Jafar Sultan revolt

Jafar Sultan revolt
Part of the Kurdish separatism in Iran
DateAutumn 1931[1][2]
Location
Hawraman, North-Western Iran
Result Revolt suppressed
Belligerents
Jafar Sultan's Kurdish rebels Iran
Commanders and leaders
Jafar Sultan Haj Ali Razmara

The Jafar Sultan revolt (Kurdish: شۆڕشی جەعفەر سوڵتان, Persian: شورش جعفر سلطان) refers to a Kurdish tribal revolt in Pahlavi Iran which erupted in the mountainous Hawraman region in 1931,[1] and was one of the early tribal-nationalist Kurdish revolts against central Iranian rule during the early stage of Kurdish separatism in Iran.

Background

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Jafar Sultan of Hawraman region took control of the area between Marivan and north of Halabja and remained independent until 1925. Jafar Sultan is seen as the ”head” of the royal sultan family (Lohoni, Lahoni) From 1927 to 1934 a number of Kurdish tribal uprisings erupted in the Hawraman and Marivan regions.[3] In 1926 Iranian forces fighting Kurdish insurgents in the Pizhdar, Hawraman and Marivan areas executed all prisoners in an unprecedented act of brutality, likely among the factors that caused 31 Kurdish chieftains in the region to ask for British protection.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Berch Berberoglu. Turmoil in the Middle East: Imperialism, War, and Political Instability. p86.
  2. ^ Gérard Chaliand. A People Without a Country: The Kurds and Kurdistan. p105,249.
  3. ^ a b David McDowall. A Modern History of the Kurds: Third Edition. p225.