Overview
Country, Middle East, southwestern Asia.
Area: 636,374 sq mi (1,648,200 sq km). Population (2008 est.):
72,269,000. Capital: Tehrān. Persians constitute the largest ethnic
group; other ethnic groups include Azerbaijanians, Kurds, Lurs,
Bakhtyārī, and Baloch. Languages: Persian (Farsi; official), numerous
others. Religions: Islam (official; predominantly Shīʿite); also
Zoroastrianism. Currency: rial. Iran occupies a high plateau, rising
higher than 1,500 feet (460 metres) above sea level, and is surrounded
largely by mountains. More than half of its surface area consists of
salt deserts and other wasteland. About one-tenth of its land is arable,
and another one-fourth is suitable for grazing. Iran’s rich petroleum
reserves account for about one-tenth of world reserves and are the basis
of its economy. It is an Islamic republic with one legislative house and
several oversight bodies dominated by clergy. The head of state and
government is the president, but supreme authority rests with the
rahbar, a ranking cleric. Human habitation in Iran dates to some 100,000
years ago, but recorded history began with the Elamites c. 3000 bce. The
Medes flourished from c. 728 but were overthrown in 550 by the Persians,
who were in turn conquered by Alexander the Great in the 4th century
bce. The Parthians (see Parthia) created an empire that lasted from 247
bce to 226 ce, when control passed to the Sāsānian dynasty. Various
Muslim dynasties ruled from the 7th century. In 1501 the Ṣafavid dynasty
was established and lasted until 1736. The Qājār dynasty ruled from
1796, but in the 19th century the country was economically controlled by
the Russian and British empires. Reza Khan (see Reza Shah Pahlavi)
seized power in a coup (1921). His son Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi
alienated religious leaders with a program of modernization and
Westernization and was overthrown in 1979; Shīʿite cleric Ruhollah
Khomeini then set up an Islamic republic, and Western influence was
suppressed. The destructive Iran-Iraq War of the 1980s ended in a
stalemate. Since the 1990s the government has gradually moved to a more
liberal conduct of state affairs.
Profile
Official name Jomhūrī-ye Eslamī-ye Irān (Islamic Republic of Iran)
Form of government unitary Islamic republic with one legislative house
(Islamic Consultative Assembly [290])
Supreme political/religious authority Leader
Head of state and government President
Capital Tehrān
Official language Farsī (Persian)
Official religion Islam
Monetary unit rial (Rls)
Population estimate (2008) 72,269,000
Total area (sq mi) 636,374
Total area (sq km) 1,648,200
Main
a mountainous, arid, ethnically diverse country of southwestern Asia.
Much of Iran consists of a central desert plateau, which is ringed on
all sides by lofty mountain ranges that afford access to the interior
through high passes. Most of the population lives on the edges of this
forbidding, waterless waste. The capital is Tehrān, a sprawling, jumbled
metropolis at the southern foot of the Elburz Mountains. Famed for its
handsome architecture and verdant gardens, the city fell somewhat into
disrepair in the decades following the Iranian Revolution of 1979,
though efforts were later mounted to preserve historic buildings and
expand the city’s network of parks. As with Tehrān, cities such as
Eṣfahān and Shīrāz combine modern buildings with important landmarks
from the past and serve as major centres of education, culture, and
commerce.
The heart of the storied Persian empire of antiquity, Iran has long
played an important role in the region as an imperial power and
later—because of its strategic position and abundant natural resources,
especially petroleum—as a factor in colonial and superpower rivalries.
The country’s roots as a distinctive culture and society date to the
Achaemenian period, which began in 550 bc. From that time the region
that is now Iran—traditionally known as Persia—has been influenced by
waves of indigenous and foreign conquerors and immigrants, including the
Hellenistic Seleucids and native Parthians and Sāsānids. Persia’s
conquest by the Muslim Arabs in the 7th century ad was to leave the most
lasting influence, however, as Iranian culture was all but completely
subsumed under that of its conquerors.
An Iranian cultural renaissance in the late 8th century led to a
reawakening of Persian literary culture, though the Persian language was
now highly Arabized and in Arabic script, and native Persian Islamic
dynasties began to appear with the rise of the Sāmānids in the early 9th
century. The region fell under the sway of successive waves of Persian,
Turkish, and Mongol conquerors until the rise of the Ṣafavids, who
introduced Ithnā ʿAsharī Shīʿism as the official creed, in the early
16th century. Over the following centuries, with the state-fostered rise
of a Persian-based Shīʿite clergy, a synthesis was formed between
Persian culture and Shīʿite Islam that marked each indelibly with the
tincture of the other.
With the fall of the Ṣafavids in 1736, rule passed into the hands of
several short-lived dynasties leading to the rise of the Qājār line in
1796. Qājār rule was marked by the growing influence of the European
powers in Iran’s internal affairs, with its attendant economic and
political difficulties, and by the growing power of the Shīʿite clergy
in social and political issues.
The country’s difficulties led to the ascension in 1925 of the
Pahlavi line, whose ill-planned efforts to modernize Iran led to
widespread dissatisfaction and the dynasty’s subsequent overthrow in the
revolution of 1979. This revolution brought a regime to power that
uniquely combined elements of a parliamentary democracy with an Islamic
theocracy run by the country’s clergy. The world’s sole Shīʿite state,
Iran found itself almost immediately embroiled in a long-term war with
neighbouring Iraq that left it economically and socially drained, and
the Islamic republic’s alleged support for international terrorism left
the country ostracized from the global community. Reformist elements
rose within the government during the last decade of the 20th century,
opposed both to the ongoing rule of the clergy and to Iran’s continued
political and economic isolation from the international community.
Many observers have noted that since pre-Islamic times Iranian
culture has been imbued with a powerful sense of dualism, which is
likely grounded in the Zoroastrian notion of a perpetual struggle
between good and evil. This attitude persisted in different forms in
succeeding centuries, with the culture’s preoccupation with justice and
injustice and with an ongoing tension between religion and science. The
12th-century poet Omar Khayyam—himself a noted mathematician—captured
this dualism in one of his robāʿiyyāt (quatrains), in which he expresses
his own ambivalence:
Some follow the path of religious faith.
Others, more doubtful, seek rational certainty.
I fear, someday, the call might come:
You fools! The route is neither one nor the other.
Land
Iran is bounded to the north by Azerbaijan, Armenia, Turkmenistan, and
the Caspian Sea, to the east by Pakistan and Afghanistan, to the south
by the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman, and to the west by Turkey and
Iraq. Iran also controls about a dozen islands in the Persian Gulf.
About one-third of its 4,770-mile (7,680-km) boundary is seacoast.
Relief
A series of massive, heavily eroded mountain ranges surrounds Iran’s
high interior basin. Most of the country is above 1,500 feet (460
metres), with one-sixth of it over 6,500 feet (1,980 metres). In sharp
contrast are the coastal regions outside the mountain ring. In the north
a strip 400 miles (650 km) long bordering the Caspian Sea and never more
than 70 miles (115 km) wide (and frequently narrower) falls sharply from
10,000-foot (3,000-metre) summits to the marshy lake’s edge, some 90
feet (30 metres) below sea level. Along the southern coast the land
drops away from a 2,000-foot (600-metre) plateau, backed by a rugged
escarpment three times as high, to meet the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of
Oman.
The Zagros (Zāgros) Mountains stretch from the border with Armenia in
the northwest to the Persian Gulf and thence eastward into the
Baluchistan (Balūchestān) region. Farther to the south the range
broadens into a band of parallel ridges 125 miles (200 km) wide that
lies between the plains of Mesopotamia and the great central plateau of
Iran. The range is drained on the west by streams that cut deep, narrow
gorges and water fertile valleys. The land is extremely rugged and
difficult to access and is populated largely by pastoral nomads.
The Elburz (Alborz) Mountains run along the south shore of the
Caspian Sea to meet the border ranges of the Khorāsān region to the
east. The tallest of the chain’s many volcanic peaks, some of which are
still active, is snow-clad Mount Damāvand (Demavend), which is also
Iran’s highest point. Many parts of Iran are isolated and poorly
surveyed, and the elevation of many of its peaks are still in dispute;
the height of Mount Damāvand is generally given as 18,605 feet (5,671
metres).
Volcanic and tectonic activity
Mount Taftān, a massive cone reaching 13,261 feet (4,042 metres) in
southeastern Iran, emits gas and mud at sporadic intervals. In the
north, however, Mount Damāvand has been inactive in historical times, as
have Mount Sabalān (15,787 feet [4,812 metres]) and Mount Sahand (12,172
feet [3,710 metres]) in the northwest. The volcanic belt extends some
1,200 miles (1,900 km) from the border with Azerbaijan in the northwest
to Baluchistan in the southeast. In addition, in the northwestern
section of the country, lava and ashes cover a 200-mile (320-km) stretch
of land from Jolfā on the border with Azerbaijan eastward to the Caspian
Sea. A third volcanic region, which is 250 miles (400 km) long and 40
miles (65 km) wide, runs between Lake Urmia (Orūmiyyeh) and the city of
Qazvīn.
Eathquake activity is frequent and violent throughout the country.
During the 20th century—when reliable records were available—there were
fully a dozen earthquakes of 7.0 or higher on the Richter scale that
took large numbers of lives. In 1990 as many as 50,000 people were
killed by a powerful tremor in the Qazvīn-Zanjān area. In 2003 a
relatively weak quake struck the ancient town of Bam in eastern Kermān
province, leveling the town and destroying a historic fortress. More
than 25,000 people perished.
The interior plateau
The arid interior plateau, which extends into Central Asia, is cut by
several smaller mountain ranges, the largest being the Kopet-Dag (Koppeh
Dāgh) Range. In the flatlands lie the plateau’s most remarkable
features, the Kavīr and Lūt deserts, also called Kavīr-e Lūt. At the
lowest elevations, series of basins in the poorly drained soil remain
dry for months at a time; the evaporation of any accumulated water
produces the salt wastes known as kavīrs. As elevation rises, surfaces
of sand and gravelly soil gradually merge into fertile soil on the
hillsides and mountain slopes.
Drainage
The few streams emptying into the desiccated central plateau dissipate
in saline marshes. The general drainage pattern is down the outward
slopes of the mountains, terminating in the sea. There are three large
rivers, but only one—the Kārūn—is navigable. It originates in the Zagros
Mountains and flows south to the Shatt Al-Arab (Arvand Rūd), which
empties into the Persian Gulf. The Sefīd (Safid) River originates in the
Elburz Mountains in the north and runs as a mountain stream for most of
its length but flows rapidly into the Gīlān plain and then to the
Caspian Sea. The Dez Dam in Dezfūl is one of the largest in the Middle
East. The Sefīd River Dam, completed in the early 1960s at Manjīl,
generates hydroelectric power and provides water for irrigation.
The Zāyandeh River, the lifeline of Eṣfahān province, also originates
in the Zagros Mountains, flowing southeastward to Gāv Khūnī Marsh
(Gāvkhāneh Lake), a swamp northwest of the city of Yazd. The completion
of the Kūhrang Dam in 1971 diverted water from the upper Kārūn through a
tunnel 2 miles (3 km) long into the Zāyandeh for irrigation purposes.
Other streams are seasonal and variable: spring floods do enormous
damage, while in summer many streams disappear. However, water is stored
naturally underground, finding its outlet in springs and tap wells.
The largest inland body of water, Lake Urmia, in northwestern Iran,
covers an area that varies from about 2,000 to 2,300 square miles (5,200
to 6,000 square km). Other lakes are principally seasonal, and all have
a high salt content.
Soils
Soil patterns vary widely. The abundant subtropical vegetation of the
Caspian coastal region is supported by rich brown forest soils. Mountain
soils are shallow layers over bedrock, with a high proportion of
unweathered fragments. Natural erosion moves the finer-textured soils
into the valleys. The alluvial deposits are mostly chalky, and many are
used for pottery. The semiarid plateaus lying above 3,000 feet (900
metres) are covered by brown or chestnut-coloured soil that supports
grassy vegetation. The soil is slightly alkaline and contains 3 to 4
percent organic material. The saline and alkaline soils in the arid
regions are light in colour and infertile. The sand dunes are composed
of loose quartz and fragments of other minerals and, except where
anchored by vegetation, are in almost constant motion, driven by high
winds.
Climate
Iran’s climate ranges from subtropical to subpolar. In winter a
high-pressure belt, centred in Siberia, slashes west and south to the
interior of the Iranian plateau, and low-pressure systems develop over
the warm waters of the Caspian Sea, the Persian Gulf, and the
Mediterranean Sea. In summer one of the world’s lowest-pressure centres
prevails in the south. Low-pressure systems in Pakistan generate two
regular wind patterns: the shamāl, which blows from February to October
northwesterly through the Tigris-Euphrates valley, and the “120-day”
summer wind, which can reach velocities of 70 miles (110 km) per hour in
the Sīstān region near Pakistan. Warm Arabian winds bring heavy moisture
from the Persian Gulf.
Elevation, latitude, maritime influences, seasonal winds, and
proximity to mountain ranges or deserts play a significant role in
diurnal and seasonal temperature fluctuation. The average daytime summer
temperature in Ābādān in Khūzestān province tops 110 °F (43 °C), and the
average daytime winter high in Tabrīz in the East Āz̄arbāyjān province
barely reaches freezing. Precipitation also varies widely, from less
than 2 inches (50 mm) in the southeast to about 78 inches (1,980 mm) in
the Caspian region. The annual average is about 16 inches (400 mm).
Winter is normally the rainy season for the country; more than half of
the annual precipitation occurs in that three-month period. The northern
coastal region presents a sharp contrast. The high Elburz Mountains,
which seal off the narrow Caspian plain from the rest of the country,
wring moisture from the clouds, trap humidity from the air, and create a
fertile semitropical region of luxuriant forests, swamps, and rice
paddies. Temperatures there may soar to 100 °F (38 °C) and the humidity
to nearly 100 percent, while frosts are extremely rare. Except in this
region, summer is a dry season. The northern and western parts of Iran
have four distinct seasons. Toward the south and east, spring and autumn
become increasingly short and ultimately merge in an area of mild
winters and hot summers.
Plant and animal life
Flora
Topography, elevation, water supply, and soil determine the character of
the vegetation. Approximately one-tenth of Iran is forested, most
extensively in the Caspian region. In the area are found broad-leaved
deciduous trees—oak, beech, linden, elm, walnut, ash, and hornbeam—and a
few broad-leaved evergreens. Thorny shrubs and ferns also abound. The
Zagros Mountains are covered by scrub oak forests, together with elm,
maple, hackberry, walnut, pear, and pistachio trees. Willow, poplar, and
plane trees grow in the ravines, as do many species of creepers. Thin
stands of juniper, almond, barberry, cotoneaster, and wild fruit trees
grow on the intermediate dry plateau. Thorny shrubs form the ground
cover of the steppes, while species of Artemisia (wormwood) grow at
medium elevations of the desert plains and the rolling country. Acacia,
dwarf palm, kunar trees (of the genus Ziziphus), and scattered shrubs
are found below 3,000 feet (900 metres). Desert sand dunes, which hold
water, support thickets of brush. Forests follow the courses of surface
or subterranean waters. Oases support vines and tamarisk, poplar, date
palm, myrtle, oleander, acacia, willow, elm, plum, and mulberry trees.
In swamp areas reeds and grass provide good pasture.
Fauna
Wildlife includes leopards, bears, hyenas, wild boars, ibex, gazelles,
and mouflons, which live in the wooded mountains. Jackals and rabbits
are common in the country’s interior. Wild asses live in the kavīrs.
Cheetahs and pheasants are found in the Caspian region, and partridges
live in most parts of the country. Aquatic birds such as seagulls,
ducks, and geese live on the shores of the Caspian Sea and the Persian
Gulf, while buzzards nest in the desert. Deer, hedgehogs, foxes, and 22
species of rodents live in semidesert, high-elevation regions. Palm
squirrels, Asiatic black bears, and tigers are found in Baluchistan.
Tigers also once inhabited the forests of the Caspian region but are now
assumed to be extinct.
Studies made in Khūzestān province and the Baluchistan region and
along the slopes of the Elburz and Zagros mountains have revealed the
presence of a remarkably wide variety of amphibians and reptiles.
Examples are toads, frogs, tortoises, lizards, salamanders, boas,
racers, rat snakes (Ptyas), cat snakes (Tarbophis fallax), and vipers.
Some 200 varieties of fish live in the Persian Gulf, as do shrimps,
lobsters, and turtles. Sturgeon, the most important commercial fish, is
one of 30 species found in the Caspian Sea. It constitutes a major
source of export income for the government, in the production of caviar.
Mountain trout abound in small streams at high elevations and in rivers
that are not seasonal.
The government has established wildlife sanctuaries such as the
Bakhtegān Wildlife Refuge, Tūrān Protected Area, and Golestān National
Park. The hunting of swans, pheasants, deer, tigers, and a number of
other animals and birds is prohibited.
People
Ethnic groups
Iran is a culturally diverse society, and interethnic relations are
generally amicable. The predominant ethnic and cultural group in the
country consists of native speakers of Persian. But the people who are
generally known as Persians are of mixed ancestry, and the country has
important Turkic and Arab elements in addition to the Kurds, Baloch,
Bakhtyārī, Lurs, and other smaller minorities (Armenians, Assyrians,
Jews, Brahuis, and others). The Persians, Kurds, and speakers of other
Indo-European languages in Iran are descendants of the Aryan tribes that
began migrating from Central Asia into what is now Iran in the 2nd
millennium bc. Those of Turkic ancestry are the progeny of tribes that
appeared in the region—also from Central Asia—beginning in the 11th
century ad, and the Arab minority settled predominantly in the country’s
southwest (in Khūzestān, a region also known as Arabistan) following the
Islamic conquests of the 7th century. Like the Persians, many of Iran’s
smaller ethnic groups chart their arrival into the region to ancient
times.
The Kurds have been both urban and rural (with a significant portion
of the latter at times nomadic), and they are concentrated in the
western mountains of Iran. This group, which constitutes only a small
proportion of Iran’s population, has resisted the Iranian government’s
efforts, both before and after the revolution of 1979, to assimilate
them into the mainstream of national life and, along with their fellow
Kurds in adjacent regions of Iraq and Turkey, has sought either regional
autonomy or the outright establishment of an independent Kurdish state
in the region.
