Maku was a region of the old
Armenia –800, previously known as Artaz according to
Aziz Atiya's
History of Eastern Christianity. The Castle of Maku, original Shavarshan, was the center of the domains of the princely Armenian family of
Amatuni. The Artazian branch of Amatuni family ruled the Maku region of Artaz still in the XVth century and successfully defended it against
Timurleng, when he besieged the castle of Maku. Maku was the capital of a
Kangarli Khanate, one of numerous small, semi-independent
Maku Khanates that emerged from the breakup of the
Safavid Empire in the 18th century. Maku served as the capital of the
Kurdish Jalali dynasty into the 1860s when the centralizing
Qajar government in
Persia/
Iran removed them, appointing a governor instead. The city is well known in the history of the
Baháʼí Faith for its fort where the
Báb had been exiled to and imprisoned for nine months. At this fortress
Mullá Husayn, the first Disciple of the Báb, arrived on
Náw-Rúz of the year 1848 to see the Báb. == Demographics ==