Safavid control could roughly be divided into two areas. The areas in southernmost Daghestan, amongst which
Darband (Derbent), were governed by officials who directly hailed from the Safavid ranks. The areas more to the north and west, where various Daghestani
principalities and feudal territories existed, were governed by various local dynasts under Safavid suzerainty. The most important of these were the
Shamkhal of
Kumukh at the
Terek River, and the ruler of the Kara Qaytaq styled with the hereditary title of
Utsmi, located on the
Caspian littoral. The small kingdom of
Enderi, located south of the Terek, formed somewhat of a "buffer state" towards the north. In contemporary sources, its population was commonly referred to as "Lezgis". The Safavid king (
shah) appointed the Shamkhal himself, but the candidate always had to be from the local princes. According to
Engelbert Kaempfer, the Shamkhal also possessed the title of
vali (i.e. viceroy), but "only as a honorific".
Fath-Ali Khan Daghestani, a member of the family of the Shamkhal of Kumukh, rose to become one of the most powerful individuals in the Safavid state. Though the Shamkhal and the
Utsmi attempted at playing the Safavids,
Ottomans, and
Russians against each other, they were, most of the time, subject rulers of the Safavids. From 1606 till 1719, the
Utsmi paid tribute to their Safavid overlords, whereas the Shamkhals did so from 1636 till 1719. During the
Russo-Persian War of 1651-1653, the successful Safavid offensive resulted in the destruction of the Russian fortress on the Iranian side of the Terek and its garrison being expelled. After the issue with the Russians was dealt with, then incumbent Safavid king
Abbas II (r. 1642-1666) ordered the "master of the hunt" (
mīr shekār-bāshi)
Allahverdi Khan to build new fortresses in Daghestan in order to secure the settlement of
Qizilbash warriors. However, this led to an atmosphere of uncomfort amongst the Daghestani tribes. Abbas II then tried to bring the Daghestani vassal rulers under the jurisdiction of the Safavid governor of
Shirvan, Hajji Manuchehr Khan. When these efforts proved to be unsuccessful, the Safavids sent a 30,000 strong army, which defeated the tribal Daghestani forces. Nevertheless, however, the result was "status quo ante". The Safavid rulers allowed their subject, the Shamkhal, to regain his post as local ruler whereas the Shamkhal sent a son, Gol-Mehr Beg as hostage to the Safavid capital
Isfahan. In 1659, a Safavid army which included 2,000
musketeers (
tofangchis), artillery-men (
tupchis), their artillery battery (
tup-khaneh) led by Aliqoli Beg the
tupchi-bashi-ye jolo, was dispatched to the Daghestan province. In 1668, the province was attacked by the
Cossack Stenka Razin and his men. By the late 1710s, Safavid Iran was in a state of heavy decline, with high-profile issues on its border regions. Amongst these, was the issue related to the
Shamkhal of Tarki. For years, the Safavids had not paid his customary subsidy. When the Shamkhal of
Tarki then requested government troops against Russian aggression, the Safavid king promised him "a token sum of 1,000
tomans". As a result of this negligence, the Shamkhal of Tarki submitted to Russian authority in 1717, facilitating the Russian invasion of Iran of several years later. In 1719, the
Utsmi of the Kara Qaytaq and the Shamkhal rebelled against the Safavid overlordship. In the same year the Lezgis were already considered a threat to the northwestern regions. The Safavid government then decided to send the Safavid commander-in-chief (
sepahsalar)
Hosaynqoli Khan (Vakhtang VI) to Daghestan in order to deal with the issue. Assisted by the governors of
Kakheti and
Shirvan, the commander-in-chief made significant progress in putting a halt to the Lezgins. However, the initially successful counter-campaign was abandoned by the central government at a critical moment in 1721. The order, which came after the fall of
grand vizier Fath-Ali Khan Daghestani, was made at the instigation of the eunuch faction within the royal court, who had persuaded the shah that a successful end of the campaign would do the Safavid realm more harm than good. In their view, it would enable Hosaynqoli Khan, the Safavid
vali, to form an alliance with
Russia with an eye to conquering Iran. With the threat then left unchecked,
Shamakhi, the capital of the Shirvan province,
was taken by 15,000 Lezgin tribesmen aided by Shamkhal Sorkhay Khan, its
Shia population massacred, and the city ransacked. In 1722, the
Russian Empire capitalized on the eruption of chaos and instability, and
annexed the maritime areas of the province, including Derbent, from the Safavids. After the Safavids were restored in 1729 by Nader Qoli Beg (later known as
Nader Shah), Nader also re-established the former's hegemony over the area. In 1735, he concluded the
Treaty of Ganja with the Russians, whereby they were forced to give back the territories in Daghestan back that had been taken by Peter the Great in 1722-1723. He also conducted military campaigns in Daghestan which re-subjected the Daghestani tribes, and defeated Shamkhal Sorkhay Khan, who had rebelled earlier against the Safavid hegemony. Another Daghestani chief, Ahmad Khan, sent Nader two of his daughters and his son, as a gesture of submission. ==Notes==