Also inhabiting the western mountains are seminomadic Lurs, thought
to be the descendants of the aboriginal inhabitants of the country.
Closely related are the Bakhtyārī tribes, who live in the Zagros
Mountains west of Eṣfahān. The Baloch are a smaller minority who inhabit
Iranian Baluchistan, which borders on Pakistan.
The largest Turkic group is the Azerbaijanians, a farming and herding
people who inhabit two border provinces in the northwestern corner of
Iran. Two other Turkic ethnic groups are the Qashqāʾī, in the Shīrāz
area to the north of the Persian Gulf, and the Turkmen, of Khorāsān in
the northeast.
The Armenians, with a different ethnic heritage, are concentrated in
Tehrān, Eṣfahān, and the Azerbaijan region and are engaged primarily in
commercial pursuits. A few isolated groups speaking Dravidian dialects
are found in the Sīstān region to the southeast.
Semites—Jews, Assyrians, and Arabs—constitute only a small percentage
of the population. The Jews trace their heritage in Iran to the
Babylonian Exile of the 6th century bc and, like the Armenians, have
retained their ethnic, linguistic, and religious identity. Both groups
traditionally have clustered in the largest cities. The Assyrians are
concentrated in the northwest, and the Arabs live in Khūzestān as well
as in the Persian Gulf islands.
Languages
Although Persian (Farsi) is the predominant and official language of
Iran, a number of languages and dialects from three language
families—Indo-European, Altaic, and Afro-Asiatic—are spoken.
Roughly three-fourths of Iranians speak one of the Indo-European
languages. Slightly more than half the population speak a dialect of
Persian, an Iranian language of the Indo-Iranian group. Literary
Persian, the language’s more refined variant, is understood to some
degree by most Iranians. Persian is also the predominant language of
literature, journalism, and the sciences. Less than one-tenth of the
population speaks Kurdish. The Lurs and Bakhtyārī both speak Lurī, a
language distinct from, but closely related to, Persian. Armenian, a
single language of the Indo-European family, is spoken only by the
Armenian minority.
The Altaic family is represented overwhelmingly by the Turkic
languages, which are spoken by roughly one-fourth of the population;
most speak Azerbaijanian, a language similar to modern Turkish. The
Turkmen language, another Turkic language, is spoken in Iran by only a
small number of Turkmen.
Of the Semitic languages—from the Afro-Asiatic family—Arabic is the
most widely spoken, but only a small percentage of the population speaks
it as a native tongue. The main importance of the Arabic language in
Iran is historical and religious. Following the Islamic conquest of
Persia, Arabic virtually subsumed Persian as a literary tongue. Since
that time Persian has adopted a large number of Arabic words—perhaps
one-third or more of its lexicon—and borrowed grammatical constructions
from Classical and, in some instances, colloquial Arabic. Under the
monarchy, efforts were made to purge Arabic elements from the Persian
language, but these met with little success and ceased outright
following the revolution. Since that time, the study of Classical
Arabic, the language of the Qurʾān, has been emphasized in schools, and
Arabic remains the predominant language of learned religious discourse.
Before 1979, English and French, and to a lesser degree German and
Russian, were widely used by the educated class. European languages are
used less commonly but are still taught at schools and universities.
Religion
The vast majority of Iranians are Muslims of the Ithnā ʿAsharī, or
Twelver, Shīʿite branch, which is the official state religion. The Kurds
and Turkmen are predominantly Sunni Muslims, but Iran’s Arabs are both
Sunni and Shīʿite. Small communities of Christians, Jews, and
Zoroastrians are also found throughout the country.
Shīʿism
The two cornerstones of Iranian Shīʿism are the promise of the return of
the divinely inspired 12th imam—Muḥammad al-Mahdī al-Ḥujjah, whom
Shīʿites believe to be the mahdi—and the veneration of his martyred
forebears. The absence of the imam contributed indirectly to the
development in modern Iran of a strong Shīʿite clergy whose penchant for
status, particularly in the 20th century, led to a proliferation of
titles and honorifics unique in the Islamic world. The Shīʿite clergy
have been the predominant political and social force in Iran since the
1979 revolution.
Clergy
There is no concept of ordination in Islam. Hence, the role of clergy is
played not by a priesthood but by a community of scholars (Arabic
ʿulamāʾ). To become a member of the Shīʿite ʿulamāʾ, a male Muslim need
only attend a traditional Islamic college, or madrasah. The main course
of study in such an institution is Islamic jurisprudence (Arabic fiqh),
but a student need not complete his madrasah studies to become a faqīh,
or jurist. In Iran such a low-level clergyman is generally referred to
by the generic term mullah (Arabic al-mawlā, “lord”; Persian mullā) or
ākhūnd or, more recently, rūḥānī (Persian: “spiritual”). To become a
mullah, one need merely advance to a level of scholarly competence
recognized by other members of the clergy. Mullahs staff the vast
majority of local religious posts in Iran.
An aspirant gains the higher status of mujtahid—a scholar competent
to practice independent reasoning in legal judgment (Arabic ijtihād)—by
first graduating from a recognized madrasah and obtaining the general
recognition of his peers and then, most important, by gaining a
substantial following among the Shīʿite community. A contender for this
status is ordinarily referred to by the honorific hojatoleslām (Arabic
ḥujjat al-Islām, “proof of Islam”). Few clergymen are eventually
recognized as mujtahids, and some are honoured by the term ayatollah
(Arabic āyat Allāh, “sign of God”). The honorific of grand ayatollah
(āyat Allāh al-ʿuẓmāʾ) is conferred only upon those Shīʿite mujtahids
whose level of insight and expertise in Islamic canon law has risen to
the level of one who is worthy of being a marjaʿ-e taqlīd (Arabic marjaʿ
al-taqlīd, “model of emulation”), the highest level of excellence in
Iranian Shīʿism.
There is no real religious hierarchy or infrastructure within
Shīʿism, and scholars often hold independent and varied views on
political, social, and religious issues. Hence, these honorifics are not
awarded but attained by scholars through general consensus and popular
appeal. Shīʿites of every level defer to clergymen on the basis of their
reputation for learning and judicial acumen, and the trend has become
strong in modern Shīʿism for every believer, in order to avoid sin, to
follow the teachings of his or her chosen marjaʿ-e taqlīd. This has
increased the power of the ʿulamāʾ in Iran, and it has also enhanced
their role as mediators to the divine in a way not seen in Sunni Islam
or in earlier Shīʿism.
Sayyids
Those progeny of the family of Muḥammad who are not his direct
descendents through the line of the 12th imam are referred to as
sayyids. These individuals have traditionally been viewed with a high
degree of reverence by believing Iranians and continue to have strong
influence in contemporary Iranian culture. Many sayyids are found among
the clergy, although in modern Iran they may practice virtually any
occupation.
Religious minorities
Christians, Jews, and Zoroastrians are the most significant religious
minorities. Christians are the most numerous group of these, Orthodox
Armenians constituting the bulk. The Assyrians are Nestorian,
Protestant, and Roman Catholic, as are a few converts from other ethnic
groups. The Zoroastrians are largely concentrated in Yazd in central
Iran, Kermān in the southeast, and Tehrān.
Religious toleration, one of the characteristics of Iran during the
Pahlavi monarchy, came to an end with the Islamic revolution in 1979.
While Christians, Jews, and Zoroastrians are recognized in the
constitution of 1979 as official minorities, the revolutionary
atmosphere in Iran was not conducive to equal treatment of non-Muslims.
Among these, members of the Bahāʾī faith—a religion founded in Iran—were
the victims of the greatest persecution. The Jewish population, which
had been significant before 1979, emigrated in great numbers after the
revolution.
Settlement patterns
Rural settlement
The topography and the water supply determine the regions fit for human
habitation, the lifestyles of the people, and the types of dwellings.
The deep gorges and defiles, unnavigable rivers, empty deserts, and
impenetrable kavīrs have all contributed to insularity and tribalism
among the Iranian peoples, and the population has become concentrated
around the periphery of the interior plateau and in the oases. The felt
yurts of the Turkmen, the black tents of the Bakhtyārī, and the osier
huts of the Baloch are typical, as the tribespeople roam from summer to
winter pastures. The vast central and southern plains are dotted with
numerous oasis settlements with scattered rudimentary hemispherical or
conical huts. Since the mid-20th century the migrations have shortened,
and the nomads have settled in more permanent villages.
The villages on the plains follow an ancient rectangular pattern.
High mud walls with corner towers form the outer face of the houses,
which have flat roofs of mud and straw supported by wooden rafters. A
mosque is situated in the open centre of the village and serves also as
a school.
Mountain villages are situated on the rocky slopes above the valley
floor, surrounded by terraced fields (usually irrigated) in which grain
and alfalfa (lucerne) are raised. The houses are square, mud-brick,
windowless buildings with flat or domed roofs; a roof hole provides
ventilation and light. Houses are usually two stories high, with a
stable occupying the ground floor.
Caspian villages are different from those of both the plains and the
mountains. The scattered hamlets typically consist of two-storied wooden
houses. Separate outbuildings (barns, henhouses, silkworm houses)
surround an open courtyard.
Urban settlement
Tehrān, the capital and largest city, is separated from the Caspian Sea
by the Elburz Mountains. Eṣfahān, about 250 miles (400 km) south of
Tehrān, is the second most important city and is famed for its
architecture. There are few cities in central and eastern Iran, where
water is scarce, although lines of oases penetrate the desert. Most
towns are supplied with water by qanāt, an irrigation system by which an
underground mountain water source is tapped and the water channeled down
through a series of tunnels, sometimes 50 miles (80 km) in length, to
the town level. Towns are, therefore, often located a short distance
from the foot of a mountain. The essential feature of a traditional
Iranian street is a small canal.
City layout is typical of Islamic communities. The various sectors of
society—governmental, residential, and business—are often divided into
separate quarters. The business quarter, or bazaar, fronting on a
central square, is a maze of narrow arcades lined with small individual
shops grouped according to the type of product sold. Modern business
centres, however, have grown up outside the bazaars. Dwellings in the
traditional style—consisting of domed-roof structures constructed of mud
brick or stone—are built around closed courtyards, with a garden and a
pool. Public baths are found in all sections of the cities.
Construction of broad avenues and ring roads to accommodate modern
traffic has changed the appearance of the large cities. Their basic
plan, however, is still that of a labyrinth of narrow, crooked streets
and culs-de-sac.
Demographic trends
Iran is a young country: nearly two-fifths of its people are 15 years of
age or younger. However, the country’s postrevolutionary boom in births
has slowed substantially, and—with a birth rate slightly lower than the
world average and a low death rate—Iran’s natural rate of increase is
now only marginally higher than the world average. Life expectancy in
Iran is some 68 years for men and 71 years for women.
Internal migration from rural areas to cities was a major trend
beginning in the 1960s (some three-fifths of Iranians are defined as
urban), but the most significant demographic phenomenon following the
revolution in 1979 was the out-migration of a large portion of the
educated, secularized population to Western countries, particularly to
the United States. (Several hundred thousand Iranians had settled in
southern California alone by the end of the 20th century.) Likewise, a
considerable number of religious minorities, mostly Jews and Bahāʿīs,
have left the country—either as emigrants or asylum seekers—because of
unfavourable political conditions. Internally, migration to the cities
has continued, and Iran has absorbed large numbers of refugees from
neighbouring Afghanistan (mostly Persian [Dari]-speaking Afghans) and
Iraq (both Arabs and Kurds).
Khosrow Mostofi
Janet Afary
The economy
Overview
The most formidable hurdle facing Iran’s economy remains its continuing
isolation from the international community. This isolation has hampered
the short- and long-term growth of its markets, restricted the country’s
access to high technology, and impeded foreign investment. Iran’s
isolation is a product both of the xenophobia of its more conservative
politicians—who fear postimperial entanglements—and sanctions imposed by
the international community, particularly the United States, which
accuses Iran of supporting international terrorism. The Iran and Libya
Sanctions Act of 1996 expanded an existing U.S. embargo on the import of
Iranian petroleum products to encompass extensive bans on investment
both by U.S. and non-U.S. companies in Iran. These prohibitions included
bans on foreign speculation in Iranian petroleum development, the export
of high technology to Iran, and the import of a wide variety of Iranian
products into the United States. Overtures by reform-minded Iranian
politicians to open their country to foreign investment have met with
limited success, but in the early 21st century U.S. sanctions remained
in place.
Iran’s long-term objectives since the 1979 revolution have been
economic independence, full employment, and a comfortable standard of
living for its citizens, but at the end of the 20th century the
country’s economic future was lined with obstacles. Iran’s population
more than doubled in that period, and its population grew increasingly
young. In a country that has traditionally been both rural and agrarian,
agricultural production has fallen consistently since the 1960s (by the
late 1990s Iran was a major food importer), and economic hardship in the
countryside has driven vast numbers of people to migrate to the largest
cities. The rates of both literacy and life expectancy in Iran are high
for the region, but so, too, is the unemployment rate, and inflation is
regularly in the range of 20 percent annually. Iran remains highly
dependent on its one major industry, the extraction of petroleum and
natural gas for export, and the government faces increasing difficulty
in providing opportunities for a younger, better-educated workforce,
which has led to a growing sense of frustration among lower- and
middle-class Iranians.
Still, the government has tried to develop the country’s
communication, transportation, manufacturing, and energy infrastructures
(including its prospective nuclear power facilities) and has begun the
process of integrating its communication and transportation systems with
those of neighbouring states.
State planning
The national constitution divides the economy into three sectors:
public, which includes major industries, banks, insurance companies,
utilities, communications, foreign trade, and mass transportation;
cooperative, which includes production and distribution of goods and
services; and private, which consists of all activities that supplement
the first two sectors. The constitution also establishes specific
guidelines for the administration of the nation’s economic and financial
resources, and after the revolution the government declared null and
void any law, or section of a law, that violated Islamic principles.
This prohibition restricts individuals or institutions from charging
interest on loans, an action considered illegal under Islamic law, and
also places limits on certain types of financial speculation. These
restrictions have heretofore made Iran’s participation in the
international economic community problematic, which has led to harsh
financial conditions and a strong reliance on local markets.
From the first years of the revolution, two different factions have
sought to impose their own interpretation of Islamic economics on the
government. Islamic leftists have called for extensive nationalization
and expansion of a welfare state. Conservatives within the religious
establishment, who have maintained strong ties to the merchant
community, have defended the rights of property owners and insisted on
maintaining privatization. Both factions, however, have generally
supported the government’s restriction on Western banking practices.
Although Iran’s first postrevolutionary leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini, refused to takes sides in the leftist-conservative debate, the
effects of the Iran-Iraq War (1980–88) prompted increased state
intervention in the economy. The government gained a virtual monopoly
over income-producing activities by nationalizing private banks and
insurance companies and increasing state control of foreign trade.
Reform
The economy continued to lag despite Iran’s move away from public
control of the financial system after the end of the war in 1990. The
election of Mohammad Khatami as president in 1997 promised social and
economic reform, and a number of key government positions were filled by
reformist clergy and technocrats. Nonetheless, no steps have been taken
on numerous proposed plans to reduce state control of the economy and
encourage privatization, and the government’s economic policies have
remained unclear. U.S. sanctions have also continued to hamstring Iran’s
economy by restricting access to Western technology, despite the
willingness of some European and East Asian companies to ignore these
measures. Conservatives within Iran’s government have been willing, in
limited instances, to ease the restriction on interest-bearing
transactions but have continued to block reformists’ plans to introduce
large amounts of foreign capital into the country, particularly
investments from the United States. Foreign investment has remained a
contentious issue because of the adverse social and political effects of
foreign economic entanglements during Iran’s colonial past.
Agriculture, forestry, and fishing
Roughly one-third of Iran’s total surface area is arable farmland, of
which less than one-fourth—or one-tenth of the total land area—is under
cultivation, because of poor soil and lack of adequate water
distribution in many areas. Less than one-third of the cultivated area
is irrigated; the rest is devoted to dry farming. The western and
northwestern portions of the country have the most fertile soils.
At the end of the 20th century, agricultural activities accounted for
about one-fifth of Iran’s gross domestic product (GDP) and employed a
comparable proportion of the workforce. Most farms are small, less than
25 acres (10 hectares), and thus are not economically viable, which has
contributed to the wide-scale migration to cities. In addition to water
scarcity and areas of poor soil, seed is of low quality and farming
techniques are antiquated.
All these factors have contributed to low crop yields and poverty in
rural areas. Further, after the 1979 revolution many agricultural
workers claimed ownership rights and forcibly occupied large, privately
owned farms where they had been employed. The legal disputes that arose
from this situation remained unresolved through the 1980s, and many
owners put off making large capital investments that would have improved
farm productivity, further deteriorating production. Progressive
government efforts and incentives during the 1990s, however, improved
agricultural productivity marginally, helping Iran toward its goal of
reestablishing national self-sufficiency in food production. The wide
range of temperature fluctuation in different parts of the country and
the multiplicity of climatic zones make it possible to cultivate a
diverse variety of crops, including cereals (wheat, barley, rice, and
corn [maize]), fruits (dates, figs, pomegranates, melons, and grapes),
vegetables, cotton, sugar beets and sugarcane, nuts, olives, spices,
tea, tobacco, and medicinal herbs.
Iran’s forests cover approximately the same amount of land as its
agricultural crops—about one-tenth of its total surface area. The
largest and most valuable woodland areas are in the Caspian region,
where many of the forests are commercially exploitable and include both
hardwoods and softwoods. Forest products include plywood, fibreboard,
and lumber for the construction and furniture industries.
Fishing is also important, and Iran harvests fish both for domestic
consumption and for export, marketing their products fresh, salted,
smoked, or canned. Sturgeon (yielding its roe for caviar), bream,
whitefish, salmon, mullet, carp, catfish, perch, and roach are caught in
the Caspian Sea, Iran’s most important fishery. More than 200 species of
fish are found in the Persian Gulf, 150 of which are edible, including
shrimps and prawns.
Of the country’s livestock, sheep are by far the most numerous,
followed by goats, cattle, asses, horses, water buffalo, and mules. The
raising of poultry for eggs and meat is prevalent, and camels are still
raised and bred for use in transport.
