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Beth Garmai

Historical region around the city of Kirkuk in northern Iraq

Beth Garmai

Summary

Historical region around the city of Kirkuk in northern Iraq

Roman]]-[[Sasanian]] borders.

Beth Garmai, (, Middle Persian: Garamig/Garamīkān/Garmagān, New Persian: Garmakan, Kurdish: Germiyan/گەرمیان, , Latin and Greek: Garamaea) is a historical Assyrian region around the city of Kirkuk in northern Iraq. It is located at southeast of the Little Zab, southwest of the mountains of Shahrazor, northeast of the Tigris and Hamrin Mountains, although sometimes including parts of southwest of Hamrin Mountains, and northwest of the Sirwan River.

The name "Beth Garmai" or "Beth Garme" may be of Syriac origin which meaning "the house of bones", which is thought to be a reference to bones of slaughtered Achaemenids after a decisive Macedonian victory in the Battle of Gaugamela. An alternative explanation for the name's origin suggests that it may have been derived from a people, possibly a Persian tribe.

The region was a province, Garmekan, under the Sasanians. It was a prosperous metropolitan province centered at Karkha D'Beth Slokh (Kirkuk), It had a substantial Assyrian population who mostly followed the Church of the East until the fourteenth century, when the region was conquered by Timurlane, who conducted massacres of the indigenous Assyrian population of what is today Northern Iraq, Southeast Turkey and Northeast Syria.

References

Sources

References

  1. Thomas A. Carlson et al., "Beth Garmai – ܒܝܬ ܓܪ̈ܡܝ ” in The Syriac Gazetteer last modified 14 January 2014, http://syriaca.org/place/33.
  2. British Institute of Persian Studies. (1982). "Iran: journal of the British Institute of Persian Studies, Volume 20". The Institute.
  3. "Garmai is the plural of Garma/Garmo meaning "bone"".
  4. Wilmshurst, David. (2000). "The ecclesiastical organisation of the Church of the East, 1318-1913, Volume 582". Peeters Publishers.
  5. Aboona, Hirmis. (2008). "Assyrians, Kurds, And Ottomans Intercommunal Relations On The Periphery Of The Ottoman Empire". Cambria Press.
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