Al-Muntafiq
Al-Muntafiq Emirate المنتفق | |||||||||||||||
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1530–1918 | |||||||||||||||
Flag of the Muntafiq Emirate | |||||||||||||||
Capital | Basra | ||||||||||||||
Common languages |
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Religion | Islam | ||||||||||||||
Government | Monarchy | ||||||||||||||
Emir | |||||||||||||||
• 1530–1918 BC | Sadoon Tribe | ||||||||||||||
Historical era | Modern History | ||||||||||||||
1530 | |||||||||||||||
13 November 1918 | |||||||||||||||
Area | |||||||||||||||
1675 | 265,000 km2 (102,000 sq mi) | ||||||||||||||
Currency | Ottoman lira | ||||||||||||||
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Area does not include Sadoon control of Ottoman Basra Vilayet pre autonomy. |
Al-Muntafiq (Template:Lang-ar) is a large Arab tribal confederation of southern Iraq and Kuwait. The confederation's tribes predominantly settled in Iraq's southern provinces and northern Kuwait. The confederation is not homogeneous in terms of sect/religion.[1] Centuries of intermarriage and intermingling created mixed of Sunni and Shia tribes. Therefore, a minority of individual tribes within the confederation is Sunni. Overall, it is almost impossible to delineate who is, and who is not part of the Muntafiq.
The tribe is divided into three main branches: Bani Malik, al-Ajwad, and Bani Sa'id. Most of the tribe traces its genealogy to the tribe of Banu 'Uqayl of the large and ancient Banu 'Amir confederation of Najd. However, the tribe's traditional leaders are Al-Saadun ("the house of Saadun"), who are said to be Sharifs originating from Mecca, while the al-Ajwad branch is said to partially originate from the ancient Arab tribe of Tayy. The Muntafiq tribe was led by Yusuf Beg of the Saadun clan.[2] They were traditional rivals of the Dhufir and of Ibn Saud, although Yusuf sometimes co-operated with Ibn Saud.
The tribe migrated to Iraq during the Islamic conquests. In Ottoman times, the tribe held control over the region of Basrah under Ottoman suzerainty. In 1521, they successfully occupied al-Ahsa and al-Qatif (eastern Saudi Arabia today) on the Ottomans' behalf, before being expelled by Banu Khalid.
During the Ottoman era, most of the tribe settled into sedentary life and took up agriculture in southern and western Iraq. During the Ottoman era, from the late eighteenth century onwards, al-Muntafiq converted to Shia Islam.[3][4]
The city of Nasiriya in southern Iraq was named after one of the tribe's sheikhs, and the surrounding province was known as "Al-Muntafiq Province" until 1976. Those who were herders of small animals such as sheep and goat, rather than camels, and this made them less mobile and less competent as a fighting force compared to the camel-herding tribes of inner Arabia.
Although the tribe's nominal leaders, the Al Saadun, are Sunnis, most of the tribe's members follow the Shi'ite sect of Islam. After many decades of sedentarization, the tribal bond has weakened and the leadership of the Al Saadun is largely nominal.
Many stateless Bedoon in Kuwait belong to the Muntafiq tribal confederation.[5][6][7][8][9][10][11][12]
Division
- Bani Malik:
- Al Ibrahim
- Al Wadai
- Al Majid
- Al Diwan
- Al Taughiyah
- Al Ajwad :
- Al Bdour
- Al Juwarin
- Al Ghazzi
- Al Shuraifat
- Bani Huchaim:
- Al Zayyad
- Al Ghazalat
- Bani Salamah
- Albu Salah:
- Al Shamlah
- Al Safaa
- Al Abada
- Al Araithib
- Albu Salah:
- Al Aunan
- Al Rufiat
- Al Zuaba
See also
Sources
- Levi Della Vida, G.; Sluglett, P. "al- Muntafiḳ ." Encyclopaedia of Islam. Edited by: P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel and W.P. Heinrichs. Brill, 2007. Brill Online. [1] Christiane Thompson, Iranian Tentacles into Iraq, 2009 [2]
Notes
- ^ Thompson, Christiane. "Iranian Tentacles into Iraq". School of Advanced Military Studies (SAMS). Retrieved 3 December 2012.
- ^ "Muntafiq". King Abdul Aziz Ibn Saud Information Resource. Archived from the original on 2 December 2013. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
- ^ The Shi'is of Iraq By Yitzhak Nakash, pg.27
- ^ Lorimer, Gazetteer, 2B:1273; Great Britain, naval intelligence division, geographical handbook series, Iraq and the Persian Gulf, September 1944, 379-80; Great Britain, office of the civil commissioner, The Arab of Mesopotamia, Basra, 1917,6.
- ^ Eman Shams Aldeen (19 September 2012). "البدون فــي الكويـــت.. مواطنون بلا هوية". As-Safir Al-Arabi (in Arabic).
- ^ Fayez Alfayez (26 February 2021). "أزمة الهوية الوطنية - د. فايز الفايز". Platform Post (in Arabic).
- ^ Ahmad Jaber (February 2021). "Critical sociolinguistic ethnography as a lens to statelessness: a case from the Bidoon community in Kuwait".
- ^ "Kuwait's Laws and Policies of Ethnic Discrimination, Erasure and Genocide Against The Bedoon Minority Submission on 'Human Rights Protections for Minorities Recognised in the UN System'". Susan Kennedy Nour al Deen. 2020.
- ^ Report to the UN Expert Mechanism on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples - Annual Study. Bedoon Indigenous Rights in the Context of Borders, Migration and Displacement (PDF) (Thesis). OHCHR. 2019. p. 1–63.
- ^ "Stateless Bedoons Are Shut Out of Kuwait". The Christian Science Monitor. 1991.
- ^ Susan Kennedy Nour al Deen (2018). "The Bedoun Archive: A public archive created for the northern tribes Bedouin of Kuwait".
- ^ Enam al-Wer, Rudolf Erik de Jong, ed. (2009). Arabic Dialectology: In Honour of Clive Holes on the Occasion of His Sixtieth Birthday. Vol. 53. Brill. p. 99–100. ISBN 9789047425595.