Iran Under The Safavids: Roger Savory
Iran Under The Safavids: Roger Savory
Iran Under The Safavids: Roger Savory
R O G ER SA V O R Y
Professor, Department of Middle East and Islamic Studies
Trinity College, University of Toronto
IS B N O 5 2 1 2 2 4 8 3 7
To my w ife I<Zcithleen
C o n ten ts
v
Illustrations
vi
List of illustrations
15 Cylindrical candlestick, cast and engraved in bronze, late 16th
century. (Courtesy of the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto.
Acquisition no. 924.76.r.) 150
16 Helmet of Shäh ‘Abbas I, 1625/6. (Reproduced by courtesy of
the Trustees of the British Museum.) 152
17 Isfahan - plan of the Royal Square. (Line drawing by Michael
D. Willis, reproduced from Anthony Welch, Shäh ‘Abbas and
the Arts of Isfahan, The Asia Society, New York, 1973.) 157
18 Isfahan - the Maydän. (From de Bruyn, Travels.) 158
19A Isfahan - the Royal Mosque (begun 1611 ; completed after
1629), main courtyard looking north. (Photo: J. Powell,
Rome.) 160
19B Isfahan —the Royal Mosque, minarets and dome. (Photo:
J. Powell, Rome.) 161
20 Isfahan - the Shaykh Lutf Allah Mosque (begun 1603 ;
completed 1618). (Photo: J. Powell, Rome.) 164
21 Isfahan —the Chihil Sutün palace. (From Mme Dieulafoy, La
Perse, 1887.) 167
22 Isfahan - the Madrasa-yi Madar-i Shah (built 1706-14).
(Photo: J. Powell, Rome.) 168
23 Isfahan - the Chahär Bägh, (From de Bruyn, Travels.) 169
24 Isfahan - the Marnän, Allähverdl Khan and Hasanäbäd
(Khvljü) bridges. (From E. Kaempfer, Amoenitatum
Exoticarum, 1712.) r7i
25 Isfahan - the Hasanäbäd bridge. (From de Bruyn,Travels.) 172
26 Dress of the natives of Isfahän. (From Kaempfer, Amoenitatum
Exoticarum.) 178
27A Court dress, male. (From de Bruyn, Travels.) 180
27B Court dress, female. (From de Bruyn, Travels.) 181
28 Octagonal caravanserai at Amlnäbäd. (From Flandin and
Coste, Voyage en Perse pendant les années 1840 et 1842,
reproduced from Mazaheri, Les Trésors de ITran, Editions
d’Art Albert Skira, Geneva, 1970.) 190
29 Käshän —the great inn. (From Chardin, Travels inPersia.) 192
30 The poet laureate ShifaT (Reproduced by courtesy of the
Trustees of the British Museum.) 212
31 Brass astrolabe, engraved with the name of Shäh Sultän
Husayn, 1712. (Reproduced by courtesy of the Trustees of the
British Museum.) 223
32 Shäh Safi. (From A. Olearius, Relation du voyage, 1727-) 227
33 Shäh ‘Abbäs II. (Victoria and Albert Museum. Crown
copyright.) 230
34 Shäh Sulaymän. Miniature in the Chester Beatty Collection.
(Photo : Pieterse Davison International.) 240
35 Shäh Sultän Husayn. (From de Bruyn, Travels.) 242
vii
vin
IX
A c k n o w le d g e m e n ts
i
2 Iran under the Safavids
mind of the first member of the Safavid family of whom we have
historical knowledge, a certain Fïrüzshâh “ of the golden hat”
(zarrïnkulâh), whom we find established as a wealthy landowner
in the Ardabll region sometime during the eleventh century. The
origins of the Safavid family are still enveloped in obscurity. Hinz
has talked about an alleged migration of Fïrüzshâh to Äzarbäyjän
from the Yemen, and has taken this to be an indication of the Arab
origin of the family. Ayalon has claimed that the Safavids were
Turks. Kasravï, after a careful examination of the evidence, came
to the conclusion that the Safavids were indigenous inhabitants
of Iran, and of pure Aryan (i.e., Iranian) stock; yet they spoke
Âzarï, the form of Turkish which was the native language of
Äzarbäyjän. The only point at issue for Kasravï was whether the
Safavid family had been for long resident in Äzarbäyjän, or had
migrated from Kurdistän. More recently, Togan re-examined the
evidence, and suggested that the ancestors of the Safavids may
have accompanied the Kurdish Ravadid prince Mamlän b. Vah-
südän when the latter conquered the regions of Ardabïl, Arrän,
Muqän and Där-Büm in 1025.
Why is there such confusion about the origins of this important
dynasty, which reasserted Iranian identity and established an
independent Iranian state after eight and a half centuries of rule
by foreign dynasties? The reason is that the Safavids, having been
brought to power by the dynamic force of a certain ideology,
deliberately set out to obliterate any evidence of their own origins
which would weaken the thrust of this ideology and call in
question the premises on which it was based. In order to
understand how and why the Safavids falsified the evidence of
their origins, one must first be clear about the nature of the Safavid
dctva (propaganda, or ideological appeal), and about the bases on
which the power of the Safavid shahs rested.
The power of the Safavid shahs had three distinct bases: first,
the theory of the divine right of the Persian kings, based on the
possession by the king of the “ kingly glory ” (hvarnah; khvarenah ;
farr). This ancient, pre-Islamic theory was reinvested with all its
former splendour and reappeared in the Islamic garb of the
concept of the ruler as the “ Shadow of God upon earth ” (.zill alläh
fi'l-arzi)\ second, the claim of the Safavid shahs to be the
representatives on earth of the Mahdï, the 12th and last Imäm of
the Ithnä ‘Ashari ShTïs, who went into occultation in a.d. 873/4
The Lords of Ardabïl 3
and whose return to earth will herald the Day of Judgement;
third, the position of the Safavid shahs as the murshid-i kämil or
perfect spiritual director, of the Süfî Order known as the
Safaviyya.
Before these points are discussed in detail, reference should be
made to what may be called the “ official” version of the early
history of the Safavid family. The earliest extant genealogy of the
Safavid house (düdmän) is that contained in the Safvat al-SaJa of
Ibn Bazzäz, written about 1357/8, less than twenty-five years after
the death of Shaykh Safi al-DIn Abu’l-Fath Ishâq Ardabïlï
(1252—1334), who founded the Safaviyya Order and set the
Safavid house on the path to future greatness. The Safvat al-SaJd
is primarily hagiography, and must therefore be used with
caution, but is of vital importance both because of its early date
and because its account, as subsequently amended, became the
“ official” version followed by all later histories up to and
including the genealogical work entitled Silsilat al-Nasab-i Safa
viyya; the latter was a late Safavid work written during the reign
of Shäh Sulaymän (1666-94) by a descendant of Shaykh Safi
al-DTn’s spiritual director Shaykh Zâhid-i Gïlânî.
The purpose of the “ official” Safavid genealogy was to
establish the descent of the Safavid house from the 7th ShT‘TImam,
Müsä al-Käzim, and through him to 'AIT himself, the ist Shï'ï
Imam; but even in the “ official” Safavid genealogy, there are
inconsistencies and variations in the number of links in the
genealogical chain. There is little dispute about the five links in
immediate descent from the Imäm Müsä al-Käzim, and only
minor inconsistencies in the chain between FTrüzshäh Zarrinku-
läh and Shaykh Safi al-DTn. It is the middle portion of the
genealogy, consisting of eight links in the “ official version”, on
which the greatest doubt has been cast ; of these eight persons, four
are unspecified Muhammads.
Following the “ official” version of early Safavid history, it
appears that FTrüzshäh was appointed Governor of the province
of Ardabïl and its dependencies by a son of Ibrâhîm b. Adham;
this son is described as “ King of Iran” . Ibrâhîm b. Adham was
an eighth-century ascetic whose life has been much embellished
by legend. There is no historical basis for the belief that he was
a prince of Balkh who renounced worldly pomp in favour of a
life of abstinence. We are further told that FTrüzshäh converted
4 Iran under the Safavids
to Islam the inhabitants of Äzarbäyjän and Muqän, who were
infidels (kafir). Both of these statements are patently false. Ibrâhîm
b. Adham died in a.d. 777, so no son of his could possibly have
been alive in the eleventh century, and the inhabitants of Muqän
and Arrän had embraced Islam during the seventh and eighth
centuries. Fïrüzshâh was a man of wealth and authority, and
owned much property and livestock; indeed, his animals were so
numerous that he selected for his residence a place called Rängln,
on the edge of the forests of Gllän, where the pasturage was
excellent. Fïrüzshâh became noted for the nobility of his character,
the excellence of his manners, the felicity of his conversation and
the generosity of his behaviour. He was said to be a sayyid
(descendant of the Prophet), and, as a result of his abundant piety
and zealous religious observance, the people of the region became
his disciples (murid). After his death, his son ‘Ivaz moved to
Isfaranjän, a village in the Ardabïl district. On the other hand, a
“ non-establishment” source states that Fïrüzshâh was the first
member of the Safavid house to come to Ardabïl; this statement
is not necessarily incompatible with the “ official” account, for
“ Ardabïl” may mean “ the Ardabïl district”.
The son o f ‘Ivaz, Muhammad Häfiz, disappeared at the age of
seven, and the customary rites of mourning were performed for
him. After seven years had elapsed, Muhammad suddenly
reappeared, wearing a jujube (reddish-brown) coloured robe, and
with a white turban wound around the ordinary hat of the period.
Round his neck was hung a copy of the Qur’än. In answer to
questions about his absence, he replied that he had been carried
off by jinn, who had taught him the Qur’än and instructed him
in the obligatory sciences, such as the precepts and laws of God.
From then onwards, Muhammad Häfiz lived a life of perfect piety
and scrupulous religious observance. Two new, predictive
elements have been introduced into the “ official” account at this
point: the supernatural element (the abduction by jinn); and the
repetition of the socio-religiously significant number “ 7 ”.
Muhammad’s son, Saläh al-Dïn Rashid, lived an uneventful life
as a small landowner (dihqän) and agriculturalist at the village of
Kalkhvurän near Ardabïl. According to the Silsilat al-Nasab,
Saläh al-Dïn’s son, Qutb al-Dïn Abu’l-Bâqï Ahmad, was living
at Kalkhvurän at the time of the Georgian invasion of Iran and
capture of Ardabïl in 1203/4. During the sack of Ardabïl, Qutb
The Lords of ArdabU 5
al-DTn took refuge with his infant son Amin al-DTn Jibrä’H1 in
a cellar, with one of his followers on guard above. The guard,
attacked by a marauding Georgian, succeeded in overcoming
him, but the sound of the struggle brought further Georgians to
the spot. Before they arrived, the guard pulled a large grain-bin
over the entrance to the cellar. The Georgians killed the guard
and left. The cellar was too cramped for the number of people,
mainly women and children, concealed in it, and Qutb al-DTn was
forced to seek another hiding-place. Before he found one, he was
caught by the Georgians, and left for dead with a severe wound
in his neck. He was later recovered from a pile of corpses of other
victims by a band of ruffians out for loot, and taken back to the
cellar to be nursed by his relatives. Qutb al-DTn was still alive in
1252/3, when Shaykh SafT al-DTn was born. Shaykh Safi al-DTn,
recounting the story of these events in later days, used to say that,
when Qutb al-DTn lifted him up on his shoulder, he could put
four fingers into the gash left by the sword wound.
Amïn al-DTn Jibrä’Tl, like his forefathers, combined the success
ful practice of agriculture with the holy life. He did not mix at
all with the common people, but was always silent and at his
devotions. He chose as his spiritual director MawlanI Imam
al-RabbänT Khväja Kamäl al-DTn ‘Arabshäh. He married Daw-
latT, the daughter of ‘Umar Bârüqï, who bore him Shaykh Safi
al-DTn in 1252/3; six years later, Amïn al-DTn Jibrâ’ïl died.
With the birth of Shaykh SafT al-DTn, the history of the Safavid
family enters a new and decisive phase. According to the tradi
tional hagiographical accounts, signs of future greatness were
stamped upon his brow from infancy. He did not mix with other
boys, but spent his time in prayer and fasting until God removed
the veil from his heart. He experienced visions, seeing angels in
the form of birds which in turn assumed human shape and
conversed with him. Sometimes the awtäd and abdâl2 would
approach him and comfort him with the assurance that he would
reach the state of gnosis and become the focus for the hopes of
the world.
When he was about twenty years of age, Shaykh SafT al-DTn
sought a spiritual director among the recluses of Ardabïl, but none
could meet his needs. A certain Shaykh NajTb al-DTn Buzghüsh
at Shîrâz was recommended to him, and SafT al-DTn journeyed
to that city only to find that Shaykh NajTb al-DTn had died before
6 Iran under the Safavids
his arrival. Safi" al-DIn remained at Shiraz for some time. Many
dervishes gathered round him and conversed with him, and he
continued to ask advice from the local shaykhs regarding a
possible spiritual director. Eventually, he was advised that no one
in the world could analyse his mystical state and interpret his
visions except Shaykh Zâhid-i Gïlânî. After a protracted search,
during which he experienced visions in which Shaykh Zähid was
present, and after suffering illness and hardship, Safi al-DIn
succeeded in finding the latter at a village on the shores of the
Caspian Sea. He reached Shaykh Zähid’s residence during Ram
azan and, although it was Shaykh Zahid’s custom not to receive
visitors during the month of fast, Safi al-DIn was at once
summoned into his presence. Unlike other spiritual directors
whom he had visited, Shaykh Zähid did not turn away his face,
but gazed steadily upon him, and Safi al-DIn knew that he had
reached the goal of his aspirations. At once, he made the formal
act termed tawba, that is, repentance of his sins and renunciation
of the worldly life. Safi al-DIn remained in Shaykh Zähid’s
private quarters until the end of Ramazan. He was granted yet
another audience with the Shaykh during Ramazan, because Safi
al-DIn was in doubt as to whether his mystical states and visions
were inspired by God or by Satan. Shaykh Zähid resolved his
doubts and answered his questions, and affirmed his exalted
spiritual status; there was but one veil between Safi al-DIn and
God, he declared, and that veil had now been removed.
When Safi al-DIn reached Gnän in 1276/7, he was twenty-five
years of age, and Shaykh Zähid was sixty. He followed Shaykh
Zähid’s spiritual guidance for twenty-five years, until the death
of the latter in 1301. As Shaykh Zähid grew older, he became
more and more dependent on Safi al-DIn who, when the Shaykh’s
eyesight failed him, used to sit at his side, describe visitors to him
and conduct interviews for him. At some point during this period,
the close bonds between the two men were further cemented by
a reciprocal marriage alliance : Safi al-DIn married Shaykh Zähid’s
daughter, Bibi Fätima, and gave his own daughter in marriage
to Shaykh Zähid’s son, Häjjl Shams al-DIn Muhammad. Safi
al-DIn had three sons by Bibi Fätima: Muhyl al-DIn, who died
in 1323/4, Sadr al-Milla va’l-DIn Müsä and Abü Sa‘Id.
the title-deeds had been drawn up, but the landowners in question
had not received payment; otherwise, he reasoned, at least a
portion of the property would still be in the hands of the
beneficiary. The view that the story of the benefaction by Tïmür
either to Khvaja ‘All and his descendants or to the shirine of
Shaykh Safi al-DIn itself is a fabrication is supported by the great
Safavid historian Iskandar Beg Munshl With his usual honesty,
he writes: “ Although I have not found this tradition in the
historical chronicles, or in any other accounts of the circumstances
of the Safavid family, either in prose or poetry, nevertheless it
is widely rumoured and disseminated by a succession of verbal
reports, and so I have written it down.” He goes on to say,
however, “ the actual vaqf document, written in an antique hand,
and embellished with the Mongol seal and with the personal seal
of Amïr Tïmür, fell into Safavid hands during a campaign in the
region of Balkh, while Safavid forces were laying siege to
Andikhüd, and was brought to the notice of Shäh ‘Abbas I ”.16
We are told that Tïmür’s son Shährukh also held Khvaja ‘All
in respect. In 1420, in the course of his campaign in north-western
Iran against the Qarä Quyünlü, Shährukh entered Ardabïl and
visited the tomb of Shaykh Safï al-DIn, and sought to obtain
spiritual blessings from the presence of Khväja ‘All. Shährukh was
in the habit of demonstrating his sympathy with popular religious
sentiment by showing veneration for the holy men and visiting
the tombs of the celebrated shaykhs of the regions through which
he passed, but his visit to Khvaja ‘Alï is particularly interesting
in view of the by then manifestly Shï‘ï tendencies of the Safavid
Order. It appears that the political benefits of such an action
outweighed in the mind of the Sunni ruler any religious antipathy
he may have felt, and this view is supported by the fact that on
several occasions Shährukh visited the shrine of the 8th ShTï
Imäm at Mashhad.
About the year 1427, Khväja ‘All decided to make the
pilgrimage to Mecca, and set out, leaving his third son, Ibrâhîm,
at Ardabïl as spiritual director and supervisor of the Safavid
mausoleum. Ibrâhîm could not bear the separation from his father,
and followed him to Mecca, where they performed the rites of
the pilgrimage together. From Mecca, they went to Jerusalem,
where Khväja ‘Alï died and was buried by Ibrâhîm. Ibrâhîm then
returned to Ardabïl to assume the duties of his father’s vicegerent
i6 Iran under the Safavids
and successor, which he performed until his own death in 1447.
Little is known about the development of the Safavid Order
during this period. What is clear, is that Ibrâhîm maintained and
strengthened the network of adherents who were actively
engaged in spreading Safavid propaganda in Anatolia and else
where. At the head of this organisation was an officer called the
khalifat al-khulaja; this office has been felicitously termed by
Minorsky the “ special secretariat for Süfî affairs”. Through the
khalifat al-khulafa and his subordinates, called ptra, the leaders of
the Safavid Order and, later, the Safavid shahs, controlled and
maintained close contact with their Süfî disciples both within and
without the borders of Iran. The presence of large numbers of
Safavid supporters in eastern Anatolia ultimately came to be
recognised by the Ottomans as a serious threat to their authority
in that area. The khalifat al-khulafa was regarded as the deputy and
lieutenant of the murshid-i kätnil himself, that is, the perfect
spiritual director, or leader of the Safavid Order. All Süfîs of the
Order obeyed the orders of the khalifat al-khulafa as they would
the orders of their leader himself. It was the duty of Süfîs of the
Safavid Order to visit the Safavid shrine at Ardabïl and be
spiritually enriched by an audience with their Shaykh. We are told
that by the time of Shaykh Ibrâhîm the throng of disciples
crowding round the Safavid sanctuary had become so great that
not all of them could be admitted into the presence of the Shaykh.
Ibrâhîm excelled even his forefathers in the scale of his charity to
the poor and needy; the shrine had become so wealthy that its
kitchens were stocked with dishes and vessels of gold and süver,
and the Shaykh conducted himself like a king.
With the accession of IbrâhînTs son, Junayd, to the leadership
of the Safavid Order, the Safavid movement entered yet another
important phase in the two centuries of patient preparation for
the establishment of the Safavid dynasty. From his assumption of
the leadership, Junayd gave clear indications of his desire for
temporal power and kingship. It is no accident that he is the first
Safavid leader to whom the term sultan, indicative of temporal
authority, was applied. No importance should be attached to the
fact that pious tradition liked to apply the title sultan retroactively
to the early leaders of the Safavid family. No longer content with
spiritual authority alone, Junayd introduced a militant note by
inciting his disciples to carry on holy war against the infidel.17
The Lords of Ardabïl 17
These activities aroused first the suspicion and then the appre
hension of the ruler of western Iran, the Qarä Quyünlü chief
Jahänshäh, whose authority extended from Äzarbäyjän and the
borders of Georgia to the Persian Gulf. Jahänshäh peremptorily
ordered Junayd to disperse his forces, leave Ardabïl, and go
wherever he pleased as long as it was outside his dominions.
Should Junayd fail to comply with these demands, Ardabïl would
be destroyed. Junayd fled from Ardabïl with a number of Süfïs
of the Safavid Order and, after some years in Asia Minor and
Syria, was finally given sanctuary by Jahänshäh’s enemy the Äq
Quyünlü ruler Üzün Hasan, whose base at that time was Diyär
Bakr. Junayd spent three years in Diyär Bakr (1456-9), and
cemented his political alliance with the Äq Quyünlü ruler by
marrying his sister, Khadya Begum. Üzün Hasan saw Junayd as
a useful ally in the event of an Äq Quyünlü drive eastward into
Iran against the Qarä Quyünlü. Similarly, the decision of the
Safavid leader to ally himself with the Sunnï Äq Quyünlü was
taken on the grounds of political and military expediency. Not
only were the Qarä Quyünlü too powerful militarily to permit
any successful Safavid military coup in Äzarbäyjän (Junayd had
tacitly acknowledged this in abandoning Ardabïl, the nerve-centre
of the Safavid movement), but the Qarä Quyünlü were also rivals
to the Safavids on the religious level too. Although the Qarä
Quyünlü were not militant Shï‘ïs, they had been “ trying to unify
their adepts on a shï‘a platform”,18 and so they were much more
likely to clash with the Safavids on ideological grounds than were
the Äq Quyünlü.
In 1460, Junayd led a force of 10,000 men into Shïrvân.
According to some sources, this was a repetition on a larger scale
of his earlier raids on Circassia, and he intended merely to march
across the territory of the Shïrvânshâh in order to reach Circassia.
Other sources, however, state that his object was the conquest of
Shïrvân, which would then constitute a convenient base for a
subsequent invasion of Iran. In view of the size ofjunayd’s army,
this seems much more probable. The expedition ended in disaster,
for Junayd was attacked by the Shïrvânshâh on the banks of the
river Kur, near Tabarsarän on 4 March 1460, and was killed in
the battle.
The value of the long years of patient ideological preparation
by the Safavid organisation for the seizure of power in Iran now
i8 Iran under the Safavids
became apparent. Not only did the Safavid movement not
disintegrate, but, with the succession of Junayd’s son Hay dar, its
drive to achieve temporal power accelerated. Haydar’s first move
was to continue the political and military alliance with the Äq
Quyünlü by marrying Üzün Hasan’s daughter ‘Alamshâh Begum
(also known as HalTma Begum Äghä and Marta) whose mother,
Despina Khätün, was the daughter of Calo Johannes, the Emperor
of Trebizond. Like his father, Haydar wielded both spiritual and
temporal authority : “ inwardly, following the example of shaykhs
and men of God, he walked the path of spiritual guidance and
defence of the faith ; outwardly, he was a leader sitting on a throne
in the manner of princes”.19 It could only be a matter of time
before Haydar, like his father, would make a bid for a kingdom
of his own. Before trying conclusions with the Qarä Quyünlü,
however, Haydar, again like his father, gave his men battle
experience by leading them in raids against the “ infidels” of
Circassia and Däghistän —probably the Christian Alans (Ossetes)
living north of the Darial pass, and the Kabard Circassians. In
order to reach these regions, it was necessary for Haydar to cross
the territory of the Shïrvânshâh, who had defeated and killed his
father in 1460. The Shïrvânshâh allowed Haydar’s first two
expeditions, in 1483 or i486, and 1487, to cross his territory
unopposed. In 1488, however, when Haydar sacked the town of
Shamâkhï, the capital of Shïrvân, the Shïrvânshâh, Farrukhyasär,
appealed for help to his son-in-law, the Äq Quyünlü Sultän
Ya‘qüb: “ At the moment,” said Farrukhyasär, “ Haydar owns no
territory, but he has mobilized a warlike army, and his ambitions
will not be contained within the confines of the district of Ardabïl.
Nor, if he succeeds in acquiring a kingdom such as mine, will he
for long be satisfied with such a meagre empire. On the contrary,
it will merely whet his appetite.”20 Sultän Ya‘qüb, persuaded by
these arguments, sent 4,000 men to the assistance of Farrukhyasär.
