The Bahdinan principality originated during the late Abbasid period, sometime around 1200. During its formation, it was largely dominated by the
Kurdish Hakkariyya tribe. The
Sharafnama of
Sharaf al-Din Bitlisi contains an account of the principality's history for two centuries, from the time of the
Timurid ruler
Shah Rukh in the 1400s until 1596. The Bahdinan amir Hasan, who was a client of the Safavid shah
Isma'il I, expanded the principality to include Duhok and the Sindi territory north of Zakho. Hasan's son Husayn later reigned as a client of the
Ottoman sultan
Suleiman the Magnificent. Husayn's son Qubād was deposed and killed by members of the Muzuri tribe; Qubād's son, Saydī Khān, was later reinstalled with Ottoman help. In the early 1600s, the principality of
Ardalan captured the Bahdinan capital of
Amadiya and appointed a governor there; sources say little about Bahdinan for a century afterward. The most famous ancient library in the region, in the Qubehan school at Amadiya, was destroyed by British troops putting down a
revolt in the region in 1919, although some 400 manuscripts were rescued and eventually found their way into the Iraq Museum's collection. ==References==