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Assyrian tribe and historical district in Hakkari From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tyari[a] (Syriac: ܛܝܵܪܹܐ, romanized: Ṭyārē)[1][2] is an Assyrian tribe and a historical district within Hakkari, Turkey. The area was traditionally divided into Upper Tyari (Tyari Letha[3]) and Lower Tyari (Tyari Khtetha[3])–each consisting of several Assyrian villages. Both Upper and Lower Tyari are located on the western bank of the Zab river.[4] Today, the district mostly sits in around the town of Çukurca.[5][6][7] Historically, the largest village of the region was known as Ashitha.[8] According to Hannibal Travis the Tyari Assyrians were known for their skills in weaving and knitting.[5]
Before 1915, Tyari was home to Assyrians from the Bet Tyari tribe as well as a minority of Kurds and Armenians. Following the Assyrian genocide, Ṭyārāyē, along with other Assyrians residing in the Hakkari highlands, were forced to leave their villages in southeast Anatolia and fled to join their fellow Assyrian brethren in modern-day northern Iraq[9] (Sarsink,[10] Sharafiya,[11] Chammike[12] and various villages in the Nahla valley[13]), northeastern Syria (Tel Tamer[14] and Al Hasakah), Armenia, Georgia and, from the late 20th century, to western countries. The Tyari tribe was, according to Robert Elliot Speer, one of the Assyrian "ashirets".[9] In 1869 there were 15,000 Tyari Assyrians living in 2,500 houses in the Tyari district according to John George Taylor in a report to the Earl of Clarendon.[15] The Tyari Assyrians lived across 51 different villages and constituted 50,000 members - making it the most powerful among the semi-independent Assyrian tribes.[16] The Tyari district is located in the boundaries of the ancient Neo-Assyrian kingdom of Adiabene.[17]
It is worth particular notice that the most central parts of this region are, and have been from time immemorial, entirely inhabited by the Nestorians, to the exclusion of every other class of people. A great part of the Independent tribes of Tiari [Tiyari] and the whole of the tribes of Tekhoma, Bass, Jelu and other smailer tribes, are included in the boundaries of Adiabene.
Tyari may be a variation of the ancient "Autiyara" (Assyria). American historian Albert T. Olmstead describes in his work History of the Persian Empire how the Persian General Vaumisa wins a battle in the Autiyara districts located in Tyari and mentions that this is where Assyrian Christians maintained independence until modern times.[19]
In Syriac, the word ṭyārē (ܛܝܪ̈ܐ) is the plural form of ṭyārā, meaning "sheepfold" or "grazing area".[1] Indeed, the Assyrians of Tyari were renowned even amongst neighboring Kurds and Armenians for their yogurt, cheese and other dairy products mostly made from sheep or goat's milk. They were also famous for their textiles,[5] which again were spun and woven from sheep's wool. They also made woolen felt for their characteristic conical caps, a style dating back to the Assyrian Empire.[20]
One of the reasons the Assyrians of Tyari were able to stay independent for so long despite being significantly outnumbered by Turkish, Kurdish and Arab Muslims was their fighting ability. The Assyrians of Tyari were especially known for being a fierce, warlike people. It was said that they were the best fighters in West Asia, along with the Assyrian tribe of Tkhuma.[21] Their Muslim neighbors stated that in order to stand a chance they needed to outnumber the Assyrians of Tyari or Tkhuma five to one, and have superior modern weapons.[22] Assyrians of Tyari used much older weaponry and manufactured their own weapons and ammunition.[23]
In 1834 the leader of the Soran Emirate Muhammad Pasha of Rawanduz tried to subdue the Assyrians of Lower Tyari, but suffered a humiliating defeat at the hands of the vastly outnumbered Assyrians. They then chased the Kurds and Turks back to Amadiya.[24] This defeat played a major role in the collapse of the Soran Emirate.[25][26][27][28]
In 1880, Ubeydullah's militia, with the support of mercenaries from the Tyari tribe, invaded the northwestern Kurdish territories of Qajar dynasty in attempt to expand his control.[29]
In 1907 the Ottomans sent troops to Hakkari to stop fighting between the Assyrians of Tyari and Kurds. The Ottoman troops were successful in subduing the Kurds. The Assyrians of Tyari, however, defeated them and the Ottomans were routed and had their weapons seized.[30]
Following the Assyrian Genocide of World War One which began in 1915, the Tyareh tribe, along with all other Assyrians took part in the Assyrian War of Independence against the offending Ottoman Empire and their Kurdish and Arab allies, allying themselves with the British, Russians and Armenians (victims of the Armenian Genocide). The Tyareh, under Malik Khoshaba took part in scoring a number of notable victories against the Ottomans and Kurds despite being heavily outnumbered and outgunned. However Following the Russian withdrawal after the Russian Revolution in 1917 and the collapse of Armenian lines the Tyareh and other northern Assyrian tribes were forced to fight their way to British lines in Northern Mesopotamia and Northern Persia.
