Umayyad governors
- Muhammad ibn Marwan (ca. 685–705)
 - Yusuf ibn Yahya ibn al-Hakam (ca. 685–705)
 - Sa'id ibn Abd al-Malik (ca. 685–705)
 - Yahya ibn Yahya al-Ghassani (719–720)[1]
 - Marwan ibn Muhammad ibn Marwan (720–724)
 - Al-Hurr ibn Yusuf (727–731/32)
 - Yahya ibn al-Hurr (732/33)
 - Al-Walid ibn Talid (733–739)
 - Abu Quhafa ibn al-Walid (739–743)
 - Al Qatiran ibn Akmad ibn al-Shaybani (744–745)
 - Hisham ibn Amr-al Zubayr (745–750)
 
Abbasid governors
- Muhammad ibn Sawl (750–751)
 - Yahya ibn Muhammad ibn Ali (c. 751)
 - Ismail ibn Ali ibn Abdullah (751–759)
 - Malik ibn al-Haytham al-Khuzai (759–762)
 - Ja'far ibn Abu Jafar (762–764)
 - Khalid ibn Barmak (764–766)
 - Ismail ibn Abd Allah ibn Yazid (768–770)
 - Yazid ibn Usayd ibn Zafir al-Sulami (770)
 - Musa ibn Ka'b (771–772)
 - Khalid ibn Barmak and Musa ibn Mus'ab (772–775)
 - Ishaq ibn Sulayman al-Hashimi (776)
 - Hassan al Sarawi (776–777)
 - Abd al-Samad ibn Ali (778)
 - Muhammed ibn al-Fadl (779–780)
 - Ahmad ibn Ismail ibn Ali (781–782)
 - Musa ibn Mus'ab (782–783)
 - Hashim ibn Sa'id (785)
 - Abd al-Malik ibn Salih (785–787)
 - Ishaq ibn Muhammed (787–778)
 - Saíd ibn al-Salm (778–789)
 - Abd Allah ibn Malik (789–791)
 - al-Hakam ibn Sulayman (791)
 - Muhammed ibn al-Abbas al-Hashimi (791–796)
 - Yahya ibn Sa'id al-Harazi (796–797)
 - Harthama ibn A'yan (798–802), with various deputies
 - Nadal ibn Rifa's (804–805)
 - Khalid ibn Yazid ibn Hatim (806)
 - Ali ibn Sadaqa ibn Dinar (c. 806)
 - Muhammed ibn al-Fadl (806–809)
 - Ibrahim ibn al-Abbas (809)
 - Khalid ibn Yazid (810)
 - al-Muttalib ibn Abd Allah (811)
 - al-Hasan ibn Umar (812)
 - Tahir ibn Husayn (813)
 - Ali ibn al-Hasan ibn Sailh (814–817)
 - al-Sayyid ibn Anas (817–826)
 - Muhammed ibn Humayd al-Tusi (826–827)
 - Harun ibn Abu Khalid (827)
 - Muhammed ibn al-Sayyid ibn Anas (827–828)
 - Malik ibn Tawk (829–831)
 - Mansur ibn Bassam (c.834)
 - Abd Allah ibn al-Sayyid ibn Anas (c. 838)
 - Akaba ibn Muhammad (before 868)
 - Hasan ibn Ayyub (before 868)
 - Abd Allah ibn Sulayman (c. 868)
 - Musawir: Kharijite rebel (868)
 - Azugitin (873–874), with deputies
 - Khidr bin Ahmad (c. 874)
- Autonomous:
 
 - Ishaq ibn Kundaj (879–891)
 - Muhammad ibn Ishaq ibn Kundaj (891–892)
 - Ahmad ibn Isa al-Shaybani (892–893)
 - Hamdan ibn Hamdun, rebel Hamdanid (892–895)
 - Direct Abbasid control
- Hasan ibn Ali (c. 895)
 - Abu Muhammad Ali ibn al-Mu'tadid (c. 899–902)
 
 
Hamdanid emirs
- Abdallah Abu'l-Hayja ibn Hamdan, 905–913, 914–916 926–929, as Abbasid governor
 - Nasir al-Dawla, 929–930 and 935–967
 - Sa'id ibn Hamdan, 931–934
 - Abu Taghlib, 967–978
 - Directly administered as part of the Buyid emirate of Iraq, 978–989
 - Abu Tahir Ibrahim and Abu Abdallah Husayn, 989–990
 
Uqaylid emirs
- Muhammad ibn al-Musayyab ca. 990–991/2
 - Abu Ja'far al-Hajjaj (Buyid governor) 991/2–996
 - Al-Muqallad ibn al-Musayyab 996–1001
 - Qirwash ibn al-Muqallad 1001–1050
 - Baraka ibn al-Muqallad 1050–1052
 - Quraysh ibn Baraka 1052–1061
 - Under Seljuk suzerainty 1055–1096
 - Muslim ibn Quraysh 1061–1085
 - Ibrahim ibn Quraysh 1085–1089/90
 - Fakhr al-Dawla ibn Jahir (vizier of Malik-Shah I) 1089/90–1092
 - Ali ibn Muslim 1092
 - Ibrahim ibn Quraysh 1092–1093
 - Ali ibn Muslim 1093–1096
 
Seljuk Atabegs
- Kerbogha, 1096–1102 [2][3]
 - Sunqurjah, officer of Kerbogha, 1102.[2][3][4]
 - Musa al-Turkomani, Kerbogha's deputy at Hisn Kaifa, 1102.[2][4]
 - Jikirmish 1102–1106 [2]
 - Jawali Saqawa, 1106–1109 [5]
 - Mawdud, 1109–1113
 - Aqsunqur al-Bursuqi, 1113–1114
 - Juyûsh-Beg, 1114–1124
 - Aqsunqur al-Bursuqi, second rule, 1124–1126
 - Mas’ûd ibn Bursuqî, son of Aqsunqur al-Bursuqi, 1126–1127.[6]
 
