SAFAVID

säfäˈwēd, Iranian dynasty (1499–1736), that established Shiite Islam in Iran as an official state religion. The Safavid state provided both the territorial and societal foundations of modern Iran. Founded by Shah Ismail, this Turkic-speaking dynasty claimed descent from a Shiite Sufi order. Shiite views, propagated with the help of clerics recruited from Jabal Amil (today in Lebanon) and Iraq, endowed Iran with an identity distinct from its Sunni neighbors. The consolidation of Safavid rule was completed during the reign of Shah Abbas I. Recognizing his military inferiority vis-à-vis the Ottoman Sultanate, Abbas accepted the Ottoman occupation of the western parts of his domain and was thus able to concentrate his efforts on creating a standing army and halting Uzbek incursions from the east. He established Isfahan as his capital and transformed it into an architectural showcase. The strategic location of Iran and Safavid animosity toward the Ottomans, who were a continuing threat to European powers, generated European interest. Shah Abbas received numerous European legations and, with the help of English warships, conquered Hormoz, the Portuguese colony at the entrance of the Persian Gulf. His project to create a major competing maritime trade center at Bandar-i Abbas failed. Benefiting from a change in the balance of power, he expanded into Ottoman territory, annexing the holy Shiite cities of Karbala and Najaf. A period of upheaval followed his death, during which Ottoman pressure from the west and Mughal attacks from the east led to substantial territorial losses. Shah Abbas II (1642–66) attempted to eliminate bureaucratic corruption, and gained a peace, largely due to the military exhaustion of Iran's neighbors. Shah Husayn (1694–1722) devoted his energy to reconquering the island of Bahrayn, ignoring the opposition centered in Afghanistan. In 1722, Afghan forces entered Isfahan and forced Husayn to abdicate, putting an effective end to Safavid rule. The final blow came in 1736 when the Afshar Nadir, regent of young Abbas III, deposed him, becoming shah himself (see Nadir Shah).

See L. Lockhart, The Fall of the Safavi Dynasty (1958); I. Munshi, History of Shah Abbas the Great (1978); R. Savory, Iran under the Safavids (1980).

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The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

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books on: Safavid  - 430 results

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...MIDDLE EAST Studies on Iran in the Safavid Period EDITED BY ANDREW J. NEWMAN...Cataloging-in-Publication Data International Round Table on Safavid Persia (3rd : 1998 University of Edinburgh...modern Middle East : studies on Iran in the Safavid period / edited by Andrew J. Newman...
...social structure from the rise of the Safavid dynasty in 1501 to the dramatic social...Ideological and Political Conceptions in Safavid Iran, 43...Types of Social Change under the Safavids, 1500-1722, 60...
...ARDEBIL AND THE RISE OF THE SAFAVID DYNASTY 3...Chinese porcelains reached Iran in the Safavid Dynasty? Did it all come at once, or over...a the place of the Ardebil Shrine in Safavid history, the dedication of the porcelains...
...1. The Ottoman-Safavid Conflict 1...5. Decline and Fall of the Safavid State 43...pages that follow. 1 The Ottoman-Safavid Conflict For forty years, since he...
...Timbuktu to Mindanao. Sultanates from Africa to China and Southeast Asia emerged alongside great empires-the Ottoman and Safavid empires in the Middle East and the Mughal in South Asia. Within each, Islam expressed itself in diverse ways and flourished...
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journal articles on: Safavid  - 86 results

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...Nadir Shahs Quest for Legitimacy in Post-Safavid Iran. by Charles Melville Nadir Shahs Quest for Legitimacy in Post-Safavid Iran. By Ernest S. Tucker. (Gainesville...Nadir Quli Khan first deposed the reigning Safavid Shah, Tahmasp II, on the grounds of his...
...seen as the physical manifestation of Safavid societys attitudes toward life, death...opportunity to speculate on the manner of Safavid religious expression performed at a devotional...this conversion.1 However, in the early Safavid state, Shi ism did not immediately supplant...
...of the community, especially from the Safavid era and later. A DISTINCTIVE FEATURE...all probability, the reason why the pre-Safavid jurists prohibited the recitation of the...turn. THE WILAYA IN THE ADHAN IN THE SAFAVID ERA (907-1201,1501-1786) The sixteenth...
...development of other Islamic states, such as the Safavids, the Uzbeks, the Mughals, or Mataram...trade and nomadic movements across the Safavid-Ottoman boundary. 44 The Mediterranean...of the elite qizilbas Corps of the Safavid army were made of imported Venetian linen...
...development of other Islamic states, such as the Safavids, the Uzbeks, the Mughals, or Mataram...trade and nomadic movements across the Safavid-Ottoman boundary. 44 The Mediterranean...of the elite qizilbas corps of the Safavid army were made of imported Venetian linen...
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magazine articles on: Safavid  - 33 results