This detachment played the decisive part in the defeat of Haydar’s
army on 9 July 1488 at Tabarsarän, only a short distance from
the place where his father had been killed in 1460. In the course
of the battle, Haydar received a mortal arrow-wound, and was
buried on the battlefield by his followers.
What had brought about this volte-face in Äq Quyünlü policy
toward the Safavids? The great Äq Quyünlü ruler, Üzün Hasan,
had died in 1478, and had been succeeded first by his son KhaEl
The Lords of Ardabll 19
and, later the same year, by his younger son Ya‘qüb. From the
outset, relations between Haydar and Ya‘qüb were not smooth,
and Haydar recognised that he was no longer persona grata at the
Äq Quyünlü court. Whereas Üzün Hasan had seen Junayd as a
useful ally against the Qarä Quyünlü, and was prepared to
continue to extend his friendship to Haydar even after he himself
27
3. Shah Ismâ‘ïl I
During the last decade of the reign of IsmäTl I, there had been
a movement away from the theocratic form of government which
had been a distinctive feature of the early Safavid state. There had
been a general trend toward the separation of religious and
political powers, and toward the reduction of the influence of the
qizilbäsh in state affairs. As noted in the previous chapter, there
had been a change in the status of the vakil. From 1508 onwards,
the Shäh had not appointed a qizilbäsh chief to this high office.
From 1514 onwards, there was a subtle change in the nature of
the office ; there was tendency to lay less emphasis on the special
position of the vakil as the vicegerent of the shah, and to regard
him rather as simply the head of the bureaucracy, in other words,
as a vazïr. IsmäTl had also taken steps to reduce the status of the
office of amir al-umarä, or commander-in-chief, another of the
principal offices of state held by the qizilbäsh. In 1509/10, Husayn
Beg Lala Shämlü (who had initially combined this office with that
of vakil) was dismissed from his position as amir al-umarä. IsmäTl
did not replace him by another high-ranking qizilbäsh chief, but
awarded this important office to an unknown officer, Muhammad
Beg Ustäjlü, who held the comparatively humble position of
sufrachl (sewer). Muhammad Beg was promoted to the rank of
sultän and given the title of Chäyän Sultän, in order to give him
a status more suitable to the holder of the position of commander-
in-chief.1An even more significant fact is that Chäyän Sultän was
given not only Husayn Beg Shämlü’s office, but his tribal district
(;ulkä) and retainers as well. This action by-the Shäh struck at the
root of the qizilbäsh tribal organisation. The great qizilbäsh tribes,
termed üymäq, were subdivided into as many as eight or nine clans,
and the basis of the fighting spirit of the qizilbäsh was their fierce
tribal loyalty (ta'assub-i üymäqiyyat; ta‘assub-i qizilbäshiyyat). It
5 0
The Safavid state from 1524 to 1588 5i
would be impossible for the new amir al-umarä, an Ustäjlü, to
command from Shämlü tribesmen support in any way comparable
to that which he naturally would receive from members of his
tribe. The move appears to have been successful from Ismâ‘ïl’s
point of view, for we hear nothing of note about Chäyän Sultan,
though he held office until his death in 1523. The particular
significance of IsmäTTs action is that it foreshadows the methods
used later by Shäh ‘Abbas the Great to curb the power of the
qizilbäsh.
Tahmäsp, Shäh Ismä‘Tl’s eldest son, had been born on 22
February 1514. He was therefore only ten years and three months
old when he succeeded his father on the throne. The qizilbash were
not slow in seizing their opportunity to reverse the trend toward
giving Iranians a larger share in the governance of the state. They
took over control of the state and usurped the authority of the
Shäh for a decade. A qizilbash chief, Dïv Sultän Rümlü, summoned
his fellow-amirs to a gathering of the clans. At this gathering, Dïv
Sultän Rümlü displayed the testamentary disposition of the late
Shäh appointing himself amir al-umarä and guardian of the young
Shäh Tahmäsp. To denote this latter function of regent, the old
title of atäbeg, used by the Seljuq Turks and the Turcoman rulers
of Iran in the fifteenth century, was revived. The bulk of the chiefs
of the Rümlü, Takkalü and Zu’l-Qadar tribes agreed to recognise
Dïv Sultän as their leader and elder (rïsh-safid: literally, “ grey
beard”). Two of the leading Shämlü amirs, Dürmïsh Khän,
Governor of Harät, and Zaynal Khän, Governor of Astaräbäd,
sent pledges of support and urged other Shämlü chiefs to do the
same. Some Ustäjlü amirs also joined Dïv Sultän, but the majority
of the chiefs of that tribe, led by Köpek Sultän Ustäjlü, the brother
of the former amir al-umarä Chäyän Sultän, ranged themselves
against the new regent. The Ustäjlüs had the advantage of being
in control of the capital, Tabrïz. Some of Köpek Sultän’s
supporters urged him to challenge the regent in the field, but
Köpek Sultän demurred: “ We are both slaves of the Shäh,” he
said, “ and devotees of the same threshold; we will not contend
with each other.”2
The regent, however, was not only an able military commander
but an astute politician, and he completely outmanoeuvred the
Ustäjlü chief. In the autumn of 1525, the regent advanced on
Tabriz, and sent a message to the Ustäjlüs to the effect that the
52 Iran under the Safavids
late Shah had entrusted him, Dïv Sultan, who was one of the
veteran Süfîs of the Safavid house, with the care of the young
Tahmäsp, and had taken solemn oaths from the other amirs that
they would not act contrary to his (Dïv Sultan’s) judgement. It
was therefore incumbent on them all, he said, to respect Shah
IsmäTTs will, and he called on the Ustäjlü amir to come forth from
Tabriz and meet him. Otherwise, he said, civil war would break
out, and the enemies of Iran would get the chance for which they
had been waiting for years. The Ustäjlü amirs, reflecting on the
dishonour which would attach to their name if they refused,
agreed to meet the regent. Dïv Sultan at once put to death two
qizilbäsh chiefs, one an Ustäjlü and the other a Qäjär, whom he
accused of fomenting the dissension between himself and the
Ustäjlüs, and set up a triumvirate consisting of himself, Chüha
Sultän Takkalü and Köpek Sultän Ustäjlü. Not only was Köpek
Sultän disappointed in his hopes of becoming a joint defacto ruler
of the state with Dïv Sultän, but it rapidly became apparent that
his role was to be like that of Lepidus in the celebrated triumvirate
of Octavius, Mark Antony and Lepidus in 43 B.c. If Chüha Sultän
affixed his seal to documents, this was held to signify the
agreement of Köpek Sultän as well. Worse than that, Dïv Sultän
and Chüha Sultän aimed to deprive the Ustäjlü chiefs of the
possibility of any effective opposition to themselves, by system
atically dispersing them to their fiefs. Köpek Sultän, realising that,
as a result of this underhand dealing, his position was untenable,
withdrew to his fiefs at Nakhchivän and Erïvân; another version
is that Dïv Sultän sent him with an expedition to raid Georgia.
Whether Köpek Sultan’s departure from centre stage was volun
tary or not, his fellow-triumvirs took advantage of his absence
to expropriate most of the lands which had been assigned to the
Ustäjlü tribe in the form of tiyül.3
This arbitrary action on the part of the regent and Chüha Sultän
precipitated the civil war. In the spring of 1526, only twenty-five
years after the coronation of Shäh Ismâ‘ïl at Tabrïz, the rival
factions clashed near Sultäniyya in Äzarbäyjän, and the Ustäjlüs
were put to flight and forced to take refuge in the forests of Gïlân.
The following year, Köpek Sultän re-emerged, seized ArdaLü,
where he killed the aged governor, Bädinjän Sultän Rümlü, and
marched on Tabrïz. In a pitched battle with his fellow-triumvirs
near Sharür,4 he was defeated and killed, and the surviving
Ustäjlüs fled back to the forests.
The Safavid state from 1524 to 1588 53
The civil war had already been extremely detrimental to the
state; as one chronicle puts it: “ the body politic was destitute of
administration and order, and confusion rent the country”.5
Many of the qizilbäsh chiefs stationed in Khurasan had been drawn
into the war, and the Özbegs, always eager to exploit any
weakness on the north-east frontier, seized Tüs and Astaräbäd and
roamed at will in other parts of Khurasan. Much worse was to
come. Chüha Sultän suggested to Tahmäsp that the regent, Dïv
Sultän, was the real cause of the discord between the qizilbäsh, and
it would be advisable to get rid of him. On 5 July 1527, when
the regent entered the divan, the young Shäh shot an arrow at
him which, despite Tahmäsp’s lack of strength, struck the regent
on the chest; at a signal from Tahmäsp, Dïv Sultän was then
dispatched by the guards. Chüha Sultän thus emerged as the real
ruler of the state. The administration of affairs was entirely in his
hands, and Tahmäsp was king in name only. At first, Chüha
Sultän’s position seemed unassailable. He scored a diplomatic
success by persuading some of the alienated Ustäjlü chiefs to return
to their allegiance to the Shäh; they were received at Qazvïn by
the Shäh and each was assigned land and an office as befitted his
position. The surviving triumvir handed out most of the land in
the provinces in the form of assignments to members of his own
tribe, the Takkalüs.
On the north-east frontier, the city of Harät had been under
siege by the Özbegs under ‘Ubayd Alläh Khän for some months
and, in the summer of 1528, with the civil war apparently over,
Shäh Tahmäsp marched to its relief. Near Jam, the Safavid army
was confronted by an Özbeg force overwhelmingly superior in
numbers. According to one report, some of the qizilbäsh chiefs,
including Chüha Sultän, in command of the right wing, were so
overawed by the size of the Özbeg army that they fled from the
field; another version states that Chüha Sultän remained on the
field but exhibited cowardice later. The latter account states that
the Takkalüs on the Safavid right were shattered by a charge made
by the Özbeg commander Jânï Beg Sultän, and fled from the field
followed by the troops forming the Safavid left. Tahmäsp alone
stood firm, in the Safavid centre, thus demonstrating for the
second time that he was not as malleable as some of qizilbäsh chiefs
had thought. The Shäh ordered a counter-attack by the Safavid
centre, composed of Sjiämlüs and Zu’l-Qadars, and in the mêlée
the Özbeg chief himself, ‘Ubayd Alläh Khän, was wounded, and
54 Iran under the Safavids
his men left the field in disorder. Mean while Jânï Beg Sultan, who
had broken through the Safavid right and had been plundering
in the Safavid rear, came near Tahmäsp’s standard under the
impression that it was that o f ‘Ubayd. Tahmäsp at once made to
attack him but Chüha Sultän, kneeling in a most unmanly fashion,
urged they should await the return of the qizilbäsh who had left
the field.
Shäh Tahmäsp, though no doubt disgusted by Chüha Sultän’s
conduct, must have decided that his own personal position was
as yet too insecure for him to make a move against the triumvir,
because Chüha Sultän continued to direct the affairs of state. The
situation at Harät remained critical, because the Özbegs had
resumed the siege of the city as soon as the royal army left
Khuräsän. The Governor of Harät, Husayn Khän Shämlü, whose
conduct at the battle of Jäm had been in marked contrast to that
of Chüha Sultän, was desperately short of supplies; eventually,
in the absence of any assistance from Tabriz, he was forced to
negotiate with ‘Ubayd Alläh Khän. Chüha Sultän delayed the
dispatch of a relief force to Harät out of pure vindictiveness
toward Husayn Khän. Ultimately, Husayn Khän was forced to
surrender the city, but he obtained surprisingly generous terms:
he, his ward Säm Mirza (the Shäh’s brother), the qizilbäsh garrison
and a number of ShïTs from among the population of Harät, were
allowed to leave the city unmolested; they made their way via
STstän to Shlräz, where Husayn Khän received a royal summons
to proceed to court. Fearful of his reception at the hands of Chüha
Sultän, the Shämlü chief procrastinated, but finally, having
received a pledge of safe-conduct, joined the royal camp near
Isfahän and was received by the Shäh with great marks of
affection.
This display of royal favour made Chüha Sultän detest Husayn
Khän Shämlü even more, and he planned to murder the latter at
a banquet. Forewarned of the plot, Husayn Khän decided to strike
first, and made his way with a band of Shämlü retainers toward
Chüha Sultän’s tent. Chüha Sultän fled, and took refuge in the
royal tent, where a fierce struggle ensued. During this confused
mêlée two arrows actually struck Tahmäsp’s crown. At that
moment the words of the Huguenot jeweller Chardin, writing
in the second half of the seventeenth century, might have seemed
to the Shäh to need some qualification : ‘Te Gouvernment de Perse
The Safavid state from 1524 to 1588 55
est monarchique, despotique et absolu, étant tout entier dans la
main d'un seul homme, qui est le chef souverain, tant pour le
spirituel, que pour le temporel. . . il n’y a assurément aucun
souverain au monde si absolu que le roi de Perse”.6 Yet he was
shortly to demonstrate his determination to rule de facto as well
as de jure. The guards on duty happened to be Zu’l-Qadars; they
sided with the Shämlüs, and one of their number mortally
wounded Chüha Sultän. The Takkalüs carried away his body and,
returning in greater strength, overwhelmed the Shämlüs, took
300 of them prisoner and promptly put them to death. The
Takkalüs remained in a rebellious mood and, a few days later,
fighting broke out again near Hamadän between them and the
other qizilbäsh tribes. One of the Takkalü supporters misguidedly
attempted to abduct the Shäh and carry him off to the Takkalü
camp. Tahmäsp, his patience clearly exhausted, had the intruder
put to death, and then gave the Draconian order for the general
slaughter of the Takkalü tribe. Many were killed around the royal
tent; others escaped to Baghdad, where the Safavid governor,
himself a Takkalü, put some of them to death as a proof of his
loyalty and sent their heads to the Shäh; some eventually defected
to the Ottomans. The chronogram in Persian for this event gives
the date of the event, 937 (1530/1), and the meaning “ the Takkalü
disaster” ; the chronogram is particularly apt, for the Takkalü
tribe never subsequently played any considerable part in the
governance of the Safavid state.
Shäh Tahmäsp, still no more than sixteen or seventeen years
of age, had given clear evidence that he did not intend to allow
the usurpation of his royal prerogatives by the qizilbäsh to go on
indefinitely, or to tolerate open rebellion by his soi-disant
“ disciples”. Husayn Khän Shämlü, however, who succeeded
Chüha Sultän as the most powerful qizilbäsh chief in the state, did
not draw the appropriate moral from his predecessor’s downfall.
Husayn Khän assumed office with the consensus of the qizilbäsh
chiefs and the principal officers of state, who subsequently in
formed the Shäh of their decision. The four years of Takkalü
supremacy were followed by three years of Shämlü supremacy.
Just as Chüha Sultän had appointed Takkalüs to office in prefer
ence to men from other tribes, so Husayn Khän allotted the pick
of provincial posts to Shämlüs. Husayn Khän repeated Chüha
Sultan’s mistake of not allowing the Shäh to have any say in the
56 Iran under the Safavids
business of government, and he also repeated his predecessor’s
mistake of underestimating the Shäh. Having angered the Shäh
by his arbitrary action in putting to death the vazir Amir Ja‘far
SävajT,7 in 1533 he aroused Tahmäsp’s suspicions that he was
plotting to overthrow him and put his brother, Säm Mïrzâ, on
the throne ; even worse, he was accused of contemplating desertion
to and collaboration with the Ottomans, who had invaded Iran
again. Tahmäsp had him summarily put to death. Since Husayn
Khän Shämlü was a cousin of Tahmäsp himself, and was also the
lala (guardian) of the Shäh’s infant son Muhammad Mïrzâ, who
had been born in 1531, his execution had a profound effect on
the other qizilbäsh chiefs. It indicated not only that the Shäh had
the will to take stern measures to put an end to qizilbäsh
hegemony, but also that he had at his command a sufficient
number of loyal officers to carry out his will.
The execution of Husayn Khän Shämlü marked the end of a
decade of qizilbäsh rule (1524-33), and the reassertion of royal
authority. The qizilbäsh interregnum had naturally caused some
changes in the relative importance of the principal offices of state.
The vakil, whose position had been confused with that of the vazxr
during the last decade of the reign of Shäh Ismâ‘ïl, when the office
was held by an Iranian, regained much of his former prestige and
importance. Indeed, his military and political power was such that
he is often confused in the sources with the amir al-umarä, whose
influence, as one would expect, was also greatly increased during
the period of government by military commanders. The triumvirs
are styled vakil and amir al-umarä indifferently, and during the
qizilbäsh interregnum there seems to have been no clear distinction
between these two offices in the minds of the historians of the
period. When Shäh Tahmäsp succeeded in taking control of the
affairs of state, both these titles fell into abeyance. We no longer
hear of the amir al-umarä as an officer of the central administration,
and the office is not listed among the appointments by Shäh £Abbäs
I at his accession in 1588. The title vakil, too, almost disappeared
from the scene. The reduction of the role of the military in the
governance of the state necessarily led to a marked increase in the
power of the head of the bureaucracy, the vazir. The qürchibäshi,8
a military officer formerly subordinate to the amir al-umarä,
emerged as the chief military officer of the state, and continued
to hold this position as long as the qizilbäsh troops constituted the
whole or principal part of Safavid armies.
The Safavid state from 1524 to 1588 57
The civil war in Iran had critically weakened the state and had
given an unexpected opportunity to the two most formidable
enemies of the Safavid state, the Ottoman Turks in the west and
the Özbegs in the east, to strike deep into Safavid territory.
Reference has already been made to Özbeg attacks in the east and
to the loss of Harät. Between 1524 and 1538, the Özbegs, led by
the vigorous and martial ‘Ubayd Alläh Khän, launched five major
invasions of Khurasan; these were quite apart from the almost
habitual annual raids across the north-east frontier. Even more
dangerous were the four full-scale invasions of Iran between 1533
and 1553 by the Ottomans, then at the height of their power under
the great Sultän Süleymän, known to the Ottomans as “ the
Lawgiver”, and to the West as “ the Magnificent”. The remark
able thing is not that the Safavids suffered serious losses of
territory as a result of these onslaughts, but that they were not
overwhelmed. Shäh Tahmäsp, struggling against discord and dis
loyalty and treachery in high places, both on the part of qizil
bäsh chiefs and on the part of his own brothers, managed to hold
the Safavid state together for more than half a century. This
postulates one of two things —or perhaps a little of both: either
the institutional framework of the early Safavid state established
by Shäh IsmäTl, and its dynamic ideology, were strong enough,
in spite of all, to enable the state to weather the storm; or else
Tahmäsp possessed qualities with which he has not been credited
by any source, Western or Oriental.
Shäh Tahmäsp reigned for fifty-two years, longer than any
other Safavid monarch. His personal character seems to have made
little impression on Western observers, and what impression it did
make was wholly unfavourable. He is portrayed as a miser, so
parsimonious that he sent his disused clothing to the bazaar to be
sold. He is portrayed as a religious bigot, as a melancholy recluse
who swung between extremes of abstinence and intemperance,
as a man capable of great cruelty. He is said to have led the life
of a “ mere voluptuary”, never leaving the haram, “ where he
divides his time between dallying with his favourites and fore
casting the future by means of lots”.9 He is not credited with
any particular skill either in the arts of peace or of war.
This picture is obviously out of focus, even distorted. In the
first place, Shäh Tahmäsp, whatever his faults, was not lacking
in either physical or moral courage. At the battle ofjäm in 1528,
apparent total defeat at the hands of the Özbegs was converted
58 Iran under the Safavids
into victory by Tahmäsp’s personal bravery and powers of
leadership. His moral courage was spectacularly demonstrated by
his decisions to execute the regent DTv Sultän Rümlü in 1527 and
the amir al-umarä Husayn Khän Shämlü in 1533, and by his
ordering of the general massacre of the rebellious Takkalüs in
1530. As a military commander, he was probably not in the same
class as his father, IsmäTl, or his grandson, ‘Abbäs I. On the other
hand, IsmäTTs flamboyance and dash, which achieved brilliant
victories over the Özbegs, were if anything a handicap in war
fare against the Ottomans, which called for a cool head, sure
judgement and superior battle tactics. The shortcomings of IsmäTl
as a military commander were demonstrated by the Ottomans at
Chäldirän, and after that defeat IsmäTl retired to his tent, so to
speak, to sulk rather in the manner of Achilles. Shäh Tahmäsp’s
military skills were essentially defensive in nature, but he had no
choice but to fight defensive wars. For example, in 1533 he could
muster only 7,000 men to meet an Ottoman invasion force of
90,000 men under the Grand Vizier Ibrâhîm Pasha, and the loyalty
of many even of these 7,000 was suspect. The ability to survive
in the face of such odds surely posits that Tahmäsp was a master
of Fabian tactics. He made maximum use of a scorched earth
policy. The frontier areas of Äzarbäyjän through which invading
Ottoman armies had to pass were systematically laid waste. When
Ottoman forces reached the Iranian frontier, they were already
at the end of a long line of communication, and the task of
provisioning their men was a formidable one. The further they
advanced into Äzarbäyjän, the more difficult their position be
came. Frequently there was shortage of food for the troops, and
their baggage-animals died because of the lack of pasture. When
they were forced to beat a retreat, through the mountainous
terrain of Äzarbäyjän and Kurdistän, they were harassed by
Kurdish and other tribes which made a living by raiding baggage-
trains and cutting off stragglers; the severe winters of these areas
also took their toll. Tahmäsp, realising that another defeat on the
scale of Chäldirän would mean the end of the Safavid state,
husbanded his meagre forces with the same parsimony with which
he watched over his treasuries. The lessons of Chäldirän had been
well learnt, and at no time did he commit his numerically far
inferior forces to a pitched battle against the Ottomans. At the
same time, within a few years of his accession, we find references
to the presence of both gunners (tüpchiyän) and musketeers
The Safavid state from 1524 to 1588 59
(tufangchiyän) in the Safavid armies. The use of cannon continued
to be restricted in the main to siege-warfare. The one occasion
on which the sources specifically record the use of cannon in the
field by Tahmäsp is at the battle of Jam, and in that action the
immobility of the cannon rendered them ineffective against
swiftly moving light cavalry forces which constantly changed
their point of attack; this was the case even though the guns
employed on that occasion were not heavy field-guns, but light
cannon (probably a type of mortar) mounted on wagons. The
ineffectiveness of artillery in the field on that occasion merely
increased the already considerable antipathy felt by the Safavids
toward that weapon. In 1539, we hear for the first time of a new
military office, that of tüpchï-bâshï, or commander-in-chief of
artillery. In regard to hand-guns, detachments using arquebuses
or muskets formed part of Safavid armies before the death of Shäh
Ismä‘il, and after the accession of Tahmäsp references to them
are frequent. Until his premature death in 1549 at the age of
thirty-two, Bahräm Mïrzâ, Tahmäsp’s brother, gave the Shäh
loyal support; Bahräm, a fearless and sometimes impetuous
commander, in many ways resembled his father. Tahmäsp’s
two other brothers, however, Säm Mïrzâ and Alqäs Mïrzâ, were
both guilty of treachery: the former, while Governor-General of
Khuräsän, rebelled against the Shäh and carried on intrigues with
the Ottomans; the latter, while Governor of Shïrvân, rebelled and
threw in his lot with the Ottomans. In 1548, Sultän Süleymän
equipped him with an army and sent him to Iran to overthrow
Tahmäsp. The treachery of these two brothers was a source of
great grief to the Shäh.
That Shäh Tahmäsp was a religious bigot is undeniable. The
celebrated incident which occurred when Anthony Jenkinson, an
Englishman in search of trade privileges, was received in audience
by Tahmäsp in 1562, reveals the Shäh’s attitude toward “ infidels ”
in general (see Chapter $). Shäh Tahmäsp certainly did not possess
that dominant characteristic of pragmatism possessed by his
grandson ‘Abbäs I who, when he realised that religious tolerance
was good for trade, committed himself to a policy of religious
tolerance. Tahmäsp’s parsimony, too, is well attested. A Chronicle
of the Carmelites in Persia asserts that :
Every day, “ for the sake o f his soul” , many kinds o f tribute and imposts
are removed and people made free o f them ; but for the most part such
measures are not put into execution, because, w hen tw o or three years
6o Iran under the Safavids
have passed, he wants the w hole sum at once, as he did at the time when
I was w ith the court in the district o f Julfa, inhabited entirely by
Armenians, w ho had been exempted for 8 years from paying tribute,
when all at once he determined to demand it for the w hole time past,
to the loss and ruin o f those poor Christians.
