Caucasian Imamate
| North Caucasian Imamate | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1828–1859 | |||||||
| Flag | |||||||
| Map of the Caucasian Imamate in 1856 | |||||||
| Status | Imamate | ||||||
| Common languages | Northeast Caucasian languages[2] Northwest Caucasian languages Arabic[1] | ||||||
| Religion | Sunni Islam | ||||||
| Demonym(s) | North Caucasian | ||||||
| Imam | |||||||
| • 1828–1832  | Ghazi Muhammad | ||||||
| • 1832–1834  | Hamzat Bek | ||||||
| • 1834–1859  | Imam Shamil | ||||||
| • March – April 1918  | Najmuddin Hotso | ||||||
| Historical era | Caucasian War | ||||||
| • The Gazawat begins, the Imamate is established to combat the Russians  | 1828 | ||||||
| • Overthrown by the Russian Empire  | 1859 | ||||||
| 
 | |||||||
| Today part of | Russia | ||||||
The Caucasian Imamate, also known as the North Caucasus Imamate (Arabic: إمامة شمال القوقاز, romanized: Imāmat Shamal al Qawqāz), was a state founded by Muslim imams in the early-to-mid 19th century across Dagestan and Chechnya. It emerged during the Caucasian War (1817–1864) as a resistance movement against the Russian Empire's expansion into the region. The Imamate sought to unify the diverse peoples of the North Caucasus under a centralized Islamic governance structure, implementing sharia law to consolidate political and military opposition to Russian rule.
Russia, aiming to secure its southern frontiers and stabilize communication routes to its newly acquired territories in the South Caucasus (modern-day Georgia, Armenia, and Azerbaijan), sought to annex the North Caucasus. The Imamate became the primary force opposing this conquest, enduring decades of conflict before its eventual dissolution following the capture of its final leader, Imam Shamil, in 1859.