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{{Infobox noble|succession=]|predecessor=]|successor=]|reign=1759 (or 1763) - 1806|birth_date=1732|death_date={{Death-date and age|12 June 1806|1732}}|death_place=], ]|noble family=]}} {{Infobox noble|succession=]|predecessor=]|successor=]|reign=1759 (or 1763) - 1806|birth_date=1732|death_date={{Death-date and age|12 June 1806|1732}}|death_place=], ]|noble family=]}}


'''Ibrahim Khalil khan Javanshir''' (1732–1806) was an ]<ref>''Although written in Persian, the work of Mirza Jamal Javanshir (1773/4-1853) is actually a product of Azeri historiography: its author being an Azeri noble of the Javanshir tribe, who began his lengthy career as a scribe in the service of Ebrahim, the Azeri khan of Karabakh''. Robert H. Hewsen. Review of George A. Bournoutian, A History of Qarabagh: An Annotated Translation of Mirza Jamal Javanshir Qarabaghi's Tarikh-e Qarabagh, in Journal of the Society for Armenian Studies, 1995, p. 270</ref><ref>''Writing to his adviser Archimandrite Gaioz, Erekle informed him that he had received a communication from the new Shah ordering him to take part in a campaign against Ibrahim, the Azeri khan of Karabagh, who was also asserting his right to independence from Persia''. Nikolas K. Gvosdev. Imperial policies and perspectives towards Georgia, 1760–1819. St. Martin's Press in association with St. Antony's College, Oxford, 2000. {{ISBN|0-312-22990-9}}, {{ISBN|978-0-312-22990-0}}</ref> ]<ref>''This province was at that time the hereditary fief of the Turkish clan of Djewanshir (...) Its chiefs were called from father to son alternately Panah and Ibrahim Khalil;'' M. Th. Houtsma, E. van Donzel. E.J. . BRILL, p. 727. {{ISBN|90-04-09790-2}}, {{ISBN|978-90-04-09790-2}}</ref><ref>''There were Bayat Turks at Maku, and a further branch of the Qajar in Erivan and Qarabagh, were the Javanshir Turks and the Karachrlu Kurd also lived.'' William Bayne Fisher, Peter Avery, Gavin Hambly. The Cambridge History of Iran. Cambridge University Press, 1991, p.512. {{ISBN|0-521-20095-4}}</ref><ref>''In the following year Taymurazi took Shahverdi-Khan of Ganja under his protection; and defeated the truculent Sharji-Panah, a town crier fugitive from Persia, who had put himself at the head of the Jevanshir Turkomans and who was tyrannizing the Armenian meliks of Karabagh'' William Edward David Allen, Edward Denison Ross. A History of the Georgian People. Taylor & Francis, 1932, p. 197. {{ISBN|0-7100-6959-6}}.</ref><ref>''The late Panah Khan's lineage was of the Javanshir tribe of ], of the clan of Sarujlu, which was a group within the ] tribe, and which in times past came from Turkestan.'' A history of Qarabagh: an annotated translation of Mirza Jamal Javanshir Qarabaghi's Tarikh-e Qarabagh. Transl. George A. Bournoutian. Mazda Publishers, 1994, p. 45. {{ISBN|1-56859-011-3}}.</ref><ref>''Originally a part of the khanate of Ganja, its territory was ruled by five families of Armenian meliks, local princes who had been assigned to the governorship of the territory by the Turkoman lord Jahan-Shah (1437–1467) when it was a frontier region of his empire. In 1747, Panah Javanshir, a local Turkoman chieftain, sized control of the region after the death of Nadir Shah.'' Hewsen, Robert H (2001). Armenia: A Historical Atlas. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 155. {{ISBN|0-226-33228-4}}.</ref> ] of the ] from the ] family, who succeeded his father ] as the ruler of the khanate. '''Ibrahim Khalil khan Javanshir''' (1732–1806) was an ]<ref>''Although written in Persian, the work of Mirza Jamal Javanshir () is actually a product of Azeri historiography: its author being an Azeri noble of the Javanshir tribe, who began his lengthy career as a scribe in the service of Ebrahim, the Azeri khan of Karabakh''. Robert H. Hewsen. Review of George A. Bournoutian, A History of Qarabagh: An Annotated Translation of Mirza Jamal Javanshir Qarabaghi's Tarikh-e Qarabagh, in Journal of the Society for Armenian Studies, 1995, p. 270</ref><ref>''Writing to his adviser Archimandrite Gaioz, Erekle informed him that he had received a communication from the new Shah ordering him to take part in a campaign against Ibrahim, the Azeri khan of Karabagh, who was also asserting his right to independence from Persia''. Nikolas K. Gvosdev. Imperial policies and perspectives towards Georgia, 1760–1819. St. Martin's Press in association with St. Antony's College, Oxford, 2000. {{ISBN|0-312-22990-9}}, {{ISBN|978-0-312-22990-0}}</ref> ]<ref>''This province was at that time the hereditary fief of the Turkish clan of Djewanshir (...) Its chiefs were called from father to son alternately Panah and Ibrahim Khalil;'' M. Th. Houtsma, E. van Donzel. E.J. . BRILL, p. 727. {{ISBN|90-04-09790-2}}, {{ISBN|978-90-04-09790-2}}</ref><ref>''There were Bayat Turks at Maku, and a further branch of the Qajar in Erivan and Qarabagh, were the Javanshir Turks and the Karachrlu Kurd also lived.'' William Bayne Fisher, Peter Avery, Gavin Hambly. The Cambridge History of Iran. Cambridge University Press, 1991, p.512. {{ISBN|0-521-20095-4}}</ref><ref>''In the following year Taymurazi took Shahverdi-Khan of Ganja under his protection; and defeated the truculent Sharji-Panah, a town crier fugitive from Persia, who had put himself at the head of the Jevanshir Turkomans and who was tyrannizing the Armenian meliks of Karabagh'' William Edward David Allen, Edward Denison Ross. A History of the Georgian People. Taylor & Francis, 1932, p. 197. {{ISBN|0-7100-6959-6}}.</ref><ref>''The late Panah Khan's lineage was of the Javanshir tribe of ], of the clan of Sarujlu, which was a group within the ] tribe, and which in times past came from Turkestan.'' A history of Qarabagh: an annotated translation of Mirza Jamal Javanshir Qarabaghi's Tarikh-e Qarabagh. Transl. George A. Bournoutian. Mazda Publishers, 1994, p. 45. {{ISBN|1-56859-011-3}}.</ref><ref>''Originally a part of the khanate of Ganja, its territory was ruled by five families of Armenian meliks, local princes who had been assigned to the governorship of the territory by the Turkoman lord Jahan-Shah (1437–1467) when it was a frontier region of his empire. In 1747, Panah Javanshir, a local Turkoman chieftain, sized control of the region after the death of Nadir Shah.'' Hewsen, Robert H (2001). Armenia: A Historical Atlas. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 155. {{ISBN|0-226-33228-4}}.</ref> ] of the ] from the ] family, who succeeded his father ] as the ruler of the khanate.


