DOI QR코드

DOI QR Code

19-20세기 초 쿠르드 부족장의 검은 천막

A Study on Dīwānkhāna of Kurdish Tribal Chief in the 19th and Early 20th Centuries

  • 투고 : 2020.06.12
  • 심사 : 2020.07.15
  • 발행 : 2020.07.30

초록

This study investigates the architectural and regional characteristics of Kurdish tribal chief's tent (dīwānkhāna) based on the travel documents written by the British travellers in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Kurdish black tent has been defined as not only a black tent for a nomadic family in the Middle East, but also an ethnographical model presenting the Kurdish identity up to now. The Kurdish tribes, however, were hierarchical groups with independent forces and the tribal chiefs had used a kind of public tent until Turkey, Iran, Iraq, and Syria were established. The chiefs' tent was the multi-used facility for own dwelling, reception, and travellers' guesthouse to perform the traditional duties of the tribal leader, as well as the symbolic architecture on a large scale distinguished from the other tribesmen's. The tent is classified into three types based on the spatial composition, especially the placement of dīwānkhāna space. The distribution of the types, like the Kurdish dialects, were divided by the main mountain ranges such as the Zagros and Taurus Mountains. The distributional pattern could be understood to represent one aspect of the ethnic composition of the Kurds who consist of various origins.

키워드

과제정보

본 연구는 서울대학교 공학연구원의 지원으로 수행하였습니다. 연구 지원에 감사드립니다.

참고문헌

  1. Ainsworth, W. (1841). "An Account of a Visit to the Chaldeans, Inhabiting Central Kurdistan; And of an Ascent of the Peak of Rowandiz (Tur Sheikhiwa) in Summer in 1840". The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London. 11(-), 33, 46
  2. Andrews. P. A. (1999). Felt Tents and Pavilions : The Nomadic Tradition and its Interaction with Princely Tentage. Vol. 1, London: Melisende, xxxi
  3. Andrews, P. A. Tents: Nomad Tents and Court Tents in the Middle East and Central Asia. Retrived 4th June 2020 from http://www.andrewspeter.info/index.html
  4. Bedlisi, Sharaf al-Din ibn Shams al-Din. (1998). Sharafnama. Vel'iaminov Zernov ed., Tehran : Asatir, 82-3
  5. Brant, J., & Glascott, A. G. (1840). "Notes of a Journey Through a Part of Kurdistan, in the Summer of 1838". The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London. 10(-), 412
  6. Buckingham, J. S. (1827). Travels in Mesopotamia. Vol. 1, London : Henry Colburn, 27-31, 271-2
  7. Cay, H. (2001). The Kurdish File with All Aspects. Ankara : Tamga Yayincilik, 338
  8. Chaliand, G. ed. (1993). A People without a Country. New York : Olive Branch Press, 23-4
  9. Choi, N., & Jeon, B. (2019. 11.). "A study on Kurdish mountainous Settlements Documented by British Travellers in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries". Proceedings of Autumn Conference of KAAH, 148, 152-3
  10. Choi, N. (June 2019). "Temporary Dwelling Place and Pamanent House of Semi-nomads in the Hawraman: Palangan Village". Central Asian Studies, 24(1), 153-81 https://doi.org/10.29174/cas.2019.24.1.006
  11. Dickson, B. (1910). "Journeys in Kurdistan". The Geographical Journal. 35(4), 361 https://doi.org/10.2307/1777016
  12. Drew, P. (1979). Tensile architecture. London and New York : Routledge, 27, 106-7, 138
  13. Edmonds, C. J. (1957). Kurds, Turks and Arabs: Politics, Travels and Research in North-Eastern Iraq 1919-1925. London : Oxford Iniversity Press, 11, 57, 81-5, 160-1
  14. Faegre, T. (1979). Tents: Architecture of the Nomads. Albemare : John Murray, 13
  15. Feilberg, C. G. (1944). La Tente Noire: Contribution Ethnographique a l'Histoire Culturelle Des Nomades. Kobenhavn : Nationalmuseets Skrifter, 12, 81, 83-6 112-3, 136
  16. Hatton, E. M. (1979). The Tent Book. Boston : Houghton Mifflin Company, 9
  17. Hay, W. R. (1921). Two Years in Kurdistan: Experiences of a Political Officer, 1818-1820. London : Sidgwick & Jackson, 127
  18. Heirat Majadi, 'Abd al-Hamid. (2002). Ilha va 'Ashayer-i Kurdistan. Sanandaj : Kurdistan Unversity Press
  19. Hopkirk, P. (2001). The Great Game on Secret Service in High Asia. Chong, Youngmok tr., Paju : Sakyejul, 25-9
  20. Hosseini, 'Ali Reza Shah. (2009). "Siah Chador va Maskan dar Il-e Alikani-ye Garmsar". Najva-ye Farhang. 11(-), 58
  21. Ibn Khaldun. (2015). The Muqaddimah. Dawood, N. J. and Rosenthal, F. Eng. tr & ed., Kim, H. Kor. tr., Seoul : Kachi Publishing, 385-7
  22. James, B. (2016). "Mamluk and Mongol Peripheral Politics : Asserting Sovereignty in the Middle Ease's 'Kurdish Zone'(1260-1330)". The Mongols' Middle East: Continuity and Transformation in Ilkhanid Iran. De Nicola, Bruno and Melville, Charles ed., Leiden and Boston : Brill, 278
  23. James, B. (2014). "Arab Ethnonyms ('Ajam, 'Arab, Badu and Turk): The Kurdish Case as a Paradigm for Thinking about Differences in the Middle Ages". Iranian Studies. 47(5), 160, 696 https://doi.org/10.1080/00210862.2014.934149
  24. Jawshani, A. (2015). Kurdistanica Dictionary: English-Kurdish-Persian. Vol. 2, Karaj : Mang Publication, 2880-1
  25. Khazanov, A. M. (1990). Nomads and the Outside World. Kim, Hodong tr., Seoul : Jisik Sanup, 45
  26. Khorshid, F. M. (2009). Zaban-e Kordi va Parakandegi-ye Joqhrafiai-ye Lahjeha-ye An. Khezeri, Saeed and Jafar Khezri tr., Tehran : Paniz, 56
  27. Kinneir, J. M. (1818). A Journey through Asia Minor, Armenia, and Asia Minor, to Constantinople, in the years 1813-1814. Boston : John Murray, 374-5
  28. Koohi-Kamali, F. (2003). The Political Development of the Kurds in Iran, Pastoral Nationalism. New York : Palgrave MacMillan, 67
  29. Layard, A. H. (1853). Discoveries among the Ruins of Nineveh and Babylon with Travels in Armenia, Kurdistan and the Desert. New York : Harper & Brothers, 143, 144-5, 268, 272-3
  30. Maisel, S. ed. (2018). The Kurds: An Encyclopedia of Life, Culture, and Society. Santan Barbara and Denver : ABC-CLIO, xii, 1, 4, 83, 245
  31. Mardukh, M. (2000). Tarikh-e Kord va Kordestan (va Tavabe'). Sanandaj : Nashr-e Shuan, 302
  32. Meiselas, S. ed. (2008). Kurdistan in the shadow of history. 2nd edtion, Chicago and London : University of Chicago Press, 1, 233
  33. Mignan, R. (1839). A Winter Journey through Asia, the Caucasian Alps, and Georgia. Vol. 1, London : Richard Bentley, 220, 236-9
  34. Oliver, P. ed. (1997). Encyclopedia of Vernacular Architecture of the World. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 1589-91
  35. O'Shea, M. T. (1997). "The image from the outside: European travellers and Kurdistan before the great war". Geopolitics and International Boundaries, 2(3), 75 https://doi.org/10.1080/13629379708407600
  36. Ozoglu, H. (May, 1996). "State-Tribe Relations: Kurdish Tribalism in the 16th and 17th Century Ottoman Empire". British Journal of Middle Eastern Studies. 23(1), 15
  37. Potts, D. T. (2014). Nomadism in Iran: From Antiquity to the Modern Era. New York : Oxford University Press, 159-61
  38. Rawlinson, H. C. (1839). "Notes on a March from Zohab, at the Foot of Zagros, ... , in the Year 1836". The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London, Vol. 9, 50 https://doi.org/10.2307/1797715
  39. Roger, C. (1991). Nomads in Archaeology. Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 88, 105-7, 148, 210
  40. Rudofsky, B. (1967). Architecture without Arcihtects. New York : Doubleday & Company, 45
  41. Ruhani, M. (1992). Tarikh-e Mashahi-ye Kord. Vol. 3, Tehran : Soroush Press, 33, 302
  42. Saadallah, S. (1998). Saladin's English-Kurdish Dictionary. Baghdad and Istanbul : Paris Kurdish Institute, 1254
  43. The Website of SKCHTO. Siah Chador Bafi. Retrived 4th June 2020 from http://www.skchto.com/fa/صنایع-دستی/handicrafts/395
  44. Scott, J. C. (2019). Against the Grain: a Deep History of the Earliest States. Kyunghoon, Jeon tr., Seoul : Cheggwahamgge, 289
  45. Sharfkandi, A. (1990). Kurdish-Persian Dictionary. Tehran : Soroush Press, 359
  46. Shiel, J. (1838). "Notes on a Journey from Tabriz, Through Kurdistan, via Van, Bitlis, Se'ert and Erbil, to Suleimaniyeh, in July and August, 1836". The Journal of the Royal Geographical Society of London, 8(-), 88
  47. Soltani, Mohammad 'Ali. (1995/6). Ilat va Tavayif-e Kermanshah-Uraman. Tehran : Farhangi-ye Neshr-ye Soha, 400
  48. Soltanzadeh, H. (2017). dar Farhang-e Irani (Mafahim va B'azi az Karbardha). Kashan : Daftar-e Pezhuheha-ye Farhangi, 49, 76
  49. Sykes, M. (1908). "The Kurdish Tribes of the Ottoman Empire". The Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland. 38(-), 451-86 https://doi.org/10.2307/2843309
  50. Thevenin, M. (15 Dep. 2014). "Pastoralite in eastern Turkey". Journal of Alpine Research. 102(2), 5
  51. Van Bruinessen, M. (1992). Agha, Shaikh and State: The Social and Political Structures of Kurdistan. London : Zed Books, 21-2, 82
  52. Wehr, H. (1976). A Dictionary of Modern Written Arabic. 3rd edition, J. Milton Cowan ed., New York : Spoken Language Service, 171, 303
  53. Zaki, M. A. (1939/1996). "A Brief History of Kurds and Kurdistan, Part One : From the Advent of Islam to AD 1750". The International Journal of Kurdish Studies. 10(1-2), Sharif, Nemat tr., 113
  54. Zargar, A. (2004). Dar Amadi Bar Shenakht-e M'emari-ye Rustai-ye Iran. Tehran : Daneshgah-e Shahid-e Beheshti, 167
  55. 布野修司 編. (2005). 世界住居誌, 東京: 昭和堂, 185