       More magazine Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-33 >>  
 
...cleric in the palaces of the Persian Safavid kings from 1680 to 1698, Majlesi dramatically...that had conquered Iran in 1501. The Safavids, as they were called, sought to impose...To teach Iranians their new faith, the Safavids imported Arab Shia clerics from Lebanon...
...fascination of the western world with Safavid art, with an indebtedness to a truly original...Turkish Iznik and more recently Persian Safavid Esphahan." She adds, "I love the spontaneous...only does her choice of imagery relate to Safavid painting, but also her technique is in...
...richest of the Muslim gunpowder empires; the Safavids, 1501-1773, who made Iran into a mainly...his father, Jahangir (r.1605-27), by the Safavid ruler, Shah Abbas (r.1588-1629), he had...the Afghans, sought the support of the Safavid Shah Tahmasp (r. 1524-76) as they strove...
...EARTHQUAKE, IN WHICH UP TO forty thousand people died, may have shaken more than the foundations of the ancient citadel and the Safavid city which surrounded it. As newspaper editorials appeared to rush, with somewhat indecent haste, to criticise government performance...
...world: the Ottoman Empire in Istanbul, the Safavid Empire in Iran, and the Mughal Empire...century. The Ottoman Sultan (1520-1566), the Safavid Shah Abbas (15861628), and the Mughal...for military and political support. The Safavid Empire was set up as a consequence of...
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newspaper articles on: Safavid  - 18 results

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...glittering textiles sparkle from every corner of the galleries. These riches were used by emissaries of Ottoman sultans and Safavid shahs to win strategic political and trade agreements from Russia, an important conduit to European markets. This is one of...
...trying to cover too much. For example, a glistening Iranian Safavid "Velvet Fragment" (17th century) with strips of metal foil...17th or 18th century, middle left) is from the Caucasus. A Safavid "Velvet Fragment" (17th century, above) is from Iran, and...
...from the most handsomely illustrated copy of the "Book of Kings" ever produced. It was for the Safavid king, Shah Tahmasb (1524-76), to enhance Safavid power among its neighbors. The manuscript page "Rustam Lassos Rakhsh" tells the story of Rustams...
...Persian manuscripts occurred during the Safavid Dynasty (1501-1732). The kingdoms best...and calligraphers were brought to the Safavid court. Visitors to the exhibit already...Book of Kings, also produced under the Safavids. Epic themes - struggles between good...
...divider and a wedding blanket. Rug weaving may have originated with these wanderers, but it reached its peak in Iran under the Safavid dynasty (1501-1722). After a decline caused by economic and social turmoil, this Iranian rug production picked up in the 1800s...
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encyclopedia articles on: Safavid  - 17 results

       More encyclopedia Results: 1-10 11-17 >>  
 
SAFAVID safa wed, Iranian dynasty (1499 1736), that established Shiite Islam in Iran as an official state religion. The Safavid state provided both the territorial and societal foundations...distinct from its Sunni neighbors. The consolidation of Safavid rule was completed during the reign of Shah Abbas I...
SULTAN HUSAYN sooltan hoosan , d. 1729, Safavid shah of Persia (1694 1722). A weak and superstitious man, Shah Sultan Husayn was surrounded by astrologers and fanatics and was...
ABBAS I (Abbas the Great), 1557 1629, shah of Persia (1587 1628), of the Safavid dynasty. In 1597 he ended the raids of the Uzbeks, and subsequently (1603 23) he conquered extensive territories from the Turks...
ISMAIL , shah of Persia ismael , 1486 1524, shah of Persia (1502 24), founder of the Safavid dynasty. He restored Persia to the position of a sovereign state for the first time since the Arab invasion of Persia. Ismail...
TAHMASP ta masp, 1514 76, shah of Persia (1524 76), son and successor of Ismail and the second of the Safavid dynasty. He successfully repulsed persistent invasions by the Uzbeks. Sulayman I also invaded Persia, continuing the wars between...
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