Ancient Origins — People of the Mountains
"The mountains are the Kurds' only friends." — A Kurdish proverb reflecting millennia of mountain life that shaped a civilization.
The Zagros Mountain Peoples
The origins of the Kurdish people are rooted in the Zagros Mountain range — that vast arc of rugged highlands stretching from southeastern Turkey through northwestern Iran and into northern Iraq. Archaeological evidence places the ancestors of the Kurds here as far back as 3000 BCE, living in fortified hilltop settlements, herding goats and sheep across high pastures, and cultivating barley on the mountain terraces.
These highland communities developed a fierce independence born of necessity. The mountains offered natural defense against the great empires of the plains below — Akkadian, Sumerian, Babylonian — and allowed a distinctive culture to take root. The proto-Kurdish peoples spoke languages ancestral to modern Kurdish, belonging to the northwestern Iranian branch of the Indo-European family.
Early trade routes through the Zagros passes brought contact with Mesopotamian civilizations, creating a dynamic relationship between the mountain peoples and the plains. Kurdish ancestors traded highland resources — metals, timber, cattle — for lowland grain and manufactured goods, even as they maintained cultural and political independence.
The Zagros — Cradle of Kurdish Civilization
The mountain range stretches over 1,600 km and contains some of the oldest human settlements in Southwest Asia.
Zagros Mountains, Iraq–Iran border region · by kyselak · CC BY-SA 4.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
Proto-Cuneiform — The World's Earliest Writing
A pictographic clay tablet from Mesopotamia, c. 3100–3000 BCE — one of the oldest writing systems on earth, originating in the same lowland civilisation that Kurdish ancestors traded with and eventually ruled.
Pictographs Recording the Allocation of Beer, c. 3100–3000 BCE · by Jim Kuhn · CC BY 2.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
The Gutian Kingdom & Mesopotamian Dominance
Around 2150 BCE, the Gutians — proto-Kurdish mountain warriors from the Zagros — swept down from the highlands and overthrew the Akkadian Empire, then the dominant power of Mesopotamia. Akkadian royal inscriptions describe them as "serpents of the mountains," a vivid testament to the fear they inspired in the plains civilizations.
The Gutians ruled a large part of Mesopotamia for nearly a century before the Sumerians pushed them back to the mountains. This episode stands as one of the earliest recorded instances of Kurdish ancestors directly shaping the history of the ancient world's most civilized region.
Later, the Kassites — another related highland people — conquered Babylon around 1595 BCE and maintained the longest dynasty in Babylonian history, ruling for over 400 years. Under Kassite rule, Babylonian culture was preserved and developed, demonstrating that these "mountain peoples" were sophisticated administrators, not merely warriors.
Key Facts
- Gutians overthrow the Akkadian Empire around 2150 BCE
- Kassite dynasty rules Babylon for over 400 years (c. 1595–1155 BCE)
- Lullubi kings leave rock-carved victory reliefs at Sar-e-Pol-e Zahab, Iran
- All these peoples share Zagros mountain origins with the Kurds
Puzur-Inshushinak
Zagros king · c. 2100 BCE Statue of Puzur-Inshushinak (Kutik-Inshushinak), c. 2100 BCE · by Darafsh · CC BY-SA 3.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
Kurigalzu I
Kassite king of Babylon · c. 1400 BCE
Anubanini of Lullubi
Lullubi king · rock relief, c. 2300 BCE Rock relief of King Anubanini of the Lullubi, c. 2300 BCE, Sar-e-Pol-e Zahab · by Koorosh Nozad Tehrani · CC BY-SA 2.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
Lulubian Relief, Kurdistan
Darband-i Belula · c. 2300–2000 BCE Lulubian relief of Tardunni (Darband-i Belula / Sheikhan relief), Kurdistan, Iraq · by Osama Shukir Muhammed Amin FRCP · CC BY-SA 4.0 · via Wikimedia CommonsThe Medes Empire — Kurdistan's Greatest Ancient State
"The Medes were the fathers of the Kurdish nation — the first great empire to rise from the Iranian highlands." — Modern historians widely recognize the Medes as the direct ancestors of the Kurdish people.
The Rise of the Median Empire
Under the leadership of Deioces, the scattered Median tribes of the northern Zagros united for the first time into a single political entity around 678 BCE. Deioces is credited with founding the great city of Ecbatana — modern Hamadan in Iran — which became the capital of the Median Empire and one of the great cities of the ancient world.