Resources and power
Mining
Miners worked primarily by hand until the early 1960s, and mine owners
moved the ore to refining centres by truck, rail, donkey, or camel. As
public and private concerns opened new mines and quarries, they
introduced mechanized methods of production. The mineral industries
encompass both refining and manufacturing.
The extraction and processing of petroleum is unquestionably Iran’s
single most important economic activity and the most valuable in terms
of revenue, although natural gas production is increasingly important.
The government-operated National Iranian Oil Company (NIOC) produces
petroleum for export and domestic consumption. Petroleum is moved by
pipeline to the terminal of Khārk (Kharq) Island in the Persian Gulf and
from there is shipped by tanker throughout the world. Iran’s main
refining facility at Ābādān was destroyed during the war with Iraq, but
the government has since rebuilt the facility, and production has
returned to near prewar levels. The NIOC also operates refineries at
Eṣfahān, Shīrāz, Lāvān Island, Tehrān, and Tabrīz; several were damaged
by Iraqi forces but have since returned to production. These sites
produce a variety of refined products, including aircraft fuel at the
Ābādān facility and fuels for domestic heating and the transportation
industry.
Iran’s vast natural gas reserves constitute more than one-tenth of
the world’s total. In addition to the country’s working gas fields in
the Elburz Mountains and in Khorāsān, fields have been discovered and
exploitation begun in the Persian Gulf near ʿAsalūyeh, offshore in the
Caspian region, and, most notably, offshore and onshore in areas of
southern Iran—the South Pars field in the latter region is one of the
richest in the world. The country’s gathering and distribution spur
lines run to Tehrān, Kāshān, Eṣfahān, Shīrāz, Mashhad, Ahvāz, and the
industrial city of Alborz, near Qazvīn. The two state-owned Iranian Gas
Trunklines are the largest gas pipelines in the Middle East, and Iran is
under contract to supply natural gas to Russia, eastern Europe,
Pakistan, Turkey, and India through pipelines, under construction in
neighbouring countries, that are intended to connect Iran’s trunk lines
with those of its customers.
The petrochemical industry, concentrated in the south of the country,
expanded rapidly before the Islamic revolution. It, too, was largely
destroyed during the Iran-Iraq War but has mostly been restored to its
prewar condition. The Rāzī (formerly Shāhpūr) Petrochemical Company at
Bandar-e Khomeynī (formerly Bandar-e Shāhpūr) is a subsidiary of the
National Petrochemical Company of Iran and produces ammonia, phosphates,
sulfur, liquid gas, and light oil.
In addition to the major coal mines found in Khorāsān, Kermān,
Semnān, Māzandarān, and Gīlān, a number of smaller mines are located
north of Tehrān and in Āz̄arbāyjān and Eṣfahān provinces. Deposits of
lead, zinc, and other minerals are widely scattered throughout the
country. Kermān is the centre for Iran’s copper industry; deposits of
copper are mined nationwide. Only since the 1990s has Iran begun to
exploit such valuable minerals as uranium and gold, which it now mines
and refines in commercially profitable amounts. Iran also extracts
fireclay, chalk, lime, gypsum, ochre, and kaolin (china clay).
Power
Until the 20th century, Iran’s sources of energy were limited almost
entirely to wood and charcoal. Petroleum, natural gas, and coal are now
used to supply heat and produce the bulk of the country’s electricity. A
system of dams generates hydroelectric power (and also supplies water
for cropland irrigation).
The Atomic Energy Organization (AEO) of Iran was established in 1973
to construct a network of more than 20 nuclear power plants. By 1978 two
1,200-megawatt reactors near Būshehr on the Persian Gulf were near
completion and were scheduled to begin operation early in 1980, but the
revolutionary government canceled the program in 1979. The AEO is now
engaged in nuclear research and, with Russian and Chinese aid, is
constructing several medium-size nuclear power reactors as well as
support facilities for producing and refining uranium into fissile
material.
Manufacturing
Tehrān is the largest market for domestic agricultural and manufactured
products, which are shipped to the nearest town and thence to Tehrān and
the provincial capitals by air, truck, rail, camel, mule, and donkey.
Since craft production is localized, each city has created a market for
its products in the capital and other major cities. Major manufacturing
industries, which have transformed large parts of Iran since 1954, are
scattered throughout the country, and their products are distributed
nationwide.
Industrial development, which began in earnest in the mid-1950s, has
transformed parts of the country. Iran now produces a wide range of
manufactured commodities, such as automobiles, electric appliances,
telecommunications equipment, industrial machinery, paper, rubber
products, steel, food products, wood and leather products, textiles, and
pharmaceuticals. Textile mills are centred in Eṣfahān and along the
Caspian coast. Iran is known throughout the world for its handwoven
carpets. The traditional craft of making these Persian rugs contributes
substantially to rural incomes and is one of Iran’s most important
export industries.
Until the early 1950s the construction industry was limited largely
to small domestic companies. Increased income from oil and gas and the
availability of easy credit, however, triggered a subsequent building
boom that attracted major international construction firms to Iran. This
growth continued until the mid-1970s, when, because of a sharp rise in
inflation, credit was tightened and the boom collapsed. The construction
industry had revived somewhat by the mid-1980s, but housing shortages
have remained a serious problem, especially in the large urban centres.
Finance
The government makes loans and credits available to industrial and
agricultural projects, primarily through banks. All private banks and
insurance companies were nationalized in 1979, and the Islamic Bank of
Iran (later reorganized as the Islamic Economy Organization and exempt
from nationalization) was established in Tehrān, with branches
throughout the country. Iran’s 10 banks are divided into three
categories—commercial, industrial, and agricultural—but all are subject
to the same regulations. In lieu of interest on loans, considered to be
usury and forbidden under Islamic law, banks impose a service charge, a
commission, or both. The Central Bank of the Islamic Republic of Iran in
Tehrān issues the rial, the national currency.
Trade
Despite the government’s attempts to make Iran economically
self-sufficient, the value of the country’s imports continues to be
high. Foodstuffs account for a considerable proportion of total import
value, followed by basic manufactures and machinery and transport
equipment. The huge income derived from the export of petroleum products
has generally created a favourable annual balance of trade. Other
exports include carpets, fruits and nuts, chemicals, and metals. Iran’s
leading trading partners are Germany, Japan, and the United Kingdom.
Services
Despite efforts in the 1990s toward economic liberalization, government
spending—including expenditures by quasi-governmental foundations that
dominate the economy—has been high. Estimates of service sector spending
in Iran are regularly more than two-fifths of the GDP, and much of that
is government-related spending, including military expenditures,
government salaries, and social service disbursements.
Until the early 1960s, little attention was paid to tourism. Lack of
facilities made travel in Iran a rugged experience. The Pahlavi
government began paving highways and constructing hotels, and the number
of tourists increased steadily in the years 1964–78. However, the
political turmoil of 1978, which led to the overthrow of the monarchy,
practically destroyed the tourist industry. The Islamic regime
subsequently discouraged tourism from non-Muslim countries in an effort
to exclude Western influences, and the services that depended on tourism
collapsed as a result. Despite government attempts to promote Iran as a
tourist destination, services related to tourism remain a small sector
of the economy.
Labour and taxation
Although Iranian workers have, in theory, a right to form labour unions,
there is, in actuality, no union system in the country. Workers are
represented ostensibly by the Workers’ House, a state-sponsored
institution that nevertheless attempts to challenge some state policies.
Guild unions operate locally in most areas but are limited largely to
issuing credentials and licenses. The right of workers to strike is
generally not respected by the state, and since 1979 strikes have often
been met by police action.
Roughly one-fourth of Iran’s labour force is engaged in manufacturing
and construction. Another one-fifth is engaged in agriculture, and the
remainder are divided almost evenly between occupations in services,
transportation and communication, and finance. Women are allowed to work
outside the home but face restrictions in a number of occupations, and
the number of women in the workforce is relatively small in light of
their level of education. Some of the numerous refugees in the country
are allowed to work but, with the exception of a highly skilled
minority, are generally restricted to low-wage, manual labour positions
in construction and agriculture.
The minimum age for workers in Iran is 15 years, but large sectors of
the economy (including small businesses, agricultural concerns, and
family-owned enterprises) are exempted. The workweek is six days (48
hours), and the day of rest—as in many Muslim countries—is on Friday.
Income from petroleum and natural gas exports typically provides the
largest share of government revenue, although this varies with the
fluctuations in world petroleum markets. Taxes include those on
corporations and import duties. In addition to these mandatory taxes,
Islamic taxes are collected on a voluntary basis. These include an
individual’s income tax (Arabic khums, “one-fifth”); an alms-tax
(zakāt), which has a variable rate and benefits charitable causes; and a
land tax (kharāj), the rate of which is based on the principle of
one-tenth (ʿūshr) of the value of crops, unless the land is tax-exempt.
Transportation and telecommunications
Iran’s large centres of population are widely scattered, and
transportation is made difficult by mountainous and desert terrain. Low
funding and poor maintenance long reduced the efficiency of the
highways. Nevertheless, motor vehicles—buses and trucks in
particular—are the most important means of transportation for both
passengers and goods. Since the early 1990s the Iranian government has
allocated considerable resources to road construction and repair, and
about half the roads are now paved.
The principal line of the state-owned railway system runs between the
Caspian Sea and the Persian Gulf, with spur lines to many provincial
capitals. In 1971 the railway was linked through Turkey with the
European system; the link stimulated trade and tourism appreciably,
undercutting airfares and significantly reducing sea transportation
time. The Iranian portion of a line eastward to Singapore was completed
as far as Mashhad by 1971. There is also a connection with railroads in
Transcaucasia via Jolfā in the northwest, and a line completed in 1991
between Bafq and Bandar ʿAbbās links Iran’s rail system to Central Asia;
thus, Iran has begun to promote itself as a cost-efficient transport
outlet for the states in that region.
The Kārūn is the only navigable river and is used to transport
passengers and cargo. Lake Urmia has regular passenger and cargo ferry
service between the port of Sharafkhāneh in the northeast and
Golmānkhāneh in the southwest. Iran is served by five major ports on the
Persian Gulf, the largest being Bandar ʿAbbās. Oil terminals at Ābādān
and Khārk Island, destroyed or damaged in the war with Iraq, have since
been rebuilt, as have port facilities at Khorramshahr and Bandar-e
Khomeynī. Iran has expanded its facilities at the port of Būshehr and
built a new port at Chāh Bahār (Bandar Beheshtī) on the Gulf of Oman.
Caspian seaports, including Bandar-e Anzalī (formerly Bandar-e Pahlavī)
and Bandar-e Torkaman (formerly Bandar-e Shāh), are primarily used for
trade with nations to the north.
The state-owned airline, Iran Air, serves the major cities and
provincial capitals. Some major European, Asian, and African airlines
also serve Iran. Tehrān, Ābādān, Eṣfahān, Shīrāz, and Bandar ʿAbbās have
international airports.
Telecommunications media in Iran are state-owned, and during the
1990s the state committed significant resources to developing and
expanding its communications infrastructure. During that time the number
of telephones nearly doubled. Telephone service was increased to rural
areas, and by 2000 virtually every Iranian had access to service.
Cellular telephone use remains limited, but Internet connectivity,
although still in its infancy, has provided Iranians, and especially
Iranian youth, with a window to the outside world and accelerated
interest in global culture.
Government and society
Constitutional framework
Iran’s 1979 constitution established the country as an Islamic republic
and put into place a mixed system of government, in which the executive,
parliament, and judiciary are overseen by several bodies dominated by
the clergy. At the head of both the state and oversight institutions is
the leader, or rahbar, a ranking cleric whose duties and authority are
those usually equated with a head of state.
Velāyat-e faqīh
The justification for Iran’s mixed system of government can be found in
the concept of velāyat-e faqīh, as expounded by Ayatollah Ruhollah
Khomeini, the first leader of postrevolutionary Iran. Khomeini’s method
gives political leadership—in the absence of the divinely inspired
imam—to the faqīh, or jurist in Islamic canon law, whose characteristics
best qualify him to lead the community. Khomeini, the leader of the
revolution (rahbar-e enqelāb), was widely believed to be such a man, and
through his authority the position of leader was enshrined in the
Iranian constitution. The Assembly of Experts (Majles-e Khobregān), an
institution composed of ʿulamāʾ, chooses the leader from among qualified
Shīʿite clergy on the basis of the candidate’s personal piety, expertise
in Islamic law, and political acumen. The powers of the leader are
extensive; he appoints the senior officers of the military and
Revolutionary Guards (Pāsdārān-e Enqelāb), as well as the clerical
members of the Council of Guardians (Shūrā-ye Negahbān) and members of
the judiciary. The leader is also exclusively responsible for
declarations of war and is the commander in chief of Iran’s armed
forces. Most important, the leader sets the general direction of the
nation’s policy. There are no limits on the leader’s term in office, but
the Assembly of Experts may remove the leader from office if they find
that he is unable to execute his duties.
Upon the death of Khomeini in June 1989, the Assembly of Experts
elected Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as his successor, an unexpected move
because of Khamenei’s relatively low clerical status at the time of his
nomination as leader. He was eventually accepted by Iranians as an
ayatollah, however, through the urging of senior clerics—a unique event
in Shīʿite Islam—and was elevated to the position of rahbar because of
his political acumen.
The presidency
The president, who is elected by universal adult suffrage, heads the
executive branch and must be a native-born Iranian Shīʿite. This post
was largely ceremonial until July 1989, when a national referendum
approved a constitutional amendment that abolished the post of prime
minister and vested greater authority in the president. The president
selects the Council of Ministers for approval by the legislature,
appoints a portion of the members of the Committee to Determine the
Expediency of the Islamic Order, and serves as chairman of the Supreme
Council for National Security, which oversees the country’s defense. The
president and his ministers are responsible for the day-to-day
administration of the government and the implementation of laws enacted
by the legislature. In addition, the president oversees a wide range of
government offices and organizations.
Deliberative bodies
The unicameral legislature is the 290-member Islamic Consultative
Assembly (Majles-e Shūrā-ye Eslāmī), known simply as the Majles.
Deputies are elected directly for four-year terms by universal adult
suffrage, and recognized religious and ethnic minorities have token
representation in the legislature. The Majles enacts all legislation
and, under extraordinary circumstances, may impeach the president with a
two-thirds majority vote.
The 12-member Council of Guardians is a body of jurists—half its
members specialists in Islamic canon law appointed by the leader and the
other half civil jurists nominated by the Supreme Judicial Council and
appointed by the Majles—that acts in many ways as an upper legislative
house. The council reviews all legislation passed by the Majles to
determine its constitutionality. If a majority of the council does not
find a piece of legislation in compliance with the constitution or if a
majority of the council’s Islamic canon lawyers find the document to be
contrary to the standards of Islamic law, then the council may strike it
down or return it with revisions to the Majles for reconsideration. In
addition, the council supervises elections, and all candidates standing
for election—even for the presidency—must meet with its prior approval.
In 1988 Khomeini ordered the formation of the Committee to Determine
the Expediency of the Islamic Order—consisting of several members from
the Council of Guardians and several members appointed by the
president—to arbitrate disagreements between the Majles and the Council
of Guardians. The Assembly of Experts, a body of 83 clerics, was
originally formed to draft the 1979 constitution. Since that time its
sole function has been to select a new leader in the event of the death
or incapacitation of the incumbent. If a suitable candidate is not
found, the assembly may appoint a governing council of three to five
members in the leader’s stead.
Local government
The ostānhā (provinces) are subdivided into shahrestānhā (counties),
bakhshhā (districts), and dehestānhā (townships). The minister of the
interior appoints the governors-general (for provinces) and governors
(for counties). At each level there is a council, and the Supreme
Council of Provinces is formed from representatives of the provincial
councils. The ministry of the interior appoints each city’s mayor, but
city councilmen are locally elected. Villages are administered by a
village master advised by elders.
Justice
The judiciary consists of a Supreme Court, a Supreme Judicial Council,
and lower courts. The chief justice and the prosecutor general must be
specialists in Shīʿite canon law who have attained the status of
mujtahid. Under the 1979 constitution all judges must base their
decisions on the Sharīʿah (Islamic law). In 1982 the Supreme Court
struck down any portion of the law codes of the deposed monarchy that
did not conform with the Sharīʿah. In 1983 the Majles revised the penal
code and instituted a system that embraced the form and content of
Islamic law. This code implemented a series of traditional punishments,
including retributions (Arabic qiṣāṣ) for murder and other violent
crimes—wherein the nearest relative of a murdered party may, if the
court approves, take the life of the killer. Violent corporal
punishments, including execution, are now the required form of
chastisement for a wide range of crimes, ranging from adultery to
alcohol consumption. With the number of clergy within the judiciary
growing since the revolution, the state in 1987 implemented a special
court outside of the regular judiciary to try members of the clergy
accused of crimes.
Political process
Under the constitution, elections are to be held at least every four
years, supervised by the Council of Guardians. Suffrage is universal,
and the minimum voting age is 16. All important matters are subject to
referenda. At the outset of the revolution, the Islamic Republic Party
was the ruling political party in Iran, but it subsequently proved to be
too volatile, and Khomeini ordered it disbanded in 1987. The Muslim
People’s Republic Party, which once claimed more than three million
members, and its leader, Ayatollah Mohammad Kazem Shariat-Madari,
opposed many of Khomeini’s reforms and the ruling party’s tactics in the
early period of the Islamic republic, but in 1981 it, too, was ordered
to dissolve. The government has likewise outlawed several
parties—including the Tūdeh (“Masses”) Party, the Mojāhedīn-e Khalq
(“Holy Warriors for the People”) Party, and the Democratic Party of
Iranian Kurdistan—although it permits parties that demonstrate what it
considers to be a “commitment to the Islamic system.”
Security
Under the monarchy, Iran had one of the largest armed forces in the
world, but it quickly dissolved with the collapse of the monarchy.
