The Surmalu Uyezd () or Surmali ( Surmalu; ; ; ) was a county of the Erivan Governorate of the Caucasus Viceroyalty of the Russian Empire.
It bordered the governorate's Echmiadzin and Erivan Uyezds to the north, the Kars Oblast to the west, Persia to the east, and the Ottoman Empire to the south.
The district made up most of the Iğdır Province of present-day Turkey.
As part of the Russian Transcaucasus, the Surmalu Uyezd possessed economically importance for its abundantly rich salt mines in Kulp (Tuzluca), and spiritual importance to Armenians as the location of the culturally significant Mount Ararat.
The administrative center of the uyezd was the town of Igdir.
Etymology
"Surmali" derives from the name of the old Armenian city of "Surmari" which evolved from "Surb Mari" ( "Saint Mary").
The castle of Surmari still stands today in the village of Sürmeli on the Armenian border in the Tuzluca district of Turkey's Iğdır Province.
History
A part of Persia's Erivan Khanate, Surmalu was annexed by the Russian Empire in the Treaty of Turkmenchay in the aftermath of the Russo-Persian War of 1826–28.
The district was first administered as part of the Armenian Oblast and then the Erivan Governorate.Tsutsiev, pp.
16, 19, and 21.
In 1829, Baltic German explorer Friedrich Parrot of the University of Dorpat (Tartu) traveled to Surmalu as part of his expedition to climb Mount Ararat.
Accompanied by Armenian writer Khachatur Abovian and four others, Parrot made the first ascent of Ararat in recorded history from the Armenian monastery of St. Hakob in Akhuri (modern Yenidoğan).Parrot, p. 139.
After the Russian Revolution, Surmalu was briefly governed by the First Republic of Armenia from 1918 to 1920,Tsutsiev, p. 75. until it was occupied in 1920 and formally ceded to Turkey by the treaties of Moscow and Kars, following Armenia's defeat in the Turkish-Armenian War and subsequent Sovietization.Tsutsiev, p.
81. Administrative Divisions
The Surmalu Uyezd was split into 3 unnamed contiguous subcounties:
1-iy
2-iy
3-iy
Demographics
According to the Russian family lists accounts from 1886, of the total 71,066 inhabitants of the district, 34,351 were Tatars (modern Azerbaijanis; 48.3%), 22,096 Armenians (31.1%), and 14,619 Kurds (20.6%).
Свод статистических данных о населении Закавказского края, извлечённых из посемейных списков 1886 года, г. Тифлис, 1893
According to the 1897 Russian Empire Census, the population of the district was 89,055, of which 41,417 were Tatars (46.55%), 27,075 Armenians (30.4%), 19,099 Kurds (21.45%), and 1,361 East Slavs (Russians, Ukrainians, and Belarusians; 1.52%).
1897 Census, Surmalin Uyezd Demoscope Weekly The largest city in the district was Igdyr, which had a total population of 4,680, of which 3,934 (84.05%) were Armenians and 559 (11.94%) East Slavs.
1897 Census, Igdyr City Demoscope Weekly Первая Всеобщая перепись населения Российской империи 1897 г.
Том 24, Эриванская губерния, г. Санкт-Петербург, 1905
According to the Russian 1910 estimate, the population of the district was 91,535, of which 41,990 were Tatars (45.87%), 29,734 Armenians (32.48%) and 19,811 Kurds (21.64%).Кавказский календарь на 1910 год (Caucasian calendar for 1910); Publisher:	Канцелярия Кавказского Наместника (Office of the Governor of the Caucasus), под ред. В. В. Стратонова (Editor-in-chief: V. V. Saratanov).
Page 518 Caucasian Calendar of 1917
The 1917 Caucasian Calendar which produced statistics of 1916 indicates 104,791 residents in the Surmalu Uyezd, including 55,364 men and 49,427 women, 98,212 of whom were the permanent population, and 6,579 were temporary residents.
The statistics indicated Azerbaijanis to be the plurarity of the population of the uyezd, followed closely by Armenians, Kurds and Yezidis:
References
