Gamzat-bek
Imam of Dagestan
PredecessorGhazi Muhammad
SuccessorImam Shamil
Reign1832–1834
BornHamza Bek ibn Ali Iskandar Bek al-Hutsali
1789
Gotsatl Malyy or Gotsatl Bolshoy, Dagestan
DiedOctober 1, 1834 (aged 4445)
Khunzakh, Dagestan
ReligionMuslim, Sufi

Gamzat-bek (Avar: ХIамзат Бек; Chechen: Хьамзат Бек; Russian: Гамзат-бек; 1789 – October 1, 1834) was the second imam of the Dagestan, and succeeded Ghazi Mollah upon his death in 1832.

Gamzat-bek was a son of one of the Avar beks. He was educated under the supervision of Muslim preachers and became an avid follower of a sufi order. In August 1834, Gamzat-bek launched an assault on Avar khans, who had been supporting the Russian Empire government and who had been hostile towards the sufism movement. He succeeded in capturing the Avar capital of Khunzakh and executed its female ruler Pakhubike and her sons. Within the next eighteen months, Gamzat-bek had been actively fighting against the Russian Empire. The supporters of the Avar khans, including Hadji Murad, conspired against Gamzat-bek and killed him (Leo Tolstoy's story Hadji Murat is based on this event). After the death of Gamzat-bek, Imam Shamil became the third imam of Dagestan. For more information see Murid War.

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