Reconstituted following the revolution, the Iranian military engaged in
a protracted war with Iraq (1980–90) and has since maintained a
formidable active and reserve component. Since the mid-1980s Iran has
sought to establish programs to develop weapons of mass destruction,
including nuclear, biological, and chemical weapons (Iran used the
latter in its war with Iraq), and by the late 1990s it had achieved some
success in the domestic production of medium- and intermediate-range
missiles—effective from 300 to 600 miles (480 to 965 km) and from 600 to
3,300 miles (965 to 5,310 km) away, respectively. Outside observers,
particularly those within the United States, have contended that Iran’s
fledgling nuclear energy industry is in fact the seedbed for a nuclear
weapons program.
Iran’s military obtains much of its manpower from conscription, and
males are required to serve 21 months of military service. The army is
the largest branch of Iran’s military, followed by the Revolutionary
Guards. This body, organized in the republic’s early days, is the
country’s most effective military force and consists of the most
politically dependable and religiously devout personnel. Any security
forces that are involved in external war or in armed internal conflict
are either accompanied or led by elements of the Revolutionary Guards.
Iran has only a small air force and navy. A national police force is
responsible for law enforcement in the cities, and a gendarmerie
oversees rural areas. Both are under the direction of the Ministry of
Interior.
Health and welfare
Health conditions appreciably improved after World War II through the
combined efforts of the government, international agencies, and
philanthropic endeavour. By 1964 smallpox had been eradicated, plague
had disappeared, and malaria had been practically wiped out. Cholera,
believed to have been controlled, broke out in 1970 and again in 1981
but was speedily checked. Health facilities, nevertheless, are far from
adequate. There is a severe shortage, especially in rural areas, of
doctors, nurses, and medical supplies.
Public hospitals provide free treatment for the poor. These are
supplemented by private institutions, but all are inadequate. All health
services are supervised by the Ministry of Health, Treatment, and
Medical Education, the branch offices of which are headed by certified
physicians. Welfare is administered by the Ministry of State for
Welfare, Foundation of the Oppressed (Bonyād-e Mostaẕʿafān), and the
Martyr Foundation (Bonyād-e Shahīd), the latter being particularly
concerned with families of war casualties.
Housing
The flow of population to the cities has created serious housing
shortages, and it was only in the 1990s that the government began to
address the housing crisis, largely by providing government credits for
private sector development. However, most of the nation’s energies have
been devoted to urban developments—most of those in the larger cities,
particularly Tehrān—and habitation in rural areas remains austere. In
major cities, purified water is piped into the houses, while small towns
and villages rely on wells, qanāts (underground canals), springs, or
rivers. Central heating is not common, except for modern buildings in
major cities, and portable kerosene heaters, iron stoves using wood and
coal, and charcoal braziers are common sources of heat. Living
conditions remain especially harsh among the urban poor and the enormous
refugee population.
Education
Education is compulsory between the ages of 6 and 11. Roughly
four-fifths of men and two-thirds of women are literate. Primary
education is followed by a three-year guidance cycle, which assesses
students’ aptitudes and determines whether they will enter an academic,
scientific, or vocational program during high school. Policy changes
initiated since the revolution eliminated coeducational schools and
required all schools and universities to promote Islamic values. The
latter is a reaction to the strong current of Western secularism that
permeated higher education under the monarchy. Adherence to the
prevalent political dogma has long been an important factor for students
and faculty who wish to succeed in Iranian universities. In fact,
acceptance to universities in Iran is largely based on a candidate’s
personal piety, either real or perceived.
The University of Tehrān was founded in 1934, and several more
universities, teachers’ colleges, and technical schools have been
established since then. Iran’s institutes of higher learning suffered
after the revolution, however, when tens of thousands of professors and
instructors either fled the country or were dismissed because of their
secularism or association with the monarchy. Iran’s universities have
remained understaffed, and thus student enrollment has dropped in a
country that greatly esteems higher education. The shortage of skilled
teachers has led the government to encourage students to study abroad,
in an effort to improve the quality and quantity of advanced degree
holders and faculty. While overall enrollment numbers have fallen, the
rate of women’s admission at the university level has climbed
dramatically, and by 2000 more than half of incoming students were
women.
The public school system is controlled by the Ministry of Education
and Training. Universities are under the supervision of the Ministry of
Higher Education and Culture, and medical schools are under the Ministry
of Health, Treatment, and Medical Education.
Cultural life
Cultural milieu
Few countries enjoy such a long cultural heritage as does Iran, and few
people are so aware of and articulate about their deep cultural
tradition as are the Iranians. Iran, or Persia, as a historical entity,
dates to the time of the Achaemenids (about 2,500 years ago), and,
despite political, religious, and historic changes, Iranians maintain a
deep connection to their past. Although daily life in modern Iran is
closely interwoven with Shīʿite Islam, the country’s art, literature,
and architecture are an ever-present reminder of its deep national
tradition and of a broader literary culture that during the premodern
period spread throughout the Middle East and South Asia. Much of Iran’s
modern history can be attributed to the essential tension that existed
between the Shīʿite piety promoted by Iran’s clergy and the Persian
cultural legacy—in which religion played a subordinate role—proffered by
the Pahlavi monarchy.
Despite the predominance of Persian culture, Iran remains a
multiethnic state, and the country’s Armenian, Azerbaijanian, Kurdish,
and smaller ethnic minorities each have their own literary and
historical traditions dating back many centuries, even—in the case of
the Armenians—to the pre-Christian era. These groups frequently maintain
close connections with the larger cultural life of their kindred outside
Iran.
Daily life and social customs
The narrative of martyrdom has been an essential component of Shīʿite
culture, which can be traced to the massacre in 680 of the third imam,
al-Ḥusayn ibn ʿAlī, along with his close family and followers at the
Battle of Karbalāʾ by the troops of the Ummayad caliph, Yazīd, during
al-Ḥusayn’s failed attempt to restore his family line to political
power. As a minority in the Islamic community, Shīʿites faced much
persecution and, according to Shīʿite doctrine, offered up many martyrs
over the centuries because of their belief in the right of the line of
ʿAlī to political rule and religious leadership. Each year on the
anniversary of the massacre, Shīʿites commemorate the Karbalāʾ tragedy
during the holiday of ʿĀshūrāʾ through the taʿziyyah (passion play) and
through rituals of self-flagellation with bare hands and, sometimes,
with chains and blades. These acts of mourning continue throughout the
year in the practice of the rawẕah khānī, a ritual of mourning in which
a storyteller, the rawẕah khān, incites the assembled—who are frequently
gathered at a special place of mourning called a ḥosayniyyeh—to tears by
tales of the death of al-Ḥusayn.
The commemoration of Karbalāʾ has permeated all of Persian culture
and finds expression in poetry, music, and the solemn Shīʿite view of
the world. No religious ceremony is complete without a reference to
Karbalāʾ, and no month passes without at least one day of mourning. None
of the efforts of the monarchy, such as the annual festivals of art and
the encouragement of musicians and native crafts, succeeded in changing
this basic attitude; public displays of laughter and joy remain
undesirable, even sinful, in some circles.
Iranians do celebrate several festive occasions. In addition to the
two ʿīds (Arabic: “holidays”)—practiced by Sunnites and Shīʿites
alike—the most important holidays are Nōrūz, the Persian New Year, and
the birthday of the 12th imam, whose second coming the Shīʿites expect
in the end of days. The Nōrūz celebration begins on the last Wednesday
of the old year, is followed by a weeklong holiday, and continues until
the 13th day of the new year, which is a day for picnicking in the
countryside. On the 12th imam’s birthday, cities sparkle with lights,
and the bazaars are decorated and teem with shoppers.
Persian cuisine, although strongly influenced by the culinary
traditions of the Arab world and the subcontinent, is largely a product
of the geography and domestic food products of Iran. Rice is a dietary
staple, and meat—mostly lamb—plays a part in virtually every meal.
Vegetables are central to the Iranian diet, with onions an ingredient of
virtually every dish. Herding has long been a traditional part of the
economy, and dairy products—milk, cheese, and particularly yogurt—are
common ingredients in Persian dishes. Traditional Persian cuisine tends
to favour subtle flavours and relatively simple preparations such as
khūresh (stew) and kabobs. Saffron is the most distinctive spice used,
but many other flavourings—including lime, mint, turmeric, and
rosewater—are common, as are pomegranates and walnuts.
The arts
Crafts
Carpet looms dot the country. Each locality prides itself on a special
design and quality of carpet that bears its name, such as Kāshān,
Kermān, Khorāsān, Eṣfahān, Shīrāz, Tabrīz, and Qom. Carpets are used
locally and are exported. The handwoven-cloth industry has survived
stiff competition from modern textile mills. Weavers produce velvets,
printed cottons, wool brocades, shawls, and cloth shoes. Felt is made in
the south, and sheepskin is embroidered in the northeast.
A wide range of articles, both utilitarian and decorative, are made
of various metals. The best-known centres are Tehrān (gold); Shīrāz,
Eṣfahān, and Zanjān (silver); and Kāshān and Eṣfahān (copper). Khorāsān
is known for its turquoise working and the Persian Gulf region for its
natural pearls. The craft techniques are as divergent as the products
themselves. Articles may be cast, beaten, wrought, pierced, or drawn
(stretched out). The most widespread techniques for ornamentation are
engraving, embossing, chiseling, damascening, encrustation, or gilding.
Numerous decorative articles in wood are produced for both the
domestic and export markets in Eṣfahān, Shīrāz, and Tehrān (inlay) and
in Rasht, Orūmiyyeh (formerly called Reẕāʿiyyeh), and Sanandaj (carved
and pierced wood). Machine-made ceramic tiles are manufactured in
Tehrān, but handmade tiles and mosaics, known for their rich designs and
beautiful colours, also continue to be produced.
Stone and clay are also used for the production of a wide range of
household utensils, trays, dishes, and vases. Mashhad is the centre of
the stone industry. Potteries are widely scattered throughout the
country, Hamadān being the largest centre.
Architecture
Iran’s ancient culture has a deep architectural tradition. The Elamite,
Achaemenian, Hellenistic, and other pre-Islamic dynasties left striking
stone testaments to their greatness, such as Choghā Zanbil and
Persepolis—both of which were designated UNESCO World Heritage sites in
1979. Three monastic ensembles central to the Armenian Christian faith
were collectively recognized as a World Heritage site in 2008; their
architecture represents a confluence of Byzantine, Persian, and Armenian
cultures. From the Islamic period the architectural achievements of the
Seljuq, Il-Khanid, and Ṣafavid dynasties are particularly noteworthy.
During that time Iranian cities such as Neyshābūr, Eṣfahān, and Shīrāz
came to be among the great cities of the Islamic world, and their many
mosques, madrasahs, shrines, and palaces formed an architectural
tradition that was distinctly Iranian within the larger Islamic milieu.
Under the Pahlavi monarchy, two architectural trends developed—an
imitation of Western styles, which had little relevance to the country’s
climate and landscape, and an attempt to revive indigenous designs. The
National Council for Iranian Architecture, founded in 1967, discouraged
blind imitation of the West and promoted the use of more traditional
Iranian styles that were modified to serve modern needs. Perhaps the
most striking example of the Pahlavi architectural program is the
Shāhyād (Persian: “Shah’s Monument”) tower—renamed the Āzādī (“Freedom”)
tower after the 1979 revolution—which was completed in Tehrān in 1971 to
commemorate the 2,500th anniversary of the founding of the Achaemenian
dynasty.
Visual arts
Islamic culture never developed strong indigenous schools of visual
arts, perhaps because of the religion’s rejection of any form of
idolatry or graphic depiction of any form. A significant exception to
this rule was the development in Iran of highly refined miniature
painting—noteworthy were the Jalāyirid, Shīrāz, and Eṣfahān schools.
Persian miniature, however, largely died out by the late Ṣafavid period
(late 18th century). This did not prevent Iranian artists from working
in other media, such as calligraphy, illumination, weaving, ceramics,
and metalwork. Western classical painting and sculpture were introduced
in the late 19th century and were adapted to Iranian themes. The trend
toward Islamization after the 1979 revolution restricted visual arts,
but this medium nevertheless continued to develop through exhibits and,
more recently, through access to the Internet.
Music
For centuries Islamic injunctions inhibited the development of formal
musical disciplines, but folk songs and ancient Persian classical music
were preserved through oral transmission from generation to generation.
It was not until the 20th century that a music conservatory was founded
in Tehrān and that Western techniques were used to record traditional
melodies and encourage new compositions. This trend was reversed,
however, in 1979, when the former restrictions on the study and practice
of music were restored. Although officially forbidden—even after the
liberal reforms of the late 1990s—Western pop music is fashionable among
Iranian youth, and there is a thriving trade in musical cassette tapes
and compact discs. Iranian pop groups also occasionally perform, though
often under threat of punishment. In 2000, Iranian authorities permitted
Googoosh, the most popular Iranian singer of the prerevolutionary era,
to resume her career—albeit from abroad—after 21 years of forced
silence.
Literature
Iranian culture is perhaps best known for its literature, which emerged
in its current form in the 9th century. The great masters of the Persian
language—Ferdowsī, Neẓāmī, Ḥāfeẓ, Jāmī, and Rūmī—continue to inspire
Iranian authors in the modern era, although publication and distribution
of many classical works—deemed licentious by conservative clerics—have
been difficult. Persian literature was deeply influenced by Western
literary and philosophical traditions in the 19th and 20th centuries yet
remains a vibrant medium for Iranian culture. Whether in prose or in
poetry, it also came to serve as a vehicle of cultural introspection,
political dissent, and personal protest for such influential Iranian
writers as Sadeq Hedayat, Jalal Al-e Ahmad, and Sadeq-e Chubak and such
poets as Ahmad Shamlu and Forough Farrokhzad. Following the Islamic
revolution of 1979, many Iranian writers went into exile, and much of
the country’s best Persian-language literature was thereafter written
and published abroad. However, the postrevolutionary era also witnessed
the birth of a new feminist literature by authors such as Shahrnoush
Parsipour and Moniru Ravanipur.
Cinema
The most popular form of entertainment in Iran is the cinema, which is
also an important medium for social and political commentary in a
society that has had little tolerance for participatory democracy. After
the 1979 revolution the government at first banned filmmaking but then
gave directors financial support if they agreed to propagate Islamic
values. However, the public showed little interest, and this period of
ideology-driven filmmaking did not last. Soon films that dealt with the
Iran-Iraq War (1980–88) or that reflected more tolerant expressions of
Islamic values, including Sufi mysticism, gained ground. The religious
establishment, however, generally frowns upon the imitation of Western
films among Iran’s filmmakers but encourages adapting Western and
Eastern classic stories and folktales, provided that they reflect
contemporary Iranian concerns and not transgress Islamic restrictions
imposed by the government. In the 1990s the fervour of the early
revolutionary years was replaced by demands for political moderation and
better relations with the West. Iran’s film industry became one of the
finest in the world, with festivals of Iranian films being held annually
throughout the world. Directors Bahram Bayzaʾi, Abbas Kiarostami, Mohsen
Makhmalbaf, and Dariyush Mehrjuʾi produced films that won numerous
awards at international festivals, including Cannes (France) and Locarno
(Switzerland), and a new generation of women film directors—among them
Rakhshan Bani Eʿtemad (Blue Scarf, 1995) and Tahmineh Milani (Two Women,
1999)—has also emerged.
Iran’s filmmakers are celebrated for films that deal with the lives
of children (Bashu the Stranger, 1989; The White Balloon, 1995; Children
of Heaven, 1997), the concerns and issues of teenagers (The Need, 1991;
Sweet Agony, 1999), the beauty of nature (Gabbeh, 1996), and social and
psychological abuse in marriage, divorce, and polygyny (Leila, 1996; Two
Women; Red, 1999).
Cultural institutions
Iran has few museums, and those that exist are of relatively recent
origin. The two exceptions are the Golestān Palace Museum in Tehrān,
which was opened in 1894, and the All Saviour’s Cathedral Museum of
Jolfā (Eṣfahān), which was built by the Armenian community in 1905. The
only gallery devoted solely to art is the Tehrān Museum of Modern Art,
opened in 1977. Other well-known museums include the National Museum of
Iran (1937) and Negārestān (1975) in Tehrān and Pārs (1938) in Shīrāz.
Among the learned societies, all of which are located in Tehrān, the
most important are the Ancient Iranian Cultural Society, the Iranian
Mathematical Society, and the Iranian Society of Microbiology. There are
also a number of research institutes, such as those devoted to cultural,
scientific, archaeological, anthropological, and historical topics. In
addition to libraries at the various universities, there are public and
private libraries in Tehrān, Mashhad, Eṣfahān, and Shīrāz.
Sports and recreation
Wrestling, horse racing, and ritualistic bodybuilding are the
traditional sports of the country. Team sports were introduced from the
West in the 20th century, the most popular being rugby football and
volleyball. Under the monarchy, modern sports were incorporated into the
school curricula. Iran’s Physical Education Organization was formed in
1934. Iranian athletes first participated in the Olympics Games in 1948.
The country made its Winter Games debut in 1956. All of Iran’s Olympic
medals have come in weight-lifting and wrestling events.
Football (soccer) has become the most popular game in Iran—the
country’s team won the Asian championships in 1968, 1974, and 1976 and
made its World Cup debut in 1978—but the 1979 revolution was a major
setback for Iranian sports. The new government regarded the sports
stadium as a rival to the mosque. Major teams were nationalized, and
women were prevented from participating in many activities. In addition,
the Iran-Iraq War left few resources to devote to sports. However, the
enormous public support for sports, especially for football, could not
be easily suppressed. Since the 1990s there has been a revival of
athletics in Iran, including women’s activities. Sports have become
inextricably bound up with demands for political liberalization, and
nearly every major event has become an occasion for massive public
celebrations by young men and women expressing their desire for reform
and for more amicable relations with the West.
Media and publishing
Daily newspapers and periodicals are published primarily in Tehrān and
must be licensed under the press law of 1979. The publication of any
anti-Muslim sentiment is strictly forbidden. Iran’s Ministry of Culture
and Islamic Guidance operates the Islamic Republic News Agency (IRNA).
Foreign correspondents are allowed into the country on special
occasions. Despite constitutional guarantees of freedom of the press,
censorship by conservative elements within the government is widespread,
particularly in the electronic media. Regardless, print
media—newspapers, magazines, and journals—contributed greatly to the
growth of political reform in Iran during the late 1990s. The most
widely circulated newspapers include Eṭṭelāʿāt and Kayhān.
