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Kakuyid dynasty : ウィキペディア英語版
Kakuyids

The Kakuyids (also called Kakwayhids, Kakuwayhids or Kakuyah) ((ペルシア語:آل کاکویه)) were a Daylamite dynasty that held power in western Persia, Jibal and Kurdistan (c. 1008–c. 1051). They later became ''atabegs'' (governors) of Yazd, Isfahan and Abarkuh from c. 1051 to 1141. They were related to the Buyids.〔''The Political and Dynastic History of the Iranian World'', C.E. Bosworth, The Cambridge History of Iran, Vol. 5, ed. J. A. Boyle, John Andrew Boyle, (Cambridge University Press, 1968), 37.〕
== Origins ==
Although the historian Margaretha states that the Kakuyids were of Kurdish origin,〔Margaretha T. Heemskerk, ''Suffering in the Mu'tazilite theology'', (Brill, 2000), 54.〕 however, many other scholars consider them relatives of Sayyida Shirin, who was from the Dailamite Bavand dynasty. Encyclopædia Iranica also states that; “it should be remembered that “Kurd” in the sources of the 10th-11th centuries refers to all the transhumants of the Zagros region including the Lors.” According to historian James Boris, the word “Kurd” first became an ethnic identity in the 12th and 13th century.〔James, Boris. (2006). Uses and Values of the Term Kurd in Arabic Medieval Literary Sources. ''Seminar at the American University of Beirut'', pp. 6-7.〕 However, he further states that the term was even then also being used as a communal sense.〔James, Boris. (2006). Uses and Values of the Term Kurd in Arabic Medieval Literary
Sources. ''Seminar at the American University of Beirut'', pp. 4, 8, 9.〕

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