A ghazi ( Arabic : غازي , Arabic pronunciation: [ɣaːziː] , plural ġuzāt ) is an individual who participated in ghazw ( غزو , ġazw ), meaning military expeditions or raids. The latter term was applied in early Islamic literature to expeditions led by the Islamic prophet Muhammad , and later taken up by Turkic military leaders to describe their wars of conquest.
65-548: [REDACTED] Look up ghazi in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Ghazi or Gazi (Arabic: غازى ), a title given to Muslim warriors or champions and used by several Ottoman Sultans, may refer to: Ghazi (warrior) , an Islamic term for the Muslim soldier who come wounded from battle. People [ edit ] Given name [ edit ] Ghazi of Iraq (1912–1939), King of
130-519: A case of military operation against Turkish soil in the Syrian Civil War , which was accepted. On 6 February 2023, the city and nearby areas were devastated by catastrophic earthquakes . Around 900 buildings collapsed and 10,777 other buildings were heavily damaged in the city, which have been slated for demolition. Historic buildings including the Gaziantep Castle , the Şirvani Mosque and
195-401: A fight and gave him the keys to the castle on 20 August. The next day, 21 August, Selim set up camp outside the city "with great majesty and pomp" and held meetings with local military commanders to discuss strategy for the upcoming battle. The fateful Battle of Marj Dabiq took place just days later, on 24 August. Gaziantep, although not an active battle site, thus played a strategic role in
260-648: A form of warfare, the razzia was then mimicked by the Christian states of Iberia in their relations with the taifa states; rough synonyms and similar tactics are the Iberian cavalgada and the Anglo-French chevauchée . The word razzia was used in French colonial context particularly for raids to plunder and capture slaves from among the people of Western and Central Africa , also known as rezzou when practiced by
325-649: A general decline in commerce in the eastern Mediterranean region that caused a general economic downturn in the region in the early 1500s. Only around the 1530s, when the Ottoman authorities turned their attention to the territories recently conquered from Dulkadir, do cadastral records indicate renewed prosperity in Gaziantep. An important event was Süleyman the Magnificent 's successful Mesopotamian campaign against Safavid Iran in 1534-36 , which took Baghdad and increased
390-499: A period of relative peace and stability under his brother and successor Alaüddevle . Alaüddevle appears to have considered Gaziantep an important possession and commissioned several constructions in the city, including a reservoir and a large mosque in the middle of town. The city's fortress was also renovated, completed in 1481. These repairs were likely ordered by the Mamluk sultan Qaitbay during his tour of northern Syria in 1477; his name
455-679: A significant trade route within the Ottoman Empire. Armenians were active in manufacturing, agriculture production and, most notably, trade, and became the wealthiest ethnic group in the city, until their wealth was confiscated during the Armenian genocide. At the beginning of his campaign against the Mamluks in 1516 , the Ottoman sultan Selim I brought his army to Gaziantep en route to Syria. The city's Mamluk governor, Yunus Beg, submitted to Selim without
520-929: A similar meaning to Mujahid or "one who struggles". The verbal noun of ġazā is ġazw or ġazawān , with the meaning 'raiding'. A derived singulative in ġazwah refers to a single battle or raid. The term ghāzī dates to at least the Samanid period , where he appears as a mercenary and frontier fighter in Khorasan and Transoxiana . Later, up to 20,000 of them took part in the Indian campaigns of Mahmud of Ghazni . Ghāzī warriors depended upon plunder for their livelihood, and were prone to brigandage and sedition in times of peace. The corporations into which they organized themselves attracted adventurers, zealots and religious and political dissidents of all ethnicities. In time, though, soldiers of Turkic ethnicity predominated, mirroring