Radio and television broadcasting stations in Iran are operated by
the government and reach the entire country, and some radio broadcasts
have international reception. The government made possession of
satellite reception equipment illegal in 1995, but the ban has been
irregularly enforced, and many Iranians have continued to receive
television broadcasts—including Persian-language programs—from abroad.
Programs are broadcast in Persian and some foreign languages, as well as
in local languages and dialects. Though basic literacy increased
substantially in the years following the revolution, audiovisual media
have remained much more effective than print material for disseminating
information, especially in rural areas.
Janet Afary
History
This article discusses the history of Iran from ad 640 to the present.
For the history of the region before the 7th century, see Iran, ancient.
The advent of Islam (640–829)
The Arab invasion of Iran made a break with the past that affected not
only Iran but all of western Asia and resulted in the assimilation of
peoples who shaped and vitalized Muslim culture. (See also Islamic
world.) The Prophet Muhammad had made Medina, his adopted city, and
Mecca, his birthplace, centres of an Arabian movement that Muslim Arabs
developed into a world movement through the conquest of Iranian and
Byzantine territories. Neither Sāsānian Iran nor the Byzantine Empire
had been unfamiliar to those Arabs who were the former’s Lakhmid and the
latter’s Ghassānid vassals, the frontier guardians of the two empires
against fellow Arabs who roamed deeper in the Arabian Desert. Also,
Meccan and Medinese Arabs had established commercial connections with
the Byzantines and Sāsānids. The immunity of Mecca’s ancient sanctuary,
the Kaʿbah, against outlawry and outrage had promoted this city’s
commercial importance. The Kaʿbah was cleansed of idols by Muhammad, who
had himself once been engaged in commerce. He made it the sanctuary of a
monotheistic faith whose sacred writings were filled with the
injunctions and prohibitions needed by a business community for secure
and stable trading.
Arab tribalism beyond urban fringes was less easily broken than
idols. It was embedded in the desert sparsity that led to warfare and
carefully counting a tribe’s male offspring. After Mecca and Medina had
become Muslim, it was essential that the Muslims win the desert Arabs’
allegiance in order to secure the routes they depended on for trade and
communication. In the process of doing this, wars over water holes,
scanty pastures, men-at-arms, and camels were enlarged into
international campaigns of expansion.
The vulnerability of Sāsānian Iran assisted the expansionist process.
In 623 the Byzantine emperor Heraclius reversed Persian successes over
Roman arms—namely, by capturing Jerusalem in 614 and winning at
Chalcedon in 617. His victim, Khosrow Parvīz, died in 628 and left Iran
prey to a succession of puppet rulers who were frequently deposed by a
combination of nobles and Zoroastrian clergy. Thus, when Yazdegerd III,
Iran’s last Sāsānid and Zoroastrian sovereign, came to the throne in
632, the year of Muhammad’s death, he inherited an empire weakened by
Byzantine wars and internal dissension.
The former Arab vassals on the empire’s southwestern border realized
that their moment had arrived, but their raids into Sāsānian territory
were quickly taken up by Muḥammad’s caliphs, or deputies, at Medina—Abū
Bakr and ʿUmar ibn al-Khaṭṭāb—to become a Muslim, pan-Arab attack on
Iran.
An Arab victory at Al-Qādisiyyah in 636/637 was followed by the sack
of the Sāsānian winter capital at Ctesiphon on the Tigris. The Battle of
Nahāvand in 642 completed the Sāsānids’ vanquishment. Yazdegerd fled to
the empire’s northeastern outpost, Merv, whose marzbān, or march lord,
Mahūyeh, was soured by Yazdegerd’s imperious and expensive demands.
Mahūyeh turned against his emperor and defeated him with the help of
Hephthalites from Bādghis. The Hephthalites, an independent border
power, had troubled the Sāsānids since at least 590, when they had sided
with Bahrām Chūbīn, Khosrow Parvīz’s rebel general. A miller near Merv
murdered the fugitive Yazdegerd for his purse.
The Sāsānids’ end was ignominious, but it was not the end of Iran.
Rather, it marked a new beginning. Within two centuries Iranian
civilization was revived with a cultural amalgam, with patterns of art
and thought, with attitudes and a sophistication that were indebted to
its pre-Islamic Iranian heritage—a heritage changed but also stirred
into fresh life by the Arab Muslim conquest.
Abū Muslim’s revolution
Less time was needed before a new Islamic beginning: Abū Muslim’s
movement, which began in Khorāsān in 747 and was caused by Arab
assimilation with Iranians in colonized regions. This revolution
followed years of conspiracy directed from Medina and across to Khorāsān
along the trade route that linked East Asia with Merv and thence with
the West. Along the route, merchants with contacts in the Mesopotamian
Arab garrison cities of Al-Kūfah, Wāsiṭ, and Al-Baṣrah acted as
intermediaries. Iranians who converted to Islam and became clients, or
al-mawālī, of Arab patrons played direct and indirect parts in the
revolutionary movement. The movement also involved Arabs who had become
partners with Khorāsānian and Transoxanian Iranians in ventures in the
great east-west trade and intercity trade of northeastern Iran. The
revolution was, nevertheless, primarily an Arab Islamic movement that
intended to supplant a militaristic, tyrannical central government—whose
fiscal problems made it avid for revenue—by one more sympathetic to the
needs of the merchants of eastern Islam. Abū Muslim, a revolutionary of
unknown origin, was able to exploit the discontent of the merchant
classes in Merv as well as that of the Arab and Iranian settlers. The
object of attack was the Umayyad government in Damascus.
When Muhammad died in 632, his newly established community in Medina
and Mecca needed a guiding counselor, an imam, to lead them in prayers
and an amīr al-muʾminīn, a “commander of the faithful,” to ensure proper
application of the Prophet’s divinely inspired precepts. As the Prophet,
Muhammad could never be entirely succeeded, but it was accepted that men
who had sufficient dignity and who had known him could fulfill the
functions, as his caliphs (deputies) and imams. After Abū Bakr and
ʿUmar, ʿUthmān ibn ʿAffān was chosen for this role.
By ʿUthmān’s time, factionalism was growing among Arabs, partly the
result of the jealousies and rivalries that accompanied the acquisition
of new territories and partly the result of the competition between
first arrivals there and those who followed. There was also uncertainty
over the most desirable kind of imamate. One faction, the Shīʿites,
supported ʿAlī, Muhammad’s cousin and the husband of the Prophet’s
favourite daughter, Fāṭimah, for the caliphate, since he had been an
intimate of Muhammad and seemed more capable than the other candidates
of expressing Muhammad’s wisdom and virtue as the people’s judge. The
desire for such a successor points to disenchantment with ʿUthmān’s
attempt to strengthen the central government and impose demands on the
colonies. His murder in 656 left his Umayyad relatives poised to avenge
it, while ʿAlī was raised to the caliphate. A group of his supporters,
the Khārijites, desired more freedom than ʿAlī was willing to grant,
with a return to the simplest interpretation of the Prophet’s revelation
in the Qurʾān, along puritanical lines.
A Khārijite killed ʿAlī in 661. The Shīʿites thenceforth crystallized
into the obverse position of the Khārijites, emphasizing ʿAlī’s
relationship to the Prophet as a means of making him and his descendants
by Fāṭimah the sole legitimate heirs to the Prophet, some of whose
spiritual power was even believed to have been transmitted to them.
Centuries later this Shīʿism became the official Islamic sect of Iran.
In the interim, Shīʿism was a rallying point for socially and
politically discontented elements within the Muslim community. In
addition to the Khārijites, another minority sect was thus formed,
hostile from the beginning to the Umayyad government that seized power
on ʿAlī’s death. The majority of Muslims avoided both the Shīʿite and
Khārijite positions, following instead the sunnah, or “practice,” as
these believers conceived the Prophet to have left it and as Abū Bakr,
ʿUmar, ʿUthmān, and ʿAlī, too—known as al-khulafāʾ al-rāshidūn (Arabic:
“the rightly guided caliphs”)—had observed and codified it.
Abū Muslim’s revolutionary movement was, as much as anything,
representing Medinese mercantile interests in the Hejaz, dissatisfied
with Umayyad inability to shelter Middle Eastern trade under a Pax
Islamica. To promote the revolution aimed to destroy Umayyad power, the
movement exploited Shīʿite aspirations and other forces of
disenchantment. The Khārijites were excluded, since their movement
opposed the idea of a caliphate of the kind Abū Muslim’s adherents were
fighting to establish—one that could command sufficient respect to hold
together an Islamic universal state. A discontented element ready to Abū
Muslim’s hand in Khorāsān, however, was not a religious grouping but
Arab settlers and Iranian cultivators who were burdened by taxation.
In Iran the first Arab conquerors had concluded treaties with local
Iranian magnates who had assumed authority when the Sāsānian imperial
government disintegrated. These notables—the marzbāns and landlords
(dehqāns)—undertook to continue tax collection on behalf of the new
Muslim power. The advent of Arab colonizers, who preferred to cultivate
the land rather than campaign farther into Asia, produced a further
complication. Once the Arabs had settled in Iranian lands, they, like
the Iranian cultivators, were required to pay the kharāj, or land tax,
which was collected by Iranian notables for the Muslims in a system
similar to that which had predated the conquest. The system was ripe for
abuse, and the Iranian collectors extorted large sums, arousing the
hostility of both Arabs and Persians.
Another source of discontent was the jizyah, or head tax, which was
applied to non-Muslims of the tolerated religions—Judaism, Christianity,
and Zoroastrianism. After they converted to Islam, Iranians expected to
be exempt from this tax. But the Umayyad government, burdened with
imperial expenses, often refused to exempt the Iranian converts.
The tax demands of the Damascus government were as distasteful to
those urbanized Arabs and Iranians in commerce as they were to those in
agriculture, and hopes of easier conditions under the new rulers than
under the Sāsānids were not fully realized. The Umayyads ignored Iranian
agricultural conditions, which required constant reinvestment to
maintain irrigation works and to halt the encroachment of the desert.
This no doubt made the tax burden, from which no returns were visible,
all the more odious. Furthermore, the regime failed to maintain the
peace so necessary to trade. Damascus feared the breaking away of remote
provinces where the Arab colonists were becoming assimilated with the
local populations. The government, therefore, deliberately encouraged
tribal factionalism in order to prevent a united opposition against it.
Thus the revolution set out to establish an Islamic ecumene above
divisions and sectarianism, the Pax Islamica already referred to, which
commerce required and which Iranian merchants without status in the
Sāsānian social hierarchy looked to Islam to provide. Ease of
communication from the Oxus (modern Amu Darya) River to the
Mediterranean Sea was wanted but without what seemed like a nest of
robbers calling themselves a government and straddling the route at
Damascus. In 750 Umayyad power was destroyed, and the revolution gave
the caliphate to the ʿAbbāsids (see Islamic world and Iraq: The ʿAbbāsid
Caliphate).
Hejazi commercial interests had in a sense overcome the military
party among leading Muslim Arabs. Greater concern for the east was
manifested by the new caliphate’s choice of Baghdad as its
capital—situated on the Tigris a short distance north of Ctesiphon and
designed as a new city, to be free of the factions of the old Umayyad
garrison cities of Al-Kūfah, Wāsiṭ, and Al-Baṣrah.
The ʿAbbāsid Caliphate (750–821)
The revolution that established the ʿAbbāsids represented a triumph of
the Islamic Hejazi elements within the empire; the Iranian revival was
yet to come. Nevertheless, ʿAbbāsid concern with fostering eastern Islam
made the new caliphs willing to borrow the methods and procedures of
statecraft employed by their Iranian predecessors. At Damascus the
Umayyads had imitated Sāsānian court etiquette, but at Baghdad
Persianizing influences went deeper and aroused some resentment among
the Arabs, who were nostalgic for the legendary simplicity of human
relations among the desert Arabs of yore. Self-conscious schools of
manners grew up in the new metropolis, representing the competitive
merits of the Arabs’ or Persians’ ancient ways. To counter the
widespread Arab chauvinism still present after the ʿAbbāsid revolution,
there arose a literary-political movement known as the shuʿūbiyyah,
which celebrated the excellence of non-Arab Muslim peoples, particularly
the Persians, and set the stage for the resurgence of Iranian literature
and culture in the decades to come. Regard for poetry—the Arabs’ vehicle
of folk memory—increased, and minds and imaginations were quickened.
Philosophical enquiry was developed out of the need for precision about
the meaning of Holy Writ and for the establishment of the authenticity
of the Prophet’s dicta, collected as Hadith—sayings traditionally
ascribed to him and recollected and preserved for posterity by his
companions. An amalgam known as Islamic civilization was thus being
forged in Baghdad in the 8th and 9th centuries. The Iranian intellect,
however, played a conspicuous part in what was still an Arab milieu.
Works of Indian provenance were translated into Arabic from Pahlavi, the
written language of Sāsānian Iran, notably by Ibn al-Muqaffaʿ (c.
720–757). The wisdom of both the ancient East and West was received and
discussed in Baghdad’s schools. The metropolis’s outposts confronted
Byzantium as well as infidel marches in Afghanistan and Central Asia.
Cultural influences came from both directions. Curiosity in the pursuit
of knowledge had been enjoined by the Prophet “even as far as China.”
This cosmopolitanism was not new to the descendants of the urban Arabs
of Mecca or to the Iranians, whose land lay across the routes from the
Pacific to the Mediterranean. Both peoples knew how to transmute what
was not originally their own into forms that were entirely Islamic.
Islam had liberated men of the scribal and mercantile classes who in
Iran had been subject to the dictates of a taboo-ridden and excessively
ritualized Zoroastrianism and who in Arabia had been inhibited by tribal
feuds and prejudices.
Despite the development of a distinctive Islamic culture, the
military problems of the empire were left unsolved. The ʿAbbāsids were
under pressure from the infidel on several fronts—Turks in Central Asia,
pagans in India and in the Hindu Kush, and Christians in Byzantium. War
for the faith, or jihad, against these infidels was a Muslim duty. But,
whereas the Umayyads had been expansionists and had seen themselves as
heads of a military empire, the ʿAbbāsids were more pacific and saw
themselves as the supporters of more than an Arab, conquering militia.
Yet rebellions within the imperial frontiers had to be contained and the
frontiers protected.
Rebellion within the empire took the form of peasant revolts in
Azerbaijan and Khorāsān, coalesced by popular religious appeals centred
on men who assumed or were accorded mysterious powers. Abū
Muslim—executed in 755 by the second ʿAbbāsid caliph, al-Manṣūr, who
feared his influence—became one such messianic figure. Another was
al-Muqannaʿ (Arabic: “the Veiled One”), who used Abū Muslim’s mystique
and whose movement lasted from 777 to 780. The Khorram-dīnān (Persian:
“Glad Religionists”), under the Azerbaijanian Bābak (816–838), also
necessitated vigorous military suppression. Bābak eluded capture for two
decades, defying the caliph in Azerbaijan and western Persia, before
being caught and brought to Baghdad to be tortured and executed. These
heresiarchs revived such creeds as that of the anti-Sāsānid religious
leader Mazdak (died 528 or 529), expressive of social and millenarian
aspirations that were later canalized into Sufism on the one hand and
into Shīʿism on the other.
Sīstān, Iran’s southeastern border area, had a tradition of chivalry
as the ancient homeland of Iranian military champions. Their tales
passed to posterity collectively in the deeds of Rostam, son of Zāl, in
Ferdowsī’s Shāh-nāmeh, the Persian national epic. On the route to India,
Sīstān was also a centre of trade. Its agrarian masses were
counterbalanced by an urban population whose economy could be bolstered
by plunder gained through military forays into still non-Muslim areas
under the rule of the southern Hephthalites—the Zunbīls of the Hindu
Kush’s southwestern flanks—whose command of trade routes with India had
to be contested when the existing partnership in this command broke
down.
Early exploitation of the province’s agriculture by Arab governors
had, however, debilitated the rural life, and Khārijites, who found
refuge in Sīstān from the Umayyads, organized or attracted bands of
local peasants and vagabonds who had strayed south from Khorāsān. The
presence of these groups indicates agricultural depression following the
first century of rule by nonagricultural Arabs who had failed to grasp
the needs of the Iranian cultivators. Khārijite bands isolated the
cities and threatened their supplies. Sīstān needed an urban champion
who could come to terms with the Khārijites and divert them to what
could legitimately be termed jihad across the border, forming the
gangsters into a well-disciplined loyal army. Such a man was Yaʿqūb ibn
Layth, who founded the Ṣaffārid dynasty, the first purely Iranian
dynasty of the Islamic era, and threatened the Muslim empire with the
first resurgence of Iranian independence.
The “Iranian intermezzo” (821–1055)
Yaʿqūb ibn Layth’s movement differed from Ṭāhir ibn al-Ḥusayn’s
establishment of a dynasty of Iranian governors over Khorāsān in 821.
The latter’s rise marks the caliph’s recognition, after the difficulties
encountered in Iran by Hārūn al-Rashīd (reigned 786–809), that the best
way for the imam and amīr al-muʾminīn at Baghdad to ensure military
effectiveness in eastern Islam was by appointing a great general to
govern Khorāsān. Ṭāhir had won Baghdad from Hārūn’s son al-Amīn in
favour of his other son, al-Maʾmūn, in the civil war between the two
after their father’s death. Ṭāhir was descended from the mawālī of an
Arab leader in eastern Khorāsān. He was, therefore, of Iranian origin,
but, unlike Yaʿqūb, he did not emerge out of his own folk and because of
a regional need. Instead, he rose as a servant of the caliphate, as
whose lieutenant he was, in due course, appointed to govern a great
frontier province. He made Neyshābūr his capital. Though he died shortly
after gaining the right of having his name mentioned after the caliph’s
in the khuṭbah (the formal sermon at the Friday congregations of Muslims
when those with authority over the community were mentioned after the
Prophet), his family was sufficiently influential and respected at
Baghdad to retain the governorship of Neyshābūr until the Ṭāhirids were
ousted from the city by Yaʿqūb in 873. Thereafter they retired to
Baghdad.
Discussion of the rise of “independent” Persian dynasties such as the
Ṭāhirid in the 9th century has to be qualified: not only does the
skillful ʿAbbāsid statecraft need to be considered, but also the
Muslims’ need for legality in a juridical-religious setting must be
recognized. The majority of Muslims considered the caliph to be the
legitimate head of the faith and the guarantor of the law. Such a
guarantee was preeminently the need of merchants in the cities of
Sīstān, Transoxania, and central Iran.
