The Voice.-2004.May.-Volume:8.-No.89
Azerbaijan land of fire
The ancient states of Azerbaijan, which maintained political, economic
and cultural ties with Sumer
and Akkad and formed part of the wider civilization of Mesopotamia,
were governed by dynasties of Turkic descent. The Turkophone peoples which have
inhabited the area of Azerbaijan
since ancient times were fire-worshippers and adherents of one of the world's
oldest religions -Zoroastrianism. The country's name, in its current form, is
derived from a Turkic collocation meaning "land, noble people, keepers of
the flame". Over the period from the late ninth to the seventh centuries
BC, the Mannaean kingdom held sway in the area of lake Urmia. The
Cimmerian-Scythian-Saka kingdom flourished in the seventh and sixth centuries
BC in the south-west of Azerbaijan.
In the 670s BC, the Mannaean kingdom arose in the territory of Azerbaijan
and was overthrown by the Persian Achaemenid kingdom in the mid-sixth century
BC.
A vital role was played in
Azerbaijani history by the kingdom
of Atropaten, which came
into existence in the southern part of the country in the 520s BC and which was
heavily influenced by Hellenism. The Caucasian Albanian state was created in
the north of Azerbaijan
in the third millennium BC, with the river Araz as its southern frontier.
Following the invasion by the Arabs, the dominant religion from the early
eighth century in Azerbaijan
became Islam. Most of the Albanians also converted to Islam and only a minority
retained their former religion.
Following the
anti-Caliphate rising by the local population, several new states arose in the territory of Azerbaijan
in the ninth century, the most powerful of which was the State of Shirvan, with its
capital at Shemakha, which was ruled by the Shirvanshah dynasty. This endured
until the sixteenth century and played an enormous role in the history of
medieval Azerbaijan.
The independent states of the Sajids, Salarids, Ravvadids (with their capital
at Tabriz) and
Shaddadids (with their capital at Ganja) arose from the ninth to the eleventh
centuries in the territory
of Azerbaijan.
Azerbaijan was
ruled by the Seljuk dynasty from the end of the eleventh century. Over the
period 1136-1225, the Atabek Eldegiz state held sway in Azerbaijan.
The sharing by the
country's indigenous population of a common Turkic language and Turkic
provenance and their adherence to the same Islamic faith made possible a
process of consolidation of the Azerbaijani nation which reached its
culmination in the eleventh and twelfth centuries. This same period saw the
greatest flowering of the culture of Azerbaijan, which bequeathed to the
world an array of illustrious philosophers, architects, poets and scholars. The
crowning achievement of Azerbaijani social and cultural thought of that period
was the work of Nizami Ganjavi (1141-1209), poet and philosopher, now one of
the treasures of the world's cultural heritage. From the mid-thirteenth
century, the Azerbaijani states became vassals of the Mongol Hulagid dynasty
(1258-1356). In the mid-fourteenth century, following an uprising by the local
population to cast off the yoke of the invaders, the local Jalairid feudal
lords took up the reins of power and, with the support of the Azerbaijani
nobility, established the Jalairid state (1359-1410). From the end of the
fourteenth century, Azerbaijan
was repeatedly invaded byTamerlan and served as the
theatre for his battles with the Golden Horde.
The Azerbaijani dynasties of Qara-Qoyunlu
and Aq-Qoyunlu ruled over Azerbaijan
in 1410-1468 and 1468-1501 and under them Azerbaijan grew significantly in
power. In 1501, the Safavid state was formed in Azerbaijan, which was named after
the ruling Azerbaijani dynasty, with its capital in Tabriz. Under this dynasty, all the lands of Azerbaijan were
united, for the first time in their history, into a single Azerbaijani state.
The territory of the Safavid state stretched from the Amu Darya River
to the Euphrates and from Derbent to the
shores of the Persian Gulf. This polity was
created and developed as an essentially Azerbaijani state and all political
power remained in the hands of the Azerbaijani feudal nobility. Senior court officials,
military generals and provincial governors were all appointed from among the
Azerbaijani nobility. The army was made up from the militia of the most
powerful Azerbaijani clans. Azerbaijani was the official language of the
Safavid state. By the end of the sixteenth century, the capital of the Safavid
state had been transferred to Isfahan
and its shah now drew his support primarily from the Persian nobility. The
State, while ruled by an Azerbaijan
dynasty, took on an increasingly Persian aspect.