Zengid emirs
- [Under Seljuk sovereignty]
 - Imad al-Din Zengi 1127–1146
 - Saif ad-Din Ghazi I 1146–1149
 - Qutb ad-Din Mawdud 1149–1169
 - Ghazi II Saif ud-Din 1169–1180
 - Mas'ud I 'Izz ud-Din 1180–1193 and:
 - Sanjar Shah (at Jazira) 1176–1208 and:
 - Arslan I Shah Nur ud-Din 1193–1211 and:
 - Mahmud Muizz ad-Din (at Jazira) 1208–1241 and:
 - Mas'ud II 'Izz ud-Din 1211–1218 and afterwards:
 - Arslan II Shah Nur ud-Din 1218–1219 and afterwards:
 - Nasir ad-Din Mahmud 1219–1234.
 
Lu'lu'id emirs
- Badr al-Din Lu'lu', former atabeg to Nasir ad-Din Mahmud, 1234–1259[7]
 - [Under Mongols suzerainty beginning in 1254]
 - As-Salih Isma'il, son of Badr al-Din Lu'lu', in Mosul and Sinjar, 1259–1262
 - Al-Muzaffar 'Ala' al-Din 'Ali, son of Badr al-Din Lu'lu', in Sinjar, 1259
 - Sayf al-Din Ishāq, son of Badr al-Din Lu'lu', in Jazirat ibn 'Umar, 1259-1262.
 
Mongol Governors
- Mulay Noyan c. 1296–1312[8]
 - Amīr Sūtāy 1312–1331/1332, Sutayid
 - Alī Pādshāh, Oirat 1332–1336
 - Ḥājī Ṭaghāy ibn Sūtāy 1336–c. 1342, Sutayid
 - Ibrahim Shah 1342–1347, Sutayid, nephew of Ḥājī Ṭaghāy
 - To the house of Jalayirid of Baghdad 1340s–1383
 
Jalayirid
- Bayazid 1382–1383
 - To the Horde of the Black Sheep 1383–1401
 - To the Timurid Empire 1401–1405
 - To the Horde of the Black Sheep 1405–1468
 - To the Horde of the White Sheep 1468–1508
 - To Persia 1508–1534
 - To the Ottoman Empire 1534–1623
 - To Persia 1623–1638
 - To the Ottoman Empire 1638–1917
 
Ottoman governors
- Ezidi Mirza (1649-1650)
 - Hatibzade Yahya Pasha (1748)
 - Hüseyin Pasha 1758–?
 - Murad Pasha ?
 - Sa'dullah Pasha ?
 - Hasan Pasha of Mosul ?
 - Mehmed Pasha of Mosul ?
 - Süleyman Pasha ?
 - Mehmed Amin Pasha ?
 - Mahmud Pasha ?
 - Abdurrahman Pasha ?
 - Ahmed Pasha ?
 - Osman Pasha ?
 - Naman Pasha ?–1831
 - Omari Pasha 1831–1833
 - Yahya Pasha 1833–1834
 - Injal Pasha 1835–1840
 - ? 1840–1844
 - Sherif Pasha 1844–1845
 - Tayyar Pasha 1846
 - Esad Pasha 1847
 - Vechihi Pasha 1848
 - Kâmil Pasha 1848–1855
 - Within the eyalet of Van 1855–1865
 - Within the vilayet of Iraq 1865–1875
 - ? 1875–1889
 - Kürd Reshid Pasha 1889
 - ? 1889–1894
 - Aziz Pasha 1894–1895
 - Kölemen Abdullah Pasha 1896
 - Zihdi Bey 1897
 - Abdülwahib Pasha 1898
 - Hüseyin Hazim Pasha 1898–1900
 - Hadji Reshid Pasha 1901
 - Nuri Pasha 1902–1904
 - Mustafa Bey 1905–1908
 - Fazil Pasha 1909
 - Tahir Pasha 1910–1912
 - Süleyman Nasif Bey 1913–1916
 - Haydar Bey 1916–1918
 
References
- ↑ Forand, Paul G. (Jan–Mar 1969). "The Governors of Mosul According to Al-Azdī's Ta'rīkh Almawṣil". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 89 (1): 88–105. doi:10.2307/598281. JSTOR 598281.
 - 1 2 3 4 Grousset 1934, pp. 438–9.
 - 1 2 Houtsma, M. Th (1993). First Encyclopedia of Islam, 1913-1936, pp. 1129-1130. ISBN 9004097902.
 - 1 2 Richards, D. S., Editor, The Chronicle of Ibn al-Athir for the Crusading Period from al-Kamil fi’l-Ta’rikh. Part 1, 1097–1146., Ashgate Publishing, Farnham, UK, 2010, pp. 58-59.
 - ↑ Maalouf 1983, pp. 92–4.
 - ↑ Grousset 1934, pp. 697–9.
 - ↑ Bosworth, Clifford E., The New Islamic Dynasties: A Chronological and Genealogical Manual, Columbia University Press, New York, 1996, p. 193.
 - ↑ Patrick Wing (2007). "The Decline of the Ilkhanate and the Mamluk Sultanate's Eastern Frontier" (PDF). University of Chicago. p. 78.
 
Sources
- Grousset, René (1934). History of the Crusades and the Frankish Kingdom of Jerusalem. Paris: Perrin.
 - Maalouf, Amin (1983). The Crusades seen by the Arabs. ISBN 978-2-290-11916-7.
 
    This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.