Muhammed Emin Zeki Bey | |
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Born | 1880 Sulaymaniyah, Ottoman Empire |
Died | 1948 Sulaymaniyah, Kingdom of Iraq |
Occupation | Historian, Politician, writer |
Nationality | Ottoman Empire |
Subject | Politics, Social issues, History |
Literary movement | Kurdish Nationalism |
Notable works | Kurds and Kurdistan |
Muhammed Amin Zaki Bey, (1880 Sulaymaniyah –1948 Sulaymaniyah), was a Kurdish writer, historian, Iraqi statesman and politician. He was born in Sulaimaniya, son of Hagi Abdul Rahman. After studying in Sulaimaniya Military School and Baghdad Military High School, on 10 February 1902, he graduated from the Ottoman Military Academy (P. 1317-23) as the 23rd of the class and joined the Ottoman Army as Infantry Second Lieutenant (Mülâzım-ı Sani ). He graduated from the Ottoman Military College (Staff College) at Istanbul as distinguished officer (Mümtaz subayı ) on 11 January 1905. And then he served as a staff officer (major) in the Ottoman Army. He left his last duty at the Military history department on 23 July 1923 for Baghdad, and started to give lecture at the Iraqi Military Academy. He also served in the Iraqi administration under the British mandate in the 1920s and was appointed as Defence Minister in 1928. His two-volume book on history of the Kurdish people and states is one of the acclaimed works on this subject and has been translated into several languages including Arabic and English. He died in Sulaimaniyah in July 1948.
His books were in Kurdish, Arabic and Turkish. His works primarily focused on Kurdish history, and include:
Zeki was MP of Sulaymaniyah on a number of occasions. He also served as a minister in different portfolios: