Emomalii Rahmon
Emomalii Rahmon, President Tajikistan |
The journey is not yet finished (111)
(Part one hundred and eleven, Depok, West Java,
Indonesia, 21 September 2014, 23:16 pm)
Tajikistan one part of The former Soviet Union is now
constantly evolving apparently attract investors from outside, including from
Qatar, who want to invest in the banking industry and construction
Ezdan Holding Group expected to open Islamic bank in
Tajikistan
DUSHANBE, September 18, Asia-Plus -- Representatives of Qatar’s Ezdan Holding
Group have assured Tajik President Emomali Rahmon that they will open in
Tajikistan a bank that will work on the Islamic banking principles.
President Emomali Rahmon on September 18 received a
high-profile Qatari delegation headed by Sheikh Dr. Khalid bin Thani bin
Abdullah Al Thani, Chairman of Ezdan Holding Group.
According to the Tajik president’s official website, the
sides discussed a broad range of issues related to state and prospects of
further expansion of bilateral cooperation between Tajikistan and Qatar.
The head of the Qatari delegation reportedly noted that
the main purposes of the visit was for the delegation to establish cooperation
with Tajikistan in the fields of banking, insurance and health care as well as
to discuss investing in those sectors in Tajikistan.
Members of the Qatari delegation stressed that their
near-term plans include establishment of the bank that would work on the
Islamic banking principles and construction of a hospital in Tajikistan, the
source said. (http://news.tj/en/news)
Tajikistan Map |
History of Tajikistan
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The current Tajik Republic harkens to the Samanid Empire
(875–999). The Tajik people came under Russian rule in the 1860s. The Basmachi
revolt that broke out in the wake of the Russian Revolution of 1917 was quelled
in the early 1920s and Tajikistan became an autonomous Soviet socialist
republic (Tajik ASSR) within Uzbekistan in 1924. In 1929 Tajikistan was made
one of the component republics of the Soviet Union – Tajik Soviet Socialist
Republic (Tajik SSR) – and it kept that status until 1991.[1]
Tajikistan gained independence in 1991, and has
experienced three changes in government and a civil war since then. A peace
agreement among rival factions was signed in 1997.
Pre-Islamic period (600 BC –651 AD)[edit]
Tajikistan was part of the Bactria-Margiana
Archaeological Complex in the Bronze Age, candidate for Proto-Indo-Iranian or
Proto-Iranian culture. Tajikistan was part of Scythia in Classical Antiquity.
Most of modern Tajikstan had formed parts of ancient
Kamboja and Parama Kamboja kingdoms, which find references in the ancient
Indian epics like the Mahabharata.
Sculpture of the woman of the pre-Islamic period
(Tajikistan).
Linguistic evidence, combined with ancient literary and
inscriptional evidence has led many eminent Indologists to conclude that
ancient Kambojas originally belonged to India. Achariya Yāska's Nirukta[2] (7th
century BC) attests that verb Śavati in the sense "to go" was used by
only the Kambojas. It has been shown that the modern Ghalcha dialects, Valkhi,
Shigali, Sriqoli, Jebaka (also called Sanglichi or Ishkashim), Munjani, Yidga
and Yagnobi, mainly spoken in Pamirs and countries on the headwaters of the
Oxus, still use terms derived from ancient Kamboja Śavati in the sense "to
go".[3] The Yagnobi dialect spoken in Yagnobi province around the
headwaters of Zeravshan valley in Sogdiana, also still contains a relic
"Śu" from ancient Kamboja Śavati in the sense "to go".[4]
Further, Sir G. Grierson says that the speech of Badakshan was a Ghalcha until
about three centuries ago when it was supplanted by a form of Persian.[5] Thus,
the ancient Kamboja, probably included the Badakshan, Pamirs and northern
territories including Yagnobi province in the doab of the Oxus and Jaxartes.[6]
On the east it was bounded roughly by Yarkand and/or Kashgar, on the west by
Bahlika (Uttaramadra), on the northwest by Sogdiana, on the north by
Uttarakuru, on the southeast by Darada, and on the south by Gandhara. Numerous
Indologists locate original Kamboja in Pamirs and Badakshan and the Parama
Kamboja further north, in the Trans-Pamirian territories comprising Zeravshan
valley, north up parts of Sogdhiana/Fargana—in the Sakadvipa or Scythia of the
classical writers.[7] Thus, in the pre-Buddhist times (7th or 6th century BC),
the parts of modern Tajikstan including territories as far as Zeravshan valley
in Sogdiana formed parts of ancient Kamboja and the Parama Kamboja kingdoms
when it was ruled by Iranian Kambojas until it became part of Achaemenid
Empire.
