EVALUATION OF ATABEYLİK İNSTİTUTİON IN TURKS FROM COMPARATİVE HİSTORICAL PERSPECTİV
TÜRKLERDEKİ HÂCİBLİK KURUMUNUN KARŞILAŞTIRMALI TARİH AÇISINDAN DEĞERLENDİRİLMESİ

Author : Kayhan ATİK
Number of pages : 316-324

Abstract

The word hâcib is to interfere in the dictionary to prevent someone from entering a place; cover, hide meaning comes from the word hacb. Anyone who prevents a person from entering a place is a janitor. Divan-ı Lügati't- In Turk, the word from tulip is given in the form of the original word which is used in the meaning of mabeynci. could not be detected. Some of our historians state that the pilgrimage was established in Muawiyah time. It is known that the Hawkeye existed in the Abbasid caliphate and in the Umayyad Empire of Andalusia from the early days. In the Great Seljuk State, he was the governor of the palace and the highest authority (hacb-i büzürg) who was the highest authority after the royal vizier. He was the governor of the Karahanlılar, and he was the ruler of the palace. Beyhaki, a historian of Ghaznavia, states that the tree is the closest civil servant to the ruler and is always present in war and in peace. This term, which lasted until the last years of the Ottoman Empire, was used in the sense of its purpose. In the Ottomans, the doorman is a treaty used on the great dervishes and the great dervishes of the courtiers. When the ambassador of any state came to the state center, when this came to the palace, two of the porters headed him to the divan, and then they would enter his arms and take himself to the front of the sultan in the supply room. When a prominent and confidential communication was to be made to the governors of the state or the geniuses, it was made through one of them. There are those who claim that this institution and title emerged in the period of Umayyads through the onset of palace life with the influence of Byzantine Sassanid. Some historians state that they were also in pre-Islamic Turkish states, and brought their origin to the time of the Sassanids.

Keywords

Turks, Atabeylik, Comparative History

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