In the Caspian provinces of Gīlān and Ṭabaristān (Māzandarān) the
situation was different. The Elburz Mountains had been a barrier against
the integration of these areas into the Caliphate. Small princely
families—the Bāvands, including the Kāʾūsiyyeh and the Espahbadiyyeh
(665–1349), and the Musāfirids, also known as Sallārids or Kangarids
(916–c. 1090)—had remained independent of the caliphal capitals,
Damascus and Baghdad, in the mountains of Daylam. When Islam reached
these old Iranian enclaves, it was brought by Shīʿite leaders in flight
from metropolitan persecution. It was not the Islam of the Sunnite
state.
The Ṣaffārids
Yaʿqūb ibn Layth began life as an apprentice ṣaffār (Arabic:
“coppersmith”), hence his dynasty’s name, Ṣaffārid. Taking to military
freebooting, he mustered an army that he disciplined and regularly paid
in cash, absorbing many Khārijites into its ranks. This and his
extension of Islam into pagan areas of Sind and Afghanistan earned him
the caliph’s gratitude, which Yaʿqūb courted by sending golden idols
captured from infidels to be paraded in Baghdad. Yaʿqūb’s attitude
toward the imam’s claiming political subservience was, nevertheless,
strikingly similar to that of the caliph-rejecting Khārijites. He turned
his attention inward instead of outside the pale of Islam. He seized
Baghdad’s breadbaskets—Fārs and Khūzestān—and drove the Ṭāhirid emir
from Neyshābūr. His march on Baghdad itself was halted only by the
stratagem devised by the caliph’s commander in chief, who inundated
Yaʿqūb’s army by bursting dikes. Yaʿqūb died soon after, in 879. He had
made an empire, minted his own coinage, fashioned a new style of army
loyal to its leader rather than to any religious or doctrinal concept,
and required that verses in his praise be put into his own
language—Persian—from Arabic, which he did not understand. He began the
Iranian resurgence.
The collapse of the Ṭāhirid viceroyalty left Baghdad faced with a
power vacuum in Khorāsān and southern Persia. The caliph reluctantly
confirmed Yaʿqūb’s brother ʿAmr as governor of Fārs and Khorāsān but
withdrew his recognition on three occasions, and ʿAmr’s authority was
disclaimed to the Khorāsānian pilgrims to Mecca when they passed through
Baghdad. But ʿAmr remained useful to Baghdad so long as Khorāsān was
victimized by the rebels Aḥmad al-Khujistānī and, for longer, Rāfiʿ ibn
Harthama. After Rāfiʿ had been finally defeated in 896, ʿAmr’s broader
ambitions gave the caliph al-Muʿtaḍid his chance. ʿAmr conceived designs
on Transoxania, but there the Sāmānids held the caliph’s license to
rule, after having nominally been Ṭāhirid deputies. When ʿAmr demanded
and obtained the former Ṭāhirid tutelage over the Sāmānids in 898,
Baghdad could leave the Ṣaffārid and Sāmānid to fight each other, and
the Sāmānid Ismāʿīl (reigned 892–907) won. ʿAmr was sent to Baghdad,
where he was put to death in 902. His family survived as Sāmānid vassals
in Sīstān and were heard of until the 16th century. Yaʿqūb remains a
popular hero in Iranian history.
The Sāmānids
There was nothing of the popular hero in the Sāmānids’ origin. Their
eponym was Sāmān-Khodā, a landlord in the district of Balkh and,
according to the dynasty’s claims, a descendant of Bahrām Chūbīn, the
Sāsānian general. Sāmān became Muslim. His four grandsons were rewarded
for services to the caliph al-Maʾmūn (reigned 813–833) and received the
caliph’s investiture for areas that included Samarkand and Herāt. They
thus gained wealthy Transoxanian and east Khorāsānian entrepôt cities,
where they could profit from trade that reached across Asia, even as far
as Scandinavia, and from providing Turkish slaves—much in demand in
Baghdad as royal troops—while they protected the frontiers and provided
security for merchants in Bukhara, Samarkand, Khujand, and Herāt. With
one transitory exception, they upheld Sunnism and at each new accession
to power paid a tribute to Baghdad for the tokens of investiture from
the caliph whereby their rule represented lawful authority. Thus, legal
transactions in Sāmānid realms would be valid, and Baghdad received
tribute in return for the insignia prayed over and signed by the caliph.
This tribute took the place of regular revenue, so that it represented a
solution of the taxation problems and consequent resentments that had
bedeviled the Umayyad regime. In modern assessments of imperial power,
Baghdad may seem to have been politically the weaker for this type of
arrangement, but ensuring the reign of Islam in peripheral provinces was
important to the caliphs. Islam’s portals to East Asia were adequately
guarded, the supply of Turkish slaves essential for the caliph’s
bodyguard was maintained, and Turkish pagan tribes were converted to
Islam under the Sāmānids.
The Iranian renaissance
The Sāmānid aura lasted from 819 until it was eclipsed in 999. Its
supremacy in northeastern Islam began in 875, when the Sāmānid emir,
Naṣr I, received the license to govern all of Transoxania. Sāmānid emirs
succeeded the Ṭāhirid-Ṣaffārid power in Khorāsān, and under them the
Iranian renaissance at last came to fruition. Shaped out of the
vernacular of northeastern Iranian courts and households and making
skillful use of additional Arabic vocabulary, the Persian language
emerged as a literary medium. Persian notation had been used in the
first Muslim dīwāns, or chancelleries, in accountancy, because the first
civil servants in the old Iranian areas had been Iranians. In 697 the
ruthless Umayyad governor Ḥajjāj ibn Yūsuf had ordered the change to
Arabic notation, marking the final dethronement of Pahlavi characters.
When Modern Persian began to develop as a written language two centuries
later, its alphabet was Arabic. It emerged as poetry, by which it was
disciplined into a most expressive and flexible tongue, with the
flexibility resulting from perfect control of a highly formal medium.
The discipline was that of Arabic prosody, to which scenes of a verdure
unknown to the Arab poet in the desert added, in the words of Iranian
poets, a new and lustrous imagery. Rivaling the Arabs’ tales of ancient
valour was the Iranian legend versified under Sāmānid patronage in the
Shāh-nāmeh (“Book of Kings”), Iran’s national epic, composed by Ferdowsī
of Ṭūs in Khorāsān over a 30-year period and finally completed after the
eclipse of the Sāmānids, in 1009/10.
Under the Sāmānids, Bukhara rivaled Baghdad as a cultural capital of
Islam. Besides the Persian poet Rūdakī (died 940/941), who had
crystallized the language and imagery of Persian lyrical poetry as
Ferdowsī (died between 1020 and 1026) was to do for that of the epic,
patrons such as Naṣr II (reigned 914–943) attracted poets and scholars
to Bukhara, many producing literary and academic works in both Persian
and Arabic. A written Persian evolved that has survived with remarkably
little change.
The Ghaznavids
Rūdakī, in a poem about the Sāmānid emir’s court, describes how “row
upon row” of Turkish slave guards were part of its adornment. From these
guards’ ranks two military families arose—the Sīmjūrids and
Ghaznavids—who ultimately proved disastrous to the Sāmānids. The
Sīmjūrids received an appanage in the Kūhestān region of southern
Khorāsān. Alp Tigin founded the Ghaznavid fortunes when he established
himself at Ghazna (modern Ghaznī, Afghanistan) in 962. He and Abū
al-Ḥasan Sīmjūrī, as Sāmānid generals, competed with each other for the
governorship of Khorāsān and control of the Sāmānid empire by placing on
the throne emirs they could dominate. Abū al-Ḥasan died in 961, but a
court party instigated by men of the scribal class—civilian ministers as
contrasted with Turkish generals—rejected Alp Tigin’s candidate for the
Sāmānid throne. Manṣūr I was installed, and Alp Tigin prudently retired
to his fief of Ghazna. The Sīmjūrids enjoyed control of Khorāsān south
of the Oxus but were hard-pressed by a third great Iranian dynasty, the
Būyids, and were unable to survive the collapse of the Sāmānids and the
rise of the Ghaznavids.
The struggles of the Turkish slave generals for mastery of the throne
with the help of shifting allegiance from the court’s ministerial
leaders both demonstrated and accelerated the Sāmānid decline. Sāmānid
weakness attracted into Transoxania the Qarluq Turks, who had recently
converted to Islam. They occupied Bukhara in 992 to establish in
Transoxania the Qarakhanid, or Ilek Khanid, dynasty. Alp Tigin had been
succeeded at Ghazna by Sebüktigin (died 997). Sebüktigin’s son Maḥmūd
made an agreement with the Qarakhanids whereby the Oxus was recognized
as their mutual boundary. Thus the Sāmānids’ dominion was divided and
Maḥmūd was freed to advance westward into Khorāsān to meet the Būyids.
The Būyids
The Būyids (or Buwayhids) share with the Sāmānids the palm for having
brought to fruition the Iranian renaissance. They achieved Iranian
political reascendancy by doing what Yaʿqūb ibn Layth had failed to do
and what the Sāmānids would probably have considered illegal to do: they
captured Baghdad and made the caliph their puppet. As far east as the
city of Rayy, western, central, and southern Iran were once more ruled
by an Iranian dynasty. At the peak of the Būyid empire, the Būyid base
second to Baghdad became Fārs, whence the Achaemenids and the Sāsānids
had sprung. Politically, the Būyids effected the Iranianization of the
metropolitan government in Baghdad. Yet, by the very fact that they saw
in the caliphate an institution of enough purely political significance
to merit its dramatic takeover, they paradoxically left the caliphate’s
political role emphasized by what at first sight might seem to have been
deepest humiliation. Spiritually, the caliphate held no appeal for the
Būyids, who were Shīʿite. Politically and juridically, as the
stabilizing factor over the Islamic peoples, the Būyids, in spite of
their own religious affiliation, maintained the caliphate.
The homeland of the Būyids was Daylam, in the Gīlān uplands in
northern Iran. There, at the end of the 9th century, hardy valley
dwellers had been stirred into martial activity by a number of factors,
among them the rebel Rāfiʿ ibn Harthama’s attempt to penetrate the
region, ostensibly with Sāmānid support. ʿAmr ibn Layth had pursued the
rebel into the region. Other factors had been the formation of Shīʿite
principalities in the area and continued Sāmānid attempts to subjugate
them. After the Ṭāhirid collapse, the lack of stability in northern Iran
south of the Elburz Mountains attracted many Daylamite mercenaries into
the area on military adventures. Among them Mākān ibn Kākī served the
Sāmānids with his compatriots, the sons of Būyeh, and their allies the
Ziyārids under Mardāvīj. Mardāvīj introduced the three Būyid brothers to
the Iranian plateau, where he established an empire reaching as far
south as Eṣfahān and Hamadān. He was murdered in 935, but his Ziyārid
descendants sought Sāmānid protection. They adhered to Sunnism and
maintained themselves in the region southeast of the Caspian Sea. The
Ziyārid Qābūs ibn Voshamgīr (reigned 978–1012) built himself a tomb
tower, the Gonbad-e Qābūs (1006–07), which remains one of Iran’s finest
monuments. Also still extant is a work of his descendant ʿUnṣur
al-Maʿālī Keykāʾūs (reigned 1049–90), the Qābūs-nāmeh, a prose “Mirror
for Princes,” which is a valuable document on the social and political
life of the time.
Mardāvīj’s expansionism south of the Elburz was taken up by his Būyid
lieutenants: the eldest brother, ʿAlī, consolidated power for himself in
Eṣfahān and Fārs and obtained the caliph’s recognition; another brother,
Ḥasan, occupied Rayy and Hamadān; and the youngest brother, Aḥmad, took
Kermān in the southeast and Khūzestān in the southwest. The caliphs
al-Muttaqī and al-Mustakfī of the 940s were at the mercy of the Turkish
slaves in their palace guard. The generals of the guard competed with
each other for the office of amīr al-umarāʾ (commander in chief), who
virtually ruled Iraq on behalf of the caliphs. When Aḥmad gained
Khūzestān, he was close to the scene of the amīr al-umarāʾ contests,
which he chose to settle by himself. Aḥmad entered Baghdad in 945 and
assumed control of the caliphate’s political functions. The caliph
became a Būyid protégé and conferred on Aḥmad the title of Muʿizz
al-Dawlah. ʿAlī became ʿImād al-Dawlah, and Ḥasan became Rukn al-Dawlah.
All these titles implied that the Būyids were the upholders of the
Muslim ʿAbbāsid dawlah, or state. In practice, however, the dawlah
became a Daylamite state. It should be noted that the titles the caliph
assigned the Būyids did not include the word dīn, or religion (as in
Ṣalāḥ al-Dīn, “Righteousness of Religion”), which the caliph awarded
exclusively to Sunnite officials, thus emphasizing the continuing
independence of the caliphate as a religious institution.
Later Būyid titles increased in grandeur. Even the old Achaemenian
title of shāhanshāh, king of kings, reappeared—a title Aḥmad may have
thought appropriate for an Iranian whose family reconquered Iran south
of the Elburz Mountains. As suggested above, Būyid titles emphasized
political and territorial sovereignty. This sovereignty reached its
greatest extent under Rukn al-Dawlah’s son, ʿAḍud al-Dawlah, who, after
the deaths of his father and uncles, ruled an empire that comprised all
of Persia west and south of Khorāsān and included Iraq, with Baghdad at
its heart. ʿAḍud al-Dawlah pursued peace negotiations with Byzantium,
perhaps to free himself for his cherished project of an Egyptian
campaign against the rival caliphate of the Shīʿite Fāṭimids,
established in North Africa in 909, which had been relocated in Egypt in
969. ʿAḍud al-Dawlah’s concern with the middle kingdom and its westward
extension toward the Mediterranean increased his hostility toward the
Fāṭimids, despite his own Shīʿite persuasion. In the north he drove the
Ziyārids out of Ṭabaristān, which struck a blow against the Sāmānids’
influence in the Caspian area.
ʿAḍud al-Dawlah is celebrated for public works, of which the dam he
built across the Kor River near Shīrāz, the Band-e Amīr (“Prince’s
Dam”), remains. He embellished the tomb of ʿAlī at Al-Najaf in Iraq,
where he himself was also buried. He built libraries, schools, and
hospitals, and he was the patron of the Arabic poet al-Mutanabbī. Some
Arabic verses of his own are still extant. Although ʿAḍud al-Dawlah was
undoubtedly one of Iran’s greatest rulers, his fratricidal wars,
conducted with terrible intractability on his way to power, initiated
Būyid decline. The descendants of the early Būyids reversed the mutual
fidelity of the first three brothers. The power this fidelity had
achieved and ʿAḍud al-Dawlah had made into a world force crumbled after
his death in 983.
His base had been Shīrāz, which he beautified and established as a
cultural centre, but he died at Baghdad, where he chose to keep close to
the caliph, whose daughter he married and from whom he took the title
“the Crown of the Community” and the privilege, like the caliph, of
having drums beaten at his gate on the calls to prayer. He also had his
name mentioned after that of the caliph al-Ṭaʾiʿ in the khuṭbah. The
Būyids avoided the policy, which in all likelihood would have disrupted
the empire, of favouring the Shīʿites. Instead, they offered
consolations of an emotional sort to the Shīʿites in the form of public
rites on the anniversaries of the Shīʿite martyrs, notably the one
commemorating the massacre of ʿAlī’s son Ḥusayn and his followers under
the Umayyads at Karbalāʾ in Iraq.
Although the Būyids were careful to avoid sectarian strife, family
quarrels weakened them sufficiently for Maḥmūd of Ghazna to gain Rayy in
1029. But Maḥmūd (reigned 998–1030) went no farther: his dynasty paid
great deference to the caliphate’s legitimating power, and he made no
bid to contest the Būyids’ role as its protectors. Maḥmūd’s agreement
with the Sāmānids’ Ilek Khanid successors, that the Oxus should be their
mutual boundary, held, but south of the river the Ghaznavids had to
contend with their own distant relatives, the Oğuz Turks. Contrary to
the sage counsel of Iranian ministers, Maḥmūd and his successor Masʿūd
(reigned 1031–41) permitted these tribesmen to use Khorāsānian grazing
grounds, which they entered from north of the Oxus. United under
descendants of an Oğuz leader named Seljuq, between 1038 and 1040 these
nomads drove the Ghaznavids out of northeastern Iran. The final
encounter was at Dandānqān in 1040.
After their defeat by the Seljuqs, the Ghaznavids, patrons of Islamic
culture and letters, were deflected eastward into India, where Maḥmūd
had already conducted successful raids. The raids took the form of jihad
(or holy war), and the Ghaznavids carried Islam and Persian Muslim art
to the Indian subcontinent. In Iran it was the Seljuqs’ turn to create a
new imperial synthesis with the ʿAbbāsid caliphs. Ṭoghrıl Beg, the
Seljuq sultan, entered Baghdad in 1055, and Būyid power was terminated,
thus ending what Vladimir Minorsky, the great Iranologist, called the
“Iranian intermezzo.”
The Seljuqs and the Mongols
The Seljuqs
Ṭoghrıl I had proclaimed himself sultan at Neyshābūr in 1038 and had
espoused strict Sunnism, by which he gained the caliph’s confidence and
undermined the Būyid position in Baghdad. The Oğuz Turks had accepted
Islam late in the 10th century, and their leaders displayed a convert’s
zeal in their efforts to restore a Muslim polity along orthodox lines.
Their efforts were made all the more urgent by the spread of Fāṭimid
Ismāʿīlī propaganda (Arabic daʿwah) in the eastern Caliphate by means of
an underground network of propagandists, or dāʿīs, intent on undermining
the Būyid regime, and by the threat posed by the Christian Crusaders.
The Būyids’ usurpation of the caliph’s secular power had given rise
to a new theory of state formulated by al-Māwardī (died 1058).
