton of Mesopotamia, and Curdistan, part of the ancient Assyria. The most remarkable cities of Azarbigian are; 1. ARDEBIL, considered as sacred by the Persians, for containing the tombs of Sefiaddin and Heider, the venerable ancestors of the Sefi family. 2. TABRIZ, commonly called Tauris, which, in the last century, was a large and beautiful city, but has been much impaired during the late disorders in Persia: it stands at the foot of a mountain, which the Greeks called Orontes, a word cor¬rupted, perhaps, from Orond; and a small river winds through its streets .. The great cities of Arran and Armenia are, GANGIA, and ERIVAN, its Capital, a large but unpleasant town, without any fine edifice in it, or any other ornament than a number of gardens, and vineyards. Some Geographers, and among them the prince of Hamah, place in Armenia the cities which we consider as belonging to Georgia or Gurgistan; these are SHAMCUR, and TEFLIS, a city not large but tolerably elegant: it is washed on the eastern side by the river Ker or Cyrs, and defended on the other sides by strong and beautiful walls. .. SHIRVAN and DAGHESTAN or The country of rocks... The cities of Shirvan are, 1. BACU, a port on the Caspian lake, whence it is called the Sea of Bacu: 2. SHAMAKHI, a city well known to the Russians: and 3. DERBEND or the barrier, which stands at the foot of Mount Caucasus or Keitaf, and commands the Caspian: this place was called by the ancients Caspiæ portæ, by the Turks, Demir Capi, or, the gate of iron, and by the Arabs, Babelabwab or the important passage. It was anciently considered as the boundary of the Persian Empire, and an old king of Persia built to the north of it a vast wall, like that of China, which has been repaired at different times, in order to prevent the incursions of the Khozars, and other savage nations, who infested the rocks between the Caspian and Euxine seas.
  32. ^ A System of Geography by James Bell, published in 1832, Vol. IV, pages 88, 89, 91, 263-264
  33. ^ Extracts from a Memorandum on the Country of Azerbaijan By Keith E. Abbott, Esq., H.M. Consul-General in Persia. [Communicated by the Foreign Office.] Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society of London, Vol. 8, No. 6. (1863 - 1864), pp.275-279.
  34. ^ A Classical Dictionary by Charles Anthon, L.L.D. Published 1888 page 231
  35. ^ (in Russian) Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary. "Azerbeijan". Saint Petersburg, Russia, 1890-1907
  36. ^ Methodist Magazine and Review, Vol. LI., published in 1900, page 209
  37. ^ Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland published in 1902, Chap 3 page 63, Chap 4 page 255-254, Chap 5 page 256
  38. ^ The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)
  39. ^ The New Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia of Religious Knowledge By Johann Jakob Herzog, Philip Schaff, Albert Hauck, published in 1908, page 288
  40. ^ Encyclopedia Britannica, 1911 edition, "Azerbaijan" Azerbaijan in Encyclopaedia Britannica 1911
  41. ^ The History of the London Society for Promoting Christianity Amongst the Jews by Rev. W. T. Gidney, M.A., published in 1908, page 301
  42. ^ Persia: The Land of the Magi by Samuel K. Nweeya, Ph. D, M.D., published in 1913, page 49
  43. ^ The Foreign Doctor: A Biography of Joseph Plumb Cochran, M.D. of Persia by Robert E. Speer, published in 1911, page 16
  44. ^ In dictionaries: F. Steingass: āẕar-bād-gān,āẕar-abād-gūn,āẕar, āẕur,ādar,bāygān,pāy. Dehkhoda: آذربایجان/Âzarbâyjân,آذربایگان/Âzarbâygân,آذربادگان/Âzarbâdegân,آذر/Âzar,آدر/Âdar,بایگان/Bâygân,بادگان/Bâdegân,-پای/pây-,گان-/-gân (جان-/-jân)
  45. ^ [2] 1837 Malte-Brun Map of Persia & Arabia (Iraq, Saudi Arabia, Iran, Jordan )
  46. ^ Map showing the region north of Iran's Caucasus border as Georgia