== Early life == == Early life ==

Revision as of 03:03, 28 August 2021

Ibrahim Khalil Khan
Khan of Karabakh
Reign1759 (or 1763) - 1806
PredecessorMehrali bey Javanshir
SuccessorMehdigulu Khan Javanshir
Born1732
Died12 June 1806 (1806-06-13) (aged 73)
Shusha, Karabakh Khanate
Noble familyJavanshir clan

Ibrahim Khalil khan Javanshir (1732–1806) was an Azerbaijani Turkic khan of the Karabakh Khanate from the Javanshir family, who succeeded his father Panah Ali khan Javanshir as the ruler of the khanate.

Early life

He was born in c. 1732 in Karabakh. He was among deportees to Astarabad with his father Panah Ali Khan. He returned to Karabakh after Adil Shah issued a firman (decree) recognizing Panah Ali as the new khan. Participating in internal politics of his father, he was married with Hurizad, daughter of Armenian melik of Varanda - Shahnazar II, as a tool of marriage alliance. Panah Ali further wed him with Shahnisa, sister of Nazarali Khan Shahsevan of Ardabil and Tuti, daughter of Shahverdi Khan of Ganja in 1749. He was given as hostage to Fath-Ali Khan Afshar in 1759, who was defeated by Karim Khan Zand later. He was released by Karim Khan in 1759 and was allowed back to Karabakh.

Reign

Sceptre of Ibrahim Khalil Khan, Museum of History of Azerbaijan

He had to contest the khanate with Mehrali bey Javanshir, his younger brother who was left behind by his father Panah Ali Khan prior to his departure to Iran in 1759. Ibrahim Khalil emerged victorious thanks to aid by his new relative Umma Khan of Avar Khanate and forced his brother to flee the region. Later in his reign, Avar and Karabakh khanates coordinated against growing power of Fatali Khan of Quba. Despite their efforts, Shirvan Khanate was invaded by Fatali and Quba's power continued to grow. However later in 1774, combined forces of Amir Hamza of Qaytaq, Muhammad Husayn Khan Mushtaq of Shaki, Muhammed Khan of Gazikumukh Khanate, Rustam of Tabasaran Principality, Ali Sultan of Dzhengutay and other Dagestan forces clashed with Fatali Khan in Battle of Gavdushan plains near Khudat. This was a heavy blow to Fatali Khan's ambitions, he fled scene wounded.

In the 1780s, Ibrahim Khalil Khan emerged as one of the most powerful rulers in the eastern Caucasus. He aspired to bring most of the Muslim-ruled territory from the Caucasus mountains as far south as Tabriz under his sway, but eventually he had to curb his efforts in the face of the rising Qajar power in Iran. He was then allied with the Georgian king Erekle II of Kartli-Kakheti and the two interfered in the affairs of the Erivan khanate and made the Ganja Khanate their puppet. Muhammad Hasan of Ganja was soon arrested by Ibrahim Khalil together his son Agha. However Fatali Khan invaded Karabakh in 1780 by crossing the Kura River, but then Erekle II helped Ibrahimkhalil Khan by sending him a detachment under the command of princes George and David. In August of that year the khan of Quba undertook an unsuccessful campaign again, but in the beginning of 1781 he could penetrate deep into Karabakh and to captured some amount of peasants from there. The alliance waned after Erekle accepted the Russian protectorate in the treaty of Georgievsk in 1783. Ibrahim maintained contact with the Russian authorities, but did not sign any formal treaty.

Campaigns against the Melikdoms

Like his father, Ibrahim Khalil Khan also campaigned against Armenian meliks of Karabakh starting from 1775. Allying with Meliks of Varanda and Khachen, khan campaigned against Melik Yesai of Dizak. In one of those battles, Melik Mirzakhan of Khachen was captured by Yesai and beheaded in 1775. However, after a long siege of Togh, Melik Yesai was captured and strangled in prison in summer of 1781. His nephew, Bakhtam was put in his place by the khan. As next step, khan sent two Armenian assassins - namely Misael bek and his son-in-law Hagop Yuzbashi to kill Melik Mezhlum of Jraberd. However, plot failed and they were captured and executed. Misael's brother Rustam fled the scene and joined Ibrahim Khan's court in Shusha. Being son-in-law of Apres Agha, his wife Vard Khatun was a relative of Nerses V, who was based in Yerits Mankants Monastery and supported by Javad Khan and Ibrahim Khalil Khan as anti-catholicos. His successor, anti-Catholicos Israel (1728–1763) would also side with Ibrahim Khalil in future.

Armenian meliks soon wrote a secret letter to Catherine II on 22 January 1783, inviting her to invade Karabakh and if possible, set a vassal Armenian state in the region. However the plot was uncovered thanks to Allahquli Hasan-Jalalyan, brother of Catholicos Hovhannes (1763-1786) who told Khan about the letters. Catholicos Israel meanwhile seized the letters on their way to Ganja, securing them for Ibrahim Khalil. Using opportunity, Khan seized Melik Mezhlum of Jraberd, Melik Abov of Gulistan, Melik Bakhtam of Dizak and Catholicos Hovhannes (alongside his brothers). Melik Bakhtam was given to Nazarali Khan Shahsevan, with whom he had a grievance, Dizak was annexed to Karabakh.

