Bey

"Bey" (Ottoman Turkish: بك‎ “Beik”, Chagatay: بك “Bek”, Turkmen: beg, Uzbek: bek, Kazakh: бек, Tatar: bäk, Albanian: beu, Bosnian: beg, Persian: بیگ‎ “Beigh” or بگ “Beg”, Tajik: бе, Arabic: بك‎ “Bek”) is a Turkic title for a chieftain, and an honorific, traditionally applied to people with special lineages to the leaders or rulers of variously sized areas in the numerous Turkic kingdoms, emirates, sultanates and empires in Central Asia, South Asia, and The Middle East, such as the Ottomans, Timurids or the various khanates and emirates in Central Asia and the Eurasian Steppe. The feminine equivalent title was begum. The regions or provinces where "beys" ruled or which they administered were called beylik, roughly meaning "governorate" and/or " region (the equivalent of county in other part

Bey

"Bey" (Ottoman Turkish: بك‎ “Beik”, Chagatay: بك “Bek”, Turkmen: beg, Uzbek: bek, Kazakh: бек, Tatar: bäk, Albanian: beu, Bosnian: beg, Persian: بیگ‎ “Beigh” or بگ “Beg”, Tajik: бе, Arabic: بك‎ “Bek”) is a Turkic title for a chieftain, and an honorific, traditionally applied to people with special lineages to the leaders or rulers of variously sized areas in the numerous Turkic kingdoms, emirates, sultanates and empires in Central Asia, South Asia, and The Middle East, such as the Ottomans, Timurids or the various khanates and emirates in Central Asia and the Eurasian Steppe. The feminine equivalent title was begum. The regions or provinces where "beys" ruled or which they administered were called beylik, roughly meaning "governorate" and/or " region (the equivalent of county in other part