Tahmäsp gave his cast-ofF clothing in lieu ofpayment, “ what was
worth ‘i ’ being reckoned as ‘io ” \ He often sold jewels and dealt
in other merchandise, “ buying and bartering with that subtlety
which a passable trader might use”.10 The Shäh imposed a tax of
one-seventh on all merchandise. A contemporary Persian source
is uncompromising on the subject of his avariciousness:
Shäh Tahmäsp was extremely avaricious in regard to the accumulation
o f m oney, property and treasure. O f the rulers o f Iran and Türänu since
the invasions o f Chingiz Khän —or even since the advent o f Islam —
no king at any period expended so much effort as Shäh Tahmäsp to
accumulate treasure in the form o f cash, cloths and stuffs, and articles
like vessels o f gold and silver.12
The need to fight on two fronts was a severe handicap for the
Safavids. It meant that maximum Safavid strength could not be
mobilised either in the west or the east, and in fact Safavid armies
were regularly inferior in numbers to both the armies of the
Ottomans and those of the Özbegs. At the battle of Jäm in 1528,
for example, Tahmäsp had 24,000 men against an Ozbeg army
of 80,000 seasoned veterans and some 40,000 skirmishers and
irregulars, and the pitifully small force at Tahmäsp’s disposal in
1534 at the time of the first Ottoman invasion has already been
mentioned. The news that the Shäh had moved the bulk of his
forces to Äzarbäyjän to meet an Ottoman threat was a signal to
the Ozbegs to step up the pressure on the north-east frontier.
Conversely, the Shäh was repeatedly prevented from taking any
long-term measures against the Ozbegs by Ottoman invasions in
the west. In the winter of 1533/4, for instance, when Tahmäsp
had just relieved Harät after that city had endured a terrible siege
by the Özbegs lasting eighteen months, during which the garrison
and inhabitants had been reduced to eating cats and dogs, the Shäh
was making plans for a major expedition to Transoxania when
he received the news that Sultän Süleyman’s army had invaded
Äzarbäyjän, and was forced to return to the west. There was no
relaxation of the relentless series of attacks mounted by ‘Ubayd
Alläh Khän in the east until the death of that Özbeg leader in 1540.
The Safavid state from 1524 to 1588 61
The Ottomans were given considerable assistance in their
efforts to conquer Iran by renegade qizilbäsh amirs and by the
traitor Alqäs Mïrzâ, the Shah’s brother. Sultan Süleymän’s first
invasion of Iran in 1534 came about as the result of intrigues by
the defector Uläma of the Takkalü tribe. At the time when the
triumvir Chüha Sultän was the defacto ruler of the state, Uläma
was commander-in-chief of the armed forces in Äzarbäyjän. After
the fall of Chüha Sultän, Uläma had ambitions to succeed him
as chief executive officer of the state. When Husayn Khän Shämlü
was appointed to succeed Chüha Sultän, Uläma forgot the debt
of loyalty which he owed to the Safavid house, and defected
to the Ottomans. It is true that many Takkalü officers fled in
fear of their lives as a result of the stern action taken against
the rebellious Takkalü tribe in 1530/1. There is, however, no
evidence that the Shäh proscribed any Takkalüs who were not
actually involved in the revolt at the time of the death of Chüha
Sultän, and the fact that officers like Uläma were prepared actually
to enter Ottoman service shows the extent to which the qizilbäsh
had abandoned in practice their unquestioning obedience to the
Shäh as their murshid-i kämil, whatever lip-service they might
continue to pay to it in theory. It was Uläma who alerted the
Ottoman Sultän to the fact that north-west and central Iran lay
undefended in 1533 when the Shäh was planning to invade
Transoxania. Sultän Süleymän sent a force of 80,000—90,000 men
under the Grand Vizier, Ibrâhîm Pasha, while he followed up with
the main army. The Grand Vizier made contact with Uläma, and
dispatched him with a force in the direction of Ardabïl.
Shäh Tahmäsp marched back from the frontier of Transoxania
to Rayy by forced marches, covering the distance in twenty-one
days. The situation was a desperate one. Sultän Süleymän had
joined forces with the Grand Vizier, and the vast Ottoman host
had brushed aside a small force sent by the Shäh to try and hold
Tabriz. For the first time, the faith of some in the fortunes of the
Safavid house wavered. More qizilbäsh officers defected, and the
loyalty of some who remained was suspect. At this critical
juncture, a heavy snowfall blanketed the plain at Sultäniyya,
where the Ottomans were encamped, and many Turkish soldiers
perished from exposure. Sultän Süleymän, unable to return by the
route by which he had come, because no supplies were to be had
in Äzarbäyjän, was forced to withdraw through Kurdistän. The
62 Iran under the Safavids
Shäh went in pursuit of Uläma and other renegades who had shut
themselves up in the fortress of Van, but meanwhile Sultän
Süleymän had occupied Baghdäd at the invitation of the Safavid
garrison, which consisted of Takkalü troops. Only the com
mandant of the garrison and 300 men remained loyal to the
Safavid cause. Thereafter Baghdäd and the province of ‘Iräq-i
‘Arab, conquered by Shäh Ismä‘Il in 1508, remained in Ottoman
hands except for the short period between 1623 and 1638.
The second round of the Ottoman offensive opened the
following year, and was directed by Sultän Süleymän from
Baghdäd. A number of engagements were fought at various
points between Kurdistan and the Armenian highlands, and the
Safavids were uniformly successful. The renegade Uläma again
took part in the fighting on the Ottoman side. The third Ottoman
invasion occurred in 1548 and, like the first, was on a massive scale.
Sultän Süleymän marched forth from Istanbul, with a vast army
recruited from Anatolia, Syria, Egypt, Qarämän, Diyär RabFa
and ‘Iräq-i ‘Arab, accompanied by large quantities of artillery and
countless janissaries. With him went the traitor Alqäs Mïrzâ, Shah
Tahmäsp’s brother. Alqäs MTrzä, while Governor of Shïrvân, had
rebelled against the Shäh, had been pardoned, rebelled again,
and had finally sought refuge from Tahmäsp’s wrath with the
Ottoman Sultän. He had told the Sultän that, if he (Alqäs) were
to enter Iran at the head of a large army, there would be a general
uprising in his favour.
Tahmäsp made his usual preparations to meet the new on
slaught. He had the entire area between Tabriz and the Ottoman
frontier laid waste, so that no trace of grain or blade of grass
remained. The inhabitants of Tabriz blocked up the underground
water-channels, so that no drinking water could be found.
Similarly, measures were taken to deny the enemy all forms
of victuals. When Sultän Süleymän reached the Iranian frontier,
he sent the renegade Uläma Takkalü to lay siege to Vän, and
dispatched Alqäs MTrzä and 40,000 men in the direction of
Marand. Once again the Ottomans occupied Tabriz, but their
forces soon began to suffer acutely from lack of provisions. When
their pack-animals began to die like flies, Sultän Süleymän again
beat the retreat, harassed at every step by the qizilbäsh forces. The
Sultän detached Alqäs Mïrzâ, who had ceased to be of use to him
once his words had proved to be an empty boast, and Uläma,
hoping that they would draw off some of his pursuers. The move
The Safavid state from 1524 to 1588 63
was unsuccessful. Alqäs Mïrzâ penetrated deep into central Iran,
passing through Qum to Käshän; the people of Isfahan shut the
gates ofthat city against him, and he moved south into Firs, where
Shiraz also refused him admittance. After an equally unsuccessful
attempt to rouse support in Khüzistän, Alqäs Mïrzâ, in despair,
returned to Baghdäd. Now merely a source of embarrassment to
the Ottomans, he was expelled from Baghdäd, and fled into
Kurdistän, where he was arrested by Safavid forces and taken
before the Shäh, who upbraided him for his disloyal and dis
honourable conduct. His life was spared, but he and the Shäh’s
other disloyal brother, Säm Mïrzâ, were incarcerated in the
remote fortress—prison of Qahqaha.
The suppression of Alqäs Mïrzâ’s revolt was followed by four
or five years of peace between the Safavid and the Ottoman
empires. Minor acts of insubordination on the part of Kurdish
chieftains along the frontier were overlooked, and Shäh Tahmäsp
was encouraged to open negotiations for a more lasting peace.
Before this was achieved, however, the acts of provocation
committed by Iskandar Pasha, Governor of Van and then
Governor-General of Erzerüm, including attacks on Khvuy and
Erïvân, led to the fourth and last invasion of Iran by the Ottomans
during the reign of Sultän Süleymän. This time there was a change
in the usual pattern of events. Instead of waiting for the arrival
of the Ottoman army, Shäh Tahmäsp seized the initiative. The
fact that he was able to divide his army into four army corps, and
to send each in a different direction, indicates a significant increase
in the strength of the Safavid army. Iskandar Pasha was soundly
defeated outside Erzerüm, with the loss of 3,000 men. The Shäh
captured a number of key forts along the frontier. When Sultän
Süleymän finally reached Nakhchivän in the summer of 1533, he
found it impossible to remain in the area because of the effective
ness of the Safavid scorched earth policy, and withdrew toward
Erzerüm, In the course of his retreat, Sinän Beg, one of the
Sultän’s intimate companions and special favourites, was captured
by a Safavid patrol, and this made the Sultän the more ready to
enter into serious peace negotiations. Peace was finally signed at
Amasya in 1555, and Iran obtained a much needed respite from
Ottoman attacks which lasted for thirty years. Because Tabriz had
proved so vulnerable to Ottoman attack, the Shäh transferred his
capital to Qazvïn.
Starting from a virtually hopeless position, Shäh Tahmäsp had
64 Iran under the Safavids
achieved much during the first thirty years of his reign. He had
maintained his position during a decade of civil war between those
“ turbulent praetorians”, the qizilbäsh chiefs. With pathetically
small resources, he had survived massive onslaughts from both
east and west; not only had he survived, but he had gradually
increased the strength of his armed forces and, aided by his one
loyal brother Bahram and by his son Isma‘il, had gone over to
the offensive against the Ottomans in the campaign of 1553. As
a result, when he opened peace negotiations with the Sublime
Porte, he was able to do so from a position of relative strength,
and the terms of the Treaty of Amasya were not unfavourable
to Iran. Had Tahmäsp been forced to negotiate peace with the
Ottomans in 1534, he would undoubtedly have been forced to
cede large areas of territory in the north-west, including his
capital, Tabriz. As it was, by the Treaty of Amasya only minor
territorial modifications were made along the Ottoman—Safavid
frontier, and both sides made concessions. Georgia was divided
into mutually agreed “ spheres of influence”. Peace remained
unbroken for the remainder of Shäh Tahmäsp’s lifetime. Sultän
Selim II succeeded his father Süleymän on the death of the latter
in 1566, and was succeeded in his turn by Sultän Muräd who,
during the lifetime of Tahmäsp and Ismâ‘ïl II, “ did not deviate
from the path of friendship and sworn peace” .13
Between 1540 and 1553, Shäh Tahmäsp waged four campaigns
in the Caucasus. In the course of these campaigns, Georgian,
Circassian and Armenian prisoners were taken in large numbers
and brought back to Iran. The introduction of these new ethnic
groups profoundly changed the whole character of Safavid
society, and had important repercussions on the military and
political institutions of the state. Prior to the introduction of these
new elements, there had been a struggle for power, for control
of the principal offices of state, between the two “ founding races”,
the Iranians and the Turks. By the end of the reign of Tahmäsp,
the qizilbäsh found their privileged position as the military
aristocracy challenged by members of the new ethnic groups.
Moreover, the introduction into the royal haram of Georgian and
Circassian women, who were prized for their beauty, precipitated
dynastic struggles of a completely new kind, as these women
engaged in political intrigue with a view to securing the throne
for their own sons.
The Safavid state from 1524 to 1588 65
between the two states from the time of the founding of the
Mogul empire. Humäyün surrendered Qandahär to Tahmäsp,
but the city did not remain in Safavid hands for long, and control
of it continued to pass from one side to the other.
Another foreign dignitary to arrive at Tahmäsp’s court,
although of a rather different calibre, was the fugitive Otto
man prince Bâyazïd, who had rebelled against his father Sultän
Süleymän. Bâyazïd attempted to persuade Tahmäsp to espouse his
cause and to lead an army against the Ottomans, but Tahmäsp
not surprisingly was averse to disturbing the hard-won peace
which he had recently concluded with the Ottoman Sultän.
Ultimately, the Shäh suspected that Bäyazld, who had brought
10,000 fully armed men with him, was plotting a coup at QazvTn,
and Sultän Süleymän made it clear that the continuance of the
existing peace was dependent upon the extradition of Bâyazïd.
Tahmäsp thereupon handed over Bâyazïd and his four sons to the
Ottoman delegation sent to fetch them, and the terms of the
Treaty of Amasya were reconfirmed in 1562. On instructions
from Sultän Süleymän, the five Ottoman princes were put to
death as soon as they were taken into Ottoman custody.
In 1574, Shäh Tahmäsp fell ill. His illness lasted two months,
and twice he was at the point of death. With the temporary
removal of his firm hand from the helm, there was a recrudescence
of dissension among the qizilbäsh chiefs. For forty years, since he
reasserted the authority of the crown in 1533, Tahmäsp had
achieved a satisfactory balance between the rival qizilbäsh and
Tâjïk elements in the state. Now that the Shäh was ailing, the
qizilbäsh thought they could regain control of the state as they
had after the death of Shäh Ismâ‘ïl I when Tahmäsp himself was
still a minor. In 1574, however, the situation was more compli
cated than it had been in 1524. In 1524, the struggle had been
to determine which qizilbäsh tribe, or coalition of tribes, would
govern a state in which the qizilbäsh tribes in general enjoyed
a dominant and privileged position. In 1574, and particularly
after the death of Tahmäsp in 1576, the struggle was to deter
mine whether the qizilbäsh could fight off the challenge to this
privileged position made by the Georgians, Circassians and
Armenians who now constituted a “ third force” within the state
and society. The Safavid leaders Junayd and Haydar had married
wives of Turcoman stock, and Tahmäsp’s mother was also a
68 Iran under the Safavids
Turcoman. With the question of the succession to Tahmäsp an
imminent problem, the Georgian and Circassian women in the
royal haram who were the mothers of princes of the blood royal
pushed the claims of their respective sons to the succession; had
they succeeded in placing one of them on the throne, the power
and influence of the “ third force” elements in the administration
of the Safavid state would obviously have been greatly enhanced.
O f Tahmäsp’s nine sons who reached adolescence, seven were
the sons of Circassian or Georgian mothers; only two were the
sons of a Turcoman mother: Muhammad Khudäbanda, and
Ismâ‘ïl. The qizilbäsh problem was made more acute by the fact
that neither of these princes was fitted to rule. Muhammad
Khudäbanda’s eyesight was so bad that he was virtually blind.
Ismâ‘îl had had an auspicious start to his political career. Appointed
Governor of Shlrvän in 1547, he had conducted several successful
campaigns against the Ottomans in the Caucasus and eastern
Anatolia, and in 1556 he was appointed Governor of Khuräsän.
After only a few months at Harät, however, Ismä‘il was suddenly
arrested and sent to the remote prison of Qahqaha, usually
reserved for dangerous political prisoners. Ismä‘11 seems to have
forfeited the Shäh’s favour by certain actions at Harät which made
the Shäh suspect that Ismâ‘ïl was plotting to overthrow him.
These suspicions were played on by Ma‘süm Beg Safavï, a
powerful official descended from a side branch of the Safavid
family, who had been appointed head of the bureaucracy in 1559
or perhaps earlier, and who was also the lala (guardian) of
Tahmäsp’s third son, Haydar, whose mother was a Georgian
slave. Ma‘süm Beg would naturally have aspirations for his own
protege to succeed Tahmäsp, and would therefore seize any
opportunity to spoil IsmTïTs chances. In his position of power in
the central administration, Ma‘süm Beg was well placed to pour
poison into the Shäh’s ear. Whether Tahmäsp’s suspicions were
justified or not, Ismä‘11 remained in jail for nearly twenty years,
from the time of his incarceration in December 1556 to his release
by the qizilbäsh, who proceeded to set him on the throne, in
August 1576.
Before IsmäTl II came to the throne, there was much jockeying
for position on the part of the rival factions. It is clear that the
qizilbäsh did not at once perceive the true nature of the threat
to their own position from the Georgian and Circassian factions,
The Safavid state from 1324 to 1388 69
because in 1574 certain qizilbäsh chiefs were plotting on behalf
of Sulaymän Mïrzâ, whose mother was the sister of a Circas
sian chief. By 1575, the qizilbäsh had split into two factions,
one supporting Ismâ‘11 Mïrzâ, the other Haydar Mïrzâ, whose
mother was a Georgian and one of the Shâh’s legal wives.
Tahmäsp himself is said to have favoured Haydar, but he kept
his own counsel, and placed a special guard on Ismâ‘ïl in case
the pro-Haydar faction should try to murder him. When Shâh
Tahmäsp died on 14 May 1576, the Georgians and the Ustäjlüs
made an unsuccessful attempt to place Haydar on the throne.
Haydar actually placed the crown on his head, and called himself
“ shah ”, but, as luck would have it, the guard on duty at the palace
that day was composed of supporters oflsmâTl —Afshârs, Rümlüs
and Bayâts —who effectively isolated Haydar from his own
supporters. In the fracas which ensued, Haydar was killed. Next,
the Rümlüs and Circassians attempted to enthrone a prince whose
mother was a Circassian slave, but this attempt, too, was frustrated.
Finally, most of the qizilbäsh threw their support behind a
“ Turcoman candidate”, Ismâfl Mïrzâ. Thirty thousand qizilbäsh
assembled before the prison-fortress of Qahqaha. Ismâ‘11, who
consented to emerge from the security of the prison only after
receiving the most solemn pledges of support, was enthroned at
Qazvïn as Shâh Ismâ‘ïl II, on 22 August 1576, at the age of forty.
Ismâ‘11 II early served notice that his mind had been affected
by his long imprisonment. During the three months which
elapsed between the death of his father and his enthronement, a
delay which had been caused mainly by IsmâfTs insistence on
waiting for an auspicious date, Ismâ‘11not only put to death many
of those who had supported Haydar, especially Ustäjlüs, but also
treated his own supporters in a hostile fashion. He executed those
whose only crime was that they had held important office under
his father. “ The royal tents,” he said, “ cannot be held up by old
ropes.” It soon became clear that Ismâ‘11 Ifs only goal was to
remain in power at all costs. To that end, he systematically killed,
or blinded, any prince of the blood royal who might conceivably
become the centre of a conspiracy against him. Five of his
brothers, and four other Safavid princes, were murdered or
blinded. The qizilbäsh, realising that he was not the sort of ruler
they had hoped for, now conspired to assassinate him. The factor
which gave a certain plausible justification to their action was that
7 0 Iran under the Safavids
Ismä‘H II was a rather less than enthusiastic Shï‘ï. Since Ismâ‘ïl was
addicted to narcotics, his murder was an easy matter. With the
connivance of Ismâ‘ïTs sister, Pan Khan Khänum, the conspira
tors placed poison in an electuary containing opium, which was
consumed by the Shäh and one of his boon companions. IsmäH
died on 24 November 1577, having reigned for only slightly
more than a year.
The only members of the Safavid royal house who had not been
murdered or blinded by IsmäTl II during his brief reign were his
elder brother Muhammad Khudäbanda and the latter’s three sons :
Hamza, Abü Tälib and ‘Abbas; and they had escaped Ismä‘Tl IPs
purge only because he himself was murdered before orders issued
for their execution had been carried out. The qizilbäsh therefore
had little alternative but to place on the throne the prince whom
they had passed over previously, namely, Muhammad Khundä-
banda, and the latter reached Qazvln from Shiraz on 11 or 13
February 1578; he adopted the style Sultän Muhammad Shäh.
The new Shäh, who was of a mild, somewhat unworldly
disposition, given to jokes and witticisms, who wrote poetry
under the pen-name of “ Fahmï”, and who was, as will be
recalled, almost blind, was at once caught up in the bitter rivalry
between two ambitious and ruthless women : his own wife, Mahd-i
‘Ulyä, and Tahmäsp’s daughter, Pan Khän Khänum, who had
aided the conspirators to murder IsmäTl II and had since his death
managed the affairs of state through a council of qizilbäsh chiefs
which she had set up. None of these chiefs dared to disobey her
orders, and she confidently anticipated that her brother, Sultän
Muhammad Shäh, would submit to her will also. Her plans went
awry when an experienced Iranian bureaucrat named Mïrzâ
Salmän, who had been appointed vazxr by Shäh Ismä‘Tl II in June
1577, managed to obtain permission from Pan Khän Khänum to
leave Qazvïn and travel to Shïrâz. With that innate sense of
self-preservation bred in Iranian bureaucrats from long centuries
of tradition, MTrzä Salmän lost no time in ingratiating himself
with Sultän Muhammad Shäh and his wife by revealing to them
the powerful position held at Qazvïn by Parï Khän Khänum.
Mahd-i ‘Ulyä immediately saw that either she or the Shäh’s sister
had to go, and she set about detaching as many qizilbäsh chiefs
as possible from their allegiance to her rival. The night after the
arrival of Sultän Muhammad Shäh and Mahd-i ‘Ulyä at Qazvïn,
The Safavid state from 1524 to 1588 7i
they had Pari Khan Khanum strangled; her uncle, the Circassian
chief Shamkhal, was executed, and Ismâ‘ïl IPs infant son was
murdered.
Mahd-i ‘Ulya was now in complete control of the state. Her
eldest son, Hamza Mïrzâ, was appointed vakil of the Supreme
Divan, and was authorised to affix his seal to official documents
above that of the vazïr, Mïrzâ Salmân. For eighteen months,
Mahd-i ‘Ulyâ reigned supreme. She was the daughter of a local
ruler in Mâzandarân whose family boasted of its descent from the
4th Shï‘ï Imâm, Zayn al-‘Äbidm. She was hostile to the interests
of the qizilbäsh, and did all she could to strengthen the position
of the Tâjïks in the administration of the state; in this policy she
naturally had the strong support of the vazïr. Mahd-i ‘Ulya was
determined that her favourite son, Hamza, should succeed her
husband. To prevent her younger son ‘Abbäs from constituting
a threat to her plans, she tried repeatedly to get him sent to QazvTn,
but the Governor of Harât, ‘All Qui! Khän Shämlü, refused to
comply with her orders. Another of Mahd-i ‘Ulyâ’s ambitions
was to revenge herself on the man who had murdered her father
in Mâzandarân and expropriated her family’s territory in that
province. When her father’s murderer died before she could
achieve her object, she extended her feud to his son, Mïrzâ Khân,
who finally agreed to come to Qazvïn after receiving a solemn
promise of safe-conduct. While Mïrzâ Khân was on his way to
Qazvïn with an escort of qizilbäsh, he was murdered by some of
the Queen’s men. The qizilbäsh chiefs felt great indignation at the
Queen’s violation of a sworn oath, particularly since it was they
who had persuaded Mïrzâ Khân to throw himself on the Queen’s
mercy in the first place.
Sultän Muhammad Shâh tried to win the favour of his subjects
by a policy of lavish grants from the treasury. All the qizilbäsh
chiefs who were appointed to provincial posts received their pay
and allowances for one year and in some cases for two. The large
stock of robes of honour which had been accumulated in the
treasury were distributed to the amirs, to office-holders, to finan
cial agents, kaläntars (mayors) and other provincial dignitaries.
