Elam: Difference between revisions
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|government_type = Unitary constitutional monarchy | |government_type = Unitary constitutional monarchy | ||
|leader_title1 = [[Emir of Elam|Emir]] | |leader_title1 = [[Emir of Elam|Emir]] | ||
|leader_name1 = [[Kindinu-Muhammad šak | |leader_name1 = [[Kindinu-Muhammad šak Ahmadiri Šušan|Kindinu-Muhammad]] | ||
|leader_title2 = [[Prime Minister of Elam|Prime Minister]] | |leader_title2 = [[Prime Minister of Elam|Prime Minister]] | ||
|leader_name2 = [[Imran Hammadi]] | |leader_name2 = [[Imran Hammadi]] |
Revision as of 03:42, 14 April 2019
Emirate of Elam | |
---|---|
Flag | |
Motto: Huttak halik ume Allah napir uri in lina telakni. "May my work come as an offering to my god, Allah." | |
Capital and largest city | Ardašir |
Official languages | Elamite |
Recognised minority languages | Arabic, Persian |
Ethnic groups (2018) | Elamites (51%) Arabs (24%) Persians (10%) Lurs (7%) Qashqai (3%) Armenians (2%) Assyrians (2%) Others (1%) |
Religion (2003) | Shia Islam (70%) Sunni Islam (21%) Christianity (6%) Others (1%) |
Demonym(s) | Elamite |
Government | Unitary constitutional monarchy |
• Emir | Kindinu-Muhammad |
Imran Hammadi | |
Legislature | Majlis |
Independence from Qajar dynasty | |
• Elamite civilization | 2700 – 539 BC |
147 BC – 224 AD | |
• Persian coup d'état | 21 February 1921 |
1921 – 1925 | |
• Emirate | 1 May 1925 |
Area | |
• Total | 64,055 km2 (24,732 sq mi) |
Population | |
• 2018 estimate | 4,711,000 |
• Density | 74/km2 (191.7/sq mi) |
GDP (PPP) | estimate |
• Total | $303 billion |
• Per capita | $64,317.55 |
GDP (nominal) | estimate |
• Total | $118.271 billion |
• Per capita | $25,105.29 |
Gini | 41.1 medium |
HDI (2018) | 0.802 very high |
Currency | Elamite Dinara (Dha.) (DHA) |
Time zone | UTC+3 (AST) |
• Summer (DST) | UTC+4 (GST) |
Driving side | right |
Calling code | +978 |
ISO 3166 code | ELY |
Internet TLD | .ely |
Elam (Elamite: Haltamti; Arabic: عيلام), officially the Emirate of Elam (Elamite: Imarat Haltamtime; Arabic: إمارة عيلام), is a country in Western Asia. Situated at the foot of the central Zagros mountains, straddling the northern tip of the Persian gulf, it shares borders with Iraq and Iran. Elam has a population of 4.7 million, of which some 2.4 million are eponymous Elamites.
Historically one of the most important regions of the Ancient Near East, the seat Elam has for most of its history been in the northern reaches of the country, first at Susa and then at Shushtar. During a brief period during the Sasanian era, when Elam formed a province of the Persian empire, the captal was moved to its geographic center, the river town of Hormuzardashir, founded over the ancient city of Hurpahir by Ardashir I. This city is now known as Ardašir. Later in the Sasanian time and throughout the Islamic era, the provincial seat returned and stayed at Shushtar until the late Qajar period. With the increase in international sea commerce arriving on the shores of Elam, Ardašir became a more suitable location for the provincial capital, as the river Karun is navigable all the way up to the city. As of independence in 1921, Ardašir remains the capital of Elam.
Elam is known for its ethnic diversity; the population consists of the eponymous Elamites, as well as significant populations of Lurs, Arabs, Persians, Qashqais, Assyrians, and Armenians. The population is predominantly Shia Muslim, but there significant Sunni and Christian communities, as well as small Jewish and Mandean minorities. The Elamite language is the sole official language of government, but Arabic is widely spoken and culturally omnipresent.
Since the 1920s, tensions on religious and ethnic grounds have often resulted in violence and attempted separatism, including an Arab uprising in 1979, unrest in 2005, bombings in 2005-2006, and protests in 2011, drawing much criticism by international human rights organisations. The country is home to the Kušk and Husseyniyeh oil fields. It is estimated that oil reserves in Elam may be up to 17 billion barrels, of which 3 billion are considered to be currently recoverable.
Etymology
The Elamite endonym is Haltamti. Exonyms throughout history have included the Sumerian names NIM.MAki𒉏𒈠𒆠 and ELAM. The Akkadian Elamû (masculine/neuter) and Elamītu (feminine) meant "resident of Sousiane" or "Elamite". The modern English and Arabic names for the nation come from Akkadian.
The Persian name of the country, Xûzestân (خوزستان) is derived from Old Persian Hūjiya (𐎢𐎺𐎩). In Middle Persian this became Huź and in Modern Persian Xûz, compounded with the toponymic suffix -estân, meaning "place".
Geography and Climate
Elam can be generally divided into two regions: the rolling hills and mountains north of the Ahwaz Ridge, and the plains and marshlands to its south. The area is irrigated by the Karun, Ulay, Jarahi and Marun rivers.
