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Sherko Sabir

Sherko Sabir

Writer

Kurdish History Expert

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Join date: Feb 22, 2026

About

The Scholar of Sulaymaniyah Sherko Sabir, 48, is a distinguished Kurdish writer and intellectual whose work bridges the gap between cultural heritage and modern market dynamics. Residing in the vibrant, culturally rich city of Sulaymaniyah, Kurdistan, Sherko’s life and work are deeply intertwined with the stories, struggles, and aspirations of his homeland. From his study overlooking the bustling city streets, he crafts narratives that are both deeply rooted in the past and highly relevant to the future.


A Lifelong Dedication to the Past His fascination with the past is not just an academic pursuit; it is a lifelong devotion. Sherko began poring over ancient texts, poetry, and oral accounts of Kurdish history when he was just 13 years old. This early obsession naturally paved the way for his undergraduate studies, culminating in a degree in History that formalized his deep understanding of the region's complex lineage and geopolitical shifts.


The Intersection of History and Commerce What sets Sherko apart as a writer is his rare, multidisciplinary perspective. Recognizing that the survival, movement, and prosperity of a people are heavily dictated by trade and resources, he expanded his academic horizons to earn dual Master's degrees in Economics and Business.


This unique combination allows him to write with a highly analytical lens. When Sherko writes about a historical event, he doesn't just recount what happened; he examines the why through the mechanics of trade routes, resource allocation, and socio-economic pressures.


His Writing Style Whether he is penning historical fiction, academic essays, or socio-economic analyses, Sherko's voice is grounded, pragmatic, yet deeply empathetic. He uses the economic realities of Kurdistan's past to illuminate the realities of its present, making him a highly respected voice among both historians and modern business leaders in his community.

Posts (140)

May 8, 202622 min
The Baban Dynasty: The Kurdish Principality of Sulaymaniyah and the Babani Literary School (1649–1850)
Introduction For two centuries — from 1649 to 1850 — a Kurdish dynasty governed the rugged Shahrizor plain and its mountain hinterlands as the principal Ottoman-side counterpart to the Iranian Ardalan principality across the frontier. The Baban dynasty (Babani in Kurdish) ruled from a sequence of mountain capitals — first Qalachwalan, then from 1784 the magnificent new city of Sulaymaniyah — and built one of the most consequential Kurdish polities of the early modern period. Their founder...

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May 8, 202619 min
The Ardalan Dynasty: The Longest-Surviving Kurdish Dynasty in History (1169–1867)
Introduction For seven hundred years — from the late twelfth century to the late nineteenth — a Kurdish dynasty governed the mountain heartland of Iranian Kurdistan from its capital at Sanandaj. The Ardalan principality (Mirneshini Erdelan in Kurdish, Bani Ardalan in the Arabic-Persian sources) is the longest-surviving Kurdish dynasty in history. Founded according to dynastic tradition by Baba Ardalan around 1169, securely documented in the historical record from the fourteenth century...

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May 8, 202617 min
The Hazaraspid Dynasty: The Kurdish Atabegs of Greater Lorestan (1148–1424)
Introduction For 276 years — longer than the United States has existed as a nation — a Kurdish dynasty ruled the mountain heartland of southwestern Iran. The Hazaraspids, also known as the Atabegs of Greater Lorestan (Atabakan-i Lor-i Buzurg) and as the Fadluyids or Fazlawayhids after their tribal eponym, were the great Kurdish-Lur dynasty of the medieval Zagros. Founded around 1148 by Abu Tahir ibn Muhammad, a Salghurid governor who declared independence in Lorestan, the dynasty took its...

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