Al-Māwardī’s treatise partly prepared the theoretical ground for
Ṭoghrıl’s attempt to establish an orthodox Muslim state in which
conflict between the caliph-imam’s spiritual-juridical authority on the
one side and the secular power of the sultan on the other could be
resolved, or at least regulated, by convention. Al-Māwardī reminded the
Muslim world of the necessity of the imamate; but the treatise
realistically admitted the existence of, and thus accommodated, the fact
of military usurpation of power. The Seljuqs’ own political theorist
al-Ghazālī (died 1111) carried this admission further by explaining that
the position of a powerless caliph, overshadowed by a strong Seljuq
master, was one in which the latter’s presence guaranteed the former’s
capacity to defend and extend Islam.
The caliph al-Qāʾim (reigned 1031–75) replaced the last Būyid’s name,
al-Malik al-Raḥīm, in the khuṭbah and on the coins with that of Ṭoghrıl
Beg; and, after protracted negotiation ensuring restoration of the
caliph’s dignity after Shīʿite subjugation, Ṭoghrıl entered Baghdad in
December 1055. The caliph enthroned him and married a Seljuq princess.
After Ṭoghrıl had campaigned successfully as far as Syria, he was given
the title of “king of the east and west.” The new situation was
justified by the theory that existing practice was legal whereby a new
caliph could be instituted by the sultan, who possessed effective power
and sovereignty, but that thereafter the sultan owed the caliph
allegiance because only so long as the caliph-imam’s juridical faculties
were recognized could government be valid.
Ṭoghrıl Beg died in 1063. His heir, Alp-Arslan, was succeeded by
Malik-Shah in 1072, and the latter’s death in 1092 led to succession
disputes out of which Berk-Yaruq emerged triumphant to reign until 1105.
After a brief reign, Malik-Shah II was succeeded by Muḥammad I (reigned
1105–18). The last “Great Seljuq” was Sanjar (1118–57), who had earlier
been governor of Khorāsān.
Alp-Arslan had nearly annihilated the Byzantine army at Manzikert in
1071, opening Asia Minor to those dependent tribesmen of the Seljuqs of
whom Iran and the world were to hear more in the period of Ottoman
power. Transoxania was subdued, the Christians in the Caucasus
chastised, and the Fāṭimids expelled from Syria. An empire was for a
short time achieved whose extent and stability enabled Alp-Arslan’s and
Malik-Shah’s great minister, Niẓām al-Mulk (died 1092), to pay a
ferryman on the Oxus River with a draft cashable in Damascus.
Building and maintaining such a great empire necessitated a military
regime and a vast war machine. The price to be paid later was oppression
by military commanders and their units, set free to compete with each
other and harry the land after the machine fell out of the grasp of
powerful sultans. The soldiers had been remunerated by grants of land
called iqṭāʿs, which were originally usufructuary but developed over
time into hereditary properties. The grants later became nuclei out of
which petty principalities grew with the decline of the central power.
The cultivators were left at the mercy of military overlords in
possession of the soil.
The great minister Niẓām al-Mulk was typical of the Iranian
bureaucracy, which, in an area prone to invasion, was often called on to
attempt to cushion the impact of the brute military force of nomadic
invaders and contain it within the bounds of administrative, economic,
and cultural feasibility. For his Turkish masters he wrote the
Seyāsat-nāmeh (“Book of Government”), in which he urged the regulation
of royal court procedures in line with Sāmānid models and the
restriction of the arrogance and cupidity of the military fief holders.
His book is the measure of the Seljuqs’ failure to provide enduring
stability and equitable government. Had they done so, such a work would
have been unnecessary.
The Ismāʿīliyyah
Of one disruptive force Niẓām al-Mulk’s book is dramatically
descriptive, in terms betraying near panic. The Seljuqs failed to nip in
the bud the power of the Ismāʿīliyyah, originally spread throughout the
eastern Islamic world by clandestine Fāṭimid dāʿīs—many of whose cells
later split from the mainstream of events in Egypt to become an
independent organization within the Seljuq empire. This organization
exercised power by terrorism, and the name given its adherents by
Europeans in the Middle Ages, Assassins (from ḥashīshī, denoting a
consumer of hashish), has become a common noun in English. Ismāʿīlī
doctrine consisted of an esoteric system combining extremist (Arabic
ghulāt) Shīʿite beliefs and a complex theology heavily permeated by the
form and content of Hellenistic philosophy. Ismāʿīliyyah recognized only
7 of the imams in descent from ʿAlī and Fāṭimah, whereas the Ithnā
ʿAsharī Shīʿism—that followed by the Būyids and the dominant sect of
modern Iran—recognized 12.
The movement in Iran crystallized under the leadership of Ḥasan-e
Ṣabbāḥ, who had been trained in Fāṭimid Egypt. In 1090 Ḥasan gained the
castle of Alamūt in the Elburz Mountains, and the order’s principal
cells were thereafter situated, so far as possible, in similar
impregnable mountain strongholds. From these centres, fidāʾīs, or
devotees ready to sacrifice their lives, issued forth and permeated
society, spreading their mission as peddlers and itinerant tailors and
gaining influence among the urban artisan and weaving classes. They were
also often able to win the confidence of many highly placed women and
children, whom they could please with novelties of dress or toys. Niẓām
al-Mulk himself was assassinated by one of the fidāʾīs, but it is
possible that this was done with the connivance of one of Malik-Shah’s
wives, whose son the vizier did not support for the succession.
The Ismāʿīliyyah were able to puncture Seljuq power but not destroy
it. In the end the Seljuq empire collapsed where it had begun—in
Khorāsān, where Sultan Sanjar ultimately failed to control Turkmen
tribes related to him by blood. Sanjar could not rely on military
commanders his family had raised to high posts and had rewarded with
land and provincial powers. The tribesmen refused to be coerced into
paying taxes. In 1153 they captured the old sultan and, although
allowing him all the respect of his regal position, kept him captive for
three years.
The Khwārezm-Shahs
Atsiz was the military leader who, after Sultan Sanjar’s capture in
1153, succeeded in supplanting Seljuq power in northeastern Iran. His
ancestor, Anūṣtegin, had been keeper of Malik-Shah’s kitchen utensils
and had been rewarded with the governorship of Khwārezm on the Oxus,
where he founded the Khwārezm-Shah dynasty (c. 1077–1231). Regions
elsewhere in Iran, on the passing of Seljuq supremacy, became
independent under atabegs, who were originally proxy fathers and tutors
sent with young Seljuq princes when these were deputed to govern
provinces. At first the atabegs took power in the names of Seljuq
puppets. When this fiction lapsed, atabeg dynasties such as the
Eldegüzids of Azerbaijan (c. 1137–1225) and Salghurids of Fārs (c.
1148–1270) split Iran into independent rival principalities.
The Salghurid court in Shīrāz especially fostered the arts, as
parvenu, competitive courts are wont to do. The poet Saʿdī (died 1292)
was a contemporary in Shīrāz of the Salghurid atabeg Abū Bakr ibn Saʿd
ibn Zangī (reigned 1231–60), whom he mentions by name in his Būstān
(“The Orchard”), a book of ethics in verse. Abū Bakr’s father, Saʿd, for
whom Saʿdī took his pen name, conferred great prosperity on Shīrāz.
Saʿd ibn Zangī came to terms with the Khwārezm-Shahs. Their power in
Transoxania was secured by acceptance of tributary status to the
non-Muslim Karakitai empire of Central Asia. They endeavoured to emulate
the Seljuqs by following an expansionist policy in Iran south of the
Oxus. Saʿd ibn Zangī, in his relations with the Khwārezm-Shah, set the
pattern his successor Abū Bakr followed later. These atabegs saved Fārs
from outright invasion by northern military powers by paying heavy
tribute. This tribute was the price of Shīrāz’s remaining the peaceful
haven of the arts in which Saʿdī and after him Ḥāfeẓ (died 1390)
flourished, to continue the Persian literary tradition begun under the
Sāmānids and continued under both the Ghaznavids and the Seljuqs.
The collapse of the Karakitai empire northeast of the Oxus was partly
accelerated by the unsuccessful bid of Khwārezm-Shah ʿAlāʾ al-Dīn
Muḥammad (reigned 1200–20) to win Muslim approval while releasing
himself from the Khwārezm-Shahs’ humiliating tributary status to an
infidel power. But the coup de grâce to the Karakitai empire was
delivered by its own vassal from the east, the Mongol leader Küchlüg
Khan, who from 1211 onward was to be a direct opponent of the
Khwārezm-Shahs in Central Asia. The Karakitai had been defeated, but the
situation on the Khwārezm-Shah’s eastern border had worsened.
Meanwhile, Sultan ʿAlāʾ al-Dīn Muḥammad quarreled with the caliph; he
set up an anticaliph of his own and further antagonized his Muslim
subjects, who were unremittingly suspicious of a regime once subject to
the Karakitai infidels and whose Kipchak mercenary militia and brutal
commanders brought cruelty and desolation wherever they marched. ʿAlāʾ
al-Dīn Muḥammad was unable to control his army leaders, who had tribal
connections with such influential people at court as his own mother. The
post-Karakitai wars between him and Küchlüg Khan damaged the safety of
the Central Asian trade arteries from China to the West. The great
Mongol leader Genghis Khan took Beijing in 1215 and, as lord of China,
was concerned with Chinese trade outlets. The situation between Küchlüg
and the Khwārezm-Shah sultan afforded scope as well as a pretext for the
Mongols’ westward advance, if only to restore the flow of trade.
The Mongol invasion
Misunderstanding of how essentially fragile Sultan ʿAlāʾ al-Dīn Muḥammad
Khwārezm-Shah’s apparently imposing empire was, its distance away from
the Mongols’ eastern homelands, and the strangeness of new terrain all
doubtless induced fear in the Mongols, and this might partly account for
the terrible events with which Genghis Khan’s name has ever since been
associated. The terror his invasion brought must also be ascribed to his
quest for vengeance. Genghis Khan’s first two missions to Khwārezm had
been massacred; but the place of commercial motives in the Mongol’s
decision to march to the west is indicated by the fact that the first
was a trade mission. The massacre and robbery of this mission at Utrār
by one of ʿAlāʾ al-Dīn Muḥammad’s governors before it reached the
capital made Genghis single out Utrār for especially savage treatment
when the murder of his second, purely diplomatic, mission left him no
alternative but war.
His guides were Muslim merchants from Transoxania. They had to
witness one of the worst catastrophes of history. During 1220–21
Bukhara, Samarkand, Herāt, Ṭūs, and Neyshābūr were razed, and the whole
populations were slaughtered. The Khwārezm-Shah fled, to die on an
island off the Caspian coast. His son Jalāl al-Dīn survived until
murdered in Kurdistan in 1231. He had eluded Genghis Khan on the Indus
River, across which his horse swam, enabling him to escape to India. He
returned to attempt restoring the Khwārezmian empire over Iran. However,
he failed to unite the Iranian regions, even though Genghis Khan had
withdrawn to Mongolia, where he died in August 1227. Iran was left
divided, with Mongol agents remaining in some districts and local
adventurers profiting from the lack of order in others.
The Il-Khans
A second Mongol invasion began when Genghis Khan’s grandson Hülegü Khan
crossed the Oxus in 1256 and destroyed the Assassin fortress at Alamūt.
With the disintegration of the Seljuq empire, the Caliphate had
reasserted control in the area around Baghdad and in southwestern Iran.
In 1258 Hülegü besieged Baghdad, where divided counsels prevented the
city’s salvation. Al-Mustaʿṣim, the last ʿAbbāsid caliph of Baghdad, was
trampled to death by mounted troops (in the style of Mongol royal
executions), and eastern Islam fell to pagan rulers.
Hülegü hoped to consolidate Mongol rule over western Asia and to
extend the Mongol empire as far as the Mediterranean, an empire that
would span the Earth from China to the Levant. Hülegü made Iran his
base, but the Mamlūks of Egypt (1250–1517) prevented him and his
successors from achieving their great imperial goal, by decisively
defeating a Mongol army at ʿAyn Jālūt in 1260. Instead, a Mongol
dynasty, the Il-Khans, or “deputy khans” to the great khan in China, was
established in Iran to attempt repair of the damage of the first Mongol
invasion. The injuries Iran had suffered went deep, but it would be
unfair to attribute them all to Ghengis Khan’s invasion, itself the
climax to a long period of social and political disarray under the
Khwārezm-Shahs and dating from the decline of the Seljuqs.
The Il-Khanid dynasty made Azerbaijan its centre and established
Tabrīz as its first capital until Solṭānīyeh was built early in the 14th
century. At first, repair and readjustment of a stricken society were
complicated by the collapse of law. The caliphate, as the symbol of
Muslim legality, had been eroded by ʿAlāʾ al-Dīn Muḥammad and by its own
withdrawal into a temporal state in Iraq and the Tigris-Euphrates
estuary region. But it had retained enough vitality for Sultan
Muḥammad’s action in setting up an anticaliph to have alienated
influential members of his subject people. After 1258 it was gone
altogether, while Hülegü Khan showed considerable religious eclecticism
and had, in any event, the yāsā, or tribal law, of Genghis Khan to apply
as the law of the Mongol state, in opposition to, or side by side with,
the Sharīʿah, the law of Islam.
The Il-Khans’ religious toleration released Christians and Jews from
their restrictions under the Islamic regime. Fresh talent thus became
available, but competition for new favours marred what good effects this
release might have had on interfaith relations. It took time for Iranian
administrators to resume their normal role after the invasion and to
restore some semblance of administrative order and stability. Their
process was impeded by the paganism of the new conquerors as well as by
jostling for influence among classes of the conquered, not in this
instance exclusively Muslim. At the same time, a shattered agrarian
economy was burdened by heavy taxes, those sanctioned by the Sharīʿah
being added to by those the yāsā provided for, so that the pressure of
exploitation was increased by Mongol tax innovations as well as by the
invaders’ cupidity.
The pressure was increased beyond the economy’s endurance: the
Il-Khanid government ran into fiscal difficulties. An experiment with
paper currency, modeled on the Chinese money, failed under Gaykhatu
(reigned 1291–95). Gaykhatu was followed briefly by Baydu (died 1295),
who was supplanted by the greatest of the Il-Khans, Maḥmūd Ghāzān
(1295–1304). Ghāzān abandoned Buddhism—the faith in which his
grandfather Abagha, Hülegü’s successor (1265–82), had reared him—and
adopted Islam. One of his chief ministers was also his biographer,
Rashīd al-Dīn, of Jewish descent. He seems deliberately to have striven
to present Ghāzān, whom he styles the “emperor of Islam” (pādshāh-e
eslām), as a ruler who combined the qualities and functions of both the
former caliphs and ancient Iranian “great kings.”
Ghāzān made strenuous efforts to regulate taxes, encourage industry,
bring wasteland into cultivation, and curb the abuses and arrogance of
the military and official classes. Facilities for domestic and foreign
merchants were furnished. Buildings were constructed and irrigation
channels dug. Medicinal and fruit-bearing plants were imported and the
cultivation of indigenous ones encouraged. Observatories were built and
improved—a sure indication of concern with agricultural improvement, for
seasonal planning required accurate calendars. He fostered Muslim
sentiment by showing consideration for the sayyids, who claimed descent
from the Prophet’s family, and it seems probable that he wished to
eradicate or overlay Shīʿite-Sunnite sectarian divisiveness, for
Ghāzān’s Islam appears to have been designed to appeal equally to both
persuasions. Any slight bias in favour of the Shīʿites might be
attributed to a desire to capture the emotions and imagination of many
of the humble people who had reacted against the Seljuqs’ zeal for
Sunnism and craved a teaching that included millennial overtones.
Shīʿism had been liberated by the fall of the ʿAbbāsid Caliphate, and
its belief in the reappearance of the 12th imam, who was to inaugurate
peace and justice in the world, satisfied this popular craving for
religious solace.
Ghāzān’s work was carried on, but less successfully, by his successor
Öljeitü (1304–16). Between 1317 and 1335, though he finally relinquished
the expensive campaigns against Egypt for the opening to the
Mediterranean, Abū Saʿīd was unable to keep the Il-Khanid regime
consolidated, and it fell apart on his death. Ghāzān’s brilliant reign
survives only in the pages of his historian, Rashīd al-Dīn. Wars against
Egypt and their own Mongol kinsmen in Asia had in fact hampered the
Il-Khans in accomplishing a satisfactory reintegration of an Iranian
polity.
As the atabegs had done after the Seljuqs, Il-Khanid military emirs
began to establish themselves as independent regional potentates after
1335. At first, two of them, formerly military chiefs in the Il-Khans’
service, competed for power in western Iran, ostensibly acting on behalf
of rival Il-Khanid puppet princes. Ḥasan Küchük (the Small) of the
Chūpānids was eventually defeated by Ḥasan Buzurg (the Tall) of the
Jalāyirids, who set up the Jalāyirid dynasty over Iraq, Kurdistan, and
Azerbaijan; it lasted from 1336 to 1432. In Fārs, Il-Khanid agents, the
Injuids, after a spell of power during which Abū Isḥāq Injū had been the
poet Hāfeẓ’s patron, were ousted by Abū Saʿīd’s governor of Yazd,
Mubāriz al-Dīn Muẓaffar. Thus in 1353 Shīrāz became the Muẓaffarid
dynasty’s capital, which it remained until conquest by Timur in 1393.
The Timurids and Turkmen
Timur (Tamerlane) claimed descent from Genghis Khan’s family. The
disturbed conditions in Mongol Transoxania gave this son of a minor
government agent in the town of Kesh the chance to build up a kingdom in
Central Asia in the name of the Chagatai Khans, whom he eventually
supplanted. He entered Iran in 1380 and in 1393 reduced the Jalāyirids
after taking their capital, Baghdad. In 1402 he captured the Ottoman
sultan, Bayezid I, near Ankara. He conquered Syria and then turned his
attention to campaigns far to the east of his tumultuously acquired and
ill-cemented empire; he died in 1405 on an expedition to China. Timur
left an awesome name and an ambiguous record of flights of curiosity
into the realms of unorthodox religious beliefs, history, and every kind
of inquiry concerning lands and peoples. He showed interest in Sufism, a
form of Islamic mysticism that varied from a scholastic study of ascetic
techniques for mastering the carnal self to complete abandonment of all
forms of authority in the belief that faith alone is necessary for
salvation. Sufism had increased in the disturbed post-Seljuq era as both
the consolation and the refuge of desperate people. In Sufism Timur may
have hoped to find popular leaders whom he could use for his own
purposes. His encounters with such keepers of the consciences of
harried, exploited, and ill-treated Iranians proved that they knew him
perhaps better than he knew himself. Whatever his motives may have been,
the reverse of stability was his legacy to Iran. His division of his
ill-assimilated conquests among his sons served to ensure that an
integrated Timurid empire would never be achieved.