Melik Abov and Mezhlum, who were imprisoned in the Shusha fortress, later managed to escape. They came to Heraclius II and the head of the Russian garrison in Tbilisi, Colonel Stepan Burnashev, to ask for troops to fight Ibrahim Khan. They were promised a detachment of 4,000 soldiers, which was to be commanded by Prince Demetrius Orbeliani. In September 1787, the troops of Heraclius II and Colonel Burnashev approached Ganja, but at that time the Russian-Turkish war broke out, and Burnashev received an order to immediately return with the troops to the Caucasian line. Heraclius also was forced to turn back. Using opportunity, Ibrahim Khan demanded that Georgia hand over the meliks to him, promising to return three thousand families of Turkics who had fled from Borchali to Karabakh in previous years. Heraclius II was inclined to satisfy the demand of Ibrahim Khan in order to keep him from hostile actions. Meliks Abov and Mezhlum, having learned about the demand of Ibrahim Khan, fled from Tbilisi to Ganja to Javad Khan. Javad Khan, who was at enmity with Ibrahim Khan, warmly welcomed them and gave them a place near Shamkhor for the peasants who would come to them from Karabakh. Other Hasan-Jalalyan brothers - Jalal bek and Daniel bek were arrested in 1791 and executed as well. Meanwhile, Ibrahim Khan elevated another anti-catholicos - Simeon (1794-1810) and established him in Yerits Mankants Monastery, while also supporting anti-Catholicos Israel in Amaras Monastery.

Molla Panah Vagif was famously vizier of Karabakh Khanate

Invasion of Agha Mohammad Khan

In 1795 the ruler of Iran, Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar, attacked the region to bring it again within influence of the Iranian empire. The khans of Ganja, Nakhjavan, and Erivan submitted, but Ibrahim Khan did not. He was defeated in battle and retreated to the fortress of Shusha. After a 31 day long siege from July 8 to August 9, Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar failed to take the fortress and left the region. In a verbal truce, Ibrahim Khan acknowledged Qajar supremacy and was permitted to continue to rule as Khan of Karabakh. In 1796, following Agha Mohammad Khan's return to mainland Persia, Catherine the Great ordered her army to conquer the Caucasus. Ibrahim began negotiating with the Russian commanders and agreed to cooperate with them in exchange for maintaining his rule in Karabakh. Soon after Catherine the Great died, her successor, Paul, abandoned her plans for the region and recalled the Russian troops. Using opportunity, Ibrahim and Heraclius teamed up again, this time to invade Ganja Khanate, since its ruler Javad Khan joined Qajar Army in their raid of Tbilisi. During siege of Ganja, Melik Mezhlum was killed by Apres Agha, father of anti-Catholicos Israel.

In 1797, Aga Mohammad Khan, angered by the betrayal of Ibrahim Khalil Khan and other khans in the Caucasus, attacked and captured Shusha. Agha Mohammad Khan was assassinated in Shusha three days after its capture. Molla Panah Vagif, khan's vizier was captured by Muhammad bey, son of Mehrali bey and claimant to throne after few days. Ibrahim, who had fled to his in-laws in Avar Khanate, then returned to Shusha and gave Aga Mohammad Khan an honourable burial. In order to retain his position and ensure peaceful relations with the shah, he gave one of his daughters to Agha Mohammad Khan's successor to the throne, Fat′h Ali Shah Qajar.