Tajikistan Troops |
Sogdiana, Bactria, Merv and Khorezm were the four
principal divisions of Ancient Central Asia inhabited by the ancestors of the
present-day Tajikistani Tajiks. Tajiks are now found only in historic Bactria
and Sogdiana. Merv is inhabited by the Turkoman and Khorezm by Karakalpaks, Uzbeks
and Kazakhs. Sogdiana was made up of the Zeravshan and Kashka-Darya river
valleys. Currently, One of the surviving peoples of Sogdiana who speak a
dialect of the Sogdian language are the Yaghnobis and Shugnanis. Bactria was
located in northern Afghanistan (present-day Afghan Turkestan) between the
mountain range of the Hindu Kush and the Amu Darya (Oxus) River and some areas
of current south Tajikistan. During different periods, Bactria was a center of
various Kingdoms or Empires, and is probably where Zoroastrianism originated.
The "Avesta"—the holy book of Zoroastrianism—was written in the
old-Bactrian dialect; it is also thought that Zoroaster was most likely born in
Bactria.
Achaemenid Period (550 BC–329 BC)[edit]
Achaemenid empire at its greatest extent
During the Achaemenid period, Sogdiana and Bactria were
part of the Persian empire. Sogdians and Bactrians occupied important positions
in the administration and military of the Achaemenid Empire
Hellenistic Period (329 BC–90 BC)[edit]
For more details on this topic, see Greco-Bactrian
Kingdom.
Map of the Greco-Bactrian kingdom.
After the Persian Empire was defeated by Alexander the
Great, Bactria, Sogdiana and Merv, being part of Persian Empire, had to defend
themselves from new invaders. In fact, the Macedonians faced very stiff
resistance under the leadership of Sogdian ruler Spitamenes. Alexander the
Great managed to marry Roxana, the daughter of a local ruler, and inherited his
land. Following Alexander's brief occupation, the Hellenistic successor states
of the Seleucids and Greco-Bactrians controlled the area for another 200 years
in what is known as the Greco-Bactrian Kingdom. During the time period from 90
BC to 30 BC, Yuezhi destroyed the last Hellenistic successor states and,
together with the Tocharians, (to whom they were closely related) created a
Kushan Empire around 30 AD.
Tajikistan Police |
Kushan Empire (30 BC–410 AD)[edit]
Kushan Empire
For another 400 years, until 410 AD, the Kushan Empire
was a major power in the region along with the Roman Empire, the Parthian
Empire and the Han Empire (China). Notable contact was made with local peoples
when the envoys of the Han Dynasty journeyed to this area in the 2nd century
BC. At the end of the Kushan period, the Empire became much smaller and would
have to defend itself from the powerful Sassanid Empire that replaced the
Parthian Empire. The famous Kushan king Kanishka promoted Buddhism and during
this time Buddhism was exported from Central Asia to China.
The Sassanids, Hephthalites, and Gokturks (224–710)[edit]
Asia in 500, showing the Hepthalite Khanate at its
greatest extent.
The Sassanids once controlled much of what is now
Tajikistan, but lost the territory to the Hephthalites (possibly also of
Iranian descent) during the time of Peroz I.
They created a powerful empire that succeeded in making
Iran a tributary state around 483–485. Shah of Persia Peroz fought three wars
with Hephthalites. During the first war he was captured by Hephthalite army and
later was released after Byzantine emperor paid a ransom for him. During the
second war Peroz was captured again and was released after paying a huge
contribution to the Hephthalite king. During the third war Peroz was killed.
The Hephthalites were subjugated in 565 by a combination of Sassanid and Kök-Turk
forces. Subsequently, present Tajikistan was ruled by Göktürks and Sassanids,
however when the Sassanid Empire fell the Turks kept control of Tajikistan but
they later lost it to the Chinese people, however, they later managed to take
control of Tajikistan once again, only to lose it to the Arabs in 710.
Tajikistan Culture |
Islamic Empires (710–1218)[edit]
Arab Caliphate (710–867)[edit]
The Age of the Caliphs
Prophet Mohammad,
622-632
Patriarchal
Caliphate, 632-661
Umayyad
Caliphate, 661-750
The Transoxiana principalities never formed a viable
confederacy. Beginning in 651, the Arabs organized periodic marauding raids
deep into the territory of Transoxania, but it was not until the appointment of
Ibn Qutaiba as Governor of Khorasan in 705, during the reign of Walid I, that
the Caliphate adopted the policy of annexing the lands beyond the Oxus. In 715,
the task of annexation was accomplished. The entire region thus came under the
control of the Caliph and of Islam, but the Arabs continued to rule through
local Soghdian Kings and dihqans. The ascension of the Abbasids to rule the
Caliphate (750 - 1258) opened a new era in the history of Central Asia. While
their predecessors the Umayyads (661 - 750) were little more than leaders of a
loose confederation of Arab tribes, the Abbasids set out to build a huge
multi-ethnic centralized state that would emulate and perfect the Sassanian
government machine. They gave the Near East and Transoxiana a unity, which they
had been lacking since the time of Alexander the Great.
