Agha

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A Janissary agha.
A Janissary agha.
Crimean Agha Dedesh, portraited in 1664 for king John II Casimir by Daniel Schultz.
Crimean Agha Dedesh, portraited in 1664 for king John II Casimir by Daniel Schultz.
Omar Agha, officer for the Kurdish Pasha, Sheikh Mahmoud of Sulaymaniyah of Baban principality, Kurdistan, 1820.
Omar Agha, officer for the Kurdish Pasha, Sheikh Mahmoud of Sulaymaniyah of Baban principality, Kurdistan, 1820.[1]

Agha, also Aga (from Turkish: ağa "chief, master, lord"[2]), for example Mazen Agha as a title for a civil or military officer, or often part of such title, was placed after the name of certain military functionaries in the Ottoman Empire. At the same time some Court functionaries were entitled to the agha title.

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[edit] Military titles

In the Ottoman Empire, commanders of the different branches of military services were called the aghas e.g. azap agha, besli agha, janissary agha: the commanders of azaps, beslis, and janissaries.

This designation was given to commanders of smaller military units too, for instance the beuluk agha, odzsak agha: the commander of a beuluk and odzsak both meaning troops.

[edit] Civilian titles

[edit] Other uses

  • Aga is used for grandfather by Turks in the west Balkans and in Turkmenistan.
  • Agha is both title and family name in Egypt, Iran, Pakistan and Afghanistan.
  • Aga is a family name in Norway.
  • In Romanian, the Turkish title, spelled Aga, was used for the chief of an agie, a law enforcement office
  • In Persian, agha is normally used to refer to a male superior, similar to Mister.
  • In Tunisia, during the Ottoman Empire, Agha was the ruler of a region (for example Gabes). The name persists as a family name.
  • Agha is also used as a first name in some cases. e.g Agha Ganda or Agha Gunda.

[edit] Honorific

Pakistan's former President Yahya Khan also had Agha as the hereditary title. In usage, the title followed the given name. Although the word serves as a non-hereditary title, English-speakers have commonly used Agha as if it formed part of a personal name, as for instance in Mohammad Agha.

[edit] Etymology

The word agha entered English from Turkish,[2] and the Turkish word comes from the Old Turkic aqa, meaning "elder brother".[3][4] Ultimately the Old Turkic word, along with its Mongolian cognate aga,[5] has its origins in the proto-Altaic word "ák'v".

[edit] See also

Look up aga in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopædia Britannica article Aga.

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Narrative of Residence in Koordistan and on the Site of Ancient Nineveh, pages 66 and 214, Claudius James Rich, Published 1836, J. Duncan, 860 pages
  2. ^ a b Online Etymology Dictionary - Aga
  3. ^ American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language - aga
  4. ^ Dictionary.com Unabridged - aga
  5. ^ QA (or ACA)

[edit] References