The Chegini tribe (Kurdish: چەگینی ,Çengînî, Persian: چگنی) is a mostly sedentary[1] Kurdish[2] tribe which lives in Lorestan Province and scattered around Qazvin Province and Fars Province in Iran. The tribe also lives in Kurdistan Region and Kirkuk in Iraq.[3][4] While the tribe migrated to Lorestan from Northwestern Iran, not much info exist on its origins.[5]
Early scrutiny
Charles MacGregor classified the tribe as Kurdish in his topographical and ethnographical oeuvre from 1872.[6]
According to the Encyclopædia Iranica[3] there exists some non-Kurdish tribes in iran that have the same name, such as the clan of the Amala tribe by the name of Čegīnī in the Qašqāʾī tribal confederacy and the Jabbāra Arabs of Fārs by the name of Awlād-e Čegīnī.
History
During the reign of Tahmasp I, the Chegini Kurds settled in Khorasan as they were on their way to India. In Khorasan, they prospered under the protection of the shah. In 1597, Sharafkhan Bidlisi wrote that the tribe lived by brigandage and intercepting the roads. Moreover, unlike other Kurdish tribes, they had no emir or mirza which could lead the tribe.[7]
See also
References
Further reading
- Ebrahimi, Masoumeh; Negahban, Farzin (17 June 2021), "Chiginī", Encyclopaedia Islamica, doi:10.1163/1875-9831_isla_COM_05000082
- علی کرمی کیان (2016), نسب نامه طایفه شه کرم ایل چگنی لرستان, ISBN 978-6002602299
- چگنی (چگینی) (in Persian), Encyclopedia of the World of Islam, retrieved 25 May 2019
- "دائرة المعارف بزرگ اسلامی:چگنی", Centre for Great Islamic Encyclopaedia (CGIE) (in Persian): 3, retrieved 26 June 2019