In the 1747 after demise of Nadir
Shah and with the weakening of the power exercised by the Iranian shahs over
the territory of Azerbaijan, the country disintegrated into some 20 khanates,
namely, Ardabil, Baku, Ganja, Derbent, Erivan, Javad, Karabagh, Karadagh, Khoi,
Maku, Maragin, Nakhichevan,
Quba, Salyan, Sarab, Shirvan, Sheki, Tabriz, Talysh and Urumi.
The first Russo-Persian
war of 1804-1813, fought to establish dominance over the Azerbaijani khanates,
resulted in the first division of Azerbaijani territories between Russia and Persia. The
peace treaty of Gulistan, signed on 12 October 1813 by Russia and Persia, gave
legal recognition to the effective annexation by Russia of the khanates of northern Azerbaijan,
with the exception of Nakhichevan and Erivan.
The second Russo-Persian war of 1826-1828 led, on 10 February 1828, to the signing of the
Turkmanchai peace treaty, under which Persia officially renounced its
claims to northern Azerbaijan
and finally recognized its annexation, with the inclusion of the Nakhichevan
and Erivan khanates, by Russia.
Since the mid-19th century,
the oil industry had been flourishing in northern Azerbaijan. The first ever
industrial oil well was drilled in 1848. In the late 19thearly 20th centuries Baku was producing 95% of
Russia's
and about 50% of the world's oil production. The Nobels and Rothschilds were
among the oil magnates of Baku,
and made a great income. The capital of Nobels was made largely due to the
income that came from the Azerbaijani oil. 2nd half of the 19th - early 20th c.
was also a period of national culture's progress in Azerbaijan; for example, in
1907, Uzeyir Hajibayov, famous Azerbaijani composer, wrote his «Leyli and
Majnun», the first opera in the Muslim world. In general, Azerbaijan's
musical culture was so developed that Azerbaijan was called as
"East's Conservatoire" or "East's Italy". Considerable uplift
and real national awakening were seen in other spheres too. Thus, since the
mid-19th century the ideas of masses' enlightenment have been in an active
spread. To that end, the "Azerbaijan"
newspaper was issued by the efforts of national intelligentsia in 1858 in Tabriz, southern Azerbaijan. It
was the first one in Azerbaijani and published under different names for some
years.
In North
Azerbaijan, in 1875-1877, the newspaper "Akinchi"
("Ploughman") was published under the guidance of the outstanding
enlightener Hasan bay Zardabi. Historic achievements of "Akinchi"
include, first of all, the struggle for enriching the native language and its
propaganda.
There
should be mentioned the literary and enlightening activities of Mirza Fatali
Akhundov, Mirza Alakbar Sabir, Jalil Mammadguluzadah, Jafar Jabbarli,
Firudun bay Kocharli, Ahmad Javad, and many others. Moreover, the national
professional fine arts, architecture, theater, and cinematography were in
substantial progress.
Above-mentioned rapid cultural-ideological processes also made a great
influence on political institutionalization and the consolidation of the
Azerbaijani society. Azerbaijanis, living within Russia, were among the pioneers of
the Empire Muslims' democratic movement for their rights. Alimardan bay
Topchubashov, a distinguished Azerbaijani statesman, became one of the founders
of "Ittifaqi Muslimin" ("Union of Muslims"). It was
established in order to represent and pursue the Turkic-Muslim peoples'
interests in the Empire authorities in 1905.
In general,the Azerbaijani representatives
took an active part in this movement striving for the common aims of the
oppressed Muslims in the Czarist Russia.
Talking about the
considerable progress in the sphere of the political consciousness in the early
20th century, it's impossible not to notice visions of pan-Turkist Ahmad bay
Agaoglu, and Ali bay Huseynzadeh, who shaped the Azerbaijanism idea,
consolidating the nation in a moral level, as a synthesis of traditional
Islamic and Turkic priorities with the modern ones.
The late 19th 1st half of
the 20th c. also marked the activation of political consciousness of
Azerbaijani's lived in Southern Azerbaijan.