End of reign

During the Russo-Persian War (1804–1813), General Tsitsianov promised that Russia would recognize Ibrahim Khan as khan and agreed that Ibrahim's elder son would succeed his father, and thus an agreement was signed between Russia and Ibrahim Khan on May 26, 1805. Tsitsianov then occupied Shusha and left a Russian garrison stationed there. Tsitsianov's death on 20 February 1806 in Baku and the breakup of the Russian offensive persuaded Ibrahim Khalil Khan, in the summer of 1806, to repudiate his allegiance to the Russians, and resubmit himself to the shah; he then asked the shah for aid in ousting the Russian garrison. As the Persian army approached Shusha, Ibrahim Khan left the fortress and camped outside. On 12 June 1806, the Russians under the command of Dmitry Lisanevich, instigated by Ibrahim Khalil Khan's grandson and fearful of their own vulnerability, attacked the camp and killed Ibrahim Khan, one of his wives, a daughter, and his youngest son. To gain support from the local Muslims, the Russians appointed a son of Ibrahim Khalil, Mehdigulu Khan Javanshir, as khan of Karabakh.

Family

Ibrahim Khalil Khan had several legal wives and temporary wives (mut'ah):

  1. Khanum agha Javanshir — daughter of Nabi Kalantar of Javanshir clan
  2. Tuti khanum Ziyadoghlu-Qajar (b. 1740, m. 1749, d. 1760) — daughter of Shahverdi Khan of Ganja
  3. Khurshid begüm Ziyadoghlu-Qajar (b. 1743, m. 1761) — daughter of Shahverdi Khan of Ganja
  4. Bike (Bakhtika) khanum (b. c. 1744) — daughter of Muhammad IV, khan of Avars
    • Khanlar agha Javanshir (c. 1785-1832) — Colonel of Imperial Russian Army
    • Ahmad agha Javanshir (c. 1793 or c. 1795-died not later than 1851) — Landed nobility
    • Sultanat begüm (?-12 June 1806) — murdered together his father
  5. A daughter of Allahyar bey of Ungutlu tribe
  6. Javahir Khanum (née Sofia Abashidze, m. 1783) — daughter of Eugenius Abashidze, granddaughter of Svimon Abashidze
  7. Shahnisa Khanum — daughter of Badr khan Shahsevan of Ardabil Khanate
  8. Murassah Khanum — daughter of Gulmali bey Sarijali
    • Shahnisa Khanum — married to her second cousin Ali bey b. Mirza Ali, grandson of Behbud Ali bey (brother of Panah Ali Khan)
  9. Tubu Khanum — daughter of Muhammad Husayn Khan Mushtaq of Shaki Khanate
  10. Hurizad Khanum — daughter of Melik Shahnazar II of Varanda
  11. A daughter of Mirza Rabi, vizier of Heraclius II
  12. Khatay Khanum — daughter of Melik Bakhtam of Dizak
    • Husseinquli agha Javanshir (?-before 1844) — Landed nobility
    • Safiquli agha Javanshir (?-after 1862) — Landed nobility

Temporary wives:

  1. Rugan Khanum — an Armenian girl from Nakhichevanik village
  2. Khadija Khanum — an Azerbaijani girl from Bayramlu, Shamshaddil Sultanate
    • Shaykh-Ali agha (?-after 1847) — Landed nobility
  3. Sona Khanum (d. after 1844) — an Armenian girl from Togh village
    • Sulayman agha (?-before 1844) — Landed nobility
  4. Ana Khanum — daughter of Hajji Kerim from Shusha
    • Fatali agha