585-651: A town Dera Ghazi Khan District Turkey [ edit ] Gaziantep , a city in Turkey Gazi University Other uses [ edit ] PNS Ghazi , a Pakistan Navy submarine sunk in the Indo-Pakistani War of 1971, formerly known as USS Diablo (SS-479) The Ghazi Attack , also known as Ghazi , a 2017 Indian war film See also [ edit ] Gazi (disambiguation) Gaza (disambiguation) Khasi (disambiguation) Razzia (disambiguation) Topics referred to by
650-808: A town in Greece Iran [ edit ] Ghazi, Iran , a city in North Khorasan Province Gazi, Hormozgan , a village in Hormozgan Province, Iran Ghazi Rural District , an administrative subdivision of North Khorasan Province, Iran Gazi, Sistan and Baluchestan , a village in Sistan and Baluchestan Province, Iran Kosovo [ edit ] Gazimestan , a memorial site and monument dedicated to Gazi Evrenos in Pristina Pakistan [ edit ] Ghazi, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa ,
715-509: Is Fatma Şahin , who had previously served as the minister of family and social policies in the third cabinet of Erdoğan. Gaziantep is famous for its regional specialities: copperware and "Yemeni" sandals, specific to the region, are two examples. The city is an economic centre for Southeastern and Eastern Turkey. The number of large industrial businesses established in Gaziantep comprise four percent of Turkish industry in general, while small industries comprise six percent. Also, Gaziantep has
SECTION 10
#1732844315967780-452: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Ghazi (warrior) In the context of the wars between Russia and the Muslim peoples of the Caucasus , starting as early as the late 18th century's Sheikh Mansur 's resistance to Russian expansion, the word usually appears in the form gazavat ( газават ). In English-language literature,
845-603: Is inscribed above the entrance portal, perhaps symbolically marking his territory. The end of the Dulkadir principality came around 1515. Alaüddevle refused to fight alongside the Ottomans at the Battle of Chaldiran in 1514. The Ottomans used this as a pretext to overthrow him, and in June 1515 he was executed. As Alaüddevle had been a Mamluk vassal, the Mamluks considered this an affront, and
910-663: Is one of the leading producers of machined carpets in the world. It exported approximately US$ 700 million of machine-made carpets in 2006. There are over 100 carpet facilities in the Gaziantep Organized Industrial Zone. With its extensive olive groves, vineyards, and pistachio orchards, Gaziantep is one of the important agricultural and industrial centres of Turkey. Gaziantep is the centre of pistachio cultivation in Turkey , producing 60,000 metric tons (59,000 long tons; 66,000 short tons) in 2007, and lends its name to
975-680: Is the probable site of the Hellenistic city of Antiochia ad Taurum ("Antiochia in the Taurus Mountains"). During its early history, Aintab was largely a fortress overshadowed by the city of Dülük , some 12 km to the north. Aintab came to prominence after an earthquake in the 14th century devastated Dülük. Following the Muslim conquest of the Levant , the region passed to the Umayyads in 661 AD and
1040-815: The Abbasids in 750. It was ravaged several times during the Arab–Byzantine wars . After the disintegration of the Abbasid dynasty, the city was ruled successively by the Tulunids , the Ikhshidids , and the Hamdanids . In 962, it was recaptured by the Byzantines, upon the expansion led by Nikephoros II Phokas . After Afshin Bey captured the fortress in 1067, Aintab fell to Seljuk rule and
1105-619: The Armenian community. In the 19th century, considerable American Protestant Christian missionary activity occurred in Aintab. In particular, Central Turkey College was founded in 1874 by the American Mission Board and largely served the Armenian community. The Armenians were systemically slaughtered during the Hamidian massacres in 1895 and later the Armenian genocide in 1915. Consequently,
1170-558: The Battle of Manzikert these incursions intensified, and the region's people would see the ghāzī corporations coalesce into semi- chivalric fraternities, with the white cap and the club as their emblems. The height of the organizations would come during the Mongol conquest when many of them fled from Persia and Turkistan into Anatolia. As organizations, the ghazi corporations were fluid, reflecting their popular character, and individual ghāzī warriors would jump between them depending upon
