- Monument date
- 1966
- PlacementPrevious toponym
In Sariyagub village, Basarkechar district, Goycha mahal
- PlacementCurrent toponym
Basarkechar region since 11.06.1969 Vardenis, Sariyagub village has been called Chakhkadzor since 19.04.1991.
- Classification
Architecture
- Current situation
After the forced resettlement of the Azerbaijani population in 1987-1991, the tomb was destroyed by Armenians, and its ruins remained in the area of the ancient cemetery where it was located.
- Information
The tomb of Barkhudar Ahmadoghlu was located in the cemetery on the breast of the hill, on the left side of the road leading to Bala Garagoyunlu and Boyuk Garagoyunlu and Kalbajar, a little distance from Sariyagub village. The Barkhudar Ahmadoghlu tomb was built in honor of Seyid Barkhudar Ahmadoghlu, a descendant of Miskin Abdal, who is highly respected in Yagublu and other surrounding villages, on the initiative of the village elders and the Shadmanli (also called the Barkhudarli tribe in modern times). The tomb was built by a craftsman named Muhammad, and a grave was placed inside the tomb. Abbasali Ahmadli, the son of Barkhudar Ahmadoghlu, who died in 1970 on the advice of the elders of the tribe, was buried in one of those graves. The width of the tomb was 3.50 meters, the length was 4.50 meters, the height was around 2.3 meters, and the height of the tomb roof was around 1.5-1.6 meters. The tomb was built from the famous Subatan stone of the region.
The village was given to Miskin Abdal (1430-1535) Miskin Abdal (1430-1535), the great saint of the Safavids, Sufi sheikh Sayyid Huseyn Muhammad son, by the decree of 1515 of the founder and ruler of the Safavid state, Shah Ismayil Khataini (1487-1524). The original of that decree is currently kept in "Miskin Abdal sacred place". Shah Ismayil Khatai, the founder of the Safavid state, who started the most glorious period in the history of Azerbaijan, came to this village and met with his master, the great saint Miskin Abdal. The Safavid ruler Sultan Huseyn (17th-18th centuries) also came to this village and visited "Miskin Abdal sacred place" and delivered a sermon there. The documents confirming this were kept in "Miskin Abdal sacred place" until the deportation period.
