Kaza

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Kaaza districts in the late Ottoman Empire.
Kaaza districts, late Ottoman Empire.

A kaza (Template:Langx, "judgment" or "jurisdiction")[note 1] was an administrative division of the Ottoman Empire. It is also discussed in English under the names district,[2] subdistrict,[3][4] and juridical district.[5] Kazas continued to be used by some of the empire's successor states. At present, they are used by Iraq, Lebanon, Jordan, and in Arabic discussion of Israel. In these contexts, they are also known by the Arabic name qada, qadā, or qadaa (Template:Langx, Script error: No such module "Lang".).

Former use

Ottoman Empire

In the Ottoman Empire, a kaza was originally equivalent to the kadiluk, the district subject to the legal and administrative jurisdiction of a kadi or judge of Islamic law.[6] This usually corresponded to a major city of the empire with its surrounding villages. A small number of kazas made up each sanjak ("banner") under a sanjakbey.[6] Each kaza was in turn made up of one or more nahiyes ("districts") under müdürsTemplate:Clarify and mütesellims and several karyes ("villages") under muhtars.[7]

With the first round of Tanzimat reforms in 1839, the administrative duties of each district's kadi were transferred to a kaymakam ("governor") appointed by the Ministry of the Interior[7] and a treasurer, with the kadis restricted to solely religious and judicial roles.[8] Kazas were further emended and distinguished from the kadiluks under the 1864 Provincial Reform Law, implemented over the following decade as part of efforts by the Porte to establish uniform and rational administration across the empire.[5] The 1871 revisions removed the kazas' responsibility for direct supervision of their villages, placing them all under nearby nahiyes instead.[7]

Mandatory Palestine

The subdistricts of Mandatory Palestine were known as kaza, qada, etc (Script error: No such module "Lang".) in Arabic but as nafa (Script error: No such module "Lang".) in Hebrew. The same terms continue to be used in present-day Israel and Palestine.

Syria

Syria used kazas, qadas, etc. as its second-level administrative division after independence but laterTemplate:When renamed them mintaqahs.

Turkey

The Republic of Turkey continued to use kazas until the late 1920s,Template:When when it renamed them subprovinces (Script error: No such module "Lang".).

Current use

Kaza, qada, etc. is also used to refer to the following:

See also

Notes

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References

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Template:Arabic terms for country subdivisions Template:Turkish terms for country subdivisions

  1. a b c d e Script error: No such module "citation/CS1". (info page on book Template:Webarchive at Martin Luther University) // CITED: p. 41-44 (PDF p. 43-46/338).
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  4. Note, however, that this name is often applied to the nahiye level of the Ottoman administration.
  5. a b Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Rogan
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  7. a b c Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Cetinsaya
  8. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named Somel144


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