If you have ever wondered why Egypt is no longer an Ismaili state, why the crusaders never reached Cairo and how the Mamluks could have taken power, the answer lies with the Kurdish Ayubid clan.
One of the most important Arabic chronicles of this time are the memoirs of Osama ibn Munqidh (available in English translation by Phillip Hitti), an Arab prince of Syria who lived for an incredible 95 years during the 12th and 13th centuries.
While in the past the Arab aristocracy of Greater Syria (the Levant) prided itself on its roots in the Arabian peninsula, a vestige of the Umayyad days, ibn Munqidh considered the Ayubids, with whom he was allied in battle, not too different from himself: they enjoyed hunting, horse-riding, reciting Arabic poems and exhibiting chivalry.
It was clear even then that a thoroughly acculturated Kurdish elite had grown up among the Arabs of the late Abbasid state. During that period, unlike Persian ministers and, later on, Turkish military leaders, the Kurds never sought to impose their own mores on the Arabs they lived with. It was more of a symbiotic relationship, at least for those at the top.
If only life could be so civilised as falconry and hunting parties in Syria. Alas it is not, and not all Kurds have had the material ability or the will to feel as empowered as the Ayubids among the overwhelming Arab presence.
During nearly 800 years of rule by Seljuk and especially Ottoman Turks, Kurds living in Arab countries tended to do one of two things: recede into the remote mountain reaches where only other Kurds lived, or become part of the military apparatus which ruled over the Levant.
Taken together with the recent history of the Kurds in Iraq, it is interesting to note that the first massacre in that country was directed by a Kurd against Assyrians.
In 1933, General Bakr Sidki led the killing of 3,000 of them in the village of Simle, now under Kurdish control, thus ushering in the military as a political force in Iraq.
Some people are surprised that the previous Iraqi constitution defined Kurdish as the second official language. Hence the particular dialect of Kurdish spoken in the country, Karmanji, is more widely known than any other, and is the only one which has ever been in print.
The Kurdish Regional Government in northern Iraq says Kurdish nationalism has been "long in the making," but without a definite reference predating the modern nation states of the region and their boundaries. What is beyond doubt is that modern Kurdish nationalism was coalescing during the years leading up to World War II.
This was also a zenith for Arab nationalism, witnessing the Palestinian revolt against colonialism which led to further upheavals throughout the Arab world, including the military uprising led by Mohammed Ali Kilani in Baghdad.
"In the beginning, [Kurdish and Arab nationalisms] had common interests [against imperialism]," Khalid Saleh, KRG spokesman in London, tells Sharq. "But when the states were formed, [the Kurds] were left behind."