1235-591: The Gaziantep Province , in the westernmost part of Turkey 's Southeastern Anatolia Region and partially in the Mediterranean Region . It is located approximately 185 km (115 mi) east of Adana and 97 km (60 mi) north of Aleppo , Syria and situated on the Sajur River . The city is thought to be located on the site of ancient Antiochia ad Taurum and is near ancient Zeugma . As of
1300-716: The Liberation Mosque were also heavily damaged. The city is located on the Aintab plateau . Gaziantep has a hot-summer Mediterranean climate ( Köppen : Csa , Trewartha : Cs ), with very hot, dry summers and cool, wet and often snowy winters. According to 1966 data, on average, Gaziantep experiences 4.6 snowy days per winter with 10 days of snow cover, along with 2.5 days of hail. Highest recorded temperature: 44.0 °C (111.2 °F) on 29 July 2000 and 14 August 2023 Lowest recorded temperature: −17.5 °C (0.5 °F) on 15 January 1950 The current mayor of Gaziantep
1365-450: The Tuareg . The word was adopted from ġaziya of Algerian Arabic vernacular and later became a figurative name for any act of pillage, with its verb form razzier . Ghazi ( Arabic : غازي , ġāzī ) is an Arabic word, the active participle of the verb ġazā , meaning 'to carry out a military expedition or raid'; the same verb can also mean 'to strive for' and Ghazi can thus share
SECTION 20
#17328443159671430-513: The ghazw often appears as razzia , a borrowing through French from Maghrebi Arabic . In modern Turkish , gazi is used to refer to veterans , and also as a title for Turkic Muslim champions such as Ertuğrul and Osman I . In pre-Islamic Bedouin culture, ghazw[a] was a form of limited warfare verging on brigandage that avoided head-on confrontations and instead emphasized raiding and looting, usually of livestock (see cattle raiding ). The Umayyad -period Bedouin poet al-Kutami wrote
1495-738: The ghazw' s function was to weaken the enemy's defenses in preparation for his eventual conquest and subjugation. Because the typical ghazw raiding party often did not have the size or strength to seize military or territorial objectives, this usually meant sudden attacks on weakly defended targets (e.g. villages) with the intent of demoralizing the enemy and destroying material which could support their military forces. Though Islam's rules of warfare offered protection to non-combatants such as women, monastics and peasants in that they could not be slain, their property could still be looted or destroyed, and they themselves could be abducted and enslaved ( Cambridge History of Islam , p. 269): A good source on
1560-558: The terrorist attacks on Paris in November 2015 , the Islamic State group is said to have referred to its actions as "ghazwa". In modern Turkey, gazi is used to refer to veterans. 19 September is celebrated as Veterans Day in Turkey. Gaziantep Gaziantep , historically Aintab and still informally called Antep , is a major city in south-central Turkey. It is the capital of
1625-431: The 2021 census, the Gaziantep province (Metropolitan municipality) was home to 2,130,432 inhabitants, of whom 1,775,904 lived in the metropolitan area made of two (out of three) urban districts of Şahinbey and Şehitkamil , as Oğuzeli is not conurbated. It is the sixth-most populous city in Turkey. Gaziantep is a diverse city inhabited mostly by ethnic Turks and a significant minority of Kurds and Syrian refugees . It
1690-676: The Central Turkey College was transferred to Aleppo in 1916. After the First World War and Armistice of Mudros , Gaziantep was occupied by the United Kingdom on 17 December 1918, and it was transferred to France on 5 November 1919. The French Armenian Legion was also involved in occupation. In April 1920 irregular Turkish troops known as Kuva-yi Milliye besieged the city , but the 10-month-long battle resulted in French victory. Around 6,000 Turkish civilians were killed in
1755-402: The French occupation in 1921, Gaziantep was relatively peaceful. In the short term, though, Gaziantep was still reeling from the instability before (and after) the Ottoman conquest. During that period, Gaziantep had suffered from "depredation", as well as fear caused by political uncertainty. Besides political conflict, the city's economic slump at this time can also be partly attributed to
1820-436: The French … seems to have been as much the organised struggle of a group of genocide profiteers seeking to hold onto their loot as it was a fight against an occupying force. The resistance … sought to make it impossible for the Armenian repatriates to remain in their native towns, terrorising them [again] to make them flee. In short, not only did the local … landowners, industrialists, and civil-military bureaucratic elites lead to
1885-765: The Kingdom of Iraq Prince Ghazi bin Muhammad (born 1966), Jordanian prince and academic Ghazi Aridi (born 1954), Lebanese politician Gazi Evrenos (fl. 1345–1417), Ottoman military commander Ghazi Abdul Rahman Al Gosaibi (1940–2010), Saudi Arabian politician, technocrat and novelist Ghazi Honeini (born 1995), Lebanese footballer Gazi Husrev-beg (1480–1541), Bosnian bey Ghazi Khan , Baloch mercenary in Multan Ghazi Saiyyad Salar Masud (1014-1034), Ghaznavid army general Ghazi Muhammad (1793–1832), first imam of Dagestan, autonomous state of
1950-481: The Mamluk period, Gaziantep was then seen more as part of northern Syria than as part of Anatolia. The area was "culturally mixed", and many locals were bilingual in Turkish and Arabic (as well as other languages). Gaziantep's cultural and economic ties were mostly with Aleppo, which was a major international center of trade. At some point in the 1530s, Gaziantep was moved into the beglerbeglik of Dulkadir, whose capital
2015-409: The Mamluk sultan Qansuh al-Ghawri mobilized an army and marched north towards Aleppo. The conflict over the region meant that in Gaziantep, anxieties about the fate of the city and its surroundings must have been high. Later court records from the early 1540s provide documentary evidence of "dislocation and loss of population" as people fled; this may have been more pronounced in rural areas than in
Ghazi - Misplaced Pages Continue
2080-412: The Ottoman conquest of the Mamluk sultanate. The Ottoman victory at Marj Dabiq had profound consequences for Gaziantep, although its inhabitants had no way of knowing at the time. For the first time in almost 1,000 years, Gaziantep was located in the middle of an empire rather than a contested border region. It lost its strategic importance, but also its vulnerability to attack. For four centuries, until
2145-536: The Ottoman dynasty Abdul Rashid Ghazi (1964–2007), Islamic fundamentalist and Chancellor Faridia University Moosa Ghazi , (1938–2003), Pakistani footballer Abid Ghazi , (1935–2013), Pakistani footballer Places [ edit ] Afghanistan [ edit ] Ghazi Stadium , multi-purpose stadium in Kabul Greece [ edit ] Gazi, Athens , a neighborhood in Athens, Greece Gazi, Crete ,
2210-571: The Prophet's journeys from Medina, whether to make peace treaties and preach Islam to the tribes, to go on ʽumrah , to pursue enemies who attacked Medina, or to engage in the nine battles. Muhammad participated in 27 Ghazwa. The first Ghazwa he participated in was the Invasion of Waddan in August 623, he ordered his followers to attack a Quraysh caravan. When performed within the context of Islamic warfare,
2275-649: The Russian Federation Ghazi Ajil al-Yawer (born 1958), former President of Iraq Surname [ edit ] Ahmad ibn Ibrahim al-Ghazi (1506-1543), Imam and General of the Adal Empire. Badr Al Din Abu Ghazi (1920–1983), Egyptian art critic and writer Emad Abu Ghazi (born 1955), Egyptian scholar Ertuğrul Gazi (died c. 1280), father of Osman Gazi Habibullah Ghazi (1891–1929), Emir of Afghanistan Osman Gazi (1299-1326), founder of
2340-628: The Russian military operations declared a gazawat (understood as holy war) against the Russian Orthodox invasion. Although it is not known for certain, it is believed that Dagestani Islamic scholar Muhammad al-Yaraghi was the ideologist of this holy war. In 1825, a congress of ulema in the village of Yarag declared gazawat against the Russians. Its first leader was Ghazi Muhammad ; after his death, Imam Shamil would eventually continue it. After
