Answer 1
There was never a state called Kurdistan, so therefore it has never really been divided. A more correct way to put it, is that it has never been united. During the fall of the Ottoman Empire it seemed like there was going to be a Kurdistan for the first time in history, but it turned out otherwise. In the Treaty of Lausanne the borders of the remainders of the Ottoman Empire are clarified, and in that treaty in 1923 it was decided that there would be no Kurdistan. The treaty was signed by Turkey, Great-Britain, France, Italy, Japan, Greece, Romania, and the Serb-Croat-Slovene State.
Answer 2
There has been no modern nation of Kurdistan for any extended period of time, but the region of Kurdistan was well-known in an unofficial capacity for centuries. The Ardalan Kurdish State existed from 959-1117 C.E. in parts of what is currently called Iranian Kurdistan and Iraqi Kurdistan. As a result, there is a historic Kurdish State. However, it was overrun by the Seljuks. Regardless, by the late 1400s, the region of Kurdistan had several quasi-autonomous Kurdish statelets that remained vassals of larger more powerful neighbors.
However, the first major division of the region of Kurdistan occurred in the early 1500s when the Safavids of Iran and Ottomans of Turkey created a border that separated Iranian Kurdistan permanently from Turkish/Iraqi/Syrian Kurdistan. With the Fall of the Ottoman Empire, the Ottoman government capitulated to Allies at the end of World War I and signed the Treaty of Sèvres in 1919, which, among other things, granted the right for an independent Kurdistan. However, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk overthrew the Ottoman government and established the modern Republic of Turkey. He successfully opposed the Greek forces on the Anatolian mainland and prevented the realization of a new Kurdish state in the east. Thus in 1923, the Treaty of Sèvres was abrogated by the Treaty of Lausanne and Kurdistan was further divided by the creation of the French Mandate of Syria and the British Mandate of Iraq. This is how Kurdistan as a region was divided.
Kurdistan has never been officially split into four pieces. The Kurdish population is spread across several countries including Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria, with regions within these countries often referred to as Kurdistan. However, there is no internationally recognized independent state of Kurdistan divided into four pieces.
Three years: 1639, 1919, 1923.Most of what is today considered Kurdistan was united last during the Safavid Empire of Shah Ismail I. At the end of the Ottoman-Safavid War of 1623-1639, the Treaty of Zuhab was signed, which ceded to the Ottomans control of Mesopotamia. This cut off what is today called Iranian Kurdistan (remaining under Safavid Persian control) from the other regions of Kurdistan, which came under Ottoman control. In 1919, the Treaty of Versailles split Iraqi Kurdistan and Syrian Kurdistan off from Turkish Kurdistan, giving them to a British and French mandate respectively. There was a small attempt to create an independent Kurdistan in what is now southeast Turkey, but this was cut short by the War of Turkish Independence and the signing of the Treaty of Lausanne in 1923 which finalized the Turkish-Syrian and Turkish-Iraqi borders.
Erbil /Hawler/ is the largest city in kurdistan of Iraq
Depends on what country you are visiting, it might be Turkish Lira, Iranian Rial, Iraqi Dinar, or Syrian Pounds. The autonomous state within Iraq which the term Kurdistan nowadays mostly refers to uses the Iraqi Dinar.
Kurdistan - Estimated area of 74,000 to 151,000 sq. miles
In 1923, Kurdistan was divided between the two countries that are Iraq and Turkey today.
The first major division of the region of Kurdistan occurred in the early 1500s when the Safavids of Iran and Ottomans of Turkey created a border that separated Iranian Kurdistan permanently from Turkish/Iraqi/Syrian Kurdistan. With the Fall of the Ottoman Empire, the Ottoman government capitulated to Allies at the end of World War I and signed the Treaty of Sèvres in 1919, which, among other things, granted the right for an independent Kurdistan. However, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk overthrew the Ottoman government and established the modern Republic of Turkey. He successfully opposed the Greek forces on the Anatolian mainland and prevented the realization of a new Kurdish state in the east. Thus in 1923, the Treaty of Sèvres was abrogated by the Treaty of Lausanne and Kurdistan was further divided by the creation of the French Mandate of Syria and the British Mandate of Iraq. This is how Kurdistan as a region was divided.
Kurdistan has never been officially split into four pieces. The Kurdish population is spread across several countries including Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and Syria, with regions within these countries often referred to as Kurdistan. However, there is no internationally recognized independent state of Kurdistan divided into four pieces.
Three years: 1639, 1919, 1923.Most of what is today considered Kurdistan was united last during the Safavid Empire of Shah Ismail I. At the end of the Ottoman-Safavid War of 1623-1639, the Treaty of Zuhab was signed, which ceded to the Ottomans control of Mesopotamia. This cut off what is today called Iranian Kurdistan (remaining under Safavid Persian control) from the other regions of Kurdistan, which came under Ottoman control. In 1919, the Treaty of Versailles split Iraqi Kurdistan and Syrian Kurdistan off from Turkish Kurdistan, giving them to a British and French mandate respectively. There was a small attempt to create an independent Kurdistan in what is now southeast Turkey, but this was cut short by the War of Turkish Independence and the signing of the Treaty of Lausanne in 1923 which finalized the Turkish-Syrian and Turkish-Iraqi borders.
Erbil /Hawler/ is the largest city in kurdistan of Iraq
ugh- kurdistan is part of Iraq
The population of Kurdistan Province is 1,440,156.
Kurdistan Airlines was created in 2004.
Kingdom of Kurdistan was created in 1922.
Kingdom of Kurdistan ended in 1924.
Depends on what country you are visiting, it might be Turkish Lira, Iranian Rial, Iraqi Dinar, or Syrian Pounds. The autonomous state within Iraq which the term Kurdistan nowadays mostly refers to uses the Iraqi Dinar.
Yes. People have manners in Iraqi Kurdistan.