9
was given by the Turco-Mongol invaders of Genghis Khan. Iranians were the first
inhabitants in Central Asia. Persian speaking Tajik peoples were descendants of early
Iranians. Then the Turkic groups arrived in the region. Turcomans were the first
arrivals as a Turkic group in the tenth century and
they maintained their ethnic,
cultural identity and nomadic life style. After Turcomans, Uzbeks were the last
arrivals and they became the ruling group in the region
.
15
The Uzbeks were a group
of Moslem, Turkiospeaking,
nomadic tribes of mixed Turkic, Mongol, and Iranian
origin.
16
During the Russian protectorate era in Bukhara, the ethnic composition is
that Uzbeks were the majority by 55-60 %
and living in Zarafshan, Kashka Darya
and in the river valleys of Central Bukhara, Tajiks were the second largest group
living in the mountainous eastern region (Eastern Bukhara) by 30%, Turcoman were
5-10% living alongside the Amu Darya and Kelif.
In addition, there were several
thousand nomadic Kirghiz population, living in Karategin. And, other minor ethnic
groups including Persians, Jews, and Indians also live as habitants of main towns
.
17
The Uzbeks and Turcoman were the two major Turkic communities in the region.
Although there was no ethnic identity
consciousness in the emirate, Uzbeks were
known as sedentary population. The Russians also named both Uzbeks and Tajiks
who were sedentary and semi sedentary in Bukhara as Sarts. The nomadic population
was known as Turcoman and they were different in terms of culture, life style, and
linguistics. Uzbeks are the latest arrivals in the region
and had the primary role of
ruling ethnic group deriving from Timurids and Shaybanids which had ruled the
region for a long time. “The name Uzbek thus now includes a fairly heterogeneous
population, ranging in culture from fully sedentary merchants and craftsmen to
15
Becker, Seymour,
Russia’s Protectorates in Central Asia: Bukhara and Khiva, 1865–1924,
(
London &New York: Routledge Curzon, 2005), 5.
16
Ibid, 3.
17
Ibid, 5.
10
seminomadic communities having a strong tribal orientation”.
18
The importance of
Uzbeks as the ruling ethnicity was based on being Uzbek ethnically of the Manghit
dynasty of the Emirate.
The Uzbeks, Tajiks and nomadic Turcomans were major
ethnic groups in the emirate. These three populations were originally orthodox
Sunnite. In addition, there were minor ethnic groups such as Arabs, Jewish, Gypsies
and Persians which have either different sects or different religions.
The reason of Uzbek population’s leading role in the region was the Uzbek
rulers for centuries. “Since the sixteenth, Bukhara had been an Uzbek kingdom, and
the Uzbeks who were Sunnis represented the largest group in the emirate (778,000
inhabitants in 1920 or 50.7 percent of the population).With the accession to the
throne of the Manghits, who came from a major Uzbek tribe, the Uzbek elite became
the
mainstay of power, and struggles for power itself merged with age old tribal
struggles”.
19
But, the Uzbek ruling elite constructed a very specific system between
Uzbeks and non-Uzbeks in the Emirate and other two khanates (Kokand and Khiva).
In the Uzbek khanates, for the pattern of government, Persians were chosen although
the ruling klans were Uzbeks. It is claimed that some khans’ mothers were Persian,
so this policy of Persian based government became a continual tradition.
20
The Tajik
population was the second largest one after Uzbeks. Since Bukhara and Samarkand
were the old and traditional Samanid Dynasty’s
21
cities, there were a large amount of
18
E.Bacon, Elizabeth,
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