2405-434: The Turkish word for pistachio , Antep fıstığı , meaning "Antep nut". Gaziantep is the main centre for pistachio processing in Turkey, with some 80% of the country's pistachio processing (such as shelling, packaging, exporting, and storage) being done in the city. "Antep fıstığı" is a protected geographical indication in Turkey; it was registered under this status in 2000. In 2009, the largest enclosed shopping centre in
2470-467: The acquisition of Mamluks, Turkic slaves in the Mamluk retinues and guard corps of the caliphs and emirs and in the ranks of the ghazi corporation, some of whom would ultimately rise to military and later political dominance in various Muslim states. In the west, Turkic ghāzīs made continual incursions along the Byzantine frontier zone , finding in the akritai ( akritoi ) their Greek counterparts. After
2535-465: The base of the castle upgrades the beauty and accessibility to the castle and to the surrounding copper workshops. New restaurants and tourist-friendly businesses are moving into the area. In comparison with some other regions of Turkey, tourists are still a novelty in Gaziantep and the locals make them very welcome. Many students studying the English language are willing to be guides for tourists. Gaziantep
2600-548: The beginnings of their state: Ottoman historian Ahmedi in his work explain the meaning of Ghazi: A Ghazi is the instrument of the religion of Allah, a servant of God who purifies the earth from the filth of polytheism. The Ghazi is the sword of God, he is the protector and the refuge of the believers. If he becomes a martyr in the ways of God, do not believe that he has died, he lives in beatitude with Allah, he has eternal life. The first nine Ottoman chiefs all used Ghazi as part of their full throne name (as with many other titles,
2665-460: The case in Gaziantep – tax rates in 1536 were significantly lower than the rates in 1520, which she assumes were the pre-Ottoman rates. The rates went up again in the 1543 survey, which she interprets as the Ottomans raising taxes again in the meantime. The Dulkadir emirate did not simply go away immediately after the Ottoman victory at Marj Dabiq. It stuck around as an Ottoman vassal until 1522, when
Ghazi - Misplaced Pages Continue
2730-494: The city between 1261 and 1271, 1272–1280, 1281–1299, 1317–1341, 1353–1378, 1381–1389. It was unsuccessfully besieged by the Dulkadir leader Sevli Beg in 1390. Although the Mamluks and their Dulkadirid vassals could control the city from 1395 until the Ottoman conquest in 1516, the city was besieged by Timur in 1400, and then in 1420 by the Ak Koyunlu leader Kara Yusuf . These attacks all caused destruction and suffering among
2795-621: The city itself. The Ottoman Empire captured Gaziantep just before the Battle of Marj Dabiq in 1516, under the reign of Sultan Selim I . In the Ottoman period, Aintab was a sanjak centred initially in the Dulkadir Eyalet (1516–1818), and later in the Aleppo vilayet (1908–1918). It was also a kaza in the Aleppo vilayet (1818–1908). The city established itself as a centre for commerce due to its location straddling trade routes. Although it
2860-620: The conduct of the traditional ghazw raid are the medieval Islamic jurists, whose discussions as to which conduct is allowed and which is forbidden in the course of warfare reveal some of the practices of this institution. One such source is Averroes ' Bidāyat al-Mujtahid wa-Nihāyat al-Muqtasid (translated in Peters, Jihad in Classical and Modern Islam: A Reader , Chapter 4). In the 19th century, Muslim fighters in North Caucasus who were resisting
2925-585: The field against non-Moslem enemies; thus it was conferred on Osman Pasha after his famous defence of Plevna in Bulgaria and on Mustafa Kemal Pasha (later known as Atatürk) for leading the victory in the Battle of the Sakarya . Some Muslim rulers (in Afghanistan) personally used the subsidiary style Padshah-i-Ghazi . Ghazwah , which literally means "campaigns", is typically used by biographers to refer to all
2990-423: The government might have been applying more strict scrutiny as their control increased. Part of this was deliberate – the Ottomans had a policy of lowering taxes in recently conquered territories, both to placate locals and to provide an economic stimulus to help war-torn areas recover. Later, as their control solidified, the authorities would raise taxes again. According to Leslie Peirce , this seems to have been