The Greek historian Herodotus describes Ecbatana as a city of seven concentric circular walls, each painted a different color, with the innermost walls covered in silver and gold. Whether exaggerated or not, this description reflects the genuine wealth and sophistication of Median civilization at its height.
Subsequent Median kings — Phraortes and Cyaxares — expanded the empire dramatically. Cyaxares modernized the army, organizing it into distinct units of spearmen, archers, and cavalry, creating one of the ancient world's most effective fighting forces.
Ecbatana — Capital of the Medes
Modern Hamadan sits atop ancient Ecbatana, one of the great capitals of the ancient world and the heart of Median power.
Archaeological site of Ecbatana (Hegmataneh), Hamadan, Iran, 2017 · by Behzad39 · CC BY-SA 4.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
"The Medes had gained so much power that they became the greatest nation in upper Asia, and the Median king set himself over all these nations and made them subject to his rule."— Herodotus, The Histories, Book I
The Fall of Nineveh, 612 BCE
The reconstructed Mashki Gate of Nineveh — the Assyrian capital destroyed by the Median-Babylonian alliance in 612 BCE. The gate was later destroyed again by ISIS.
Reconstructed Mashki Gate of Nineveh (destroyed by ISIS) · by Omar Siddeeq Yousif · CC BY-SA 4.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
The Destruction of Nineveh & Imperial Peak
In 612 BCE, Cyaxares the Mede and Nabopolassar of Babylon formed an alliance and laid siege to Nineveh — the magnificent capital of the Assyrian Empire, then the most powerful state on earth. The city fell after a fierce battle, and its destruction sent shockwaves across the ancient world.
The Median Empire now stretched from Anatolia to eastern Iran — one of the largest empires the ancient world had seen. At its peak, it encompassed territories covering parts of modern Turkey, Iran, Iraq, Armenia, and Azerbaijan.
Median rule lasted until 550 BCE when Cyrus the Great of Persia defeated the last Median king, Astyages. However, the Medes were not simply conquered — they were integrated into the Persian Empire as equals, retaining their nobility, culture, and influence. Many historians describe the Achaemenid Persian Empire as essentially a "Medo-Persian" entity in its early decades.
Key Facts
- Median Empire spans approximately 678–550 BCE
- Capital Ecbatana — modern Hamadan, Iran
- Destroyed Nineveh (Assyrian capital) in 612 BCE
- Medes widely recognized as Kurdish ancestors by modern scholars
- Empire stretched from Anatolia to eastern Iran
Classical Era — Empires, Zoroaster & the Kurdish Soul
Through Persian, Greek, Parthian, and Sasanian rule, the Kurdish highlands remained a world apart — shaped by Zoroastrian fire, Greek philosophy, and the enduring spirit of mountain peoples.
Under the Persian Empires
For over a thousand years following the fall of the Median Empire, the Kurdish highlands were incorporated into a succession of Iranian empires: Achaemenid (550–330 BCE), Seleucid (312–63 BCE), Parthian (247 BCE–224 CE), and Sasanian (224–651 CE). Throughout all of these, Kurdish communities maintained their language, tribal structures, and cultural distinctiveness.
Zoroastrianism — the ancient Iranian religion centered on the eternal struggle between light and darkness — deeply penetrated Kurdish folk religion and practice. The celebration of Newroz (the spring new year, lit. "new day"), tied to the Zoroastrian spring equinox festival, became the central holiday of Kurdish identity and remains so to this day, celebrated with bonfires that echo ancient fire worship.
The Sasanian period saw the flourishing of a rich Iranian cultural renaissance. Kurdish communities in the Zagros were part of this world, producing warriors, priests, merchants, and nobles who participated in the great civilization of late antiquity.
Taq-e Bostan — Sasanian Art in the Kurdish Highlands
These magnificent reliefs carved into a cliff at Kermanshah, Iran — in the heart of the Kurdish highlands — depict Sasanian royal investiture and hunting scenes, 4th–7th century CE.
Taq-e Bostan, Sasanian rock relief, Kermanshah, Iran · by Ali Heidari - علی حیدری · CC BY-SA 4.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
Newroz — 3,000 Years of Spring
What began as a Zoroastrian new year festival became the defining celebration of Kurdish identity, outlasting every empire that tried to suppress it.