The troops of the royal bodyguard, who had received no pay
for ten years, were paid all the arrears due to them. New positions
of the status of amir were added to the establishment of each
qizilbäsh tribe. Since all the provinces had already been assigned
72 Iran under the Safavids
as fiefs (the normal form of payment), the payment of these newly
created amirs constituted yet another drain on the royal treasury,
which rapidly became exhausted. This royal largesse did not
produce good government. The civilian population complained
of a lack of security. The qizilbäsh, seeing that new offices and
perquisites were apparently there for the asking, demanded more.
The general impression created abroad by the administration
of Sultän Muhammad Shäh and his Queen was one of weakness
and discord within the state. The traditional enemies of the
Safavids, the Ottomans and the Özbegs, were not slow in
attacking Iran to see whether this impression was correct. The
Ozbegs again ravaged Khuräsän, and, in the west, the Ottomans,
in league with some Kurdish chiefs, probed the Safavid defences
in Äzarbäyjän. The long period of peace with the Ottomans was
definitively broken when Sultän Muräd sent an army of more
than 100,000 men, which included a large force of Crimean
Tatars, to invade Äzarbäyjän in 1578. The Safavid forces suffered
defeat after defeat. A large part of Georgia was overrun. In
1579/80 Hamza Mïrzâ and the vazxr MTrzä Salmän made a
successful counter-attack in Shïrvân and Qaräbägh, and the Tatar
chief, ‘Ädil Giräy Khän, was taken prisoner. ‘Ädil Giräy was
treated with honour, in the hope of weaning him from his
allegiance to the Ottomans, and he was lodged in the state
apartments in the royal palace at Qazvïn. The qizilbäsh amirs
pressed the Shäh to transfer the Tatar khän to one of the
fortress—prisons, on the grounds that it was too dangerous to leave
him at Qazvïn while most of the amirs were away on campaign
against the Ottomans.
The hostility between the Queen and the qizilbäsh chiefs was
rapidly coming to a head. The qizilbäsh resented the Queen’s
pro-Tâjïk policies; those who had persuaded Mïrzâ Khän to go
to Qazvïn on the Queen’s guaranteeing his safe-conduct were
outraged when the Queen violated her oath; those of the royal
bodyguard who carried out the murder of Mïrzâ Khän were
disgruntled because the Queen failed to reward them adequately;
they were angered by the Queen’s rejection of their advice in
regard to ‘Ädil Giräy Khän; in short, they disliked Mahd-i
‘Ulyä and everything she stood for, and in particular they disliked
her hold over the Shäh and the fact that she missed no opportunity
to humiliate the qizilbäsh. A group of qizilbäsh conspirators
The Safavid state from 1524 to 1588 73
banded together to remove Mahd-i ‘Ulya from her position of
power. They sent a message to the Shäh:
Your Majesty w ell know s that w om en are notoriously lacking in
intelligence, weak in judgem ent, and extrem ely obstinate. M ahd-i
‘U lya has always opposed us, the loyal servants o f the crow n, and has
never agreed w ith us on matters o f state policy; she has acted contrary
to the considered opinions o f the qizilbäsh elders, and has constantly
attempted to humiliate and degrade us. W e have not been safe from
her actions, even though up to the present time w e have not been guilty
o f improper conduct, nor have w e done anything to cause her alarm.
So h ow can w e feel secure now , w hen our basic incompatibility has
com e out into the open, when she has lashed w ith her tongue the elders
o f the qizilbäsh tribes, has called us mutinous, and has uttered dire threats
against us ? In short, w e do not consider it proper that word should get
around am ong neighbouring rulers that no member o f the royal family
still remains in the care o f the qizilbash, because a w om an has taken
charge o f the affairs o f state and is all-powerful. M ahd-i ‘U ly a ’s pow er
and influence in the governm ent o f the realm is objectionable to all the
qizilbäsh tribes, and it is impossible for us to reach a modus vivendi with
her. If she is not rem oved from pow er, in all probability revolts will
occur w hich w ill be to the detriment o f both religion and the state.17
The Shäh, a pious, ascetic and mild soul, offered to exile his
wife to Qum, or to send her back to Mâzandarân, or to abdicate
himself, leaving the choice of his successor to the qizilbäsh chiefs.
The Queen despised his attempts to appease the qizilbash; she
would not swerve a hair’s breadth, she said, from the line of
conduct she had followed so far. When they heard this, a group
of the conspirators burst into the haram and strangled the Queen.
A few days later, the qizilbäsh amirs assembled at the palace, and
reaffirmed their fealty to Sultän Muhammad Shäh and, after him,
to Hamza Mïrzâ. The impotence of the Shäh and Hamza Mïrzâ,
starkly revealed by their inability to call the murderers of the
Queen to account, encouraged the qizilbäsh to give full rein to
inter-tribal rivalries in a manner reminiscent of the factionalism
rampant at the beginning of the reign of Tahmäsp. In the case
of Tahmäsp, they had been able easily to dominate a ten-year-old
boy ; in the case of Sultän Muhammad Shäh, they were able to
impose their will on a good, well-meaning, but pathetically weak
and almost blind middle-aged man. At Qazvïn, the Turkmän and
Takkalü tribes were in control; in Khuräsän, an Ustäjlü—Shämlü
coalition raised the standard of revolt in 1581 and swore allegiance
74 Iran under the Safavids
to the Shäh’s son ‘Abbas, then ten years of age. In November 1582,
the Shäh and Hamza MTrzä led the royal army to Khuräsän to
suppress the revolt, but their attempt brought them further
humiliation at the hands of the qizilbäsh. At first, all went well.
The Ustäjlü leader, Murshid QulT Khän, declared his allegiance
to Hamza MTrzä, and received the royal pardon. The Shämlü
chief, ‘AlT QulT Khän, was isolated and besieged at Harät. Then
the bad blood between the qizilbäsh chiefs in the royal army, and
the vazxr MTrzä Salmän, formerly the right-hand man of the
Queen, Mahd-i ‘Ulyä, came to a head. Since the qizilbäsh in the
royal army were less than enthusiastic about prosecuting a siege
against their fellows within the walls of Harät, the vazxr openly
accused them of dereliction of duty and sedition. The qizilbäsh
already hated the vazïr because he had supported the pro-Tâjîk
policies of the late Queen, and because he had been granted
military rank and had taken a leading part in the campaigns of
1579/ 8o against the Ottomans. In other words, the qizilbäsh were
no more reconciled in 1583 to the idea of a Tâjïk having military
pretensions than they had been in 1512 when their animosity
toward the Tâjïk vakil had led to the defeat and death of the latter.
They now denounced MTrzä Salmän in violent terms. He was,
they said, the destroyer of the state and the enemy of the qizilbäsh,
and they demanded his dismissal from the office of vazxr. MTrzä
Salmän had every reason to expect that his patrons, the Shäh and
Hamza MTrzä (the prince was additionally his son-in-law) would
protect him, but they surrendered him tamely to the qizilbäsh
amxrs, who put him to death after appropriating all his possessions.
After the murder of MTrzä Salmän, Hamza MTrzä, then about
nineteen years of age, directed the affairs of state, but he lacked
the maturity of judgement and political experience required by
such turbulent times. Not only was he impulsive and hot-
tempered, but he was a heavy drinker, and he made the fatal
mistake of making some of the younger qizilbäsh officers stationed
at Qazvïn his drinking-companions. As a result, he soon became
embroiled in qizilbäsh factionalism. The military situation con
tinued to deteriorate, and the Ottomans occupied Tabrïz in 1585.
This time, they were to remain in occupation of the former
Safavid capital for twenty years. The same year, Hamza had to
suppress a plot in favour of his brother Tahmäsp. On 6 December
1586, Hamza MTrzä was murdered in mysterious circumstances
while campaigning in Qaräbägh.
The Safavid state from 1524 to 1588 75
In July 1585, the leader of the Ustäjlü faction in Khuräsän,
Murshid Qulï Khän, had outwitted his rival Shämlü chief and had
secured possession of the person of ‘Abbäs Mïrzâ, then about
fourteen years of age. The death of Hamza Mïrzâ the following
year, and a massive invasion of Khuräsän in December 1587 by
the Özbegs under their new leader ‘Abd Alläh Khän, who laid
siege to Harät and threatened to engulf the whole province, made
Murshid Qulï Khän decide to risk a coup at Qazvïn. When he
reached Qazvïn, a public demonstration in favour of ‘Abbas
decided those among the qizilbäsh chiefs in the capital who still
wavered, and on 1 October 1588 Sultän Muhammad Shäh handed
over the insignia of kingship to his son, who was crowned Shäh
‘Abbäs I. The kingmaker, Murshid Qulï Khän Ustäjlü, was for
the moment the most powerful man in the Safavid state, and he
assumed the title of vakil of the Supreme Divan as a token of that
fact. As in 1534, the existence of the Safavid state was at stake.
Harät, after a heroic defence lasting nine months, fell to the
Özbegs in February 1589, and the Özbegs swept on to Mashhad
and Sarakhs. In the west, all efforts to dislodge the Ottoman
garrison at Tabrïz had failed. The situation called for a strong and
astute ruler; fortunately for the Safavid state, and indeed for the
future of Iran, the seventeen-year-old ‘Abbäs was such a man.
4
76
Safavid empire under Shäh ‘Abbäs the Great 77
painful but decisive step of signing a peace treaty with the
Ottomans in 1589/90 which ceded to the enemy some of Iran’s
richest provinces: Äzarbäyjän, Qaräbägh, Ganja, Qaräjadigh and
parts of Georgia, Luristän and Kurdistan. The acceptance of such
humiliating peace terms was an indication of the weakness of
‘Abbas’s position at his accession.
One matter was of the greatest urgency : he had to make it clear
to the qizilbäsh chiefs that, though they had made him shah, he
had no intention of being their puppet. The very manner in which
he had come to the throne, by means of a coup d'état which
overthrew his father, the legal ruler, made it obvious that the
qizilbäsh might conspire to overthrow him in the same way if he
failed to govern in accordance with their wishes. The events of
‘Abbas’s formative years had left him with a deep and abiding
distrust of the qizilbäsh chiefs. In 1581, when he was too young
to have any real say in the matter, he had been proclaimed king
in Khuräsän by a group of qizilbäsh chiefs, although he had no
wish to be the centre of a revolt against his father. He had been
a pawn in the struggle between his own guardian, ‘AH QulT Khän
Shämlü, Governor of Harät, whose aim was to unite all the
qizilbäsh chiefs in Khuräsän behind ‘Abbäs Mïrzâ, and Murshid
Qulï Khän Ustäjlü, the Governor of Mashhad, whose ambition
would not allow him to accept a position subordinate to that of
‘Alï Qulï Khän. Finally, in 1585, in a battle between the two
factions, ‘Abbäs was taken prisoner by Murshid QulïKhân’s men
and carried off in triumph to Mashhad. ‘Abbäs had been brought
up since infancy among the Shämlü tribe, and this turn of events
was abhorrent to him. His captor, Murshid Qulï Khän, assumed
the role of his guardian, and arrogantly gave himself the title of
vakti.
However much ‘Abbäs might wish to take punitive action
against the qizilbäsh for their disloyalty to the state, he had to
recognise that they still constituted the backbone of the fighting
forces and that too drastic a purge of their ranks would militate
against his objective of increasing the strength of the army. ‘Abbäs
had made one basic decision: there was to be no going back to
a situation in which the qizilbäsh chiefs held a dominant position
in the state, or even to the situation which obtained between 1533
and 1574, when Shäh Tahmäsp adroitly maintained a delicate
balance between the Turcoman and Tâjïk interests. The punish-
78 Iran under the Safavids
ment of the qizilbäsh for their disloyalty and factionalism was to
be the forfeiture of their privileged position in the state. Yet one
of the bases of the power of the Safavid kings had been the
unquestioning obedience and devotion accorded to them by their
qizilbäsh Süfî disciples. Although the actions of the qizilbäsh since
the battle of Chäldirän in 1514 had made it abundantly clear that
they no longer believed in their leader as a divine or quasi-divine
person, nevertheless the dynamic ideology which had motivated
the early Safavid movement had not entirely disappeared. The
Shäh was, in theory at any rate, still their murshid-i kämil, their
perfect spiritual director, and they were his murids (disciples). At
moments of crisis, an appeal to those qizilbäsh who were shähl-
sevdn, that is, who loved the shah, was still an effective rallying-cry.
The original Süfî organisation of the Safavid party was still in
existence, though its existence was a shadowy one and it had
no organic functiön within the administrative framework of the
state. Nevertheless the head of this organisation, the khalifat
aUkhulaJa, still considered himself a person to be reckoned with,
and in 1576 had even made a direct challenge to the authority of
Shäh Ismä‘Tl IL Ismä‘Tl, in order to test the loyalty of the khalifat
al-khulaja, Husayn Qulï Khulafa Rümlü, told him that he would
appoint him vakil of the Supreme Divan if he was willing to
relinquish the position of khalifat al-khulafä. Husayn QulT replied:
“ I will not surrender the position of khalifa. If the office of vakil
be added to that, well and good; but if not, I will not be satisfied
with the vikälat [alone].”1 He said this because he considered his
power as khalifa to be superior to that of a vakil. While one cannot
help thinking that Husayn QulT was exaggerating the importance
of his office, given the realities of the situation in 1576, it is clear
that Shäh ‘Abbäs could not afford lightly to dispense with the
devotion to his person which was inherent in the Sufi ideology,
even though by 1588 perhaps only a minority of the qizilbäsh
subscribed to this ideology wholeheartedly.
The question, therefore, was what source of support could
‘Abbäs find which would place loyalty to himself above sectarian
interests? For an answer, ‘Abbäs turned to the “ third force”
which Shäh Tahmäsp had introduced into the state, namely, the
Circassians, Georgians and Armenians termed theghuläms (slaves)
of the shah, who, after conversion to Islam, had been trained for
service either in the army or in some branch of the administration
Safavid empire under Shah ‘Abbas the Great 79
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IOO Iran under the Safavids
nationalities, including Christians from Georgia, which had been
moved there from territory overrun by Safavid forces. The
buildings were destroyed by the Cossacks in the course of a raid
by the latter in 1668. Ashraf lay some 26 miles to the south-east,
at the foot of a wooded spur of the Alburz range and commanding
a fine view over the bay of Astaräbäd to the north. The new town
of Ashraf was founded by ‘Abbäs I about 1612. Intended initially
to be a simple rural retreat, it consisted of a group of farmhouses
surrounding the royal palaces, but eventually the royal residences
extended over a considerable area. Spacious accommodation was
provided for guests and travellers. The gardens were laid out with
walks bordered by pines and by orange and other citrous trees,
and were watered by an elaborate system of reservoirs, cisterns
and channels fed by a spring which also supplied numerous
fountains and cascades. Ashraf was severely damaged by the
Afghans and during the Zand-Qäjär civil war which followed the
collapse of the Safavid dynasty and the death of Nadir Shäh.
Farahäbäd in particular became a sort of second capital. When the
Shäh was not actually on campaign, he would retire to Farahäbäd ;
from this base he carried on the affairs of state, and foreign envoys
who wished to see him had to visit him there.
Under ‘Abbäs I, Isfahän became a prosperous city. Merchants
from China, India, Central Asia, Arabia, Turkey and Europe
flocked to Isfahän to buy the luxury items produced by Safavid
craftsmen. Thousands of skilled Armenian artisans were trans
ferred from Julfa on the present Irano-Soviet border in Äzarbäyjän
to “ New Julfa”, a suburb of Isfahän on the right bank of the
Zäyanda-rüd. In addition to merchants seeking trading privileges,
many other Europeans came to Isfahän: ambassadors from Spain,
Portugal and England; representatives of foreign monastic orders
such as the Carmelites, the Augustinians and the Capuchin friars,
who were given permission to proselytise and establish convents
in Iran; gentlemen-adventurers such as the Sherley brothers, one
of whom, Sir Robert, distinguished himself in the Shäh’s service
against the Ottomans, and was appointed “ Master General against
the Turks” ; and travellers such as Pietro della Valle, who left
valuable accounts of Safavid Iran. Intense commercial rivalry in
the Persian Gulf and the Indian Ocean between the Dutch, the
Portuguese and the English meant the development of diplomatic
relations between Iran and the west (see Chapter 5). In all things
Safavid empire under Shah ‘Abbäs the Great IOI
F ro m earliest times, relations betw een Iran and the W est have
existed on a n u m b er o f different levels: diplom atic, political and
m ilitary contacts; trade relations; and the m u tu al interchange o f
religious ideas. U n d er the first head, the contacts betw een the
Greeks and the A chaem enids, betw een the Parthians and the
R om ans and betw een the Sasanids and the R om ans are well
k n o w n . U n d er the second head, Iran, as the land-bridge betw een
E urope, Asia M in o r and the M editerranean lands on the one hand,
and C entral Asia, the Indies and the Far East on the other, was
fro m ancient times involved in the transit trade betw een East and
W est; for exam ple, the fam ous silk route fro m C hina passed
th ro u g h Iranian territory, and the transit dues charged on this
trade w ere a lucrative source o f incom e to the rulers o f Iran. U n d er
the third head, the traffic was initially all east—west. In Parthian
times, the cult o f M ithras exerted an influence on the R om an
legionaries and, as a result, spread to R om e and further west. By
Sasanid times, how ever, C hristianity began to penetrate Iran from
the west. T he process was accelerated w hen Shäpür I transplanted
to Iran large num bers o f the inhabitants o f Syria and o th er eastern
provinces o f the R om an em pire ; m any o f these people w ere
Christians. A fter C hristianity becam e the state religion o f the
R om an em pire, the loyalty o f the C hristian inhabitants o f Iran
becam e suspect and they w ere subject to persecution. In return
for C hristianity, Iran ex p o rted to the W est the dualistic religion
o f M ani, in w hich elem ents o f C hristianity and Z oroastrianism
w ere blended. T h o u g h suppressed in Iran as a heresy, M anichaeism
penetrated w estw ards as far as France, and even the great Bishop
o f H ippo, St A ugustine, was a M anichaean in his early years.
In the seventh century a . d ., the Arabs conquered Iran, and
gradually the w hole o f Iran adopted the new religion o f the
104
Relations with West during Safavid period ros
conquerors, Islam. Iran, from being a w o rld -p o w e r (in term s o f
the then k n o w n w orld), w ith m any centuries o f im perial history
behind it, was relegated to the position o f being ju st one p a rt o f
a vast Islamic em pire w hose centre o f p o w er was at first M edina,
then Damascus, and finally B aghdad. As the A rabs rapidly
extended their control over the eastern M editerranean and N o rth
Africa, and as the T urks, from the eleventh century onw ards,
gradually b ro u g h t Asia M in o r u n d er their control, this Islamic
em pire placed an im penetrable barrier betw een Iran and the W est.
As a result, Iran becam e a forgotten land. T he Crusaders, filled
w ith zeal for the conquest o f the H oly Land, had little interest
in the countries w hich lay further to the east. T h e strength and
persistence o f the legend o f Prester Jo h n , the pow erful C hristian
potentate living som ew here in C entral Asia, w h o , it was th o u g h t
in the W est, w o u ld be a useful ally against the Saracens, indicates
the extent o f W estern ignorance o f Asia in m ediaeval times.
T he invasion o f the eastern Islamic w o rld by C hingiz K han in
1219, and the subsequent establishm ent o f the pax Mongolica from
C hina to the Balkans, b ro u g h t Iran back into contact w ith the
W est, and the M o ngol rulers o f Iran m ade repeated b u t u n p ro
ductive attem pts to form an alliance w ith E uropean m onarchs
against the M am lük sultans o f E gypt and the Levant. A fter 1335,
the M o n g o l state in Iran broke up into a n u m b er o f small units
w hich in m ost cases follow ed old provincial boundaries. T here
was a general lessening o f cohesion and security, and at tim es a
situation n ot far rem oved fro m anarchy; these conditions w ere
naturally n ot attractive to m erchants, and the Venetians and
Genoese w h o w ere rash enough to venture into Ä zarbäyjän w ere
usually robbed and in m any cases lost their lives. T he cam paigns
o f TTmür (Tam erlane) in Iran (1381—1405) again b ro u g h t Iran to
the notice o f the W est, but, shortly after his death in 1405, the
w hole o f n o rth -w est and central Iran cam e u n d er the control
successively o f tw o T u rco m an dynasties, the Q arä Q u y ü n lü , or
B lack Sheep T urcom ans, and the Ä q Q uy ü n lü , or W hite Sheep
T urcom ans. B o th dynasties m ade T abriz their capital, and, under
the great Äq Q u y ü n lü ruler U zü n Hasan (died 1478), internal
security so far im p ro v ed as to encourage the Italian city-states to
resum e diplom atic and com m ercial contacts w ith Iran. A decade
after the death o f Ü zü n Hasan, the Portuguese sea-captain B ar
tolom eu Dias ro unded the C ape o f G ood H ope, and ten years
io6 Iran under the Safavids
after that, his fellow -countrym an Vasco da G am a reached India.
T he sea-route fro m w estern E urope to the East, for so long the
dream o f Prince H en ry the N avigator, had thus been opened three
years before the establishm ent o f the Safavid dynasty in Iran. T he
Portuguese had outflanked n o t only the intervening Islamic
countries w hich had for so m any centuries virtually cut Iran off
fro m contact w ith the W est, b u t also the V enetians and other
E uropean m ercantile pow ers w hich had traded w ith Iran via the
M editerranean ports.
T he Portuguese w ere n o t long in follow ing up their advantage.
In 1507, a Portuguese fleet under the com m and o f A fonso de
A lbuquerque arrived o ff the island o f H u rm ü z in the Persian
Gulf. T he Portuguese V iceroy im m ediately perceived the im
m ense strategic and com m ercial im portance o f the site, w hich
com m anded the entrace to the Persian G u lf and from w hich
Portuguese com m unications w ith India could be protected. T he
Portuguese captured the island, and the tw elve-year-old K ing o f
H u rm ü z becam e a vassal o f the K ing o f P ortugal and agreed to
pay an annual tribute. This caused friction w ith Shäh IsmäTl I,
w hose envoy reached H u rm ü z shortly afterw ards also to dem and
tribute. A threatened m u tin y on the p art o f his captains forced
A lbuquerque to sail fro m H u rm ü z in 1508, b u t he fully intended
to recover it as soon as an o p p o rtu n ity arose, and in 1513 he sent
the envoy M iguel Ferreira to Shah Ism â‘ïl w ith a friendly message.
In 1515, A lbuquerque returned to H u rm ü z, w here he was m et
by M iguel Ferreira and an envoy fro m Ism â‘ïl. T he Shäh, n o t
possessing a navy, and w ith an arm y m uch w eakened by his
disastrous defeat at C häldirän the previous year, had to accept the
occupation o f H u rm ü z as a fa it accompli. A lbuquerque concluded
a treaty w ith IsmäTl w hich confirm ed the K ing o f H u rm ü z as a
Portuguese vassal. T o sw eeten the pill, A lbuquerque sent the
Shäh’s envoy back w ith gifts w o rth double the ones he had
received fro m IsmäTl. T h e Portuguese also contracted under the
treaty to help the Shäh recover the B ahrein islands fro m the A rab
Jab rid dynasty; to enter in to an alliance w ith Iran against the
O tto m an s; and to help Iran to p u t d o w n a revolt by a B alüchï
tribe in M ak rän .1 Som e years later the Portuguese occupied the
B ahrein islands but, instead o f handing them over to Iran as they
w ere b o u n d to do under the 1315 T reaty, they retained possession
o f them for eighty years.