3055-480: The honorific title of ghāzī was assumed by those Muslim rulers who showed conspicuous success in extending the domains of Islam, and eventually the honorific became exclusive to them, much as the Roman title imperator became the exclusive property of the supreme ruler of the Roman state and his family. The Ottomans were probably the first to adopt this practice, and in any case the institution of ghazw reaches back to
3120-554: The largest organised industrial area in Turkey and holds first position in exports and imports. The city is the centre of the green olive oil-based Nizip Soap industry. Traditionally, commerce in Gaziantep was centre in covered markets known as 'Bedesten' or 'Hans', the best known of which are the Zincirli Bedesten, Hüseyin Pasha Bedesten and Kemikli Bedesten. Gaziantep also has a developing tourist industry. Development around
3185-443: The last Dulkadir ruler "resisted discipline by the Ottoman administration". The Ottomans had him executed and officially dismantled the Dulkadir principality, annexing its territories to the empire to form the beglerbeglik of Dulkadir . Despite being part of the former Dulkadir territories, though, the sanjak of Gaziantep was initially put under the beglerbeglik of Aleppo instead of Dulkadir. This indicates how, just as in
3250-464: The late 1460s, when the Dulkadir prince Şehsuvar rebelled against the Mamluks. Mamluk forces captured Aintab in May 1468, driving out Şehsuvar's forces; a report by the governor of Aleppo indicates that resistance had been fierce. Just a month later, Şehsuvar recaptured Aintab after four "engagements" with Mamluk forces. After Şehsuvar's final defeat and public execution by the Mamluks in 1473, Gaziantep enjoyed
3315-488: The local population. But at the same time, the city was "acquiring a reputation as a cultured urban center". Badr al-Din al-Ayni , an Aintab native who became a successful diplomat, judge, and historian under the Mamluks, wrote at the end of the 1300s that the city was called "little Bukhara " because so many scholars came to study there. Ayni also left a firsthand account of the suffering caused during Sevli Beg's siege in 1390. Another rough patch for Aintab's people came in
SECTION 50
#17328443159673380-535: The nomination was added even though it did not fit the office), and often afterwards. However, it never became a formal title within the ruler's formal style, unlike Sultan ul-Mujahidin , used by Sultan Murad Khan II Khoja-Ghazi, 6th Sovereign of the House of Osman (1421–1451), styled 'Abu'l Hayrat, Sultan ul-Mujahidin, Khan of Khans, Grand Sultan of Anatolia and Rumelia, and of the Cities of Adrianople and Philippolis. Because of
3445-420: The oft-quoted verses: "Our business is to make raids on the enemy, on our neighbor and our own brother, in the event we find none to raid but a brother." William Montgomery Watt hypothesized that Muhammad found it useful to divert this continuous internecine warfare toward his enemies, making it the basis of his war strategy; according to Watt, the celebrated battle of Badr started as one such razzia . As
3510-515: The political legitimacy that would accrue to those bearing this title, Muslim rulers vied amongst themselves for preeminence in the ghāziya , with the Ottoman Sultans generally acknowledged as excelling all others in this feat: Ghazi was also used as a title of honor in the Ottoman Empire, generally translated as the Victorious, for military officers of high rank, who distinguished themselves in
3575-399: The prestige and success of a particular emir , rather like the mercenary bands around western condottiere . It was from these Anatolian territories conquered during the ghazw that the Ottoman Empire emerged, and in its legendary traditions it is said that its founder, Osman I , came forward as a ghāzī thanks to the inspiration of Shaikh Ede Bali. In later periods of Islamic history
3640-634: The process. The French made the last attempt to revive the Armenian community in the city during the Siege of Aintab , where the Armenians who fled the genocide were promised their homes back in their native lands. However, on 25 December 1921, the Treaty of Ankara was signed, and as a result, the French evacuated the city. According to Ümit Kurt , born in modern-day Gaziantep and an academic at Harvard's Center for Middle East Studies, "The famous battle of Aintab against
