Durraniyan
Asayış
Durraniyan İmperatoriya Durraniyan د درانیانو واکمني | ||||
| ||||
Bayrak | ||||
Ahmed Şah Dürrânî dı tewr hera sinor. | ||||
Paytext | Kendehar (1747–1776) Kabil (1776–1823, 1839–1842) Peşawer (1776–1818; paytextê zımıstani)[1][2] Herat (1818–1826)[3] | |||
Zon(i) | Peştuki, Farski (resmi) | |||
Din | ||||
İdare | Monarşiye | |||
Şah | ||||
- 1747 - 1772 | Ahmed Şah Dürrânî | |||
- 1803 - 1809 | Şüca Şah Dürrânî | |||
weziyetê ewroy | Efğanıstan Hindıstan İran Pakıstan Tacikistan Türkmenistan Özbekistan |
Durraniyan, terefê Peştunan ra dewleta ke şah Ahmed Şah Dürrânî naya ro. Serranê 1747 u 1826 miyan de Efğanıstan de hıkum kerdo.
Bıvênên
[bıvurne | çımeyi bıvurne]Referansi
[bıvurne | çımeyi bıvurne]- ↑ Hanifi, Shah Mahmoud. "Timur Shah transferred the Durrani capital from Qandahar in 1775-76. Kabul and Peshawar then shared time as the dual Durrani capital cities, the former during the summer and the latter during the winter season." p. 185. Connecting Histories in Afghanistan: Market Relations and State Formation on a Colonial Frontier. Stanford University Press, 2011. Retrieved 2012-08-04.
- ↑ Singh, Sarina (2008). "Like the Kushans, the Afghan kings favoured Peshawar as a winter residence, and were aggrieved when the upstart Sikh kingdom snatched it in 1818 and levelled its buildings." p. 191. Pakistan and the Karakoram Highway. Retrieved 2012-08-10.
- ↑ L. Lee, Jonathan (1996). The Ancient Supremacy: Bukhara, Afghanistan and the Battle for Balkh, 1731-1901 (illustrated bas.). BRILL. s. 116. ISBN 9004103996. Erişim tarihi: March 8, 2013.
[The Sadozai kingdom] continued to exist in Herat until the city finally fell to Dost Muhammad Khan in 1862.