Feyli Kurds are native to the historical region known as Mahsabadhan, which during the
Parthian era was considered a subregion of
Pahla, and during the
Sasanian era was considered a subregion of
Azarbaijan. After the
Islamic conquest of Iran, Mahsabadhan was considered part of
Jibal. When the term Luristan came into use, it included historical Mahsabadhan, which became known as Posht-e-Kuh and made up the western part of historical Lur-e-Kuchak. Posht-e-Kuh had a Kurdish majority, with some Lur and Lak minorities. Lurs were the majority of Pish-e-Kuh which had a Lak minority. In 1655-1656, Evliya Çelebi travelled from Baghdad to Shahrizur and Erbil, passing through territories under the vali of Luristan, which he stated was independent from both the Safavids and Ottomans. He wrote about the presence of the "Kurds of Luristan" (Ekrad-i Luristan) in the region, as well as several mixed towns inhabited by both Luristani Kurds and Sunni Kurds.
Martin van Bruinessen stated that it was likely that the "Luristani Kurds" mentioned by Evliya Çelebi were the Feyli Kurds. When the Russian-Ottoman-Persian boundary commission surveyed the borders from 1848 to 1852, Mehmed Hurşîd Paşa, a member of the commission, wrote a travelogue in which he wrote that along the southern parts of the Ottoman-Iranian borders, there were two large tribal groups, the Arab
Bani Lam and the Fayli. He wrote that the Fayli were "Persian subjects" (İran'a tâbi'i), and listed the tribes of Pusht-i Kūh and Pīsh-i Kūh, which he estimated to be 50,000, also adding that the Fayli tribes were "entirely Kurds" (kāffesi Ekrād) and spoke Persian. He added that they were mostly Shia with Yarsani minorities and that they had many scholars and poets who wrote in Persian "and their own language, Gurani." Hurşîd listed the Feyli tribes, which were the Kirda, Rizawand, Mahaki, Charkhiston, Dinarwand, and Shadkhun tribes in Posht-e-Kuh, the Kakawand, Bitiyawand, Muminawand, Bitirnawand, and Jawari tribes in Pish-e-Kuh, the Silsilah tribe in
Dilfan, the Amala tribe of non-nomadic farmers and peasants, the Hulaylani tribes (Osmanwand, Jalalwand, Dajiyawand, Balawand, and Suramiri), the Bajalan tribes (Daliyawand and Sagwand), and the Beyranvand tribes (Aliyyawand and Dushiyyawand). Hurşîd wrote that Khanaqin city and Kermanshah province were Kurdish but not Feyli, and that the center of the Feyli Kurds was
Dih-i-Bala. At the beginning of the 19th century, many Feyli Kurds migrated westwards from Posht-e-Kuh (Ilam province) across the border to eastern Iraq, where there was already a Feyli Kurdish community, and some went to Baghdad. In 1928, the Iranian government ordered its consulate in Baghdad to provide Feyli Kurds with incentives to return to Iran. The Iranian consulate of Mandali in 1925 estimated that over 20,000 Feyli Kurds from Iran migrated to Iraq that year, with 10,000 in the Kurdish villages of eastern Iraq, 4,000 in Baghdad, and the rest in southern Iraq as well as Kirkuk. There were more Feyli Kurds in Iraq than in Iran. At the beginning of the 1920s, out of the 185,000-200,000 population of Baghdad, around 20,000 were Feyli Kurds. The connection of the Feyli Kurds to the trade routes between Iran and Iraq made them play an important role in Baghdad's commerce. Furthermore, the
Exodus of Iranian Jews to Israel in 1948, which included Jewish merchants, allowed Feyli Kurdish merchants to take over the trade industry. Hossein-Ali Razmara, an officer in the geography unit of the Iranian Army, and older brother of
Ali Razmara, visited Posht-e-Kuh in 1941 and wrote that most tribes were Kurdish and had an ancient presence there. In 1916,
Muhammad Amin Zaki Beg went on an official trip to Posht-e-Kuh where he met the Vali. He wrote that he had no issues speaking Kurdish with the locals, who identified themselves as Kurds. He also wrote that even the Vali of Posht-e-Kuh knew Kurdish. In 1953, British historian
Stephen Hemsley Longrigg wrote about the political history of Iraq and wrote that "these hardy natives of the southern
Zagros, and subjects of their hereditary Wali, were familiar in Baghdad and Basra as porters of heavy loads, which occupation they monopolized. They were resident also as traders and craftsmen in the middle-Tigris and Gharraf regions, known there as Fayliya Kurds; and they dominated the border towns of Mandali and Badra and the villages near by. Of all this the last half-century has changed nothing. North of Arabistan and almost equally independent of the
Qajar dynasty lay Luristan, the province of the Lurs, who are racially and dialectically distinct from the Persians. It fell into two areas, the Greater and the Lesser. The Pusht-i Kuh, western zone of the latter and home of the Fayliya Kurds, formed its boundary with Basra and Baghdad wilayas. It had remained for three centuries under a single line of Walis. The obligations of the government were confined to a small tribute to the central Government, its powers unlimited within Pusht-i Kuh, its influence considerable in eastern Iraq. Quolam Reza Khan, fourteenth of his line, was respected for his pomp and his religious observances, but hated for his morbid avarice." After the
Iraqi–Kurdish Autonomy Agreement of 1970, which included the appointment of a Kurdish vice president of Iraq, the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) nominated a Feyli Kurd named Habib Karim, although the Iraqi government refused to approve the nomination, accusing him of having Iranian origin. In the late 1970s and throughout the Ba'athist period, the
Feyli Kurds were increasingly targeted. Although the Iraqi government officially justified the persecution of Feyli Kurds by claiming they were originally Iranian, its main goal was to reduce Kurdish influence in Iraq. After Saddam Hussein was overthrown in the
2003 invasion of Iraq, the situation of the Feyli Kurds began to improve. Many Feyli Kurds rose to significant positions, including
Fuad Hussein. Feyli Kurds were recognized in the Iraqi constitution of 2005. In January 2019, Feyli Kurds received a reserved minority seat in
Wasit Governorate, which was won by Mazen Abdel Moneim Gomaa who had 5,078 votes in the
2018 Iraqi parliamentary election. By the early 2000s, around half of the Feyli Kurds in Iraq were native to eastern Iraq, while the other half descended from those who migrated from Posht-e-Kuh. == Subdivisions ==