Mir Xanzad
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Mir Xanzad (or Khanzad) was a military commander and ruler of the
Soran Emirate Soran Emirate ( ku, میرنشینی سۆران) was a medieval Kurdish emirate established before the conquest of Kurdistan by Ottoman Empire in 1514 and later revived by Emir Kor centered in Rawandiz from 1816 to 1836. Kor was ousted in an off ...
in the late 16th or early 17th century. Xanzad was the sister of Mir Sulaiman, who ruled the Soran Emirate in the
Ottoman Empire The Ottoman Empire, * ; is an archaic version. The definite article forms and were synonymous * and el, Оθωμανική Αυτοκρατορία, Othōmanikē Avtokratoria, label=none * info page on book at Martin Luther University) ...
around 1620. After her brother was murdered by one of his military commanders, Lashkry, she took over from her brother. Some sources give a date of 1590 for when Xanzad became ruler. Laskry fled to the Shingal mountains, where Xanzad sent him a letter with a marriage proposal. When Xanzad and Lashkry met in Harir, Xanzad had Lashkry and all his men put to death. She moved the capital from Dwin Qala to Harir, built roads and castles and attacked many surrounding towns at the head of a huge army of 40,000 to 50,000 soldiers, including 12,000 infantry and 10,000 cavalry archers to protect the Soran Emirate from its enemies. During her reign, she ruled over two Kurdish districts called Harir and Soran, constituting the current Erbil governorate. Xanzad ruled for seven years, and her castle, Xanzad Castle, is still extant, located on a hilltop 22 kilometres from Erbil. Kurdistan 24 listed the castle as an important historical site in Kurdistan, saying that the ruins of the castle are "a dazzling hiking destination over the Harir plains, and are associated with the Kurdish queen Khanzad." Evliya Celebi, a Turkish explorer who lived between 1611 and 1684, described Xanzad in his diary:
''In the time of Sultan Murad IV 623-40 the districts of Harir and Soran were ruled by a venerable lady named Khanzade Sultan. She commanded an army consisting of twelve thousand foot soldiers with firearms and ten thousand mounted archers. On the battlefield, her face hidden by a veil and her body covered with a black cloak, she resembled he legendary Iranian heroSam, the son of Nariman, as she rode her Arabian thoroughbred and performed courageous feats of swordsmanship. At the head of a forty to fifty thousand strong army, she several times carried out raids into Iran, plundering Hamadan, Dargazin, Jamjanab and other considerable cities and returning to Soran victorious, loaded with booty.''
The name of Xanzad, the legendary Kurdish warrior queen, remains alive and is commemorated through various Kurdish songs and poems, including the Laskiri poem.


References

{{Authority control 17th-century Kurdish people Kurdish women in politics Kurdish female military and paramilitary personnel 17th-century women rulers 16th-century Kurdish people