Village girl in Palangan prepares to kindle fire for Newroz, 2019 · by Salar Arkan - سالار ارکان · CC BY-SA 4.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
The Legend of Kawa the Blacksmith
Embedded within the Newroz tradition is one of the most powerful myths of Kurdish identity — the story of Kawa the Blacksmith. According to the legend, the tyrant king Zahhak demanded the brains of two young men each day to feed the serpents growing from his shoulders. Kawa, whose sons were taken, led a rebellion against the tyrant, slew him, and lit a great bonfire on the mountain to signal freedom to the people below.
This myth — blending real historical memory of ancient oppression with the imagery of fire, liberation, and the mountain — became the foundational narrative of Kurdish Newroz. Every year on March 21st, Kurds light bonfires on the highest available points, reenacting Kawa's signal fire. In this single act, pre-Islamic Zoroastrian practice, Kurdish mythology, and the longing for freedom converge across 3,000 years of continuous tradition.
Newroz — Key Facts
- Celebrated every March 21st — the spring equinox
- Roots in 2,500-year-old Zoroastrian new year traditions
- Banned in Turkey for much of the 20th century
- Now a public holiday in Iraqi Kurdistan and Iran
- UNESCO Intangible Cultural Heritage since 2010
Medieval Kurdistan — Dynasties, Poets & Saladin
The medieval era saw Kurdish rulers forge independent dynasties, Kurdish poets shape the Arabic and Persian literary traditions, and one Kurdish general change the entire course of the Crusades.
Islamization & Kurdish Principalities
The Arab Muslim conquests of the 7th century brought a new religion and language to the Kurdish lands. Conversion to Islam was gradual — spreading over generations through trade, intermarriage, and the prestige of the new civilization. Kurds brought their own character to Islam, blending it with pre-Islamic folk traditions, Zoroastrian memory, and mountain spirituality that persists to the present.
As the Abbasid Caliphate weakened in the 10th and 11th centuries, Kurdish tribal leaders seized the opportunity to establish independent principalities. The Marwanids ruled from the great black-walled city of Amida (modern Diyarbakır), the Shaddadids controlled parts of the Caucasus, the Hasanwayhids held western Iran, and the Rawwadids dominated Azerbaijan. For the first time since the Medes, Kurdish rulers governed large territories with full sovereignty.
Diyarbakır's Black Walls — Marwanid Legacy
The massive basalt fortifications built under Kurdish Marwanid rule still define the city's skyline today.
Saladin — Sultan of Egypt, Syria & Kurdish Legend
Born Kurdish in Tikrit, he became the most celebrated Muslim ruler of the Middle Ages.
Saladin & the Ayyubid Empire
Salah ad-Din Yusuf ibn Ayyub was born around 1137 CE in Tikrit, present-day Iraq, to a Kurdish family from the Rawadiya tribe. His rise was meteoric: from a young officer in the service of the Syrian ruler Nur ad-Din, he became vizier of Egypt, then Sultan, and finally the founder of the Ayyubid dynasty that ruled Egypt, Syria, parts of Arabia, and North Africa.
His decisive victory over the Crusaders at the Battle of Hattin on July 4, 1187 ended the Kingdom of Jerusalem. Three months later, on October 2, 1187, Jerusalem fell to Saladin's forces. Unlike the Crusaders who had massacred the city's Muslim and Jewish inhabitants when they took Jerusalem in 1099, Saladin allowed the Christian population to ransom their freedom and leave safely — an act that earned him admiration even from his enemies.
Saladin remains the most celebrated Kurdish historical figure, admired across the Muslim world as a symbol of justice, chivalry, and strategic genius. His Kurdish identity is a source of immense pride and is commemorated throughout Kurdistan today.
"I warn you against shedding blood, indulging in it and making a habit of it, for blood never sleeps."— Saladin (1137–1193), Kurdish Sultan of Egypt and Syria
The Ottoman Period — Division, Poetry & the Birth of Nationalism
Four centuries under Ottoman and Safavid rule produced some of the greatest Kurdish literature ever written — and the first stirrings of a national consciousness that would shape the 20th century.
Kurdistan Divided Between Empires
The Battle of Chaldiran in 1514 between the Ottoman Sultan Selim I and the Safavid Shah Ismail I was fought on Kurdish soil. Kurdish tribal leader Idris Bitlisi negotiated the alignment of most Kurdish chieftains with the Ottomans, in exchange for autonomous rule within the empire. This established the Ottoman-Safavid frontier running directly through Kurdish lands — a division that would have profound consequences for Kurdish unity.
