Sheikh Said Rebellion

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Sheikh Said Rebellion
Location
Result Mosul province is assigned to British Mandate of Mesopotamia
Combatants
Republic of Turkey Sheikh Said Piran

Sheikh Said Rebellion is Sheikh Said Piran and a group of Hamidieh soldiers (Azadî group) beginning in 1924 and escalating until 1927.

Contents

The Azadî was dominated by officers from the former Hamidiye, a Kurdish tribal militia established under the Ottomans to deal with the Armenians and sometimes even to keep the Kizilbash under control. According to British intelligence reports, the Azadî officers had eleven grievances. Apart from inevitable Kurdish cultural demands and complaints of Turkish maltreatment, this list also detailed fears of imminent mass deportations of Kurds. They also registered annoyance that the name Kurdistan did not appear on maps, at restrictions on the Kurdish language and on Kurdish education and objections to alleged Turkish economic exploitation of Kurdish areas, at the expense of Kurds.

It was Sheikh Said, reportedly, who convinced Hamidiye commanders to support a fight for Kurdish independence. According to Olson, the Kurdish officers expressed their objectives in November 1924 as being: to deliver the Kurds from Turkish oppression; to give Kurds freedom and opportunity to develop their country.

Certain among you have taken as a pretext for revolt the abuse by the governmental administration, some others have invoked the defence of the Caliphate, but you are all united on one point: to create an independent Kurdistan.[1][2]

British assistance was seek realizing that Kurdistan could not stand alone.[3]

As a last resort, Mustafa Kemal was prepared to use military force regarding Mosul, but he believed that Mosul can be solved diplomatically. Treaty of Lausanne did solve the problem of Mosul province, and leave it to League of Nations. September 1925, A council at League of Nations decided to advise leaving the Mosul to British Mandate of Mesopotamia. Turkey decided to resist this advice and prevent a final decision (award it to Britain). The boarder between Turkish forces (Turkey) and British forces (British Mandate of Mesopotamia) was based on Brussels line, and beginning with November 1924, the escalating rebellion was a treat to prove that Brussels line is not the correct line, which left the Kurds divided.

Sheikh Said appealed to all the Kurdish tribes to join in the rebellion being planned. The tribes which actually participated were mostly Zaza (Dimli) speaking Kurds. However the Xormak and Lolan tribes were the most active and effective opponents of this rebellion. Mindful of the depredations of the Hamidiye against them (especially the Hamidiye commanded by Xalid Beg Cîbran), other Alevi tribes also refused to join the rebellion.

The main part of the uprising was over by the end of March, as the Turkish authorities crushed the rebellion with continual aerial bombardments and a massive concentration of forces.[4] The president of the military tribunal which sentenced the rebels declared, on 28 June 1925:

More than 50,000 Turkish troops were mobilized against the rebellion. The military strength of the Kurds was 15,000.[5]

In this rebellion, Turkish government used its airplanes for bombing raids in the Diyarbakır area. During this operation, the airfield near Harput road was used.[6]

The rebellion diminished the negotiating power of Turkey and the Ottoman province of Musul was assigned to British Mandate of Mesopotamia. The final conclusion of the rebellion from existent powers were the British have the control of Mosul and Turkey and Kurds were the chance of uniting Mosul Province, Ottoman Empire to Turkey.

  1. ^ Viennot, Jean-Pierre (1974) Contribution á l'étude de la Sociologie et de l'Histoire du Mouvement National Kurde: 1920 á nos Jours. Paris, Institut Nationale des Langues et Civilisations Orientales. p.108
  2. ^ [1]
  3. ^ Olson, Robert W. (1989) The Emergence of Kurdish Nationalism and the Sheikh Said Rebellion, 1880-1925, p.45
  4. ^ van Bruinessen, Martin (1978) Agha, Shaikh and State. On the Social and Political Organisation of Kurdistan, University of Utrecht, Utrecht.
  5. ^ Olson, R., The Kurdish Rebellions of Sheikh Said (1925), Mt. Ararat (1930), and Dersim (1937-8): Their Impact on the Development of the Turkish Air Force and on Kurdish and Turkish Nationalism, Die Welt des Islam, New Ser., Vol.40, Issue 1, March 2000, p.74
  6. ^ Olson, R., The Kurdish Rebellions of Sheikh Said (1925), Mt. Ararat (1930), and Dersim (1937-8): Their Impact on the Development of the Turkish Air Force and on Kurdish and Turkish Nationalism, Die Welt des Islam, New Ser., Vol.40, Issue 1, March 2000, p.77
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