Relations with West during Safavid period 107
Steele and C ro w th er, after exam ining several ports, chose Jäsk,
on the M akrän coast east o f H urm üz. In D ecem ber 1616, the
C o m p an y sent E dw ard C onnock in the James w ith a cargo o f
cloth; the James reached Jäsk despite Portuguese attem pts to
intercept her. C o n n o ck to o k the cloth to Shïrâz, and opened
factories b o th in that city and in Isfahän. ‘Abbäs issued another
114 Iran under the Safavids
farmän in m ore specific terms, giving the English East India
C o m p an y the rig h t to trade freely th ro u g h o u t the country. A n
English am bassador was to reside perm anently in Iran, and was
em pow ered to appoint agents and factors as and w here neces
sary. English nationals w ere guaranteed free exercise o f their
religion; in legal m atters, they w ere to be under the jurisdiction
o f their ambassador. M oreover, the Shah prom ised to supply the
C o m p an y w ith betw een 1,000 and 3,000 bales o f silk annually at
a given rate, and the C o m p an y m ig h t ship this silk from Jâsk free
o f duty.
T h e East India C o m p an y m ight w ell be gratified by this display
o f royal liberality. T here was, how ever, a small string attached.
In retu rn for these concessions, ‘Abbas I expected the English to
assist him in expelling the Portuguese from H urm üz. 'A bbäs I
had always, quite naturally, regarded the Portuguese forts on
the island o f H urm üz and on the m ainland, and the fact that the
K ing o f H u rm ü z was a P ortuguese tributary, as infringem ents on
his o w n sovereignty. In default o f a navy, how ever, he, like his
predecessors, had been powerless to drive the Portuguese o u t o f
T h e f lo w e r in g o f t h e arts u n d e r t h e S a fa v id s
P A I N T I N G A N D T H E “ A R T OF T H E B O O K ”
128
Flowering of the arts under the Safavids 129
established the T abriz school o f painting. Shäh Ism ä ‘11 was ap
parently so solicitous for B ihzäd’s safety that, at the tim e o f the
battle o f C häldirän in 1514 against the O ttom ans, he concealed
B ihzäd and his favourite calligrapher, Shäh M ah m ü d , in a cave
o u t o f h a rm ’s w ay .3 In 1522, Bihzäd was appointed by Shäh
Ism ä‘Il director o f the royal library. His letter o f ap pointm ent was
penned b y the em inent historian G hiyäth al-D In K hvändam lr, a
personal friend o f the artist and author o f the Habib al-Siyar, one
o f the best histories o f the reign o f Ism ä‘Tl I. In Safavid times, the
royal library was n o t so m uch a library as w e understand the w o rd
as a w orkshop under royal patronage in w hich a variety o f
craftsm en laboured to produce superb m anuscripts characterised
by the excellence o f their calligraphy, illum ination, illustration
and b o o k binding —the principal skills w hich together constituted
the “ art o f the b o o k ” .4
D u rin g the long reign o f Shäh T ahm äsp (1524—76), the various
skills w hich constituted the “ art o f the b o o k ” w ere b ro u g h t to
the ultim ate pitch o f perfection. This was in large p art due to the
fact that T ahm äsp was n o t only a keen patro n o f the arts b u t had
him self devoted a lo t o f tim e in his y o u th to the study o f painting.
Several o f the leading artists o f the tim e had been his intim ate
com panions, and he had acquired proficiency in illum inating
sarlawhas, or the decoration on the title-pages o f m anuscripts.5
Shäh Tasmäsp was a “ gifted, exacting p a tro n w ho follow ed his
artists’ w o rk as closely as if it w ere his o w n ” .6 G iven the degree
o f interest in the “ art o f the b o o k ” exhibited by b o th Ismä ‘11 I
and Tahm äsp, it is n o t suprising that the nonpareil o f Safavid
m anuscripts should be a w o rk com m issioned in 1522 by Shäh
Ism ä‘H for his son T ahm äsp b u t n o t com pleted until after IsmäTTs
death. T his w o rk is the Shähnäma-yi Shäh Tahmäspi, or King's Book
o f Kings.7 T he unique nature o f this w o rk m ay be ju d g e d by the
fact that, w hereas no other extant contem porary m anuscript
contains m ore than fourteen m iniature-paintings, the King's Book
o f Kings contains m o re than tw o hu n d red and fifty. It constitutes
a “ portable art g a lle ry ” since m ost o f the m ost illustrious court
artists o f the period contributed to it.8 T h e individual paintings
are n o t necessarily all the w o rk o f one artist. “ A t tim es w e find
m iniatures designed and largely painted by very distinguished
m asters, b u t w ith parts, such as distant m o u n tain crags or an entire
battalion o f soldiery, executed b y carefully controlled, alm ost
i3o Iran under the Safavids
m iraculously discreet follow ers w ho w ere only slightly less senior
artists them selves.” 9 In other instances,
lesser masters or assistants painted pictures either entirely alone or with
some degree o f aid from their betters. Sometimes a master sketched in
the design and left its amplification and completion to the assistants. The
master’s participation varied from a scrawled hint suggesting the
disposition o f figures or architecture to an elaborate under-drawing
requiring little beyond coloring to complete. W hen an assistant had
done his work, a master would sometimes return to add a few
improving strokes, or perhaps even a complete figure or tw o.10
A lm ost every characteristic o f Persian painting is present in
these m iniatures : the reduction o f the three-dim ensional w o rld to
tw o dim ensions and the use o f various devices to circum vent the
problem s caused b y this; the sure and exquisite use o f harm onious
colour ; and the filling o f every inch o f the background w ith birds,
anim als, trees, vignettes depicting action subsidiary to that o f the
central them e o f the picture. “ G olden skies and silver w ater,
black-green cypresses against w hite-blossom ing trees, th e autum n
foliage o f the spreading plane, dappled horses in taw n y deserts,
clustered figures in raim ent o f scarlet, crim son and azure, diaper
tiles and dainty frescoes, b rig h t gardens behind slender fences o f
cinnabar red: these to gether com pose the gayest o f all possible
sym phonies.” 11
T h e King's Book o f Kings is n o t, how ever, m erely a treasury o f
the p ain ter’s art; it is also a m o n u m e n t to the calligrapher’s skill,
since FirdawsT’s Shähnäma, w h ich form s the vehicle for this w ealth
o f illustration, consists o f over 60,000 verses. In the Islamic w orld,
o f course, the dogm a that the Q u r’an is the W o rd o f G od had,
fro m the earliest days o f Islam, given a theological justification
for the veneration o f calligraphy. This fact, to gether w ith the
Islamic ban on the representation o f the hu m an fo rm (a ban w hich
in Iran was m ore often h o n o u red in the breach), com bined to give
calligraphy a h igher status in M uslim culture than it achieved in
any o th er civilisation. T h e cult o f calligraphy w en t far beyond
the confines o f the pro d u ctio n o f books and m anuscripts, and the
A rabic script, in a natural or stylised form , played a m ajor role
in the decoration o f m osques and other religious buildings. In
o th er w ords, religious feeling found an outlet b o th in penm anship
and in the abstract illum ination o f m anuscripts. M anuscripts w ere
em bellished by one or m o re w hole pages o f illum ination, and the
Flowering of the arts under the Safavids 131
pages o f the text w ere adorned w ith illum inated and gilded
borders and o ther ornam entation. T he chapter headings w ere
frequently contained w ith in panels w hich w ere little m asterpieces
o f artistry. T he skills o f the m iniature-painter w ere transferred
to the tooling and em bossing o f leather for bookbindings, and
co u rt painters extended their technique to lacquering, w hich was
applied n o t only to bookbindings b u t to such item s as trays, dishes,
pen-cases, m irror-cases and je w e l- and trinket-boxes.
As A n th o n y W elch has pointed out, Shäh ‘Abbäs I (1588—1629)
did n o t have the intense and single-m inded dedication to the art
o f p ain tin g displayed b y his grandfather Shäh Tahm äsp. “ In
general, ‘A bbäs w o u ld appear to have been m ore concerned w ith
the arts o f official conviction (architecture and city planning) and
econom ic utility (exportable ceramics, textiles and carpets) than
w ith the far m o re private and personal a rt o f the precious b o o k .” 12
N evertheless, ‘Abbäs I’s patronage o f artists was on an extensive
scale, and he seems to have had a w arm h u m an relationship w ith
his artists w hich was typical o f the m an. O n one occasion, Rizä
painted a p o rtrait w hich m oved the Shäh so m uch that he kissed
the artist’s h a n d .13 O n other occasions, the Shäh is said to have
held the candle w hile his favourite calligrapher ‘A ll Rizä was at
w o r k ;14 ‘A ll Rizä’s superb calligraphy adorns the entrance portal
o f the M asjid-i Shäh at Isfahän, the M asjid-i Shaykh L u tf Alläh
and the d om e over the tom b in the shrine o f the Im äm Rizä at
M ashhad.
D u rin g the reign o f ‘Abbäs I, at least tw o divergent styles o f
painting em erged. O n the one hand, Rizä ‘A bbâsï crow ned the
achievem ents o f his predecessors in the art o f m anuscript
illustration, and m ade “ a full, final sta te m en t” in this genre o f
paintings.15 O n the other, the aggressive and irascible genius
Sâdiqï B eg Afshär, w ho rose to the high position o f director o f
the royal library, displayed in his paintings an astonishing realism
w hich m ark ed a new departure in Safavid art and presaged the
increased realism o f the late seventeenth and eighteenth centuries.
His character is w ell told by the Safavid poet G h u rü rî and
illustrated b y an anecdote recorded by A n th o n y W elch:
I wrote a qastdah in praise o f Sâdiqï and went to recite it in a coffee house.
The qasïdah had not yet come to an end, when Sâdiqï seized it from
me and said, “ I don’t have the patience to listen to more than this!”
Getting up after a moment, he tossed down five tomans bound in a
Flowering of the arts under the Safavids 133
cloth, along with two pieces o f paper on which he had executed
black-line drawings. He gave them to me and said: “ Merchants buy
each page o f m y work for three tomans. They take them to Hindüstän.
D on’t sell them any cheaper!” Then he excused himself several times
and went out.16
A characteristic o f the great m ajority o f paintings p roduced in
the royal ateliers fro m the tim e o f ‘Abbas I onw ards is that they
are n o t designed as m anuscript illustrations b u t are single-page
paintings and draw ings, intended probably for inclusion in album s
belonging to m em bers o f the royal fam ily o r the nobility, or
possibly for sale to persons o f lo w er ra n k .17 A n o th er departure
is that these single-page paintings and draw ings are n o t necessarily
linked to traditional literary them es. B y 1596/7, w hen Sâdiqï B eg
Afshâr was dismissed fro m his position o f director o f the royal
library, Rizä ‘Abbas! had em erged as an innovative artist o f genius,
and he rapidly established h im self as a m aster o f the n o w preferred
single-page painting, ju st as form erly he had been an acknow
ledged m aster o f the m iniature. “ His w o rk revolves around the
idealized p o rtray al o f beautiful people, usually unidentified and
perhaps actually non-existent. T h e sem i-canonized secular content
o f traditional Iranian painting —based on the great them es o f the
Shähnämah, the Khamsah o f N izam i, the Haft Aurang o f Jam !, and
other w o rk s —was largely abandoned u n d er Shäh ‘A bbäs.” 18
O th e r artists, such as M Irzä ‘A ll and Shaykh M uham m ad,
follow ed his exam ple: “ elegant youths stand in wistful awareness
o f n o th in g at all, w hile other beautiful people graciously hold or
proffer delicate w ine cups and flasks. Couples em brace each other,
their feelings seem ingly turned less to w ard each other than coyly
to w ard adm iring connoisseurs” .19 T h e trend to w a rd the p roduc
tion o f single-page paintings resulted in a relative paucity o f fine
Safavid m anuscripts in the early seventeenth century. A n thony
W elch suggests that the collectors o f these single-page paintings
w ere m em bers o f the aristocracy, b o th qizilbäsh and T äjlk, and
m em bers o f the new landed and m oneyed classes; he suggests
fu rth er that the aesthetic taste o f these new patrons o f the arts was
to som e extent at variance w ith that o f the artists’ royal patron,
Shäh ‘Abbäs I, and he sees this as an indication that ‘A bbäs I,
enthusiastic p ro m o te r o f the arts th o u g h he was, did n o t determ ine
the course o f the developm ent o f art in the w ay in w hich Shäh
T ahm äsp had determ ined it in the second and th ird quarters o f
the sixteenth century.20
As the seventeenth century w o re on, the strains o f sensuality
and eroticism w hich could be clearly perceived in the later w o rk
o f Rizä ‘Abbäs! w ere blatantly displayed in the w o rk o f his
Flowering of the arts under the Safavids 135
successors such as M uham m ad Q äsim , M ïr Afzal and M uTn
M usavvir. “ M u ‘in has left a n u m b er o f erotic pictures o f a type
unsuitable for public e x h ib itio n ” , state the authors o f Persian
Miniature Painting prim ly (w riting, it should be noted, in I 9 3 3 )-21
A n th o n y W elch is in no d o u b t that later Safavid p ainting is
decadent :
The sublety of Riza’s early work, still reminiscent o f the previous
generation of Safavi painters, was altered into surface values in his later
pages: curves are less volumetric; pigment is less rich; expressions
coarsen and become less winning. In the w ork o f his many students and
followers these trends are emphasized. There is a narrowing rather than
an expansion o f subject matter, which comes to rely heavily on images
o f external beauty —delicate young men and wistful young women
who seem to assume the role o f secular icons. Svelte in appearance but
vapid in content, they are the evident ideals of the new social order.
Where they are explicitly erotic, as they often are, their activity conveys
an unreal feeling, titillating rather than passionate. . .It is, largely, an
a-spiritual art, requiring not an eye searching for meaning but one
receptive to beauty.22
CARPETS
TEXTILES
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Flowering of the arts under the Safavids 141
the foresight o f Shäh ‘Abbäs the Great caused numerous and manifold
factories to be established in the provinces of Shlrvän, Qarä-bägh, Gflän,
Käshän, Mashhad, Astaräbäd, as well as in the capital Isfahän itself, in
which, under a strict supervision o f overseers, silk textiles and sashes
[turbans], as well for common use as royal ones. . .are woven in a
magnificent and wonderful way, while rugs and all kinds o f woven
fabrics are constantly made for the royal court.
In this account, Krusinski does n o t m ention one o f the principal
textile centres, Y azd; there w ere also o th er subsidiary centres o f
the industry at Rasht, A rdistän, Säva and K irm än. Krusinski adds
that, in order to preserve the “ specific characteristics o f artistic
w eaving o f each lo cality ” , the Shäh gave orders that each factory
should “ w eave in its o w n m a n n e r” .36 A significant p ro p o rtio n
o f textile p ro d u ction was for e x p o rt:
those factories not only produce what is necessary for the court and the
courtiers with small expense to the Treasury, beyond the cost o f the
silver thread, but they also enrich not a little the royal Treasury, for
the more precious silk weavings and the textiles that are enriched with
gold and silver threads are sent with government salesmen for sale to
Europe and even more to India by whole shiploads.37
In addition to producing w oven fabrics, brocades and velvets
o f the finest quality, Safavid craftsm en also excelled in em broidery
and printed cottons (<qalam-kär) w hich w ere block p rinted in an
infinite variety o f designs. A t Isfahan, the textile industry was on
a huge scale. In the bazaars, there are said to have been stalls for
25,000 w orkers, and “ the chief o f the textile guild was one o f the
m ost pow erful m en in the country. Even the g overnor feared
h im .” T he court loom s are said to have covered the w hole
distance betw een the M aydän and the C hihil Sutün, a distance
o f about a quarter o f a m ile.38 As in the earlier Safavid period,
leading artists such as Rizä ‘Abbäsi placed their designs at the
disposal o f the textile-w eavers. “ T he increasing anthropocentric
interest o f the tim e w hich saw the beginning o f individual p o r
tra itu re ” 39 m eant that, instead o f the small and rather incidental
figures on earlier textiles, m ore and m o re one found hangings on
w hich the design o f a hum an figure w o u ld take up a w hole panel.
A lth o u g h some experts consider that the velvets and other
textiles o f the period o f ‘Abbäs I do n o t quite m easure up in
quality to the productions o f the earlier Safavid period, there is
no d ou b t th at the range o f designs and colours o f the textiles o f
‘Abbas Ts period is infinitely greater. In addition to all the usual
12. Kâshan
e r.-
144 Iran under the Safapids
colours, there is “ a w ide g am u t o f delicate greys, m auves, violets,
and aubergine [sic] so num erous that the very inventory o f names
is exhausted. T he colour com positions are pro p o rtio n ately varied
and ingenious, and the pattern m akers had at their com m and
the limitless resources o f the gardens o f Isfahan and her wide,
flow er-spangled m eadow s.” 40 Indeed, m otifs from the anim al
and floral w orld are com m on: leopards, gazelles and hares
abound, and the p arro t is the com m onest b ird ; o f flowers, the
tulip, rose, hyacinth and iris appear m ost frequently, bu t m any
other varieties w ere used by the w e a v e r s - “ a m ore extensive
array than has ever been depicted in any oth er textile a r t ” .41 It
is n o t surprising th at there was a brisk m arket in Europe for
Persian velvets, silks, damasks, satins, taffetas. T he Yazd brocades
in particular m ade use o f the ubiquitous buta (the so-called pear
or palm -leaf design). W h en one adds to this bew ildering array o f
textiles the m any types o f em broidered fabrics, one can assert
positively that textiles o f the Safavid period have never been
surpassed in design and technique.
CERAMICS
METALWORK
Unlike Shiraz, Isfahan has had no Häfiz to sing its praises, and the
people of Isfahan have an unenviable reputation among their
fellow-countrymen for stinginess and a lack of what Sir Winston
Churchill used to call “ intestinal fortitude”. Laurence Lockhart
pointed out that jealousy lay at the root of many of the satires
and attacks on Isfahânïs, and drew attention to the fact that the
fourteenth-century Muslim traveller, Ibn BattGta, who was a
Moor and therefore presumably impartial, gave quite a different
picture:1 “ their dominant qualities are bravery and pugnacity,
together with generosity”.2 At all events, Isfahânïs must be well
satisfied with the accolade bestowed by history on their city, for
nearly everyone who knows anything at all about Iran has heard
the jingle Isfahan nisf-i jahän: “ Isfahan is half the world” —the
poet wishing us to understand that paradise constitutes the other
half. This proud boast derives from the achievements of one man,
Shäh ‘Abbas the Great. As Wilfrid Blunt truly says: “ Isfahan is
Shäh ‘Abbäs’s memorial: Si monumentum requiris, circumspice.”3
Rarely in the course of history has an entire city been planned
or replanned at one time by a master mind. In recent times, Paris
was doubled in size by Baron Haussmann in the time of Napoleon
III; the Washington of L’Enfant is another example which springs
to mind; the Isfahän of Shäh ‘Abbäs I is a much earlier example.
“ In a real sense Safavid architecture begins in the reign of Shäh
‘Abbäs.”4
There were few novel elements in the architecture itself. The
originality of the urban planning of Shäh ‘Abbäs lay in the
boldness of its conception and in the colossal scope of the
programme, embracing the building of a great capital city “ with
avenues, palaces, public offices, mosques and madrasas, bazaars,
baths, forts and gardens”.5 The Shäh’s right-hand man in the
154
66Isfahan is half the world ” 155
citizen met.8 All around the edge of the Maydän ran a water-
channel, 3^- metres wide and 2 metres deep. Along the channel,
a row of plane trees afforded shade for strollers. By day, the piazza
was often covered witji hucksters’ booths, and the merchants’
warehouses surrounding the Maydän were “ stored with all
Merchandizes, chiefly drugs, and to the place daily resort most
Nations, as English, Dutch, Portugals, Arabians, Turkes, Jewes,
Armenians, Muscovians, and Indians” .9 At night, the Maydän
was frequented by a teeming throng of mummers, jugglers,
puppet-players, acrobats, storytellers, dervishes and prostitutes.
From time to time, and especially during the great Iranian
national festival celebrating the New Year (Nawrüz), the gardens
flanking the Maydän were the site of the New Year’s levees held
by the Shäh. A contemporary chronicler describes such an
occasion in 1611 :
The Shah then ordered a great feast to be prepared in the Bägh-i Naqsh-i
Jahän to which all classes of society were invited: emirs, viziers,
moqarrabs of the court; people from various parts of the Shah’s
i6o Iran under the Safavids
‘ - «« -É Saa^
19B. Isfahän-- the Royal Mosque, minarets and dome
162 Iran under the Safavids
An important feature of Shäh ‘Abbas’s urban planning was that
it did not involve the demolition of the old city; the new city
simply started where old Isfahan ended. “ The new plan was
realized on open ground (the royal garden and public lands) away
from the limitations and problems of the old city.”11 It was thus
possible for this royal exercise in town-planning to become a
reality in less than half a century. The magnificent old Masjid-i
JunTa, dating from Seljuq times, and the prosperous bazaars on
which the eleventh-century traveller and IsmäTlI missionary,
Näsir-i Khusraw, had commented so approvingly, were not only
left standing but were closely linked with the new city by the
Great Maydän, which stretched away directly from the main
entrance of the Qaysariyya, or Royal Bazaar. The theme of
commerce was carried into the Great Maydän itself by a two-
storey row of shops which surrounded the entire Maydän, the row
being broken only by the principal buildings fronting on the
Maydän: the Masjid-i Shaykh Lutf Alläh, the Masjid-i Shäh, or
Royal Mosque, and the ‘ÄlT Qäpü palace.
Two of the greatest masterpieces of Safavid architecture were
built during the reign of Shäh ‘Abbäs: the Masjid-i Shaykh Lutf
Alläh, situated on the east side of the Maydän, was begun in 1603
and completed in 1618. It was dedicated to the Shäh’s father-in-law,
who was reputed to be one of the most famous preachers of his
day. The Masjid-i Shäh, located at the south end of the Maydän,
is the second architectural masterpiece commissioned by Shäh
‘Abbäs; it was begun in 1611, but not completed until after the
death of Shäh ‘Abbäs in 1629. The two buildings differ both in
conception and in function. The Masjid-i Shäh was designed as
a public building, and as the Shäh’s “ affirmation of the dynasty’s
adherence to Shi‘ism”.12 Because of the Shäh’s desire to have the
building completed during his lifetime, short-cuts were taken in
the construction; for example, painted hafi-rangt (polychrome)
tiles were largely used in place of the more time-consuming
mosaic tiles. The Shäh had also ignored the warnings of the
architect Abu’l-Qäsim regarding the danger of subsidence in the
foundations, and pressed ahead with the construction ; the architect
subsequently proved to have been justified.13 Nevertheless, the
mosque complex, when completed, was spectacular in its impact.
The entrance ayvän (portal) is almost 27 metres high, the arch
framed by turquoise triple cable ornament and decorated with
“ Isfahän is half the world ” 163
or baroque squares on deep ochre stucco. The colours of all this inlay
are dark blue, light greenish-blue, and a tint of indefinite wealth like
wine. Each arch is framed in turquoise corkscrews. The mihräb in the
west wall is enamelled with tiny flowers on a deep blue meadow.
Each part of the design, each plane, each repetition, each separate
branch or blossom has its own sombre beauty. But the beauty of the
whole comes as you move. Again, the highlights are broken by the play
of glazed and unglazed surfaces ; so that with every step they rearrange
themselves in countless shining patterns; while even the pattern of light
through the thick window traceries is inconstant, owing to outer
traceries which are several feet away and double the variety of each
varying silhouette.
I have never encountered splendour of this kind before.18
The third of the principal buildings fronting on the Maydän
was the ‘AIT Qäpü, or Sublime Porte, which was “ at once a
lodging, a grandstand, and audience chamber, and a state gateway
leading to the Palace grounds”.19 Shäh ‘Abbäs developed and
extended an existing Timurid building and added to it three
additional storeys. The beauty of the ‘AIT Qäpü, dismissed con
temptuously by Robert Byron as “ that brick boot-box”,20 lies
not so much in its exterior architecture, which is undistinguished,
as in its interior, in the charm of the small rooms designed for
informal gatherings, in the exquisite design and colour of the
frescoes etched in the stucco walls and ceilings and in the effects
of light and shade created by the delicate tracery of the windows.