The nearest a Timurid state came to being an integrated Iranian
empire was under Timur’s son Shah Rokh (reigned 1405–47), who
endeavoured to weld Azerbaijan and western Persia to Khorāsān and
eastern Persia to form a united Timurid state for a short and troubled
period. He succeeded only in loosely controlling western and southern
Iran from his beautiful capital at Herāt. Azerbaijan demanded three
major military expeditions from this pacific sovereign and even so could
not long be held. He made Herāt the seat of a splendid culture, the
atelier of great miniature painters (Behzād notable among them), and the
home of a revival of Persian poetry, letters, and philosophy. This
revival was not unconnected with an effort to claim for an Iranian
centre once more the palm of leadership in the propagation of Sunnite
ideology: Herāt sent copies of Sunnite canonical works on request to
Egypt. The reaction, in Shīʿism’s ultimate victory under the Ṣafavid
shahs of Persia, was, however, already being prepared.
Western Iran was dominated by the Kara Koyunlu, the “Black Sheep”
Turkmen. In Azerbaijan they had supplanted their former masters, the
Jalāyirids. Timur had put these Kara Koyunlu to flight, but in 1406 they
regained their capital, Tabrīz. On Shah Rokh’s death, Jahān Shah
(reigned c. 1438–67) extended Kara Koyunlu rule out of the northwest
deeper into Iran at the Timurids’ expense. The Timurids relied on their
old allies, the Kara Koyunlu’s rival Turkmen of the Ak Koyunlu, or
“White Sheep,” clans, who had long been established at Diyarbakır in
Turkey. The White Sheep acted as a curb on the Black Sheep, whose Jahān
Shah was defeated by the Ak Koyunlu Uzun Ḥasan by the end of 1467.
Uzun Ḥasan (1453–78) achieved a short-lived Iranian empire and even
briefly deprived the Timurids of Herāt. He was, however, confronted by a
new power in Asia Minor—the Ottoman Turks. His relationship with the
Christian emperor at Trebizond (Trabzon) through his Byzantine wife,
Despina, involved Uzun Ḥasan in attempts to shield Trebizond from the
ineluctable Ottoman advance. The Ottomans crushingly defeated him in
1473. Under his son Yaʿqūb (reigned 1478–90), the Ak Koyunlu state was
subjected to fiscal reforms associated with a government-sponsored
effort to reapply rigorous purist principles of Sunnite Islamic rules
for revenue collection. Yaʿqūb attempted to purge the state of taxes
introduced under the Mongols and not sanctioned by the Muslim canon. But
the inquiries made by the Sunnite religious authorities antagonized the
vested interests, damaged the popularity of the Ak Koyunlu regime, and
discredited Sunnite fanaticism.
This attempt to revive strict Sunnite religious values through
revenue reform or to effect the latter under the guise of religion no
doubt gave impetus to the spread of Ṣafavid Shīʿite propaganda. Another
factor must have been related to the same general economic decline that
made Sultan Yaʿqūb’s fiscal reforms necessary in the first place. Sheikh
Ḥaydar led a movement that had begun as a Sufi order under his ancestor
Sheikh Ṣafī al-Dīn of Ardabīl (1253–1334). This order may be considered
to have originally represented a puritanical, but not legalistically so,
reaction against the sullying of Islam, the staining of Muslim lands, by
the Mongol infidels. What began as a spiritual, otherworldly reaction
against irreligion and the betrayal of spiritual aspirations developed
into a manifestation of the Shīʿite quest for dominion over a Muslim
polity. By the 15th century, the Ṣafavid movement could draw on both the
mystical emotional force of Sufism and the Shīʿite appeal to the
oppressed populace to gain a large number of dedicated adherents. Sheikh
Ḥaydar inured his numerous followers to warfare by leading them on
expeditions from Ardabīl against Christian enclaves in the nearby
Caucasus. He was killed on one of these campaigns. His son Ismāʿīl was
to avenge his death and lead his devoted army to a conquest of Iran
whereby Iran gained a great dynasty, a Shīʿite regime, and in most
essentials its shape as a modern nation-state.
Gone were the days of rule by converted and zealous Sunnite Turks or
by Mongols of ambiguous spiritual allegiance. Iran’s defilement was
removed by the swelling tide of Shīʿism, which bore Ismāʿīl to the
throne his family was to occupy without interruption until 1722, in one
of the greatest epochs of Iranian history.
The Ṣafavids (1501–1736)
Shah Ismāʿīl
In 1501 Ismāʿīl I (reigned 1501–24) supplanted the Ak Koyunlu in
Azerbaijan. Within a decade he gained supremacy over most of Iran as a
ruler his followers regarded as divinely entitled to sovereignty. The
Ṣafavids claimed descent—on grounds that modern research has shown to be
dubious—from the Shīʿite imams. Muslims in Iran, therefore, could regard
themselves as having found a legitimate imam-ruler, who, as a descendant
of ʿAlī, required no caliph to legitimate his position. Rather, Ṣafavid
political legitimacy was based on the religious order’s mixture of Sufi
ecstaticism and Shīʿite extremism (Arabic ghulū), neither of which was
the dusty scholasticism of the Sunnite or Shīʿite legal schools. The
dynasty’s military success was based both on Ismāʿīl’s skill as a leader
and on the conversion of a number of Turkmen tribes—who came to be known
as the Kizilbash (Turkish: “Red Heads”) for the 12-folded red caps these
tribesmen wore, representing their belief in the 12 imams—to this
emotionally powerful Sufi-Shīʿite syncretism. The Kizilbash became the
backbone of the Ṣafavid military effort, and their virtual deification
of Ismāʿīl contributed greatly to his swift military conquest of Iran.
In later years, though, extremist (ghulāt) zeal and its chiliastic
fervour began to undermine the orderly administration of the Ṣafavid
state. Ismāʿīl’s attempt to spread Shīʿite propaganda among the Turkmen
tribes of eastern Anatolia prompted a conflict with the Sunnite Ottoman
Empire. Following Iran’s defeat by the Ottomans at the Battle of
Chaldiran, Ṣafavid expansion slowed, and a process of consolidation
began in which Ismāʿīl sought to quell the more extreme expressions of
faith among his followers. Such actions were largely preempted, however,
by Ismāʿīl’s death in 1524 at the age of 36.
The new Iranian empire lacked the resources that had been available
to the caliphs of Baghdad in former times through their dominion over
Central Asia and the West: Asia Minor and Transoxania were gone, and the
rise of maritime trade in the West was detrimental to a country whose
wealth had depended greatly on its position on important east-west
overland trade routes. The rise of the Ottomans impeded Iranian westward
advances and contested with the Ṣafavids’ control over both the Caucasus
and Mesopotamia. Years of warfare with the Ottomans imposed a heavy
drain on the Ṣafavids’ resources. The Ottomans threatened Azerbaijan
itself. Finally, in 1639 the Treaty of Qaṣr-e Shīrīn (also called the
Treaty of Zuhāb) gave Yerevan in the southern Caucasus to Iran and
Baghdad and all of Mesopotamia to the Ottomans.
Shah ʿAbbās I
The Ṣafavids were still faced with the problem of making their empire
pay. The silk trade, over which the government held a monopoly, was a
primary source of revenue. Ismāʿīl’s successor, Ṭahmāsp I (reigned
1524–76), encouraged carpet weaving on the scale of a state industry.
ʿAbbās I (reigned 1588–1629) established trade contacts directly with
Europe, but Iran’s remoteness from Europe, behind the imposing Ottoman
screen, made maintaining and promoting these contacts difficult and
sporadic. ʿAbbās also transplanted a colony of industrious and
commercially astute Armenians from Jolfā in Azerbaijan to a new Jolfā
adjacent to Eṣfahān, the city he developed and adorned as his capital.
The Ṣafavids had earlier moved their capital from the vulnerable Tabrīz
to Qazvīn. After eliminating the Uzbek menace from east of the Caspian
Sea in 1598–99, ʿAbbās could move his capital south to Eṣfahān, more
centrally placed than Qazvīn for control over the whole country and for
communication with the trade outlets of the Persian Gulf. ʿAbbās engaged
English help to oust the Portuguese from the island of Hormuz in 1622.
He also strove to lodge Ṣafavid power strongly in Khorāsān. There, at
Mashhad, he developed the shrine of ʿAlī al-Riḍā, the eighth Shīʿite
imam, as a pilgrimage centre to rival Shīʿite holy places in
Mesopotamia, where visiting pilgrims took currency out of Ṣafavid and
into Ottoman territory.
Under ʿAbbās, Iran prospered. The monarch continued the policy begun
under his predecessors of eradicating the old Sufi bands and ghulāt
extremists whose support had been crucial in building the state. The
Kizilbash were replaced by a standing army of slave soldiers loyal only
to the shah, who were trained and equipped on European lines with the
advice of the English adventurer Robert Sherley. Sherley was versed in
artillery tactics and, accompanied by a party of cannon founders,
reached Qazvīn with his brother Anthony in 1598. The bureaucracy, too,
was carefully reorganized, but the seeds of the sovereignty’s weakness
lay in the royal house itself, which lacked an established system of
inheritance by primogeniture. A reigning shah’s nearest and most acute
objects of suspicion were his own sons. Among them, brother plotted
against brother over who should succeed on their father’s death.
Intriguers, ambitious for influence in a subsequent reign, supported one
prince against another. ʿAbbās did not adopt the Ottoman sultans’
practice of eliminating royal males by murder (as a child he had been
within a hair’s breadth of being a victim of such a policy). Instead, he
instituted the practice of immuring infant princes in palace gardens
away from the promptings of intrigue and the world at large. As a
result, his successors tended to be indecisive men, easily dominated by
powerful dignitaries among the Shīʿite ʿulamāʾ—whom the shahs themselves
had urged to move in large numbers from the shrine cities of Iraq in an
attempt to bolster Ṣafavid legitimacy as an orthodox Shīʿite dynasty.
The Afghan interlude
Ḥusayn I (reigned 1694–1722) was of a pious temperament and was
especially influenced by the Shīʿite divines, whose conflicting advice,
added to his own procrastination, sealed the sudden and unexpected fate
of the Ṣafavid empire. One Maḥmūd, a former Ṣafavid vassal in
Afghanistan, captured Eṣfahān and murdered Ḥusayn in his cell in the
beautiful madrasah (religious school) built in his mother’s name.
The Afghan interlude was disastrous for Iran. In 1723 the Ottomans,
partly to secure more territory and partly to forestall Russian
aspirations in the Caucasus, took advantage of the disintegration of the
Ṣafavid realm and invaded from the west, ravaging western Persia. Nādr,
an Afshārid Turkmen from northern Khorāsān, was eventually able to
reunite Iran, a process he began on behalf of the Ṣafavid prince Ṭahmāsp
II (reigned 1722–32), who had escaped the Afghans. After Nādr had
cleared the country of Afghans, Ṭahmāsp made him governor of a large
area of eastern Iran.
Religious developments
As in the case of the early Sunnite caliphate, Ṣafavid rule had been
based originally on both political and religious legitimacy, with the
shah being both king and divine representative. With the later erosion
of Ṣafavid central political authority in the mid-17th century, the
power of the Shīʿite clergy in civil affairs—as judges, administrators,
and court functionaries—began to grow, in a way unprecedented in Shīʿite
history. Likewise, the ʿulamāʾ began to take a more active role in
agitating against Sufism and other forms of popular religion, which
remained strong in Iran, and in enforcing a more scholarly type of
Shīʿism among the masses. The development of the taʿziyyah—a passion
play commemorating the martyrdom of al-Ḥusayn and his family—and the
practice of visits to the shrines and tombs of local Shīʿite leaders
began during this period, largely at the prompting of the Shīʿite
clergy.
These activities coincided with an escalated debate between Shīʿite
scholars in Iran and Iraq over the role played by the clergy in
interpreting Islamic precepts. One faction felt that the only sound
source of legal interpretation was the direct teachings of the 12
infallible imams, in the form of their written and oral testaments
(Arabic akhbār, hence the name of the sect: the Akhbāriyyah). Their
opponents, known as the Uṣūliyyah, held that a number of fundamental
sources (uṣūl) should be consulted but that the final source for legal
conclusions rested in the reasoned judgment of a qualified scholar, a
mujtahid. The eventual victory of the Uṣūliyyah in this debate during
the turbulent years at the end of the Ṣafavid empire was to have
resounding effects on both the shape of Shīʿism and the course of
Iranian history. The study of legal theory (fiqh), the purview of the
mujtahids, became the primary field of scholarship in the Shīʿite world,
and the rise of the mujtahids as a distinctive body signaled the
development of a politically conscious and influential religious class
not previously seen in Islamic history.
This rising legalism also facilitated the implementation of a theory
that was first voiced in the mid-16th century by the scholars ʿAlī
al-Karakī and Zayn al-Dīn al-ʿĀmilī, which called for the clergy to act
as a general representative (nāʾib al-ʿamm) of the Hidden Imam during
his absence, performing such duties as administering the poor tax
(zakāt) and income tax (khums, “one-fifth”), leading prayer, and running
Sharīʿah courts. A strong Ṣafavid state and the presence of influential
Akhbārī scholars at first managed to suppress the execution of these
ideas, but the complete collapse of central authority in Iran during the
18th century accelerated the already considerable involvement of the
clerisy in state and civil affairs, a trend that would continue until
modern times.
Nādir Shah (1736–47)
Nādr later dethroned Ṭahmāsp II in favour of the latter’s son, the more
pliant ʿAbbās III. His successful military exploits, however, which
included victories over rebels in the Caucasus, made it feasible for
this stern warrior himself to be proclaimed monarch—as Nādir Shah—in
1736. He attempted to mollify Persian-Ottoman hostility by establishing
in Iran a less aggressive form of Shīʿism, which would be less offensive
to Ottoman sensibilities; but this experiment did not take root. Nādir
Shah’s need for money drove him to embark on his celebrated Indian
campaign in 1738–39. His capture of Delhi and of the Mughal emperor’s
treasure gave Nādir booty in such quantities that he was able to exempt
Iran from taxes for three years. His Indian expedition temporarily
solved the problem of how to make his empire financially viable.
How large this problem loomed in Nādir Shah’s mind is demonstrated by
his increasingly morbid obsession with treasure and jewels. After
suspecting his son of complicity in a plot against him in 1741, Nādir
Shah’s mind seems to have become unhinged; his brilliance and courage
deteriorated into a meanness and capricious cruelty that could no longer
be tolerated. In 1747 he was murdered by a group of his own Afshārid
tribesmen, together with some Qājār chiefs—a sad end to one of Iran’s
greatest leaders.
Nādir had been the first modern Iranian leader to perceive the
importance of having his own navy, and in 1734 he had appointed an
“admiral of the gulf.” Ships were purchased from their British captains,
and by 1735 the new Iranian navy had attacked Al-Baṣrah. What really
mattered, however, were the land forces. Nādir Shah’s reign exemplified
the fact that, to be successful, a shah of Iran had to prove himself
capable of defending his realm’s territorial integrity and of extending
its sources of wealth and production by conquest. To these ends, Nādir
Shah built up a large army composed of tribal units under their own
chiefs, such as his Afshārid kinsmen and the Qājār and Bakhtyārī.
But on Nādir Shah’s death his great military machine dispersed, its
commanders bent on establishing their own states. Aḥmad Shah Durrānī
founded a kingdom in Afghanistan based in Kandahār. Shah Rokh, Nādir
Shah’s blind grandson, succeeded in maintaining himself at the head of
an Afshārid state in Khorāsān, its capital at Mashhad. The Qājār chief
Muḥammad Ḥasan took Māzanderān south of the Caspian Sea. Āzād Khan, an
Afghan, held Azerbaijan, whence Moḥammad Ḥasan Khan Qājār ultimately
expelled him. The Qājār chief, therefore, disposed of this post-Nādir
Shah Afghan remnant in northwestern Iran but was himself unable to make
headway against a new power arising in central and southern Iran, that
of the Zands.
The Zand dynasty (1750–79)
Muḥammad Karīm Khan Zand entered into an alliance with the Bakhtyārī
chief ʿAlī Mardān Khan in an effort to seize Eṣfahān—then the political
centre of Iran—from Shah Rokh’s vassal, Abū al-Fatḥ Bakhtyārī. Once this
goal was achieved, Karīm Khan and ʿAlī Mardān agreed that Shah Sulṭān
Ḥusayn Ṣafavī’s grandson, a boy named Abū Ṭurāb, should be proclaimed
Shah Ismāʿīl III in order to cement popular support for their joint
rule. The two also agreed that the popular Abū al-Fatḥ would retain his
position as governor of Eṣfahān, ʿAlī Mardān Khan would act as regent
over the young puppet, and Karīm Khan would take to the field in order
to regain lost Ṣafavid territory. ʿAlī Mardān Khan, however, broke the
compact and was killed by Karīm Khan, who gained supremacy over central
and southern Iran and reigned as regent or deputy (vakīl) on behalf of
the powerless Ṣafavid prince, never arrogating to himself the title of
shah. Karīm Khan made Shīrāz his capital and did not contend with Shah
Rokh (reigned 1748–95) for the hegemony of Khorāsān. He concentrated on
Fārs and the centre but managed to contain the Qājār in Māzanderān,
north of the Elburz Mountains. He kept Āghā Muḥammad Khan Qājār a
hostage at his court in Shīrāz, after repulsing Muḥammad Ḥasan Qājār’s
bids for extended dominion.
Karīm Khan’s geniality and common sense inaugurated a period of peace
and popular contentment, and he strove for commercial prosperity in
Shīrāz, a centre accessible to the Persian Gulf ports and trade with
India. After Karīm Khan’s death in 1779, Āghā Muḥammad Khan escaped to
the Qājār tribal country in the north, gathered a large force, and
embarked on a war of conquest.
Peter William Avery
Janet Afary