Tajikistan People |
Samanid Empire (819–999)[edit]
Samanid empire
The Samanid dynasty ruled (819–1005) in Khorasan
(including Eastern Iran and Transoxiana) and was founded by Saman Khuda . The
Samanids were one of the first purely indigenous dynasties to rule in Persia
after the Muslim Arab conquest. During the reign (892–907) of Saman Khuda's
great-grandson, Ismail I (khown as Ismail Samani), Samanids expanded in
Khorasan. In 900, Ismail defeated the Saffarids in Khorasan (area of current
Northwest Afghanistan and northeastern Iran), while his brother was the
governor of Transoxiana. Thus, Samanid rule was acclaimed over the combined
regions. The cities of Bukhara (the Samanid capital) and Samarkand became
centres of art, science, and literature; industries included pottery making and
bronze casting. After 950, Samanid power weakened, but was briefly revitalized
under Nuh II, who ruled from 976 to 997. However, with the oncoming
encroachment of Muslim Turks, the Samanids lost their domains south of the Oxus
river which were taken by Ghaznavids. In 999, Bukhara was taken by the
Qarakhanids. The Samanid Isma'il Muntasir (died 1005) tried to restored the
dynasty (1000–1005), until he was assassinated by an Arab bedouin chieftain.[8]
The attack of the Qarakhanid Turks ended the Samanid dynasty
in 999 and dominance in Transoxiana passed on to Turkic rulers.
Qarakhanids (999–1211) and Khwarezmshahs
(1211–1218)[edit]
After the collapse of Samanid Dynasty, Central Asia
became the battleground of many Asian invaders who came from the north-east.
Tajikistan Women |
The Mongols and their successors (1218–1740)[edit]
Mongol Empire (1218–1370)[edit]
The Mongol Empire swept through Central Asia, invaded
Khwarezmian Empire and sacked the cities of Bukhara and Samarkand, looting and
massacring people everywhere.
Timurid Empire (1370–1506)[edit]
Timur, founder of the Timurid Empire, was born on 8 April
1336 in Kesh near Samarkand. He was a member of the Turkicized Barlas tribe, a
Mongol subgroup that had settled in Transoxiana after taking part in Genghis
Khan's son Chagatai's campaigns in that region. Timur began his life as a
bandit leader. During this period, he received an arrow-wound in the leg, as a
result of which he was nicknamed Timur-e Lang (in Dari) or Timur the Lame.
Although the last Timurid ruler of Herat, Badi az Zaman finally fell to the
armies of the Uzbek Muhammad Shaibani Khan in 1506, the Timurid ruler of
Ferghana, Zahir-ud-Din Babur, survived the collapse of the dynasty and
re-established the Timurid dynasty in India in 1526, where they became known as
the Mughals.
Shaybanid rule (1506–1598)[edit]
The Shaybanid state was divided into appanages between
all male members (sultans) of the dynasty, who would designate the supreme
ruler (Khan), the oldest member of clan. The seat of Khan was first Samarkand,
the capital of the Timurids, but some of the Khans preferred to remain in their
former appanages. Thus Bukhara became the seat of the khan for the first time
under Ubaid Allah Khan (r.1533-1539).
Dushanbe City |
The Astrakhanid (Janid) dynasty (1598–1740)[edit]
The period of political expansion and economical
prosperity was short-lived. Soon after the death of Abd Allah Khan the
Shaibanid dynasty died out and was replaced by the Janid or Astrakhanid
(Ashtarkhanid) dynasty, another branch of the descendants of Jöchi, whose
founder Jani Khan was related to Abd Allah Khan Through his marriage to
Abdullah Khan's Sister. The Astrakhanids are also said to be connected to The
Hashemites Due to Imam Quli Khan's status as a Sayyid. Their Descendents today
live in India. In 1709, eastern part of Khanate of Bukhara seceded and formed
Khanate of Kokand. Thus, eastern part of present Tajikistan passed to Khanate
of Kokand, while western one remained part of Khanate of Bukhara.
Persian and Bukharan rule (1740–1920)[edit]
Afsharid dynasty (1740–1756)[edit]
In 1740, the Janid khanate was conquered by Nadir Shah,
the Afsharid ruler of Persia. The Janid khan Abu al Faiz retained his throne,
becoming Nadir's vassal.