3705-435: The resistance movement, but they also financed it to cleanse Aintab of Armenians." The same Turkish families who made their wealth through the expropriation of Armenians in 1915 and 1921/1922 continued to dominate the city's politics through the one-party period of the Republic of Turkey . In 2013, Turkey, a member state of NATO , requested deployment of MIM-104 Patriot missiles to Gaziantep to be able to respond faster in
3770-573: The same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Ghazi . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Ghazi&oldid=1256631499 " Categories : Disambiguation pages Place name disambiguation pages Disambiguation pages with surname-holder lists Bengali Muslim surnames Hidden categories: Articles containing Arabic-language text Short description
3835-417: The security of trade routes in Gaziantep's region. As with the earlier economic downturn, the renewed prosperity in Gaziantep in the 1530s was part of a broader regional pattern of economic growth during this period. As a disclaimer – some of this apparent economic growth may be an artifact of using tax documents as a source. Tax assessors may have simply been doing more accurate counts in later surveys, or
3900-484: Was Maraş . Even though it was now administratively part of Dulkadir, Gaziantep remained commercially more connected to Aleppo. The 17th-century Turkish traveller Evliya Çelebi noted it had 3,900 shops and two bedesten s. In 1818, Gaziantep was moved back into the Aleppo province. By the end of the 19th century, Aintab had a population of about 45,000, two-thirds of whom were Muslim—largely Turkish, but also partially Arab. A large community of Christians lived in
3965-416: Was administered by Seljuk emirs of Damascus. One of these emirs, Tutush I appointed Armenian noble Thoros of Edessa as the governor of the region. It was captured by the Crusaders and united to the Maras Seigneurship in the County of Edessa in 1098. The region continued to be ruled by independent or vassalized Armenian lords, such as Kogh Vasil . It reverted to the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm in 1150,
SECTION 60
#17328443159674030-473: Was controlled by the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia between 1155–1157 and 1204–1206 and captured by the Zengids in 1172 and the Ayyubids in 1181. It was retaken by the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm in 1218. With the turn of the 13th-century, Dülük became one of Aintab's dependencies according to geographer Yaqut al-Hamawi . In the next century, Aintab was the capital of its district and a town with fine markets much frequented by merchants and travellers, while Dülük
4095-405: Was controlled by the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia only between 1155–1157 and 1204–1206, for most of the last two millennia, Gaziantep hosted a large Armenian community. Armenians played a significant role in the city's history, culture, welfare, and prosperity. These communities no longer exist in the city due to the Hamidian massacres in 1895 and the Armenian genocide in 1915. Gaziantep served
4160-430: Was historically populated by Turkmens , Armenians , Jews , and a plethora of other ethnic groups . In February 2023, the city was heavily damaged by the 2023 Turkey–Syria earthquake . Due to the city's contact with various ethnic groups and cultures throughout its history, the name of the city has many variants and alternatives, such as: The several theories for the origin of the current name include: Gaziantep
4225-536: Was in ruins, according to Abulfeda . Still, Aintab continued to be hotly contested throughout these centuries. It was besieged by the Mongols in 1270. It repeatedly changed hands between the Ilkhanate and the Mamluk Sultanate or the Dulkadirids , a Turkoman vassal state of the Mamluks. Gaziantep was near the southern frontier of the Dulkadir emirate, and on several occasions it slipped out of their control. The Ilkhans ruled over it between 1260 and 1261, 1271–1272, 1280–1281 and 1299–1317. The Mamluks controlled
#966033