The main feature of the ‘AIT Qäpü is the tälär, or covered balcony,
from which ‘Abbäs I and his successors used to watch games of
polo and other forms of entertainment in the Maydän.
At the north end of the Maydän, linking the new capital with
the old city, lay the Qaysariyya, or Royal Bazaar, of Isfahän. Over
the main entrance was located the naqqära-khäna, or musicians’
gallery, where music was played at sunrise and sunset whenever
the Shäh was in residence at Isfahän. To the right of the main gate
lay the Royal Mint. The bazaar itself consisted of endlessly
repeated groupings of hammäms (public baths), caravanserais,
mosques and madrasas (theological seminaries). The caravanserais
were the areas in which goods were received, weighed, assessed
and stored; adjacent to them were the timchas, or shopping
arcades, where goods were on display. In general each section of
the bazaar was devoted to a single trade, and each section was
virtually self-contained, having its own gates, its own security
166 Iran under the Safavids
arrangements and fire guards, and its own trade guild which
administered its own section of the bazaar and arbitrated in
disputes. Some of the bazaar mosques were simple and functional ;
others were exquisitely decorated masterpieces. The madrasas
usually followed the same chahär-ayvän (four-portal) plan as the
mosques and caravanserais; the arcaded sides of the madrasas
afforded shade, and pools of water in the central courtyard kept
the air cool. The bazaar covered a total area of about n |- square
miles.21 Fryer, who visited Isfahän in 1677, was tremendously
impressed by the whole scene in the Royal Bazaar, which he
termed “ the surprizingest piece of Greatness in Honour of
Commerce the whole world can boast of, our Burses being but
Snaps of Buildings to these famous Buzzars ”22 Linking the Great
Maydän and the Chahär Bägh avenue were extensive gardens at
the west end of which stood the Chihil Sutün palace, constructed
by Shäh ‘Abbäs I and completed in 1648 by his great-grandson
‘Abbäs IL Like the ‘Äll Qäpü, the Chihil Sutün has been
disparaged by both contemporary and recent European writers
and travellers. Stevens refers to the “ ungainly bulk of the Ali
Kapu” and to “ the quaint absurdity of the Chehel Situn”. “ It
seems almost incredible,” he says, “ that buüdings on the one hand
so perfectly proportioned [as the two great mosques] and on the
other hand so primitive should have been built at the same time
under the inspiration of the same monarch.”23
Such criticisms, it seems to me, in the first place fail to take
sufficient account of the appalling defacement and destruction of
Safavid monuments perpetrated during the Qäjär period, parti
cularly during the governorship of the infamous Zill al-Sultän,
the son of Näsir al-DIn Shäh. For example, the twenty wooden
columns supporting the verandah were originally covered with
delicate faceted aîna-kân, or mirror-work. Again, the beautiful
Safavid murals in the great hall and other parts of the building
were obliterated by a layer of plaster on which Qäjär artists
superimposed their own inferior paintings. Curzon, who did
appreciate the extent of the damage done to the Chihil Sutün
during the Qäjär period, was not able to suppress his indignation.
Referring to the obliteration of the marble wainscoting and
mirror-work panels above it by a wash of pink paint, he exclaims
“ Had I caught the pagan, I would gladly have suffocated him in
a barrel of his own paint!”24
Secondly, criticisms of these two buildings are frequently based
on a misunderstanding of their function and also of the life-style
of Shäh ‘Abbäs I. Both buildings, for want of a better word, are
often referred to in English as “ palaces”, but this term automati
cally conjures up something much more splendid and grandiose.
Neither building was the official residence of the king in the
European sense. The varied functions of the ‘Alï Qäpü have
already been mentioned ; the Chihil Sutün was the building where
the king gave formal audience to ambassadors, held levees and
gave state banquets. Both buildings are, in fact, not so much
palaces as kiosks or pavilions, and, in summer, they served as
“ open banqueting houses”.25 Compared to the massive palaces
of the Mogul emperors in India, they are insignificant, but Shäh
‘Abbäs I did not want buildings the mere size and magnificence
of which would overawe the people and cut him off from them.
His personal style of dress was simple and his style informal; he
eschewed excessive ceremony, but he appreciated the pleasures of
life: good food, good wine, good company, and he appreciated
them all the more in beautiful surroundings. The ‘ÄlT Qäpü and
the Chihil Sutün reflect these tastes. Building on the grand scale
was restricted to the glory of God, as is exemplified by the Masjid-i
Shäh, and his successors followed the pattern he had established.
22. Isfahan —the Madrasa-yi Mädar-i Shäh
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giving access to the roadway, while the outer wall has some ninety
arches which give views of the river. The bridge has also an upper
and a lower promenade; the upper is reached by staircases in the
round towers at the corners of the bridge; the lower by other
staircases in the basements of the towers and in the main piers.
This lower promenade is a vaulted passage cut through the central
piers of the bridge and raised only slightly above the bed of the
river, which is crossed by stepping-stones set in the river-bed
between the piers. This bridge, constructed about 1620, is
popularly known as the Pul-i Sï-u-Sih, because the main arches
are thirty-three in number. “ One would hardly expect,” says
Curzon, “ to have to travel to Persia to see what may, in all
probability, be termed the stateliest bridge in the world.”31
Other travellers, however, have preferred the Khväjü bridge,
built half a mile downstream by Shäh ‘Abbäs II in 1660. The
Khväjü bridge, 140 metres long, is built on a dam of stone blocks.
Its construction follows the general pattern of the Allâhverdï Khän
bridge, but “ its peculiar charm depends upon the six semi-
octagonal pavilions”.32 These pavilions were originally decorated
with uplifting texts in prose and verse, and later with erotic
?
i : T H E S T R U C T U R E OF S A F A V I D S O C I E T Y
I i : T H E N A T U R E OF T H E S A F A V I D E C O N O M Y
y I. T H E D O M E S T I C E C O N O M Y
Although roads throughout Iran were poor (if one excepts Shäh
‘Abbäs’s famous causeway in Mäzandarän), and communications
were slow, the network of caravanserais which covered the
country along the main trade routes at least provided the
merchant with protection for his goods and pack-animals, and also
with facilities for displaying his wares and engaging in a little
business at overnight stops. Both Thévenot and Tavernier comment
that the Persian caravanserais were better built and cleaner than
their Turkish counterparts. Caravanserais were designed especially
Social and economic structure 191
fulfilled the terms of the resulting contract signed in 1628, but the
English imports of cloth and tin similarly glutted the Iranian
market and caused a slump in the price of these commodities. The
quality of the English cloth, too, was not all that it might have
been, and Safavid soldiers who had received consignments of it
in lieu of pay ran after English merchants in the street and cursed
them for its poor quality. Despite these gross misjudgements of
the market situation, the royal agent was not dismissed from office
until 1632, after the death of Shäh ‘Abbäs I.45
With the accession of Shäh Safi in 1629, royal control of trade
diminished. Whereas under Shäh ‘Abbäs I the silk trade had been
a royal monopoly, Shäh Safi, influenced by substantial bribes
from the Armenian community, gave licences to buy silk to all
and sundry. Once again, the Dutch East India Company out
manoeuvred the English and succeeded in exploiting this new
situation by trading both with the king and with local merchants,
including Armenians, who were busy strengthening their con
nections with Italy and extending their commercial network to
France, England, Holland and Russia.46 To begin with, the
English East India Company’s factors declined to co-operate with
the Armenians. Their agent, William Gibson, sent to London a
testy report in which he described the Armenians as “ soe griping
and deceitful in their dealings and so slowe in performing of their
promises” ; he strongly advocated that the Company not co
operate with them, and concluded rhetorically, “ knowing them
to be as aforesaid how think your worships ’tis to be imbraced ”.47
During the reign of Shäh Safi" (1629-42), the Dutch continued
to purchase large quantities of Iranian silk, mainly from private
sources. Government officials tried to offset the resultant loss of
revenue to the state by imposing heavy customs duty on silk
bought privately. This in turn led the Dutch authorities in Batavia
to order their factors in Iran to stop buying silk from private
sources. The Dutch merchants were by no means totally dependent
on the silk trade; after the foundation of their factory at Bandar
‘Abbäs, which rapidly replaced Hurmüz as the principal Iranian
port-of-entry in the Persian Gulf, they soon established a mono
poly of the spice trade between the East Indies and Iran. The
rivalry between the Dutch and English East India Companies
prevented either from achieving a dominant position, and both
were able to derive profit from the transit trade between Bandar
2 0 0 Iran under the Safavids
‘Abbäs and the Indian Ocean ports. Ships of both Companies
carried goods for both Iranian and Indian merchants, who were
able to obtain attractive freight rates and reliable service by
playing off one Company against the other. The pressure these
merchants were able to exert caused Jan Smidt, the Dutch
ambassador to Iran in 1629, to exclaim indignantly : “ they do not
at all realise what profit and advancement their country and its
inhabitants achieve with our extensive trade, on the contrary they
brazenly assert that it is us who are quite dependent upon their
trade and cannot manage without it”.48 Clearly, the age of
imperialism had not yet dawned !
By the second half of the seventeenth century, the Dutch had
outstripped both its English rivals and also the French, whose
Compagnie Française des Indes was founded in 1664; Thévenot,
Fryer and Chardin all testify to the supremacy of Dutch trade in
the Persian Gulf at that period. The Dutch success was achieved
primarily by their quickness in adapting to changing circum
stances. They abandoned the concept of bilateral trade which
had been the basis of the operations of both the early Dutch
and English traders, in favour of multilateral, co-ordinated trade
throughout Asia based on Batavia. Capital invested by Dutch
merchants was not to return to source immediately, but was to
circulate permanently in Asia, Dutch merchants taking a profit
from each successive stage. This policy received its classic form
ulation by Coen in 1619:
Piece goods from Gujarat we can barter for pepper and gold on the
coast of Sumatra, rials and cottons from the coast for pepper in Bantam,
sandalwood, pepper and rials we can barter for Chinese goods and
Chinese gold ; we can extract silver from Japan with Chinese goods,
piece goods from the Coromandel coast in exchange for spices, other
goods and gold from China, piece goods from Surat for spices, other
goods and rials, rials from Arabia for spices and various other trifles
—one thing leads to the other. And all of it can be done without any
money from the Netherlands and with ships alone.49
The English East India Company was constrained to acknow
ledge that desperate measures were needed if the Company was
not to be forced out of business altogether, and in 1688 the
Company took the unprecedented step of conferring on Armen
ians equal status with Englishmen in the conduct of commercial
operations —a step which would have been unthinkable a hundred
years later. Under the terms of the 1688 Agreement, Armenians
Social and economic structure 2 0 1
I n t e lle c t u a l lif e u n d e r th e S a fa v id s
LI TERATURE
had he applied these metaphors and images to the holy Imams, it w ould
have been impossible to use expressions too extravagant to describe their
exalted rank.” In short, Mawlänä Muhtasham did not receive any
reward for his ode. W hen the Mawlänä received the Shäh’s reply, he
despatched to him a w ork by the late Mawlänä Hasan KäshT on the
Imäm ‘AIT, which he had put into verse in the form o f a haft-band9 —
a really inspired piece o f w ork —and in reward for this he received a
fitting present. At once all the poets at court set to work, madly writing
haft-bands, and fifty or sixty poems rained dow n on the Shäh, and their
authors were all rewarded.10
the fact that the com plex but functional centralised system
developed b y the Safavids was largely destroyed b y the actions
o f N a d ir Shäh and by the civil w ar betw een the Z ands and the
Qäjärs during the second h alf o f the eighteenth century. O thers
have attributed the slow progress m ade byx Iran during the
nineteenth century in the direction o f social or econom ic reform
to the entrenched p o w er o f the religious classes, and have seen this
entrenched p o w er as a direct legacy o f the Safavid period. This
view ignores the fact that the religious classes attained a position
o f dom inance in the Safavid state only under the last representative
o f that dynasty, Shäh Sultan H usayn, whose reign m arked a rapid
decline in Safavid fortunes. T he gradually changing attitude in
Iran to w ard the Safavid period has led to the publication o f an
increasing n u m b er o f historical texts, w hich in turn has facilitated
m o re detailed study o f the period. T he doyen o f Safavid histori
ographers is n o w recognised by leading Islamic scholars to be
that same Iskandar B eg M unshï whose w o rk was so severely
castigated by E. G. B row ne. M . G. S. H odgson, in his m onum ental
w o rk , The Venture o f Islam, spoke o f the “judicious accuracy” o f
Iskandar B eg ’s History o f Shäh ‘Abbas the Great, o f “ its psycho
logical perceptiveness, and the broad interest it manifests in the
ram ifications o f the events it traces” .34 A. K. S. L am bton has
d raw n attention to the unique character and the great value o f
the biographical m aterial contained in Iskandar B eg’s H istory *5
a n d j. R. W alsh has assessed it as n o t only a great w o rk o f Safavid
and o f Iranian historiography, b u t as “ one o f the greatest o f all
Islamic historical w orks and, indeed, perfect w ithin the lim itations
o f its trad itio n s” .36
S CI ENCE AND M E D I C I N E
testim ony to its status in the m edical w o rld , b u t also suggests that
n o t m uch progress had been m ade in the science o f m edicine since
the tim e o f al-Râzî (ca 865—925), “ the greatest physician o f the
Islamic w o rld and one o f the great physicians o f all tim e ” .56 Even
m o re popular am ong physicians had been the w o rk o f his
fellow -Iranian, A vicenna, w hose massive al-Qänün fi'l-T ib b
(Canon o f Medicine), had been translated into Latin by G erard o f
C rem ona in the tw elfth century. Such was the dem and for this
w o rk that “ in the last th irty years o f the fifteenth century it was
issued sixteen times —fifteen editions being in Latin and one in
H e b re w ” , and “ was reissued m ore than tw en ty times during the
sixteenth c e n tu ry ” ; the b o o k “ continued to be printed and read
in to the second h a lf o f the seventeenth c e n tu ry ” .57
T he status o f physicians during the Safavid period stood as high
as ever. W hereas neither the Greeks n o r the R om ans accorded
h ig h social status to their doctors, Iranians had from ancient times
h o n o u red their physicians, w h o w ere often the counsellors o f
kings and som etim es reached the exalted rank o f vizier. In Safavid
times, the hakïm-bâshï, or C h ie f Physician, was an im p o rtan t
official at court. B u t w hat was the state o f m edicine under the
Safavids? A vicenna’s Canon was still one o f the tw o principal
textbooks studied b y m edical students. Since the Canon had been
w ritten in A rabic, and m edical students in Safavid tim es did n o t
always possess a know ledge o f that language, a large n u m b er o f
com m entaries on the Canon was available in Persian.58 Physiology
was still based on the four h u m o u rs o f ancient and m ediaeval
m edicine. B leeding and purging w ere still the principal form s o f
therapeusis. T hévenot, w h o had personal experience o f Safavid
surgeons, speaks w ell o f their ability : “ T here are m any Physicians
in Persia, and am ongst them som e skilful m en . . .T h ey let bloud
too, and are very dextrous at it; I speak b y experience, they tye
a ligature o f leather very streight about the A rm , and then
w ith o u t rub b in g or looking m uch on the place, they take their
Lance. . .an d prick very skilfully.” 59 A w ide variety o f surgical
procedures was perform ed, b u t pre-operative care was u n k n o w n ;
indeed, greater emphasis was laid on the need for the surgeon to
p ro tect h im self against infection fro m a suppurating w o u n d than
on the safety o f the patient; a rudim entary surgical glove m ig h t
be m ade in the bazaar from the m ucous m em brane covering the
testicles o f sheep.60 Elective surgery was virtually u n k n o w n , and
222 Iran under the Safavids
90 per cent o f surgical operations related to accidents o r w o u n d
ing in fights. Anaesthesia consisted o f inducing unconsciousness
by m eans o f various narcotics. O f all the branches o f Islamic
m edicine, pharm acy survived longest. Persians had always led
the field in pharm acology; the n in th -cen tu ry pharm acopoeia o f
Sâbür b. Sahl, and the tw elfth-century Antidotary o f Ibn al-T irm iz,
“ form ed the bases o f all other pharm acopoeias and catalogues
o f simples w hich w ere subsequently w ritte n ” .61 If a Safavid
physician w ere to view the m edical w o rld today, “ he w ould find
the least change in that section w hich is concerned w ith the patient
and his drugs ” .62 Hospitals m aintained elaborate pharm acies, and
private dispensaries existed fo r the patients o f doctors w ho
practised outside a hospital.
It is clear that excessive reverence for the m ediaeval tradition
in th e field o f m edicine persisted into Safavid times in Iran and
indeed well on into the nineteenth century. T he Safavid system
was a long tim e in dying. T he late E. G. B row ne could w rite:
“ W h en I was in T ihran in 1887 D r. T holozon, physician to his
late M ajesty N asiru’d -D in Shah, kindly enabled m e to attend the
m eetings o f the M ajlis-i Sihhat, o r C ouncil o f Public H ealth, in
the Persian capital, and a m ajority o f the physicians present at that
tim e kn ew no m edicine b u t that o f A vicenna.” 63 In view o f this
persistent attitude, can any advances in the field o f m edicine be
perceived during the Safavid period?
In pharm acology, a science in w hich the Iranians had always
excelled, further progress seems to have been made. A phar
m acopoeia com piled in 1556 entitled Tibb-i S h ift3! form ed the
basis o f the Pharmacopoea Perska o f Fr Angelus printed in France in
1681. H ow ever, despite the fact that excellent medical m anuals
continued to be w ritte n during the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries, o n e’s general im pression is that they constituted re
statem ents o r rearrangem ents o f existing know ledge and did n o t
break new g round to any significant extent.
I should n o t conclude this chapter w ith o u t som e m ention o f
astrology, since the Safavid kings w ere accustom ed to consult
th eir astrologers before deciding on any m ajor course o f action.
In m ediaeval E urope, astronom y and astrology w ere synonym ous
term s in popular belief. In the Islamic w orld, the study o f the
heavens was eagerly pursued at least in p art because o f its
connection w ith astrology, b u t astronom y had its serious side too,
\ \
31. Brass astrolabe engraved with the name o f Shah Sultan Husayn, 1712
224 Iran under the Safavids
especially as it related to the art o f navigation and the calculation
o f the calendar. T he astrolabe, an astronom ical instrum ent devised
by the ancient Greeks, was substantially im p ro v ed by M uslim
scientists before they returned it to E urope in the ten th century.
F o r centuries, M uslim s m ade astrolabes w hich w ere beautiful
w orks o f art, engraved w ith great care and skill. Even the greatest
Islamic astronom ers, how ever, such as al-B ïrünï, did n o t hesitate
to w rite m anuals on judicial astrology, and it is n o accident that
in the Islamic languages the w o rd munajjim m eans b o th astronom er
and astrologer. T he casting o f a horoscope required com plex
calculations to determ ine the position o f the planets at a particular
p o in t in tim e, for exam ple, on the b irth o f a royal prince, so that
the astrologers could predict the influence o f the planets on the
p rin ce’s subsequent life and fortunes. Each year, it was im p o rtan t
to determ ine accurately the m o m e n t o f the spring equinox so that
the astrologers could m ake predictions about the course o f events
for the com ing year.
A t the Safavid court, astrologers w ere persons o f status and
im portance. T h ey took themselves seriously, and expected their
predictions to be believed. In 1625, w hen the O tto m an s w ere
m aking a determ ined eifort to recapture B aghdad, M aw länä
M u h am m ad T ähir YazdT, one o f the astrologers o f the royal
household o f Shäh ‘Abbäs, had m aintained fro m the beginning
o f the siege, on the basis o f the positions o f the stars and other
celestial signs, that the O ttom ans w o u ld n o t succeed; w hen the
Shäh appeared unconvinced, the astrologer dem anded to be
allow ed to jo in the Safavid garrison in the beleaguered city in
o rd er to dem onstrate his confidence in the accuracy o f his ow n
prognostication ! A n interesting rider to this story is that, although
the Shäh granted the astrologer’s request, the Safavid field
com m ander refused to allow the latter to enter B ag h d äd ;64 this
supports the contention that Shäh ‘Abbäs I allow ed his field
com m anders considerable discretion in their conduct o f operations.
A ccording to T hévenot, the court astrologers cost “ yearly vast
sums o f m o n e y ” , and he declares that no class o f society was
im m u n e from the prevalence o f superstition based on astrology:
“ N o t only the Learned and M en o f Letters solicitously apply
themselves to it, b u t even the co m m o n people and soldiers tam per
w ith i t . . . In conversation all their Discourse is o f Spheres,
Apogees, Perigees, Excentricks, E picycles.” 65
Intellectual life under the Safavids 225
226
32. Shäh Safi"
228 Iran under the Safavids
the w o m en o f the haratn, and o f the court eunuchs and other
officials associated w ith the haratn, in political life and in succession
problem s. H ad ‘Abbäs I been follow ed by rulers o f the same
calibre, the decline o f the Safavid dynasty m ig h t have been
postponed, b u t his o w n policies had m ade it unlikely that his
successors w o u ld be w o rth y o f the throne, and his o w n actions
had left h im w ith o u t a son w ho was capable o f taking his place.
‘A bbäs I was succeeded by his grandson Säm MTrzä, the son
o f his eldest son M u h am m ad B äqir, also k n o w n as Safi, w ho took
his father’s nam e o f Safi on his accession on 17 February 1629.
U n d e r Shäh Safi, one o f the policies initiated by ‘Abbäs I, nam ely,
the conversion o f “ sta te ” to “ c ro w n ” provinces, was extended.
Safi’s vaztr, Särü Taqï, p u t fo rw a rd an argum ent w hich the Shäh
found attractive: since the Safavid state was n o w relatively secure
fro m its external enemies, he said, there was no p o in t in allow ing
a large p art o f Safavid territo ry to rem ain in the hands o f qizilbäsh
governors, w ho rem itted little to the royal treasury. T h e Shäh
agreed, and the rich province o f Färs w hich, because o f its distance
fro m Iran ’s eastern and w estern borders, was considered safe from
foreign attack, was converted into a “ c ro w n ” province, and was
adm inistered directly by an overseer on behalf o f the Shäh. It was
Saffs successor, how ever, ‘Abbäs II (1642—66), w h o carried this
policy to dangerous lengths. U n d e r his rule, the provinces o f
QazvTn, Gllän, M äzandarän, Yazd, K irm än, K huräsän and Ä zar-
bäyjän w ere all b ro u g h t under the adm inistration o f the C ro w n
except in tim e o f w ar, w hen qizilbäsh governors w ere reappointed.
This was obviously an unsatisfactory expedient, because the ad
m inistrative infrastructures o f the tw o systems o f go v ern m en t
w ere different, and it was n o t possible to sw itch fro m one to the
o th er overnight. A part fro m that, there w ere serious objections
to the conversion o f key strategic provinces like Khuräsän,
Ä zarbäyjän and K irm än to “ c ro w n ” province status. It is no
coincidence that it was the provinces o f K irm än and K huräsän that
w ere first penetrated by th e A fghän usurpers, because the latter,
fro m ab o u t the year 1705 onw ards, had been able to determ ine
at first hand the appalling state o f m ilitary weakness and u n p re
paredness in those provinces. An early indication o f the alarm ing
extent to w hich Safavid m ilitary p o w e r had declined was the loss
o f B aghdäd to the O tto m an s in 1638, only fourteen years after
its recapture by ‘Abbäs I, and o f the key city o f Q andahär to the
M oguls in the same year.
Decline and fall of the Safavids 229
It is h ard to avoid the suspicion that the Shäh also bent his head
fo rw ard to conceal the broad g rin on his face!
