Emirate of Derbent


Emirate of Derbent was a medieval state that arose on the Caspian trade route with its center in the city of Derbent. The latter occupied a key position among trade centers in the Caspian region. It was ruled by the Hashimid dynasty, descendants of a freedman from the Banu Sulaym tribe.

Background

The first attack on Derbent by an Arab Caliphate was launched in 642 under Suraqa ibn Amr, according to al-Tabari. As a result, the city's Sassanid-appointed governor Shahrbaraz surrendered. Thereafter the city was used as a base by Arabs during the devastating Arab–Khazar wars. In 713–714, Arab general Maslama led an expedition which captured Derbent, reportedly after a resident showed him a secret underground passage. The Armenian historian Łewond claims that the Arabs, realizing that they could not hold the fortress, razed its walls. Future caliph Marwan II once garrisoned Derbent. Asid ibn Zafir al-Sulami and his son Yazid were also once in command of Derbent. A commander of Derbent, al-Munajjim al-Sulami was executed by Sa'id ibn Salm al-Bahili in 799, which prompted his son Hayyun to mount a revenge raid by the Khazars. Maskat was also annexed to governorate after 833.

History

The autonomous or independent emirate was formed in 869 by Hashim b. Suraqa b. Salis b. Hayyun, Hayyun's great-grandson, following the Anarchy at Samarra. The emirate's politics were influenced by guilds, important tribes and warrior caste, often struggling with each other as kingmakers. The neighbouring Shirvanshahs also contested the emirs' sovereignty.
Hashim's rule lasted until 884 was followed by his descendants who continuously fought against the Khazars, the Rus', the Shirvanshahs and Sarir. The Hashimid dynasty fell from power in 1075 when Fariburz I annexed Derbent, but soon another dynasty emerged following Saljuq intervention, namely the Aghlabids, named after Aghlab b. Ali who was appointed by Seljuk commander Savtegin after his release from Shirvan prison. This dynasty was in power when Akhsitan I defeated emir Bek-Bars b. Muzaffar with his cousin George III, the king of Georgia.

Rulers

The Derbent emirate was mainly ruled by Hashimids, at times interrupted by Shirvanshah appointees:
  1. Hashim b. Suraqa
  2. 'Omar b. Hashim
  3. Muhammad b. Hashim
  4. Abd al-Malik I
  5. * Abu’l-Naǰm b. Muhammad
  6. Ahmad b. Abd al-Malik I
  7. Haytham ibn Muhammad
  8. Ahmad
  9. Haytham ibn Muhammad
  10. Ahmad of Shirvan
  11. Khashram Ahmad b. Munabbih — King of Lakz
  12. Ahmad
  13. Maymun I b. Ahmad
  14. Muhammad IV of Shirvan
  15. Maymun I
  16. Muhammad II b. Ahmad
  17. Lashkari I b. Maymun
  18. Mansur I b. Maymun
  19. Yazid ibn Ahmad
  20. Mansur I
  21. Yazid ibn Ahmad
  22. Mansur I
  23. Abd al-Malik II b. Mansur
  24. Ali II of Shirvan
  25. * Mansur b. Musaddid
  26. Abd al-Malik II
  27. Mansur II b. Abd al-Malik II
  28. Lashkari II b. Abd al-Malik II
  29. Mansur II
  30. Abd al-Malik III b. Lashkari II
  31. Afridun I
  32. Abd al-Malik III
  33. Afridun I
  34. Abd al-Malik III
  35. Afridun I
  36. Abd al-Malik III
  37. Maymun II b. Mansur II
The emirate was eventually absorbed into the Seljuq Empire and later Shirvanshah state. However, around 1130-1150, the emirate was ruled by another dynasty according to Abu Hamid al-Gharnati:
  1. Sayf al-Din Muhammad b. Khalifa
  2. Muzaffar b. Muhammad — married to daughter of Demetrius I of Georgia
  3. Bek-Bars b. Muzaffar
  4. Abd al-Malik IV b. Bek-Bars
  5. Rashid b. Farrukhzad
The emirate was again absorbed into Shirvanshah state after 1225 but was finally annexed to Ilkhanate after the arrival of Hulagu Khan in the Middle East, who appointed his son Yoshmut to commander the march of Derbent in 1265.