In the early 1930s, the Assyrians consisting mainly of Tyarayeh and Tkhoumnayeh successfully defeated the Iraqi army in Dairabun killing 33 and wounding 40, including three officers, while the Assyrians suffered significantly less losses. The Iraqis were armed with modern weapons and attack planes given to them by the British, while the Assyrians were only equipped with old rifles.[31]
In the 1930s, the Iraqis admitted that one Assyrian soldier was equal to three Arab soldiers and saw the Assyrians as a huge threat to Iraq militarily if Assyrians went against the British.[32]
The dialect of Tyari belongs to the Ashiret group, along with the dialects of e.g. Tkhuma and Baz, of the Northeastern Neo-Aramaic (NENA) dialects.[33] Like Jīlū, the Tyari dialect is a very distinct Assyrian Neo-Aramaic dialect. Unlike the Jilu, Baz and Gawar dialects (which are very similar to each other), this one is more "thick". It is, in a way, a sort of a "working class" accent of the Assyrian dialects. Dialects within Tyari, and especially the Western group, have more in common with Chaldean Neo-Aramaic than with Iraqi Koine (similar to General Urmian). The Tyari dialect is divided into two main sub-dialects; upper Tyari and lower Tyari.[34]
Many Tyari speakers can switch back and forth from Tyari to "Assyrian Standard" (or "Iraqi Koine") when conversing with Assyrian speakers of other dialects. Some speakers tend to adopt a form of verb conjugation that is closer to the Iraqi Koine or Urmian Standard. This is attributed to the growing exposure to Assyrian Standard-based literature, media, and its use as a liturgical language by the Assyrian Church of the East. Furthermore, it is customary for Assyrian artists to generally sing in Iraqi Koine for them to be intelligible and have widespread recognition. Songs in Tyari dialects are usually of the folk-dance music genre and would attract certain audiences.[35]
English | Assyrian Koine | Tyari dialect |
---|---|---|
Hair | 'ch:osa | 'chawsa |
Pigeon | 'yo:na | 'yawna |
Fasting | 'so:ma | 'sawma |
Benefit | 'ph:ayda | 'pheda |
Body | 'phaġra | 'phaxra |
Lord | 'a:ġa | 'a:xa |
Rank | 'darġa | 'darxa |
English | Tyari dialect | Note |
---|---|---|
House | Bεθα[37] | This is also common in the village of Araden[37] |
Her house | Bεθα diya[37] | |
He descends | ṣāle[33] | |
He rises | qā'im[33] | |
He does not drink | la-šate-Ø (Ashitha)[34] | le-šate-Ø (Halmun)[34] |
Death | mθta (Ashitha)[34] | mawθta (Halmun)[34] |
Illness | maṛ'a[34] | |
Wool | ´amṛa[34] | |
She says | ´amra[34] |
Although possessive affixes (beti - "my house") are more convenient and common among Assyrian speakers, those with Tyari and Barwari dialects take a more analytic approach regarding possession, just like modern Hebrew and English.[42]
Upper Tyari[43][44] | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Clan | Bne Qalatha | Dadoshoshnaye | Bne Roomta | Walto | Single Village Clans |
Sub-clan or settlement | Qalatha | Dadosh | Mar Sawa | Serta | Siadohr (Siyador) |
Chamba D'Malik | Mabua | Sarispeedon | Matha D Mat Mariam | Koe (Ko) | |
Malota | Bet Mariggo | Roomta | Khadiana | Kokha | |
Chamba D'Hasso | Chamikta | Resha D'Nahra | Mazrogeh | ||
Chamba D'Nene | Shwawootha | ||||
Chamba D'Elia | Darawa | ||||
Ishta D'Nahra | |||||
Zorawa |
Lower Tyari[43][44] | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Clan | Bne Be-Alahta | Bne-Matha | Bne-Lagippa | Ashita | Bne Rawel | Single Village Clans |
Sub-clan or settlement | Be-Alahta | Lizan | Lagippa | Be-Marqus | Rawel (Ravole) | Minianish |
Salabakkan (Ravola d-Salabkhan) | Zarne | Kurkhe | Be-Qasha-Khoshaba | Shurt (Shurd) | Zawitha | |
Matha D'Qasra | Chamba d-Be-Susina | Be-Odishka | Borish | |||
Nashe d-Matha | ||||||
Chammanaye | ||||||
Khatibnaye | ||||||
Be-Rabin | ||||||
Be-Merwatte |
Lower Tyari:
Walto:
Upper Tyari:
On his head, where one would have expected to see a college “trencher”, was a high conical cap of white felt with a pagri of black silk twisted into a rope, the true Tyari turban.
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