Author(s):
C. Edmund Bosworth
first vizier for the Ghaznavid sultan Maḥmūd (r. 388-421/998-1030). A version of this article is available in print Volume I, Fascicle 3, pp. 303-304
ABU’L-
ḤASAN ʿALĪ B. FAŻL B. AḤMAD
ESFARĀʾĪNĪ, first vizier for the Ghaznavid sultan Maḥmūd (r. 388-421/998-1030). He began his career as a secretary in Khorasan in the entourage of the ambitious Turkish general of the Samanids, ʿAmīd-al-dawla Fāʾeq Ḵāṣṣa, and was probably a native of the town of Esfarāʾīn in northwest Khorasan. When the bid for control of Khorasan by Fāʾeq and Abu’l-Qāsem Sīmǰūrī was thwarted by the efforts of Sebüktigin and his son Maḥmūd, Esfarāʾīnī transferred to the service of Sebüktigin and then Maḥmūd. After Sebüktigin’s death in 387/997, he was formally invested with the vizierate and supreme executive control, under the sultan, of the expanding Ghaznavid empire in Afghanistan and Khorasan. Esfarāʾīnī’s chief task as vizier was to find money, from regular taxation and from extraordinary imposts, for the insatiable needs of the mighty war machine which the sultan had created. In this, Esfarāʾīnī was for a decade or so highly successful, on one occasion collecting an enormous sum for a military campaign in the space of two days. ʿOtbī attributes to his exactions much agricultural distress in Khorasan, a situation aggravated by bad harvests and a disastrous famine in 401/1011. ʿOtbī alleges that, after several years of exploitation, there was nothing left to be extracted, “since in Khorasan, after water had been thrown on her udders, not a trickle of milk could be obtained nor any trace of fat.” A considerable sum was in the end collected in this year of 401/1010-11 at Herat. Even so, it was not still enough for Maḥmūd. Esfarāʾīnī refused to make up the de…