For the next four centuries, the majority of Kurdish territory fell under loose Ottoman suzerainty. Kurdish emirs — local rulers of hereditary principalities — maintained considerable autonomy in exchange for military service and taxes. Places like Botan, Hakkari, Baban, and Ardalan were governed by Kurdish dynastic families under the broader Ottoman framework.
This period also saw the beginning of systematic Kurdish cultural identity formation. The 1597 Sharafnama of Sharaf Khan Bitlisi – the first comprehensive history of the Kurdish people – and the 1692 epic Mem û Zîn of Ahmad Khani represent the high-water mark of classical Kurdish literary production.
Mem û Zîn — The Kurdish National Epic
Written two centuries before European nationalism, Ahmad Khani's epic called explicitly for Kurdish unity and a Kurdish state.
"Look, from the Arabs to the Persians to the Byzantines — all have a state and throne. Only the Kurds remain without. Were there a Kurdish king with wisdom and justice, the Kurds would surpass all nations in knowledge and governance."– Ahmad Khani, Mem û Zîn (1692) · translated from classical Kurdish
The Dengbêj Tradition
Without a state or widespread literacy, the Dengbêjs kept Kurdish history, identity, and emotion alive through song.
Dengbêj performing · by Kolpakovtour · CC BY-SA 4.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
Dengbêj — The Living Archive
The Dengbêj tradition — wandering Kurdish poet-singers who perform epic oral histories called kilam and lawj — reached its greatest flowering during the Ottoman centuries. Dengbêjs traveled between villages, tribal encampments, and noble courts, composing and performing works that preserved collective memory across generations.
Their repertoire included battle epics, love songs, laments for the dead, genealogical recitations, and historical chronicles. In a world where Kurdish had no official status and literacy was rare, the Dengbêjs functioned as the living library of the Kurdish nation.
The greatest classical Dengbêjs – like the legendary 19th-century Evdalê Zeynikê – set a standard that modern icons like Aram Tigran and Karapetê Xaço would carry into the 20th century, each remembered with the reverence given to Homer in Western culture. Today, the last Dengbêjs are recognized as UNESCO-listed intangible cultural heritage, and efforts are underway to record and preserve the tradition before it disappears entirely.
Ahmad Khani
Poet · Author of Mem û Zîn · 1650–1707Statue of Kurdish poet and writer Ahmadi Xani, Sulaymaniyah, Kurdistan, Iraq · by Diyar Muhammed · CC BY-SA 4.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
Sharaf Khan Bitlisi
Historian · Sharafnama · 1543–1603Sharaf Khan Bidlisi statue at Slemani Public Park, Sulaymaniyah, Iraqi Kurdistan · by Slemanibob · CC BY-SA 4.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
✦ AI Illustration
Evdalê Zeynikê
Legendary Dengbêj · 19th century
Sheikh Ubeydullah
Nationalist leader · 1820–1883The Modern Era — Division, Resistance & the Long Struggle
The 20th century brought the Kurds close to statehood twice — and saw those hopes crushed by the great powers. Through revolts, genocide, and exile, Kurdish identity endured.
WWI & the Promise of Sèvres
The collapse of the Ottoman Empire in World War I opened a brief window of possibility for Kurdish self-determination. The Treaty of Sèvres (1920), signed between the Allied powers and the defeated Ottoman government, included Articles 62–64 which provided for Kurdish autonomy and opened the pathway to full independence — the first international recognition of Kurdish political rights.
However, the Turkish nationalist movement under Mustafa Kemal Atatürk rejected the treaty and waged a successful military campaign against the Allied-backed governments. The Treaty of Lausanne (1923) replaced Sèvres, recognized the new Republic of Turkey, and made no mention of Kurdish autonomy. Kurdistan was permanently divided between Turkey, the British Mandate of Iraq, Pahlavi Iran, and the French Mandate of Syria.
This division — the consequences of which Kurds live with today — shattered any prospect for Kurdish statehood and subjected Kurdish populations to the varying policies of four different nation-states, some of which were actively hostile to Kurdish identity and language.
1923 — Kurdistan Erased from the Map
The Treaty of Lausanne created the political reality that over 40 million Kurds still live with today.
Republic of Mahabad (1946)
Kurdistan's first modern state lasted 11 months before being crushed by Iranian forces. Qazi Muhammad was executed in Mahabad's central square.
Mustafa Barzani (1903–1979)
The defining figure of 20th-century Kurdish politics, leading the Peshmerga in Iraq for decades against Saddam's regime.
Halabja, 1988 — Never Forget
Saddam Hussein's chemical attack on Halabja — part of the genocidal Anfal campaign — killed thousands of Kurdish civilians and shocked the world.
