The Shikaki tribe are first mentioned in a Yezidimişûr (manuscript) from 1207 AD, where they're mentioned as one of the tribes affiliated to Pir Sini Darani, who is a Yezidi saint represented in the Yezidi religion as the Lord of the sea.[3]
In the Sharafnama, they are mentioned twice. First, in the chapter on the emirate of Bohtan, as being one of the four tribes living in Hakkâri. Second, in the chapter on the Ayyubid emirate of Hasankeyf.[4]
In a 16th-century OttomanDefter, they are mentioned in the regions of Birecik, Kahta, Joum, Suruç and Ravendan, and called 'Taife-I Ekrâd-I Shikakî'.[5] In another Defter, they are mentioned in the region of Çemişgezek.[6]
Among the clans of the Shekak are the 'Awdoǐ[7] or Evdoyî. According to their oral history they came from Diyarbakır in the 17th century and settled west of Lake Urmia,[7] which displaced the Donboli tribe.[8]
The first known chieftain of the 'Awdoǐ was Ismail Agha, who died in 1816 and whose tomb is beside the Naslu River.[8] His grandson Jafar Agha was executed as a bandit in Tabriz in 1905.[7] Jafar's brother Simko Shikak was responsible for leading the anti-Christian and anti-Alevimassacres in the area before and during World War I, and for the organised resistance against the regime of Reza Shah.[9]
^ abcHoutsma, M. Th.; et al. (1993). "Salmas". E.J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913-1936. Vol. 4 (Reprint ed.). E.J. Brill. p. 118. ISBN90-04-09796-1.
^ abHoutsma, M. Th.; et al. (1993). "Shakāk". E.J. Brill's First Encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913-1936. Vol. 4 (Reprint ed.). E.J. Brill. p. 290. ISBN90-04-09796-1.
^O'Leary, Brendan; Ṣāliḥ, Khālid (2005). "The Denial, Resurrection, and Affirmation of Kurdistan". In O'Leary, Brendan; McGarry, John; Salih, Khaled (eds.). The Future of Kurdistan in Iraq. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. pp. 3–46. ISBN0-8122-3870-2.
^Kalīm Allāh Tavaḥḥudī, Awghāzī (1981). حرکت تاريخي کرد به خراسان در دفاع از استقلال ايران (in Persian). p. 488.
^Gültekin, Ahmet Kerim (2019). Gezik, Erdal; Gültekin, Ahmet Kerim (eds.). Kurdish Alevis and the Case of Dersim: Historical and Contemporary Insights. Lexington Books. p. 106.