In popular media

See also

References

  1. Although written in Persian, the work of Mirza Jamal Javanshir (1773/4-1853) is actually a product of Azeri historiography: its author being an Azeri noble of the Javanshir tribe, who began his lengthy career as a scribe in the service of Ebrahim, the Azeri khan of Karabakh. Robert H. Hewsen. Review of George A. Bournoutian, A History of Qarabagh: An Annotated Translation of Mirza Jamal Javanshir Qarabaghi's Tarikh-e Qarabagh, in Journal of the Society for Armenian Studies, 1995, p. 270
  2. Writing to his adviser Archimandrite Gaioz, Erekle informed him that he had received a communication from the new Shah ordering him to take part in a campaign against Ibrahim, the Azeri khan of Karabagh, who was also asserting his right to independence from Persia. Nikolas K. Gvosdev. Imperial policies and perspectives towards Georgia, 1760–1819. St. Martin's Press in association with St. Antony's College, Oxford, 2000. ISBN 0-312-22990-9, ISBN 978-0-312-22990-0
  3. This province was at that time the hereditary fief of the Turkish clan of Djewanshir (...) Its chiefs were called from father to son alternately Panah and Ibrahim Khalil; M. Th. Houtsma, E. van Donzel. E.J. Brill's first encyclopaedia of Islam 1913–1936. BRILL, p. 727. ISBN 90-04-09790-2, ISBN 978-90-04-09790-2
  4. There were Bayat Turks at Maku, and a further branch of the Qajar in Erivan and Qarabagh, were the Javanshir Turks and the Karachrlu Kurd also lived. William Bayne Fisher, Peter Avery, Gavin Hambly. The Cambridge History of Iran. Cambridge University Press, 1991, p.512. ISBN 0-521-20095-4
  5. In the following year Taymurazi took Shahverdi-Khan of Ganja under his protection; and defeated the truculent Sharji-Panah, a town crier fugitive from Persia, who had put himself at the head of the Jevanshir Turkomans and who was tyrannizing the Armenian meliks of Karabagh William Edward David Allen, Edward Denison Ross. A History of the Georgian People. Taylor & Francis, 1932, p. 197. ISBN 0-7100-6959-6.
  6. The late Panah Khan's lineage was of the Javanshir tribe of Dizak, of the clan of Sarujlu, which was a group within the Bahmanli tribe, and which in times past came from Turkestan. A history of Qarabagh: an annotated translation of Mirza Jamal Javanshir Qarabaghi's Tarikh-e Qarabagh. Transl. George A. Bournoutian. Mazda Publishers, 1994, p. 45. ISBN 1-56859-011-3.
  7. Originally a part of the khanate of Ganja, its territory was ruled by five families of Armenian meliks, local princes who had been assigned to the governorship of the territory by the Turkoman lord Jahan-Shah (1437–1467) when it was a frontier region of his empire. In 1747, Panah Javanshir, a local Turkoman chieftain, sized control of the region after the death of Nadir Shah. Hewsen, Robert H (2001). Armenia: A Historical Atlas. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 155. ISBN 0-226-33228-4.
  8. ^ Ismayilov, Eldar. "The Khans of Karabakh: The Elder Line by Generations". The Caucasus & Globalization.
  9. ^ Vadim Nikolayevich Leviatov, Очерки из истории Азербайджана в XVIII веке , Baku, 1948, p.112
  10. Atkin, Muriel (Winter–Spring 1979). "The Strange Death of Ibrahim Khalil Khan of Qarabagh". Iranian Studies. 12 (1/2): 79–107. doi:10.1080/00210867908701551. JSTOR 4310310.
  11. Raffi, 1835-1888. (2010). The five melikdoms of Karabagh, (1600-1827). Melkonian, Ara Stepan. London: Taderon Press. ISBN 978-1-903656-57-0. OCLC 670483701.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  12. BOURNOUTIAN, GEORGE. "EBRAHÈM KHALÈL KHAN JAVANSHER". Encyclopedia Iranica. Retrieved 2011-11-04.
  13. "History of Azerbaijan" Encyclopædia Britannica Online:
  14. Abbas-gulu Aga Bakikhanov. Golestan-i Iram
  15. Bournoutian, George A. (2016). The 1820 Russian Survey of the Khanate of Shirvan: A Primary Source on the Demography and Economy of an Iranian Province prior to its Annexation by Russia. Gibb Memorial Trust. p. 4. ISBN 978-1909724808.
  16. Tapper, Richard. (1997). Frontier nomads of Iran : a political and social history of the Shahsevan. New York, NY, USA: Cambridge University Press. pp. 123–124. ISBN 0-585-03973-9. OCLC 42854663.
  17. Interview with Manafov
  18. Hökmdarin taleyi, retrieved 2020-08-24
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