Khanates of the Iranian Azerbaijan

Iran's khanates in the Caucasus and the Iranian Azerbaijan, 18th-19th centuries.[1]

The Khanates of the Iranian Azerbaijan were various principalities established by Iran on their territories in the Iranian Azerbaijan from the late Safavid to the Qajar dynasty, as opposed to those they established to the north of the Aras river (see; Khanates of the Caucasus). The Khanates were mostly ruled by Khans of Turkic Azerbaijanis origin.[2]

The following khanates ended up as part of Qajar Persia and today's Iran:

See also

Notes

  1. According to one source, "In Safavi times, Azerbaijan was applied to all the muslim-ruled khanates of the eastern Caucasian as well as to the area south of the Araz River as fas as the Qezel Uzan River, the latter region being approximately the same as the modern Iranian ostans of East and West Azerbaijan." Muriel Atkin, Russia and Iran, 1780-1828. 2nd. ed. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press Press, 2008, ISBN 0 521 58336 5
  2. World and Its Peoples: Middle East, Western Asia, and Northern Africa. Marshall Cavendish Corporation, 2006. ISBN 0761475710. Стр. 751.
    The Azeris.
    In a series of wars with Persia at the beginning of the nineteenth century, Russia gained the Azeri khanates north of the Aras River, which still forms the frontier between Azerbaijan and Iran.
  3. Tabriz Khanate on azerbaijans.com
  4. Urmia Khanate on azerbaijans.com
  5. Ardabil Khanate on azerbaijans.com
  6. Khoy Khanate on azerbaijans.com
  7. Sarab Khanate on azerbaijans.com
  8. Maku Khanate on azerbaijans.com
  9. Karadakh/Garadagh Khanate on azerbaijans.com
  10. Marageh/Maraqa Khanate on azerbaijans.com
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