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IRAQ
(55,790 words)
the southern part of Mesopotamia, known in the early Islamic period as
del-e Irānšahr (lit. “the heart of the kingdom of Iran”), served as the central province of the Sasanian empire as well as that of the ʿAbbasid caliphate.A version of this article is available in printVolume XIII, Fascicle 5, pp. 543-550
IRAQ AND ITS RELATIONS WITH IRANRelations between Iran and Mesopotamia, the core region of present-day Iraq, can be traced back to the early waves of the westward migration of Iranian tribes in the middle of the 2nd millennium B.C.E. when the Irani…
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2022-08-18
KERMAN
(59,279 words)
province of Iran located between Fars and Sistan va Balučestān; also the name of its principal city and capital.A version of this article is available in printVolume XVI, Fascicle 3, pp. 246-315
KERMAN (Kermān), a province in southeastern Iran; also the name of one of its sub-provinces as well as that of its principal city and capital.KERMAN i. Geography
Physical geography. Kerman province is situated in southeast Iran, to the southwest of the Kavir-e Lut (see DESERT). Covering an area of 182,000 km2 (70,000 square miles), Kerman is the largest province in Persia, constitutin…
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2022-09-15
ŠAYḴ-ʿALI KHAN ZANGANA
(3,692 words)
(1611 or 1613-1689), grand vizier for twenty years under Shah Solaymān I Ṣafawi.
ŠAYḴ-ʿALI
KHAN ZANGANA, grand vizier for twenty years (1079-1100/1669-89) under Shah Solaymān I Ṣafawi (q.v; r. 1075-105/1666-94).Šayḵ-ʿAli Khan was born in 1020/1611 or 1022/1613 in a prominent family of the Kurdish Zangana tribe (Ḵātunābādi, pp. 530-31). His father, ʿAli Beg Zangana, was a “holder of the rein” (
jelawdār) under Shah ʿAbbās I (q.v.; r. 996-1038/1588-1629) who, in 1028/1618, moved up to the position of master of the king’s stables (
amirāḵor-bāši), and, under Shah Ṣafi (q.v.; r. 1…
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2022-03-23
ISFAHAN
(137,783 words)
ancient province and old city in central Iran. Isfahan city has served as one of the most important urban centers on the Iranian Plateau since ancient times.A version of this article is available in printVolume XIII, Fascicle 6, pp. 613-675 and Volume XIV, Fascicle 1, 2, pp. 1-119
ISFAHAN, ancient province and old city in central Iran (Middle Pers. “Spahān,” New Pers. “Eṣfahān”). Isfahan city has served as one of the most important urban centers on the Iranian Plateau since ancient times and has gained, over centuries of urbanization, many si…
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2022-10-11
JESUITS IN SAFAVID PERSIA
(4,183 words)
The Fathers of the Society of Jesus were the first European missionaries to enter the Persian Gulf in the 16th century. Their pioneer was the Dutchman Gaspar Barzaeus (Berze, 1515-53).A version of this article is available in printVolume XIV, Fascicle 6, pp. 634-638
JESUITS IN SAFAVID PERSIA. The Fathers of the Society of Jesus were the first European missionaries to enter the Persian Gulf in the 16th century. Their pioneer was the Dutchman Gaspar Barzaeus (Berze, 1515-53) who was selected for this task by Franciscus Xavier (1506-52), the f…
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2022-09-14
FIREARMS
(9,474 words)
in Persia. This article surveys the history and production of various firearms and artillery in Persia from their introduction to the 19th century.A version of this article is available in printVolume IX, Fascicle 6, pp. 619-628
FIREARMS in Persia. This article surveys the history and production of various firearms and artillery in Persia from their introduction to the 19th century.i. HISTORYThe generic word used in Persian for a gun (i.e., an arquebus or harquebus, originally a portable but heavy matchlock gun fired from a support) was
tofak. The original meaning of
tofak was a hollo…
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2021-07-20
MOḴTAṢAR-E MOFID
(1,188 words)
MO
ḴTAṢAR-E MOFID , a geographical compendium written under Shah Solaymān (q.v.; r. 1666-94).The
Moḵtaṣar-e Mofid (hereafter cited as
MM) was composed by Moḥammad Mofid Mostawfi b. Najm-al-Din Maḥmūd Bāfqi Yazdi, who also wrote the
Jāmeʿ-e mofidi (hereafter cited as
JM), and a work titled
Majāles al-moʾmenin. It is the only known geographical text from the Safavid period and as such of extraordinary importance. The work exists in just one manuscript version, which may be from the hand of the author himself, and comprises 276 leaves, ninete…
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2021-05-21
ṢAFI I, SHAH
(4,928 words)
SHAH
ṢAFI
I, sixth Safavid ruler (r. 1038-52/1629-42; b. in 1020/1611; d. Monday, 12 Ṣafar 1052/12 May 1642).
Background and succession. Shah Ṣafi I, whose original name was Abu’l-Naṣr Sām Mirzā, was the son of Moḥammad-Bāqer Mirzā (also known as Ṣafi Mirza), Shah ʿAbbās I’s eldest son, and Moḥammad-Bāqer Mirzā’s Georgian wife, Delāram Ḵānom. After his father was killed at the orders of Shah ʿAbbās (q.v.) in 1024/1615 (Eskandar Beg, pp. 883-84, tr. pp. 1098-99; Falsafi, II, pp. 175-80), Sām Mirzā grew up in the s…
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2021-05-21
QOROQ
(2,845 words)
QOROQ, the Mongol term
qorq or
qoroq (also
q
ūroq, or
qor
ūq), refers to that which is restricted, ritually forbidden, taboo. In practice, this denoted royal burial sites, forbidden ground, off-limits to outsiders and guarded by detachments of soldiers,
qoroqčis, as well as kingly preserves, such as or royal hunting grounds, parks, or enclosed meadows where only royal horses were allowed to graze (Doerfer, III, pp. 344-45; Barthold and Rogers, pp. 204-05). Its meaning thus resembles the European
forestem silvam, the outside woods, which in the Middle Ages came to mean an “e…
Source:
Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
Date:
2021-04-22