I f ‘Abbäs I was able to m anage his theologians in this w ay, his
234 Iran under the Safavids
successors w ere less and less able to do so. T hey them selves w ere
to a large extent responsible for creating a situation in w hich the
religious classes w ere able to increase their pow er. T he all-
im p o rtan t office o f sadr was left vacant by ‘Abbäs II for eighteen
m o n th s after his accession in 1642, and in 1666 Shäh Sulaym än
divided the sadärat (the office o f the sadr) into a “ c ro w n ” (khässa)
and a “ state” (mamälik) branch. A lthough this was a logical step
in view o f the increased im portance o f the khässa branch o f the
adm inistration, the division o f the office necessarily m eant shared
and therefore w eakened authority. T he sadr continued to be
responsible for the adm inistration o f the awqäf (lands, etc., held
in m o rtm ain for pious purposes), and had certain juridical
functions. T he political role o f the sadr, how ever, was taken over
by the shaykh al-isläm and, during the reign o f S ulaym an’s suc
cessor, Shäh Sultän H usayn, by a n ew religious official term ed
the mullâbâshï. O n e o f the m ost im p o rtan t features o f the period
from ‘Abbäs II onw ards is the greatly enhanced influence o f the
religious classes as a w hole, as they freed them selves progressively
fro m political control. Pow erful theologians em erged o f w hom
a typical exam ple is M u h am m ad B âqir Majlisï, w ho held the office
o f shaykh al-isläm from 1687 and, after the accession o f Shäh Sultän
H usayn in 1694, was appointed to the new office o f mullâbâshï and
held it until his death in 1699. It is ironical that, in a state in w hich
Ithnä ‘AsharT S hfism had fro m the start been the official religion,
it was only in the tw ilig h t o f the Safavid regim e that serious w ork
was done in the fields o f ShTT theology and jurisprudence, in the
form o f the collection and collation o f Shï‘ï traditions,8 com
m entaries on the four Shî‘ï canonical books, and so on. It is
tem pting to speculate w h eth er the Safavid shahs m ay n o t have
been m o re concerned about pow er than about S hfism . As Ithnä
‘AsharT Shihsm was codified u nder the later Safavids and becam e
m ore uncom prom isingly orth o d o x , there was naturally greater
emphasis on the rooting out o f heresy. O n e theologian o f Rasht
entitled H ujjat al-Isläm (P ro o f o f Islam) is said to have p u t to death
seventy persons for various sins or heresies.9
A g ro u p that suffered particularly during this period o f the
persecution o f heretics was the Sufis. T he tightly k n it Süfï
organisation o f the Safavid O rd e r had, in the days before the
establishm ent o f the Safavid state, dissem inated the Safavid da1va,
or propaganda, had guarded the person o f its leader, the murshid-i
D ecline and f a ll o f the Safavids 235
kämil, or perfect spiritual director, and had w o rk ed ceaselessly to
p ro m o te the Safavid revolution. A fter the successful culm ination
o f this revolution, Shäh IsmäTl I had tried to incorporate this Süfï
organisation in the m ore conventional adm inistrative system,
based on the Iranian Islamic tradition, w hich he had inherited
fro m the Ä q Q u y ü n lü , the Q arä Q u y ü n lü and the T im urids. As
w e have seen, the attem p t failed, and the Sufi organisation
rem ained in existence b u t w ith o u t any organic function w ith in
the body politic. A lthough devoid o f any real pow er, the head
o f this organisation, the khalifat al-khulaja, retained considerable
prestige at least up to the tim e o f Shäh Ism â‘ïl IL
T he reason w h y this SüfT organisation had been allow ed to
continue in being long after it had ceased to serve its original
purpose, was that it provided the Safavid shahs w ith a convenient
m echanism w hich could be used to support their o w n legitim acy,
and to w hich they could appeal in the event o f any challenge to
their o w n au th o rity on the p art o f qizilbäsh chiefs and others. A n
essential p a rt o f the relationship betw een any Süfï o r murid
(disciple) and his spiritual director (pïr; shaykh ; murshid) was the
unquestioning obedience o f the disciple to the com m ands o f his
spiritual director. T he basic principles o f the pïr—murid relationship
w ere: “ n o t to leave the side o f one’s murshid in adversity or
p ro sp erity ; to endure patiently all kinds o f m isfortune; and to
p u t acquiescence to the w ill o f the murshid before all w orldly
interests” .10 T he Safavid shahs developed and extended this
relationship in tw o extrem ely significant ways : in the first place,
they transferred to the political plane w h a t was essentially a
religious and m ystical relationship betw een a spiritual director and
a traveller along the via purgativa, T hey w ere able to do this
because they w ere n o t only the murshid-i kämil b u t also the
pädishäh, or tem poral ruler, o f their subjects. D isobedience to the
orders o f the murshid-i kämil, w hich in Sufi O rders w o u ld norm ally
be punished b y penance or by expulsion fro m the O rder, thus
becam e treason against the king and a crim e against the state, and
as such punishable by death. “ C o n d u ct appropriate to a S u fi”
(süfigarï) therefore acquired a new and significant connotation
o f “ loyalty to the k in g ” ; the converse, nä~süßgan, “ conduct
inappropriate to a S üfï” , becam e the equivalent o f “ disloyalty to
the k in g ” and the m ost serious charge that could be levelled
against a person. In tim es o f crisis, the Safavid shahs found it
236 Iran under the Safavids
convenient to invoke the unquestioning devotion to their ow n
persons o f the Süfïs, by appealing to those w ho w ere shähi-sevän
(w ho loved the shah), to com e to their aid.
I f there was the slightest d o u b t about the loyalty o f the khalifat
al-khulajä him self o r o f the other m em bers o f the Süfï organisation,
the shah acted sw iftly to establish his suprem acy. In 1576, Ism â‘ïl
II to o k severe disciplinary measures against the khalifat al-khulaja,
w h o m he had blinded, and he follow ed this up by massacring
i ,200 SüfTs w h o w ere closely associated w ith the khalifat al-khulaja.
T h e charge against the khalifat al-khulaja stated that he had
w ilfully disobeyed an order fro m his murshid-i kämil, nam ely,
Shäh Ismâ‘ïl II, and was therefore rejected or “ beyond the p a le ” .
T h e rapid decline in the status o f the SüfTs, how ever, occurred
after the accession o f ‘Abbäs I. Shäh ‘Abbäs becam e suspicious o f
the SüfTs because, at the beginning o f his reign, they had conspired
to p u t his father, Sultän M u h am m ad Shäh, back o n the throne.
Sultän M uham m ad Shäh was persuaded to incite the Süfïs to seek
a m eeting w ith Shäh ‘Abbäs and to p u t h im the follow ing
question: “ W h o is o u r spiritual d ire c to r? ” T he p o in t o f the
question was that, since Sultän M u h am m ad Shäh was still alive,
he was still their spiritual director and ‘Abbäs a usurper. T he SüfTs
ho p ed th at ‘Abbäs w o u ld be forced to adm it this, and that Sultän
M u h am m ad Shäh w ould be reinstated as their spiritual director
and therefore as king. Shäh ‘Abbäs was forew arned o f the
in ten tio n o f the Süfïs. H e ordered th em to send three repre
sentatives to him if they had anything to discuss. W h en the
delegation arrived, its m em bers w ere executed on the spot, and
the rem ainder o f the Süfïs scattered “ w ith o u t even stopping to
p u t their shoes o n ” . F rom th at tim e on, ‘Abbäs I to o k every
o p p o rtu n ity to reduce the status o f the Süfïs, by ignoring them
and treating them w ith disdain. A few years later, in 1592/3, the
Süfïs incurred the w rath o f Shäh ‘Abbäs again, w hen one o f their
leaders, ShähverdT K hän, G o v ern o r o f Q aräjadägh, was executed
on the grounds that he had collaborated w ith the O tto m an s
d uring their occupation o f T abriz. D isloyalty on the p art o f the
Süfïs fro m Q aräjadägh was view ed particularly seriously b y the
Shäh, because this group had held a position o f special ho n o u r
d u rin g the early Safavid period. ShähverdT K h än ’s father, K halïfa-
yi A nsar Q aräjadäghlü, had been com m andant o f the fortress-
prison o f Q ahqaha, a post given only to the m ost tru stw o rth y
D ecline and f a ll o f the Safavids 237
inferences one m ay d raw from this are alarm ing: either Shah
Sultan H usayn did n o t k n o w w here else he could find a b ody o f
troops to deal w ith an em ergency, o r he had the troops b u t did
n o t trust them . In any event, the Shäh did no t think there was
any cause for alarm , for in 1706 he left the capital and was aw ay
for nearly a year on pilgrim age to the tw o chief ShT‘ï shrines in
Iran, that o f Fatim a the daughter o f the 7th Im am , at Q u m , and
that o f her brother, the 8th Im am ‘A ll al-Rizä, at M ashhad. Shäh
Sultän H usayn to o k w ith him his haram, his court and a retinue
num b erin g 60,000; the cost o f this expedition n o t only drained
the exchequer b u t placed an intolerable b u rden o f additional
taxation on the provinces th ro u g h w hich the royal cavalcade
passed. C om parisons m ay be odious, b u t the picture o f ‘Abbäs I
striding along on foot and covering the distance betw een Isfahän
and M ashhad in tw en ty -eig h t days in 1601, w hen he m ade the
pilgrim age to the shrine o f the 8th Im am , provides a striking
contrast. N o t for n o th in g was Shäh Sultän Husayn derisively
dub b ed ‘‘ M ullä H usayn ” !
T en years after the B aluchi incursion, the m ilitary feebleness
o f the Safavid em pire and, in particular, the defenceless state o f
the eastern frontier, w ere dem onstrated again, and this tim e w ith
m o re serious consequences for the Safavid state. In 1709, the
Ghilzäy Afghäns under their leader, M ir Vays, seized Q andahär
and killed G iorgi X I ; Q andahär had been in Safavid hands since
its recapture b y ‘Abbäs II in 1648. Shäh Sultän H usayn dispatched
fro m Isfahän G iorgi’s nephew , Kay K husraw , bu t the latter was
unable to restore the situation. T here seems to have been friction
betw een h im and the qizilbäsh troops under his com m and, friction
o f a type w hich recalls earlier instances o f dissension betw een the
qizilbäsh and Täjik, i.e., Iranian, com m anders. A lthough K ay
K husraw , like all G eorgians in Safavid em ploy, was a convert to
Islam, in his case, as in m any others, the conversion was purely
nom inal, and this again occasioned friction betw een him and his
M uslim troops. M oreover, K ay K husraw ’s position seems to have
been w eakened by treasury officials and other bureaucrats at
Isfahän w h o strongly resented the hold o f this G eorgian “ dynasty ”
over Shäh Sultän H usayn, and w ho w ithheld or greatly delayed
paym ents to his troops. G eorgi X I had been deposed b y Shäh
255
256 N o tes to p p . 15—32
16 Iskandar Beg Munshï, Tàrïkh-i ‘Älam-ärä-yi ‘Abbàsï, translated by R. M.
Savory, Persian Heritage Series, ed. Ehsan Yarshater, no. 28, 2 vols.
(Boulder, Colorado, 1978), vol. r, p. 28 (transliteration adapted) ; hereinafter
referred to as Shah ‘Abbas.
17 The “ infidel” in this case was the Christian populations o f Circassia,
Georgia and Shïrvân.
18 V. Minorsky, “Jihän-shäh Qarä-qoyünlü and his Poetry”, in Bulletin of
the School of Oriental and African Studies, xvi (1954), p. 274.
19 Shah ‘Abbas, p. 31.
20 Shah ‘Abbas, p. 32.
21 John E. Woods, The Aqquyunlu, Bibliotheca Isiamica (Minneapolis and
Chicago 1976), p. 289.
22 R. M. Savory, “ The Struggle for Supremacy in Persia after the Death of
TTmür”, in Der Islam, xl (1964), p. 58.
23 Savory, “ Struggle”, p. 59 (both quotations).
24 TM , p. i.
25 Those wishing to pursue this idea are referred to my article, “ Some
Reflections on Totalitarian Tendencies in the Safavid State”, in Der Islam,
LIII (1976), pp. 226 - 4 1 .
26 A perversion o f the orthodox Muslim profession o f faith : “ There is no god
but God.”
27 See Michel M. Mazzaoui, The Origin of the Safawids (Wiesbaden 1972), p.
73-
28 See V. Minorsky, “ The Poetry o f Shäh Ismâ‘ÏÏ I”, in Bulletin of the School
of Oriental and African Studies, x (1942), p. 1047a. See also various
publications by T. Gandjei on the subject.
29 See A. S. Tritton, Islam, Belief and Practice (London 1951), p. 83; and
M. G. S. Hodgson, article “ Ghulät”, in EP, vol. 11, pp. 1093—5.
30 See J. Spencer Trimingham, The Sufi Orders in Islam (Oxford 1971), p- 83 ;
and article “ Bektâshiyya” in E l2.
31 Quoted in Mazzaoui, p. 83.
32 Ideals and Realities of Islam (Boston 1972), p. 127.
33 Travels of Venetians in Persia, Hakluyt Society (London 1873), p. 206.
ri Yar-Shater, p, 250.
12 Ahmad, p. 120.
13 Ahmad, pp. r2i; 124.
14 All quotations from Yar-Shater, pp. 221-5.
15 Yar-Shater, p. 222.
16 Yar-Shater, p. 224.
17 Yar-Shater, p. 220.
18 Yar-Shater, p. 225.
19 Yar-Shater, pp. 225-6.
20 Yar-Shater, p. 228.
21 Yar-Shater, p. 237.
22 Yar-Shater, pp. 240—1.
23 Browne, vol. iv, p. 251.
24 Browne, vol. iv, p. 165.
25 Yar-Shater, p. 240.
26 Browne, vol. iv, p. 252.
27 Browne, vol. iv, p. 251.
28 Browne, vol. iv, p. 229.
29 Quoted in Browne, vol. iv, p. 242.
30 Yar-Shater, p. 244.
31 Yar-Shater, pp. 244-5.
32 H. A. R. Gibb, “ Ta’rïkh”, reprinted in Studies in the Civilization of Islam
(Boston 1962), p. 134.
33 Browne, vol. iv, p. 107.
34 Chicago 1974, vol. m, p. 42.
35 “ Persian Biographical Literature”, in Historians of the Middle East, eds.
B. Lewis and P. M. Holt (Oxford 1962), p. 147-8.
36 “ The Historiography o f Ottoman—Safavid Relations in the 16th and 17th
Centuries”, in Historians of the Middle East, eds. Lewis and Holt, p. 200,
n. 8).
37 See, for example, T. J. de Boer, The History of Philosophy in Islam (1903;
repr. N ew York, 1967).
38 Quoted in Browne, vol. iv, p. 425.
39 Seyyed Hossein Nasr, Three Muslim Sages (Cambridge, Mass., 1964), pp.
55-6.
40 Nasr, Sages, pp. 58-9.
41 Nasr, Sages, p. 64.
42 Particularly A. von Kremer; see Nasr, Sages, p. 154, n. 44.
43 Nasr, Sages, p. 80.
44 Browne, vol. iv, p. 429.
45 Seyyed Hossein Nasr, “ Religion in Safavid Persia”, in Iranian Studies, vn
(1974): Studies on Isfahan Part I, p. 278.
46 Seyyed Hossein Nasr, “ Sadr al-Din Shirazi, his Life, Doctrines and
Significance”, in Indo-Iranica, xiv (1961), p. 8.
47 Nasr, “ Sadr”, p. 6.
48 Nasr, “ Sadr”, p. 9.
49 Nasr, “ Sadr”, p. 9.
50 Nasr, “ Sadr”, p. 10.
51 Nasr, “ Sadr”, p. 14. For fuller details o f Mulla Sadrä’s doctrines, the reader
2 6 6 N otes to p p . 220—38
is referred to the works o f Seyyed Hossein Nasr and Henri
Corbin.
52 Nasr, “ Sadr”, pp. 15—16.
53 See Cyril Elgood, “ Persian Science”, in Legacy of Persia, ed. A. J. Arberry
(Oxford 1953 ), P- 293.
54 Elgood, “ Science”, p. 300.
55 Max Meyerhof, “ Science and Medicine”, in The Legacy of Islam, eds.
T. W. Arnold and Alfred Guillaume (London, Toronto and New York
1931), p. 325.
56 Meyerhof, p. 323.
57 Meyerhof, pp. 329-30.
58 Cyril Elgood, Safavid Medical Practice (London 1970)» P- 18..
59 Jean de Thévenot, Travels of M. de Thévenot into the Levant, newly done
out o f the French [by A. Lovell], part 11: Persia (London 1687), p. 88.
60 Elgood, Medical Practice, p. 154.
61 Elgood, “ Science”, p. 317.
62 Elgood, Medical Practice, p. 30.
63 Elgood, Medical Practice, p. 285.
64 Shah ‘Abbas, vol. 11, p. 1038.
65 Thévenot, p. 105.
66 O. Wright, “ Music” in The Legacy of Islam, new edn, eds. Joseph Schacht
with C. E. Bosworth (Oxford 1974), p. 489.
14 Zikr-i khafi: “ the $ikr which is uttered silently in the heart”. Zikr-i ja lï:
“ the zikr which is uttered audibly”.
15 Browne, vol. iv, p. 369.
16 Amin Banani, “ The Social and Economic Structure o f the Safavid Empire
in its Heyday ”, a paper submitted to the Harvard Colloquium on Tradition
and Change in the Middle East, December 1967, p. 6.
17 Sir John Chardin, Voyages du Chevalier Chardin en Perse, et autres lieux de
l’Orient, 10 vols. (Amsterdam 1711), vol. vi, p. 26 (my translation).
18 Chardin, vol. vi, p. 30 (my translation).
19 Carmelites, vol. 1, p. 421.
20 Dïvânbegï: in later Safavid times, the highest legal authority in the state.
His court was the highest court o f appeal.
21 Laurence Lockhart, The Fall of the Safavi Dynasty and the Afghan Occupation
of Persia (Cambridge 1938), p. 99, quoting the contemporary Safavid
historian, Muhammad Muhsin.
22 Lockhart, p. 104.
23 Lockhart, p. 107.
24 Lockhart, p. 108.
25 Lockhart, p. h i . The account of the Afghan invasion and occupation
which follows is based in the main on Lockhart.
26 Mullâbâshï: during the reign of Shah Sultan Husayn, we find an official
by this title as head of the religious classes. His powers clearly exceeded those
of the sadr.
27 Lockhart, p. 125.
28 I am indebted to my friend, Dr E. Llewellyn-Thomas, for this diagnosis.
29 For the text o f this Treaty, see J. C. Hurewitz, Diplomacy in the Near and
Middle East, 2 vols. (Princeton 1956), vol. 1, pp. 42-5.
30 Lt.-Col. P. M. Sykes, A History of Persia, 2 vols. (London 1915)» vol. 11,
P- 3 3 0 .
31 For full details o f the Safavid pretenders who appeared after the deposition
o f Shah Sultan Husayn, seej. R. Perry, “ The Last Safavids (1772-1773)”,
in Iran, ix (1971), pp. 59-69.
32 Perry, p. 68.
In d ex
268
Index 269
French, 108, 195, 200 Hasan MTrza (son of Shäh ‘Abbäs I), 94-5
French East India Company, 120, 126, 200 Hasan Pasha, 42
Fryer, John, 119, 166, 170, 191, 200 Hasht Bihisht, 169-70
futuvva, 182, 185 Hâtifî, 203
aUHâwï (Liber Continens), 220
Gabristän, 175 Haydar MTrza (son of Tahmäsp I), 68-9
Gama, Vasco da,. 106 Haydar, Sulçân, 18-20, 23, 44, 65, 67
Ganja, 77 HayratT, MTrza, 206
Gardane, Chevalier Ange de, 124. Hazarjanb, 156, 172-4
Genoese, 105, 108, in HazTn, 208
Georgia, 17, 52, 64-5, 72, 77, 88, 155, 245 Henry, King of France, 109
Georgians, 5, 64-9, 78, 81, 88, 92, 170, 184, Henry the Navigator, Prince, 106
243, 246 Herbert, Sir Thomas, 118, 174—5
Gerard of Cremona, 221 HilälT, 203
Germany, 140 Hilla, 90
GhadTr Khumm, 27 Hindus, 175— 6, 216
ghazal, “lyric”, 214 Hindustan, 133
Ghäzän Khan, 10 Hisär-i Shädmän, 36
Ghilzäys, 245 History of Ottoman Poetry, 211
Ghujduvän, 37, 38 History of Shäh ‘Abbas the Great, see Târïkh-i
ghulämän-i khä$$a-yi sharïfa, “slaves of the ‘Äläm-ärä-yi ‘Abbäst
royal household”, 65, 78—82, 87—8, 91—2, Holland, 125, 175
170, 184, 229, 249 Holy Land, the, 105
ghuläms, see ghulamân-i khassa-yi sharïfa Hülegü (Ilkhän), 220
GhurürT, 131 Humäyün (Mogul Emperor), 66-7
Gibson, William, 199 Hurmüz, 10, 106-^7, 112-19, *25, 194-6, 199,
Gflän, i, 4, 6, 11, 21, 22, 25, 37, 52, 141, 196, 229
228, 248, 252 Husayn, 27
Giorgi XI, 241, 243-6 Husayn Bäyqara, Sultän, 128
Goa, 107, 113, 116 Husayn, Shäh Sultän, 122, 125, 168, 191, 198,
Golconda, 204 215, 234, 238-9, 241, 243-53
Gombroon, 148 Husayn ‘AITBeg Bayât, 109-10
Gouveia, Antonio de, 115 Husayn Beg Lala Shämlü, 32, 36-7* 42, 50
Greeks, 104, 216, 221, 224 Husayn Isfahan!, MTrzä Shäh, 38, 47, 48
Gujerat, 195, 200 Husayn Khän Shâmlü, 54— 6, 58, 61
Gulistän, 25, 44 Husayn Kiyä ChulävT, Amïr, 35
Gulnäbäd, 249 Husayn Qui! Khulafa Rümlü, 78
Gurgän, 35
Ibn ‘Arabî, 219
Habib al-Siyar, 129 Ibn Baçtûta, 154
Hafiz, 85, 151, 154, 203, 208 Ibn Bazzâz, 3
Hâfiz Ahmad Pasha, 89, 90 Ibn Khaldün, 216
Haft Aurang, 133 Ibn Rushd, 215
haft-rang, haft-rangï, “polychrome”, 148, 162 Ibn Sînâ, 217-18, 221-2
Hakim al-Dm BitlTsT, 41 Ibn al-Tirmiz, 222
hakïm-bâshï, “chief physician”, 221, 247 Ibrâhîm, Shaykh, 15-16
Hamadan, 14, 35, 55, 121, 202, 253 Ibrâhîm, Sultan, 20, 25
hammättiy “public baths”, 165 Ibrâhîm b. Adham, 3-4
Hamza Mîrzâ, 70-6 Ibrâhîm Pasha, 58
Han, Chapelle de, 183 Ilkhäns/Ilkhanids, 10-11
Hanway, Jonas, 229 Imâm Qulî Khän, 82, 115-17, 119, 229, 231
haram, 57, 64, 68, 73, 94-5, 122, 169, 175, Imäm Qulî MTrza (son of Shäh ‘Abbas I), 95
226, 228, 239, 241, 243 Imäms (Ithnä ‘Asharî), 2-3, 15, 19, 23, 28-9,
haram-khäna, 10 33. 71, 93. 101, 151, 185, 204, 206-7, 2i8,
Harât, 11, 29, 36, 48, 51, 53-4, 57, 60, 68, 71, 243
74“5, 77, 83- 4. 128, 203, 245, 247 India, 45, 66, 100, 106, 112-13, 141, 151, 167,
Härünäbäd, 89 193-4, 201, 205-6, 209, 218, 225
Hasan, Üzün, 17-21, 43-4, 105 Indian genre; Indian style, 204, 207—11
2 7 2 Index
Indian Ocean, ioö, 118-19, I25>J93>200 Jerusalem, 15
Indians, 175, 191, 200, 202 Jesuits, 120, 176, 229
Indies, the, 104, no, 194 Jews, 158, 175, 187, 197, 231, 251
Iran, Iranians, passim Jibrâ’ïl, Amïn al-Dïn, 5
Iraq, 196, 202 jihäd, “holy war”, 65
‘Iräq-i ‘Ajam, 25, 85, 87 jinn, “spirits”, “genies”, 4
‘Iriq-i ‘Arab, 62, 88 jira, “payment in kind”, “rations”, 188— 9
Isfahan, 14, 48, 54, 63, 83—5, 95^6, 100-1, Joseph, Père, 120
103, 107, 109, 113, 116, 120-1, 124-^7, 131, Julfa, 60, 100, 174
136, 139, 141, 144-5, H9, 154-5, 162-3, Julfa (suburb of Isfahän), roo, 120, 174-6, 198
165, 170, 172-3, 175-6, 179, 183, 186, 195, Junayd, Sultän, 16-17, 23, 65, 67
197-8, 201, 209, 211, 217, 231-2, 243-4,
248-53 kadkhuda, 182
Isfaranjân, 4 Kaempfer, 176
Ishaq Ardabïll, Shaykh Safi! al-Dïn kafir, “infidel”, 4
Abul-Fath, see Safi al-DTn, Shaykh Kalah Bar, 194
ishik-äqäsi, 48 kaläntar, “mayor”, 71, 122, 174-5, 182, 189
ishïk-âqâsi-bâshi, “Grand Marshal”, 92 Kalkhvurän, 4
IshräqT; Ishräqiyya, 216, 218—19 Karbalä, 89, 101
Iskandar Beg MunshT, 15, 46, 89, 185, 206-7, Karmiyän, 40
213, 215 Karpivicz, Dolmet, 112
Iskandar Pasha, 63 Käshän, 40, 63, 85, 95, 137, 139, 141, 144,
Islam, 4, 65, 105, 115, 130, 197, 217-19, 225, 206
231, 251 KasravT, Sayyid Ahmad, 2, 13
Ismä‘11 Khän, 247 Kay Khusraw, 243—4, 246
Ismä‘HMTrzä, see Isma‘ïl II, Shäh Käzimayn, 89, 101
Ismä‘Tl MTrzä (son of Shäh ‘Abbäs I), 95 Ketelaar, Joan Josua, 125— 6
Ismâ‘ïl I, Shäh, 10, 20-7, 29-42, 45-52, KhadTja Begum, 17
56— 9, 62, 65, 67, 84, 106—8, 128—
9, 137, khalifa/khalifas, 23, 27, 39
138, 206, 233, 235 KhalTfa-yi Ansär Qaräjadäghlü, 236
Ismä‘TI II, Shäh, 64, 68^70, 78, 82, 92, 235-6 khalifat al-khulaß, 16, 78, 235^7
IsmäH III, Shäh, 254 Khalil Pasha, 88
Ismä‘TlTs, 162 Khalil Sultän, 18, 44
Istakhr, 20 khamsa(h), 133
Istanbul, 42, 62, 121, 136, 196, 202, 251, 252 KhäqänT, 214
Italians, 108, 120 khâssa, “subject to ‘crown’, as opposed to
Ithnä ‘Asharï Shi‘ism, 2, 23—4, 26-30, 40, 66, ‘state’ administration”, 65, 80, 184, 226,
93, 162, 204, 234 234
ïtimàd al-dawla, “trusty support of the state” Khatä’T(pen-name of Shäh Ismä‘11 I), 23, 206
(title of the vazir), 92, 177 Khuräsän, it, 29, 35-6, 38, 46, 53, 57, 59, 68,
i'tiräf “confession” (Süfï ceremony), 237 72-7, 83-5, 94, 101, 128, 138, 150, 153.