Monument at Mass Grave for 1500 Victims of 1988 Chemical Attack, Halabja, Kurdistan, Iraq · by Adam Jones, Ph.D. · CC BY-SA 3.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
Key Events of the Modern Era
- 1920 — Treaty of Sèvres promises Kurdish autonomy
- 1923 — Treaty of Lausanne erases Kurdish statehood
- 1925 — Sheikh Said revolt in Turkey, brutally suppressed
- 1937 — Dersim massacre in Turkey kills thousands of Kurds
- 1946 — Republic of Mahabad declared and destroyed
- 1961–1975 — Mustafa Barzani leads revolts in Iraq
- 1988 — Halabja chemical attack; Anfal genocide in Iraq
- 1991 — Gulf War uprising; safe haven established in Iraq
Contemporary Kurdistan — Autonomy, Resilience & Renaissance
From the ashes of Anfal and Halabja, a new Kurdistan emerged. Today, the Kurdistan Region of Iraq is a functioning democracy, and Kurdish culture is undergoing a global renaissance unlike anything in modern history.
The Kurdistan Region — A Democracy in the Middle East
The 1991 Gulf War and subsequent no-fly zone created the conditions for Kurdish self-governance in northern Iraq for the first time. In 1992, the Kurdistan Region held its first elections, establishing the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG). Despite a devastating inter-Kurdish civil war in the 1990s, the Washington Agreement of 1998 reunified the administration.
Post-2003, with Saddam's regime toppled, the KRG entered a period of dramatic economic and social development. Oil revenues funded massive construction in Erbil, Sulaymaniyah, and Duhok. Universities, hospitals, roads, and cultural institutions multiplied. Erbil's ancient citadel — one of the oldest continuously inhabited sites on earth — was inscribed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 2014.
The Kurdish Peshmerga's role in defeating ISIS between 2014 and 2019 brought the Kurdistan Region unprecedented international attention and respect. The courage of Kurdish fighters — including the celebrated women of the YPJ in Syrian Kurdistan — became symbols of resistance recognized worldwide.
Erbil — Ancient Capital, Modern City
The capital of the Kurdistan Region is one of the world's oldest continuously inhabited cities — and today one of its fastest-growing.
Erbil Citadel, 2022 · by جيهان شيركو · CC BY-SA 4.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
The Cultural Renaissance
Kurdish cinema, literature, music, and art are reaching global audiences as the diaspora and homeland communities rediscover and celebrate their heritage.
Mass dance of men in Nowruz ceremony in Kurdistan · by Hamidsolaymani85 · CC BY-SA 4.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
A Culture That Could Not Be Suppressed
Perhaps the most remarkable story of contemporary Kurdish history is cultural. Despite a century of suppression across four countries — bans on the Kurdish language in Turkey, mass displacement in Iraq, cultural erasure in Syria and Iran — Kurdish identity not only survived but is now flourishing in ways that would have seemed impossible fifty years ago.
Kurdish cinema has won international awards. Kurdish novelists write in Kurdish and are translated worldwide. Kurdish music — from the ancient Dengbêj tradition to contemporary pop — reaches global audiences through digital platforms. Kurdish diaspora communities in Germany, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and across the Americas maintain vibrant cultural life while connecting with the homeland.
Universities in Iraqi Kurdistan teach entirely in Kurdish. Kurdish-language media includes dozens of television channels, newspapers, and digital platforms. For the first time in modern history, Kurdish children in the Kurdistan Region grow up with full access to education, culture, and civic life in their own language.
The story of the Kurdish people is ultimately one of extraordinary resilience — a civilization that survived the fall of every empire that ruled over it, that kept its language and traditions alive through millennia of statelessness, and that is now reclaiming its place in the world.
Masoud Barzani
President of Kurdistan Region · 2005–2017
Sivan Perwer
Kurdish singer · living symbol of cultural resistanceŞivan Perwer during a ceremony, July 2016 · by Ridvano · CC BY-SA 4.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
Bachtyar Ali
Kurdish novelist · born 1966 · SulaymaniyahBachtyar Ali at Frankfurt Book Fair, 2017 · by Udoweier · CC BY-SA 4.0 · via Wikimedia Commons
Bahman Ghobadi
Kurdish-Iranian filmmaker · Palme d'Or winnerBahman Ghobadi, Kurdish-Iranian filmmaker · by Neva Micheva · CC BY-SA 3.0 · via Wikimedia Commons