Bala Gariva (Luri and Persian: بالاگریوه) is a geo-cultural region in southwestern Iran, located mainly between Khorramabad and Andimeshk. The population of Bala Gariva consists of Lurs who speak the Bala Gariva'i dialect of northern Luri.
Geographical extent
The region of Bala Gariva traditionally extended from Khorramabad in the north to Andimeshk in the south, and from the Diz River in the east to the Kashgan and Saymara (Karkheh) rivers in the west. Bala Gariva was located to the south of Khorramabad, and included the southern tail of the Garrin Mountain range, and extended southwards where it was enclosed on three sides by the Kashgan, Karkheh, and Diz rivers. The region of Bala Gariva was also defined by ethnicity.
Bala Gariva was naturally an extremely isolated region, and its fragmented landscape required pastoral nomads to cross over the ridges instead of go around them as they migrate. In 1973, there were no permanent settlements outside of Khorramabad and a few agricultural valleys, and there were no nomads either. Bala Gariva is also one of the main basins and is a fertile region. Settlements within Bala Gariva included Veysian and Malavi.
History
The traditional homeland of the Lurs was divided into Lur-e-Bozorg and Lur-e-Kuchak in the 10th century. Bala Gariva was the easternmost territory of Lur-e-Kuchak. Lur-e-Kuchak would later simply be called Luristan. Bala Gariva was often seen as the third division of Luristan in addition to Pish-e-Kuh and Posht-e-Kuh, which were divided by the Kabir Kuh, and later corresponded with the Iranian provinces of Lorestan and Ilam respectively. Other times, Bala Gariva was considered a part of Pish-e-Kuh, in which the Bala Gariva tribes along with the Tarhan tribes comprised the majority of Pish-e-Kuh. Bala Gariva was far more sparse than other parts of Luristan.
Shuja al-Din Khorshid, the founder of the Khorshidi dynasty, spent his summers in Bala Gariva. By the end of the Qajar dynasty, the Iranian state had no authority in Bala Gariva, which was practically independent with each tribe ruling itself. Reza Shah later established direct authority in Bala Gariva along with the rest of Luristan and Iran.
Population
The population of Bala Gariva consists of Lurs from various tribes including Baharvand, Qalavand, Judaki, Mir, and Papi. Other tribes included Sagvand, Dirakvand, and Beyranvand. They speak a Northern Luri dialect known as Bala Gariva'i. The dialect was also close to the Gioni dialect. The Vali dynasty ruled all of Luristan for nearly 200 years, during which all tribes under their rule were known as "Feyli". When the Qajars took control of Pish-e-Kuh, only the tribes of Posht-e-Kuh under the Vali were labelled as Feyli. However, the term "Feyli" was still loosely applied to the tribes in Pish-e-Kuh and Bala Gariva.
Minorsky wrote that the main groups of Lurs were the tribes of Tarhan, Dilfan, Silsila, and Bala Gariva, and considered the first three groups as Lak, but wrote that the tribes of Bala Gariva were "the Lurs par excellence and have important subdivisions: Dirīgwand, Sagwand, etc. It is possible that the Dirīgwand are the real nucleus of the Lur race." He further added that the tribes of Bala Gariva were considerably democratic in their affairs, unlike the Kurdish tribes who were more attached to their chiefs. Minorsky additionally mentioned the Beyranvand and Dalvand tribes, which spoke Laki, as tribes of Bala Gariva. A linguistic survey later showed that all the tribes of the Bala Gariva confederation spoke northern Luri, except the Beyranvand which spoke Laki.