Elam has great potential for agricultural expansion, which is almost unrivaled by the country's immediate neighbours. Large and permanent rivers flow over the entire territory contributing to the fertility of the land. The Karun River, the most effluent river of the Iranian plateau, flows into the Persian gulf through Elam. The agricultural potential of most of these rivers, however, and particularly in their lower reaches, is hampered by the fact that their waters carry salt, the amount of which increases as the rivers flow away from the source mountains and hills. In case of the Karun, a single tributary river, the Rud-i Shur, that flows into the Karun above Shushtar contributes most of the salt that the river carries. As such, the freshness of the Karun waters could be greatly enhanced if the Rud-i Shur could be diverted away from the Karun. The same applies to the Jarahi and Ulay in their lower reaches. Only the Marun is exempt from this.
The climate of Elam is generally very hot and occasionally humid, particularly in the south, while winters are cold and dry. Summertime temperatures routinely exceed 45°C (113°F) degrees Celsius almost daily and in the winter it can drop below freezing, with occasional snowfall as far south as Ardašir. Frequent sandstorms occur in the area of Elam.
History
Antiquity
Modern Elam is one of the centers of ancient civilization, and one of the most important regions of the Ancient Near East, based around Susa. The first large scale civilization based here was that of the Elamites.
Throughout the late prehistoric periods, Elam was closely tied culturally to Mesopotamia. Later, perhaps because of domination by the Akkadian dynasty (c. 2334–c. 2154 BC), Elamites adopted the Sumero-Akkadian cuneiform script. Eventually Elam came under the control first of the Guti, a mountain people of the area, and then of the 3rd dynasty of Ur. As the power of Ur in turn declined, the Elamites reasserted their independence.
In that turbulent period Elam’s unique system of matrilinear succession emerged; sovereignty was hereditary through women, in that a new ruler was always “son of a sister” of some member of an older sovereign’s family.
About 1600 BC new invaders of Mesopotamia, the Kassites, may have caused the fall of both Babylonia and Elam. Thereafter almost nothing is known of Elam until the latter part of the 13th century BC, when it began reemerging as a substantial international power.
The Elamite kings Šutruk-Nahhunte and Kutir-Nahhunte invaded Mesopotamia and succeeded in securing a large number of ancient monuments (such as the Victory Stele of Naram-Sin and the stele bearing the law code of Hammurabi). Šilhak-Inšušinak I campaigned vigorously, and for at least a short period his domain included most of Mesopotamia east of the Tigris River and reached eastward almost to Persepolis. This greatest period of Elamite conquest ended when Nebuchadnezzar I of Babylon (reigned c. 1119–c. 1098 BC) captured Susa. For almost 300 years thereafter nothing is known of Elamite history. In 640 BC, however, the Assyrian king Ashurbanipal invaded Elam, sacked Susa, and deported some of the leading citizens to Samaria in Palestine. Later, Cyrus II of Persia was able to wrest control of the Elamite lands, and Susa became one of the three most important cities of the Persian realm.
Following the fall of the Achaemenid Empire, Elam fell under the control of Alexander the Great's Macedonian empire and its successor state, the Seleucid Empire. A new dynasty of Elamite rulers established the Kingdom of Elymais in 147 BC, which was restored to Persian suzerainty in 224 AD.
Muslim conquest of Elam
The Muslim conquest of Elam took place in 639 AD under the command of Abu Musa al-Ash'ari, who drove the Persian satrap out of Ardašir. Susa later fell, and the satrap fled to Shushtar, where his forces were besieged by Abu Musa for 18 months. Shustar finally fell in 642 AD. According to popular legend, an unknown Arab who lived within the city befriended a man in Abu Musa's army, and dug tunnels through the wall in return for a share of the spoils. Abu Musa's forces then purged all Zoroastrian and Nestorian religious leaders from the region. During the Muslim conquest, the Sassanids were allied with non-Muslim Arab tribes, which implies that the wars were religious rather than national in nature.
Many Muslim settlements by military garrisons were established shortly following the conquest, and soon after many Arab Muslim families used the social upheaval to gain control of private estates. Muslim conquest thus brought Elam under the rule of the Arabs of the Umayyad and Abbasid Calipahtes, until Ya'qūb ibn al-Layth al-Saffār reclaimed control over the region as well as much of Iran, founding the short-lived Saffarid dynasty. From thence, Iranian dynasties would continue to rule the region in succession.
During the second half of the 10th century, the Arabian Assad tribe, taking advantage of social strife in the region, migrated in and settled in central Elam near Ardašir. Following the fall of the Abbassid Caliphate, however, the flow of Arab immigrants into Elam diminished. In the latter part of the 16th century, a few Arab tribes, including the bani Kaab, migrated from southern Iraq and Kuwait into Elam.
Qajar period
Modern history
Independence
1925 coup d'état
Arab uprising
Iran-Iraq war
During the 1990s
2005–present
Government and Politics
Economy
Agriculture
The abundance of water, the varied landforms, and the fertility of the soil have made Elam a rich and well-endowed land for agriculture. A wide variety of agricultural products such as wheat, barley, oil seeds, rice, eucalyptus, and medicinal herbs can be grown alongside grape vines, and palm and citrus orchards abound. The more mountainous northeast is suitable for raising olives and sugar cane. In 2005, 51,000 hectares of land were planted with sugar cane, producing 350,000 tons of sugar. THe abundance of water supplies, rivers, and dams also have an influence on the fisheries which are prevalent in the area.
The Isle of Abadan in the Arwand river in particular is an important area for the production of date palms, despite having suffered consequences of the Iraqi invasion during the Iran–Iraq War of the 1980s. The palm groves are irrigated by tidal irrigation: at high tide, the water level in the rivers rises and the river flow enters irrigation canals that have been dug from the river towards the inland plantations; at low tide, the canals drain the unused portion of the water back into the river.