Tajikistan Female |
Manghit dynasty (1756–1920)[edit]
After the death of Nadir Shah in 1747, the chief of the
Manghit tribe, Muhammad Rahim Biy Azaliq, overcame his rivals from other tribes
and consolidated his rule in the Khanate of Bukhara. His successor, however,
ruled in the name of puppet khans of Janid origin. In 1785 Shah Murad
formalized the family's dynastic rule (Manghit dynasty), and the khanate became
the Emirate of Bukhara [9]
Modern History: 1800s–Present[edit]
Russian Vassalage (1868–1920)[edit]
In the 19th century, the Russian Empire began to expand
into Central Asia. The expansion was motivated by Russia's economic interests
and was connected with the American Civil War in the early 1860s, which
severely interrupted the supply of cotton fiber to the Russian industry and
forced Russia to turn to Central Asia as an alternative source of cotton supply
as well as a market for Russian made goods. Between 1864 and 1885 Russia
gradually took control of the entire territory of Russian Turkestan from
today's border with Kazakhstan in the north to the Caspian Sea in the west and
the border with Afghanistan in the south. Tashkent was conquered in 1865 and in
1867 the Turkestan Governor-Generalship was created with Konstantin Petrovich
Von Kaufman as the first Governor-General.[1][10]
Russian Empire, being a much bigger state with a huge
population and having an advanced military, had little difficulty in conquering
the regions inhabited by Tajiks, meeting fierce resistance only at Jizzakh,
Ura-Tyube, and when their garrison in Samarkand was besieged in 1868 by forces
from Shahr-e Sabz and the inhabitants of the city. The army of the Emirate of
Bukhara was utterly defeated in three battles, and on 18 June 1868 Emir
Mozaffar al-Din (r.1860-1885) signed a peace treaty with the Governor-General
of Russian Turkestan Von Kaufman. Samarkand and the Upper Zeravshan were
annexed by Russia and the country was opened to Russian merchants. The emir
retained his throne as a vassal of Russia and with Russian help he established
control over Shahr-e Sabz, the mountainous regions in the upper Zeravshan
Valley(1870) and the principalities of the western Pamir (1895). At the end of
August 1920 the last emir, Sayyid Alim Khan, was overthrown by Soviet troops.
On 6 October 1920 the emirate was abolished and the Bukharan People's Soviet
Republic was proclaimed.
Soviet Rule (1920–1991)[edit]
Flag of the Tajik SSR
When national borders were drawn in 1928, during the
administrative delimitation, the ancient Tajik cities of Bukhara and Samarkand
were placed outside of the Tajikistan SSR. As citizens of the newly established
Uzbek SSR, many Tajiks came under pressure to conform to their newly ascribed
"Uzbek" identity, and under threat of exile, many were forced to
change their identity and sign in passports as "Uzbeks". Tajik
schools were closed and Tajiks were not appointed to leadership positions
simply because of their ethnicity. During World War II, more than 300.000
Tajikistanis were mobilized into the Red Army and fought against the Nazis.
Tajikistan (1991–present)[edit]
See also: Civil war in Tajikistan
Emomalii Rahmon, President of Tajikistan since 1994.
The Tajikistan Soviet Socialist Republic (SSR) was among
the last republics of the Soviet Union to declare its independence. On
September 9 (1991), following the collapse of the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (USSR), Tajikistan declared its independence. During this time, use
of the Tajik language, an official language of the Tajikistan SSR next to
Russian, was increasingly promoted. Ethnic Russians, who had held many
governing posts, lost much of their influence and more Tajiks became
politically active.
The nation almost immediately fell into a civil war that
involved various factions fighting one another; these factions were often distinguished
by clan loyalties. The non-Muslim population, particularly Russians and Jews,
fled the country during this time because of persecution, increased poverty and
better economic opportunities in the West or in other former Soviet republics.
Emomalii Rahmon came to power in 1994, and continues to
rule to this day. Ethnic cleansing was controversial during the civil war in
Tajikistan. By the end of the war Tajikistan was in a state of complete
devastation. The estimated dead numbered over 100,000. Around 1.2 million
people were refugees inside and outside of the country.[11] In 1997, a
ceasefire was reached between Rahmon and opposition parties (United Tajik
Opposition).
Peaceful elections were held in 1999, but they were
reported by the opposition as unfair, and Rahmon was re-elected by almost
unanimous vote. Russian troops were stationed in southern Tajikistan, in order
to guard the border with Afghanistan, until summer 2005. Since the September
11, 2001 attacks, American, Indian and French troops have also been stationed
in the country. (Continoe)
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