Ivan the Terrible, Tsar, m —12 203, 228, 247, 252
‘Ivaz, 4 khutba, “formal address in a mosque”, 29,
36, 65
Jabrids, 106 Khüzistän, 63
Ja'far SâvajT, Amïr, 56 Khväju bridge, 171
JägTrlü, 13 KhvändamTr, Ghiyäth al-DTn, 129
JahängTr (Mogul emperor), 205, 207 al-Khvârazmï, 220
Jahänshäh, 17 Khvuy, 41, 63
Jala’irids, n, 13 King's Book of Kings, 129-30
Jäm, 53-4, 57, 59, 60, 138 Kirkuk, 89
James I, King of England, 110 Kirmän, 11, 25, 35, 141, 147, 187, 228, 241,
JämT, 133, 203, 211 246—8
JänTBeg Sultän, 53— 4 Köpek Sultän Ustäjlü, 51-2
Jarün, see Bandar ‘Abbäs Krusinski, Fr Tadeusz Juda, 140-1, .229, 250
Jäsk, 113-14, 195 Kubachi, 147-8
Jeghäl-oghlü Pasha, 87 Kührang (river), 96, 156
Jenkinson, Anthony, 59, 111-12 Kur (river), 17, 25
Index 273
Kurds, 37, 88, 251 Medina, 105
Kurdistan, 2, 23, 58, 61-3, 77 Mediterranean, 1, 40, 104— 6, 196
Melo, Nicolao de, 109
Lähljän, 21— 2, 25, 39 Meskhia, 88
lala, “guardian”, 39, 48, 56, 66, 68, 94 Mesopotamia, 1, 11, 101, 113
Le Havre, 124 Michel, Pierre Victor, 122, 245
Lenin, 22 mihräb, “prayer-niche”, 163, 165
Levan (Leon), 244 Mildenhall, John, 113
Levant, 105, 193, 196, 202 milk, “private estates”, 9
Levant Company, 108—10, 112, 201 Minorsky, Vladimir, 22, 31, 34, 47, 81, 188
London, 112—13, 137, 189, 199 Mir Dämäd, see Muhammad Bäqir, Mir
Louis XIV, King of France, 120, 122 Mir Vays, 243-5
Ludovic II, King of Hungary, 108 Miranda, Diego de, 107
Luristän, 77 MIrzä Khän, 71— 2
Lutf ‘All Agar Begdïlï, 208 Mithras, 104
Lutf ‘All Khän, 247 Moguls, 45, 66-7, 83, 167, 183, 192, 204-7,
210, 213, 228, 232
madrasas, “theological seminaries”, 95, 148, Mongols, 1, 9-10, 15, 23, 32, 105, 108, 140,
165-6, 176 144, 148, 192, 213, 220, 231
Madrasa-yi Mädar-i Shäh, 168 Monnox, Edward, 117
Madrid, 110 Montesquieu, 122
Mahd-i ‘Ulyâ, 70-4, 218 Morea, the, 40
MahdT, 2, 27, 33, 93, 101, 233 Moscow, 109
Mahmud (Afghan chief), 244-6, 248—50, 252 Mosnier, Père, 121
Mahmüd of Ghazna, Sultän, 208 Mosul, 89— 90
Mahmud, Jänl Beg, 12 mu'arraq, “mosaic”, 148
Mahmüd Shäh, 117 mu'ayyir-bäsht, “controller of assay”, 183
Makrän, 106, 229 Muhammad (the Prophet), 27, 185
Malabar, 194 Muhammad ‘All Beg, 183
Malacca, 119, 194 Muhammad ‘Ämill, Shaykh Bahä al-Dïn, see
Malay Archipelago; Malaya, 194 Shaykh Bahä!
Malcolm, Sir John, 33, 103, 177— 9, 182 Muhammad Bäqir MajlisI, 234, 237—8, 251
mamälik, “‘state’ provinces”, 79— 80, 184, Muhammad Bäqir, Mir, 217—18, 233
226, 234 Muhammad Bäqir MIrzä (also known as Safi
Mamlän b. Vahsüdän (Ravadid), 2 MIrzä; son of Shäh ‘Abbäs I), 94, 228
Mamlüks, 43, 105, 108 Muhammad Beg, 183, 231
Mani, Manichaeism, 104 Muhammad Beg Ustäjlü, see Châyân Sultan
Mans, Père Raphael du, 120 Muhammad Häfiz, 4
al-Mansür (‘Abbasid Caliph), 96 Muhammad, Hâjjï, Shams al-Dïn, 6, 9
Marägha, 11, 220 Muhammad Husayn Khâtünâbâdî, Mir, 251
Marand, 62 Muhammad Husayn mullabâshï, 247
Mar‘ash, 45 Muhammad Khän Qazvlnl, MIrzä, 203— 7
Marseilles, 121 Muhammad Khän Ustäjlü, 41— 2
Marv, 35-6, 84, 128 Muhammad Khudäbanda, see Muhammad
Maryam Begum, 245 Shäh, Sultän
Mashhad, 15, 75, 77, 83, 94, 96, 101, 131, Muhammad MIrzä, see Muhammad Shäh,
141, 144, 147, 243, 245 Sultän
Masjid-i Jum‘a, 162, 232 Muhammad MIrzä (son of Shäh ‘Abbäs I), 95
Masjid-i Shäh, 96, 131, 162—3, 167, 232 Muhammad Pasha, 88
Masjid-i Shaykh Lutf Alläh, 96, 131, 162—3 Muhammad Qäsim, 135
Mas‘üd-i Sa‘d-i Salman, 205 Muhammad Rizä Beg, 122, 124
Ma‘sum Beg Safavl, 68 Muhammad Shäh, Sultän, 56, 66, 70-3, 75-6,
mathnavï, “poem in rhymed couplets”, 214 83, 92, 94, 206, 236, 251
Mathnavî-yi Ma'navï, 214 Muhammad, Shaykh, 133
Maydän-i Naqsh-i Jahän, 96, 155— 6, 158-60, Muhammad Shlbänl Khän, 35— 6
162-3, 165-6, 170, 179, 186 Muhammad, Sultän* 137
Mäzandarän, 35, 71, 73, 85, 96, 190, 228, 252 Muhammad Tähir Yazdl, Mawlänä, 224
Mecca, 15, 205, 244 Muhammad Taql Majlisl, 237
274 Index
Muhammad Zamän Khän, 244 Olearius, Adam, 183, 191
Muhtasham KäshT, Mawlänä, 206-7 Öljeitu, 10
Muhyï al-DTn, 6 Oman, 118
Mu‘în Musavvir, 135 Ori, Israel, 244-5, 247
Mu‘izzî, 214 Osborne, Edward, 112
mujtahids, “eminent doctors of ShTClaw”, Ossetes, 18
93-4, 186, 217, 237-9, 241 Ottomans, passim
Mullä Sadrä ShlräzT, 206, 217— 20 Ouseley, Sir William, 172
mullâbâskï, 234, 247, 251, 253 Oxus, 19, 36, 84
munajjim, “astronomer, astrologer”, 224 özbegs, 29, 35-8, 53, 57-8, 60, 72, 75-6,
Muqän, 2, 4, 25 83-5, 109, 125, 155
Murad (Ottoman prince), 40
Muräd III, Sulçân, 64, 72 pädishäh, “king”, 20, 32
Muräd Pasha, 87 Parï Khän Khänum, 70-1, 206
Murad, Sultän (Äq Quyünlü), 23-6, 29 Paris, 121-3, 154
Muratowicz, Sefer, 139 Parthians, 104
murid, “disciple”, 4, 39, 46, 78, 235 Passarovitz, Treaty of, 251
murshid, “spiritual director”, 14, 46, 235 Persia, 32, 138-9, 145, 178-9, 191, 197, 201,
murshid-i kämil, “perfect spiritual director”, 203-6, 218, 221
3, 16, 27, 32, 39, 48, 6i, 78, 101, 234-3, Persians, passim
236 Persian Gulf, 17, 100, 106-7, 112-13, 116-19,
Murshid Qulï Khän Ustajlü, 74—5, 77, 82, 125, 155, 193-6, 199-202, 229
Pessoa, Balthasar, 107
91 Peter the Great, Tsar, 126, 244-6, 248, 250,
Müsä, Sadr al-Milla va’l-Din, see Sadr al-DTn,
Shaykh 252
Müsä al-Käzim, 3 Petit, Marie, 121— 2
Muscat, 118, 125, 247 Petrus, Khväja, 175
Muscovy Company, 1.11—12, 196 Pharmacopoea Persica, 222
Muslims, 65, 175^-6, 205, 215-16, 224 Philip III, King of Spain, 109-10, 115—16
Muçtafa I, Sultän, 88 pidar-farzandi, 25
mutavalli, “administrator of lands, etc., ptr, “spiritual director”, 235, 238
donated for religious purposes”, 185— 6 pira, 16, 39
Plato, 217
Nädir Khän Afshär, see Nädir Shäh Poland, 196
Nädir Shäh, 100, 126, 215, 252-3 Poland, King of, 109
Nä7n, 148 Pope, A. Upham, 136, 138, 147-9, 163
Najaf, 89, 101 Portugal, 44, 100, 106-7, JI5
Najafabad, 155 Portuguese, 100, 106-7, h i , 113-20, 125,
Nakhchivän, 26, 52, 63, 86, 122 158, 193-6. 229
Nä$ir al-DTn Shäh Qäjär, 166, 222 Prague, 109
NasTr al-DTn TusT, 220 Prester John, 105
Näsir-i Khusraw, 162 Pul-i ST-u-Sih, see AllähverdT Khän bridge
na$$, “designation”, 25 Pythagoras, 217
nâ-süfîgart, “conduct inappropriate to a
Süfï”, 235, 237 qabaq-andäzt, “archery contest”, 160
Nasüh Pasha, 87-8 Qahqaha, 63, 68-9, 236
Nawrüz (New Year’s Day), 159 Qäjärs, 25, 52, 100, 166, 184, 215, 252, 254
nâzir, “superintendent of the royal qalam-kär, 141
workshops”, 183 Qandahar, 45, 66-7, 83, 228, 231-2, 243-7,
Nazîrï, 209 253
Netherlands, 200 al-Qänün fi'l-Tibb (“Canon of Medicine”),
Newberie, John, 112, 195 221
Nihävand, 85 qapi-qullarï, “slaves of the Porte”, 79
Nizâm al-Dïn ‘Abd al-Bâqï, Amïr, 42 Qarä Quyünlü, 11, 13, 15, 17—19, 105, 235
NizämT, 133 Qaräbägh, 72, 74. 77. »7. Hl
North Africa, 105 Qaräjadägh, 77, 236
Norway, in Qarämän, 62
Nür ‘AITKhalTfa, 31, 40-1 Qarchaqäy Beg, 87—8, 92
Index 275
Qârç, 87 Sa'dï, isi, IS3
qa$ïda(h), “ode”, 131, 214 Sâdiqï Beg Afshâr, 131, 133
Qavâm al-Dïn Shïrâzï, Mïr, 218 çadârat (office of $adr), 234
Qayçariyya, 96, 162, 165-6, 186 $adr (head of the religious institution), 30, 33,
Qâzï Khän, 87-8 35, 42, 87, 93, 233-4
qâzîs, “religious judges”, 35 Sadr al-Dïn, Shaykh, 6, 9-13
Qazvïn, 53, 63, 67, 69-75, 84-6, 109, n i, Sadr al-Dïn Shïrâzï, see Mullâ Sadrâ Shïrâzï
155, 189, 228, 245^7, 249-SO, 252 $adr-i azam, “exalted seat of honour” (title
Qipchaq, 12 of the vazir), 92
Qisa$ al-U lama, 238 Safavid, Safavids, passim
Qishm, 116-17, 119 Safavid Order; Safaviyya, 3, 8-9, 11-12,
qizilbâsh, “Turcoman tribal aristocracy”, 15-17, 20-2, 31-2, 36, 38, 40, 48» 234
passim Safï (son of Shäh Sulçân Husayn), 250
qullar-âqâsï, “commander of the ghulâms or Safï Mïrzâ, see Sulaymän, Shah
qullar”, 92 Safï, Shah, 80, 82, 89, 175, 199, 228-9, 231
Qum, 63, 73, 153, 219, 243 Safï al-Dïn, Shaykh, 3, 5-6, 8-11, 14-15, 93
Qur’an, 4, 10, 130, 218 Safvat al-Safi, 3
qürchïs, “qizilbâsh tribal cavalry”, 92 Sâ’ib, 203, 208, 211, 213
qûrchîbâshï, “commander of the qurchis", 34, Salmân, Mïrzâ, 70-2, 74, 76
42, 56, 92, 231, 244 Sam Mïrzâ (son of Shäh Ismâ'ïl I), 48, 54, 56,
59, 63, 208
Rabâç-i Pariyän, 84 Säm Mïrzâ, see Safï, Shah
rähdärs, “road guards”, 191 samà1, “ritual dance practised by Süfïs”, 238
Rahïm Khän hakim-bashi, 247 Samarqand, 36
Rângïn, 4 Sâmarrâ, 89, 101
Ra’s al-Khayma, 116 Sanson, Nicolas, 93
Rashïd, Sailli al-Dïn, 4 santür, “psaltery”, 225
Rashïd al-Dïn, 10 Saracens, 105
Rasht, 37, 95, 141» 234, 248 Sarakhs, 75
Rayy, 61 sardâr-i lashkar, “ commander-in-chief of the
al-Râzï, 220-1 armed forces”, 92
Red Sea, 118, 194 San, 97
Rhazes, see al-Râzï Sârü Pïra Ustäjlü, 42
Richelieu, Cardinal, 120 Sârü Taqï, 228, 231
Rigordi, Père François, 120 Sasanids, Sasanians, 27, 104, 139, 179
rîsh-safid, “greybeard, tribal elder”, 51 Sâva, 141, 148
Rizâ ‘Abbâsî, 131, 133-4, 135— 6, 141 sayyid, “person claiming descent from the
Rizâ, Imam, see ‘Alï al-Rizâ Prophet”, 4, 186
Rizâ Qulî Hidâyat, 205, 208 Scandinavia, 112, 196
Romans, 104, 221 Scotland, King of, 109
Royal Bazaar, see Qayçariyya Selim, Sulçân, 36, 40-3
Royal Mint, 165 Selim II, Sultan, 64
Royal Mosque, see Masjid-i Shäh Seljuqs, 144, 148, 162, 208
Rudolf II, King of Bohemia, 109 Shähjahän (Mogul emperor), 205
Rüm, 14 Shäh Mahmüd, 129
Rumania, 202 shâhï-sevân, “those who love the Shah”, 78,
Rümï, Jaläl al-Dïn, 214 83, 236
Rümlüs, 25, 51, 69 Shâhnâma, 130, 133
Russia, 113» 126, 140, 196, 202, 252 Shahrazür, 89
Russians, 126, 147 Shährukh (Timurid), 15, 128
Rustam (Äq Quyünlü), 20-2 Shâhverdï Khän, 236
Rustam Muhammad Sa‘dlü, 248 Shakkï, 66
Rypka, Jan, 205 Shamakhï, 18
Shamkhäl, 71
Sa‘ädatabäd, 175 Shämlüs, 25, 51, 53-5, 73-5, 77
sabk-i hindi, see Indian genre Shäpür I, 104
Sabür b. Sahl, 222 SharafJahän, Mïrzâ, 206
Sabzavâr, 11 Sharür, 26, 52
276 Index
shaykh, “spiritual director”, 235 Tahmäsp MIrzä, 74
Shaykh Baha’i, 155, 204, 233 Tahmäsp I, Shäh, 10, 41, 48, 51-60, 62-9, 73,
Shaykh Hurr-i Amull, 204 76-8, 89, 91, 93-4, 107, in-12, 129, 131,
shaykh al-isläm, 234 134, 136-7, 156, 185, 204, 206-8, 233
Shaykh Lutf Allah Mosque, see Masjid-i Tahmäsp II, Shäh, 126, 249—53
Shaykh Luff Allah täj (distinctive headgear of the qizilbäsh), 20
Sherley, Sir Anthony, 43, 109—10 Tajiks, 31-3, 37-8, 67, 71-2, 74, 91-2, 133,
Sherley, Sir Robert, 43, 100, 109-10, 118 185-6
Shibll Nu‘mänl, 209—11 Takkalüs, 25, 51, 53, 55, 58, 61-2, 73'
ShTIs, 23, 27, 35, 39- 40, 54, 66 Tälib-i Ämull, 209, 211
Shïr al-Ajam, 209 Tamerlane, see Tîmür
Shiraz, 5— 6, 54, 63, 70, 113, 115, 120, 147, Tärlkh-i ‘Älatn-ärä-yi ‘Abbäsl, 14, 46, 215
154, Ï95, 219, 253 Tatars, 32
Shîrvân, 17-19, 35, 59, 62, 66, 68, 72, 85, Tavernier, Jean Baptiste, 173, 175— 6, 179,
h i , 141, 246, 251 182-3, 187, 190-1,202
ShTrvänshäh, 17—18, 25 tawba, “act of renunciation or repentance”, 6
Sigismund III Vasa, King of Poland, 129 tawliyat, “office of mutavalli”, 185— 6
Silsilat al-Nasab-i Safaviyya, 3— 4, 14 Tagkirat al-Mulûk, 188
Silva y Figueroa, Don Garcia de, 116 Tehran, 122, 222, 247, 252
Sinan Beg, 63 Tekke, 40
sipqhsälär, “ commander-in-chief of the armed Terki, 250
forces”, 92 Thévenot, Jean de, 96, 119, 179, 190-1, 197,
Sîstân, 54, 83, 252 200, 221, 224
SIvas, 41, 87 Tibb-i Shifi’t, 222
Smidt, Jan, 200 Tigris, 89-90
Spain, Spaniards, 44, 100, 107, 109, 115—16, timcha, “shopping arcade”, 165
120 Tîmür, 13-15, 45, 105, 205
Steele, Richard, 113 Timurids, 35, 128, 149-50, 235
Struys, Jean, 176 tiyûl, “land assignment”, 52, 79, 185
Süfîs, 3, 8, 14, 16-17, 20, 22-3, 31, 39-40, 46, Togan, Zeki Velidi, 2
48, 52, 78, 91, 150, 182, 204, 218, 225, Transoxania, 35, 37-9, 60-1, 84, 205, 209
23 4 -7 Trebizond, 18
süßgan, “conduct appropriate to a Süfï”, 235 tufangchi-äqäsl, “commander of the
Sufism, 24, 39, 93, 204 musketeers”, 92
Süfiyän, battle of, 87, 90 tufangchiyän, “musketeers”-, 59, 79
Süfiyän-i Rümlü, 14 Tukfa-i Sâmï, 203
sufracht, “sewer”, 50 tüpchï-bâshï, “commander-in-chief of
Suhravard, 216 artillery”, 59, 92
SuhravardI, Shihäb al-Dïn Yahyä, 216-19 tüpchiyän, “gunners”, 58, 79
Sulaymän Mirza (son of Tahmäsp I), 69 Tuqät, 31
Sulaymän, Shäh, 3, 120, 124, 191, 226, 232, Türän, 36, 60
234, 238-9, 241, 243—5, 250 Turcoman/Turcomans, passim
Süleymän, Sultän, 57, 59, 60-4, 67, 89, 107—8 Turks, 32, 36, 38, 48, 57, 64, 76, 93, 105, 108,
Sulçâniyya, 52, 61 158, 184-5, 193, 211, 225, 241, 252
Sumatra, 200 Turkey, 100, 112, 197, 209, 246, 248, 251-2
Sunnis, 28-9, 252 Turkmans (qizilbäsh tribe), 73
Surat, 200 T ûs,5 3
Survey of Persian Art, 149 Tuscany, Grand Duke of, 109
suyürghäl, “immunities”, 12-13, 186
Syria, 8, 10, 17, 20, 25, 30, 43, 62, 104, 113, ‘Ubayd Alläh Khän, 53— 4» 57, 60
196, 202, 246 Ukraine, 1, 196
Uläma, 61— 2
tabarra iyän, “members of a corps of ShTI ‘ulamä, “theologians”, 29, 30, 33, 185, 216.
militants”, 28 233» 239>244
Tabarsarän, 17—18 ulkä, “tribal district”, 50, 81
Tabriz, 1, 11-12, 21-2, 26-7, 29, 35, 42, 45, ‘Umar, 27
51-2, 54, 61-4, 74-5, 85-7, 105, 128-9, ‘Umar Khayyam, 220
138, 148, 150, 183, 202, 236 ‘Unsuri, 214
Index 2 7 7