  47. ^ Richard J. A. Talbert, Barrington atlas of the Greek and Roman world: Map-by-map Directory, Princeton University, Published 2000, Page: 1292
  48. ^ Department of History at The George Washington University
  49. ^ Muriel Atkin, Russia and Iran, 1780-1828. 2nd. ed. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press. 1980. ISBN 0-8166-0924-1, 9780816609246.
  50. ^ George A. Bournoutian, “Two Chronicles on The History of Karabagh: Mirza Jamal Javanshir’s Tarikh-e Karabagh and Mirza Adigozal Beg’s Karabagh-name”, Mazda Publisher, California (2004). Pg XV
  51. ^ V. Minorsky. Caucasica IV. Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, Vol. 15, No. 3. (1953), p. 504
  52. ^ Tadeusz Swietochowski, Russia and Azerbaijan: A Borderland in Transition. ISBN 0-231-07068-3
  53. ^ Encyclopædia Iranica. C.E. Bosworth. Arran.
  54. ^ Encyclopædia Iranica. X. D. Planhol. Azerbaijan. Geography
  55. ^ Ben Fowkes, Ethnicity and ethnic conflict in the post-communist world (Basingstoke: Palgrave, 2002) pg 30
  56. ^ (Bert G. Fragner, ‘Soviet Nationalism’: An Ideological Legacy to the Independent Republics of Central Asia ’ in” in Van Schendel, Willem(Editor) . Identity Politics in Central Asia and the Muslim World: Nationalism, Ethnicity and Labour in the Twentieth Century. London , GBR: I. B. Tauris & Company, Limited, 2001.)
  57. ^ Tadeusz Swietochowski, Russia and Azerbaijan: A Borderland in Transition (New York: Columbia University Press, 1995. pg 16
  58. ^ Tadeusz Swietochowski, Russia and Azerbaijan: A Borderland in Transition (New York: Columbia University Press, 1995. pg 69
  59. ^ Historical Background Vol. 3, Colliers Encyclopedia CD-ROM, 02-28-1996
  60. ^ The Paths of History – Igor M. Diakonoff, Contributor Geoffery Alan Hosking, Published in the year 1999, Cambridge University Press, pg 100
  61. ^ Bartold V.V., "Sochineniia", volume II, part 1, "Vostochnoi Literatury" Publishers, Moscow, 1963, p. 703
  62. ^ a b Michael P. Croissant, "The Armenia-Azerbaijan Conflict: Causes and Implications", Praeger/Greenwood, 1998. pg 61
  63. ^ "Cold War International History Project 1945-46 Iranian Crisis".
  64. ^ Alessandra Galié, Development in Syria, Kurdish Human Rights Project, pg 49
  65. ^ (in Russian) Demoscope Weekly. Alphabetical list of people, living in the Russian empire, 1895.
  66. ^ (in Russian) Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary. "Turks". Saint Petersburg, Russia, 1890-1907
  67. ^ (in Russian) Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary. "Turko-Tatars". Saint Petersburg, Russia, 1890-1907



history

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Jābir ibn Hayyān 721-815 al-Khwārizmī 780-850

Al-Kindi 801-873 Abu Zayd al-Balkhi 850-934 Farabi 872-950

10th

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Ferdowsi 940-1020 Abū Rayḥān al-Bīrūnī 973-1048 Avicenna 980-1037 Abu Nasr Mansur 970-1036 Alhazen 965-1039

11th

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Muhammad al-Idrisi 1099-1160

12th

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13th

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Nasir al-Din al-Tusi 1201-1274

14th

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15th

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16th

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Mulla Sadra 1571-1641

17th

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Mir Damad d.1632


mahdi born 869

minor occultation 874 to 941

Kulayni 864-941

al-Mufid (948-1022)

al-Murtadha (965-1044)

al-Radhi (970-1015)

al-Saduq (918-991)

Qummi, Ali ibn Babwayh (??-940)

Tusi, Abu Ja‘far (995-1067)

Theologians

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Scientists, mathematicians and philosophers

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