Movements of 1905-1911 for the limitation of Shah's absolutism - headed by the
Azerbaijani national heroes like Sattar khan and Baghir khan for the first time
brought the democratic forms of political culture and institutionalization to
the then Persia, which was under the rule of Gajar dynasty. The brightest page
of this struggle was the revolt of 1908-1909 in Tabriz, the main city of South
Azerbaijan, where the power during the uprising was in the hands
of anjuman.
A direct socio-political
result of the 1905-1911 developments "became the movement under the
guidance of Sheikh Khiyabani broken out in Tabriz in 1919. The establishment of
parliament and government in 1945 in Southern Azerbaijan
indicates the rise of political culture of Azerbaijanis living in the Shah Iran
to higher level of development. Thus, South Azerbaijan
became a heart of all democratic processes in Iran in the late 19th- 1st half of
the 20th c.
After the revolutionary
events of 1917 in Russia, the processes of disintegration of
the country became more pronounced
and the conditions were ripe for the formation, in outlying ethnic regions of
the former Russian Empire, of independent States.Thus, on 28 May 1918, the Azerbaijani
Democratic Republic was proclaimed in
the territory of the eastern part
of the
southern Caucasus - the first parliamentary democracy in the Islamic east -which was to play a historic role in the
renaissance and formation of the sense of
ethnic identity and statehood of
the Azerbaijani nation. In its brief existence of less than two years,the
multi-party Azerbaijani parliament
and the coalition Government managed
to take a number of important steps in the process of nation-building
and the development of statehood, and in such areas as education, formation
of an
army, development of independent financial
and economic systems and securing international recognition for the young
republic as a full member of the international community of nations.On 11
January 1920, the Paris Peace Conference,
with the Treaty of Versailles, accorded
de facto recognition of the independence of the Azerbaijani Republic, to
whose capital-Baku.
The political decision by
the Bolshevist Government of the Russian Socialist Federative Republic (RSFSR)
not to recognize the Azerbaijani Democratic Republic, the deployment of the
Eleventh Red Army on the frontiers of the Azerbaijani Republic in Spring 1920,
the aggression waged by Dashnak-ruled Armenia against Azerbaijan in Karabagh
and Zangezur, the terrorist strikes by Armenian groups and
the Bolsheviks against the peaceful Azerbaijani population inside Azerbaijan and the social and economic crisis gripping the country - all these
factors combined to bring about the weakening of the, Azerbaijani Democratic
Republic and led to the occupation of its capital by the
Eleventh Army on 27- 28 April
1920.
70 years, during which it formed
part (of the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (USSR), marked a new, important stage in the development , of
the Azerbaijani statehood, during which
the Azerbaijan Soviet Socialist
Republic forged ahead in its social, economic and cultural development. At the
same time, the Soviet period also saw many
negative trends emerge in Azerbaijan,
as elsewhere throughout the USSR.
In 1988-1990, the national
democratic movement in Azerbaijan
campaigned vigorously for the restoration of the
country's independence. On September
23, 1989, Azerbaijan
was among the first Soviet republics to adopt its own Constitutional Law on
Sovereignty. With a view
to suppressing this movement, on
20 January 1990, with
the approval of
the Soviet leadership under Mikhail Gorbachev, the Soviet army units
were dispatched to Baku.Their reprisals, which were conducted with uncommon savagery, left hundreds of
innocent Azerbaijani citizens
dead and wounded. A state of emergency was declared in the country and this
remained in force until mid-1991.
18 October 1991 saw the passage of the act establishing the State independence of the Republic
of Azerbaijan,which set out the foundations for the statehood of an
independent Azerbaijan
and determined the principles of its political and economic
structure. With that act the Republic
of Azerbaijan once again,
after a 71-year interval, became an independent subject of international law.
Azerbaijan is a democratic,
secular, unitary republic with a single
legislative body.State power is based on the principle of division of
powers:legislative power is implemented
by the Parliament, executive power by President and judicial by courts. Milli
Meclis (Parliament) one chamber body comprising 125 deputies, elected by direct
elections for 5 years term. The head of state is President, elected for 5 years
term by direct elections, is responsible for executive power. Judicial Power is
executed solely by Constitutional
Court, Supreme Court and Economic Court, general and specialized
courts. From 1993 to 2003 outstanding political leader of Azerbaijan Heydar
Aliyev was the president of Azerbaijan. On October 15, 2003 llham Aliyev
was elected as president of Republic of Azerbaijan.