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A History of Iran

Page 41

by Michael Axworthy


  and suppression of writers under Reza Shah, 225

  under Sassanids, 48–49, 62–63

  See also Architecture; Literature; Poetry

  Curzon, Lord, 215–216, 217

  Customs policies under Mozaffar od-Din, 200

  Cyaxares, 4

  Cyrus (Kurosh) and Achaemenid Empire, 12–16, 20, 21, 23, 26, 251. See also Achaemenid Empire

  Cyrus cylinder, 13–14, 15

  Daena, 8–9, 75

  Daghestan, 159–160

  Dahae tribe, 32

  Damascus, 76

  Daneshvar, Simin, 239

  Daqiqi Tusi, 86

  Dar al-Funun polytechnic school, 191, 196

  Daryaee, Touraj, 58

  D’Arcy, William Knox, oil concession, 200, 212

  Darius (Daryavaush), 17–20, 21, 23

  Darius III, 26, 28

  Darwinism, 116

  Darya-ye Nur jewel, 158, 171

  Dawkins, Richard, 116

  Dehqans, 47–48, 60, 87

  Deioces, 4

  Delhi, massacre by Nader Shah, 158

  Demonstrations

  after arrest of Khomeini in 1963, 242–243

  and Black Friday, 257

  broken up, 289–290

  and economic/religious elements in 1905, 201–202

  and Golhak in 1906, 202–203

  against government and land reform, 242

  and Montazeri’s funeral, 301

  for Palestinian cause, 299

  and social media, 298–299, 301

  by students in 1999, 280

  after 2009

  election, 296, 298–299, 301

  and Writers’ Association in 1977, 253

  Dietrich of Nieheim, 259

  Divan (Hafez), 115

  Divine Flashes (Iraqi), 109

  Divorce Iranian Style (film), 276

  Dualism

  and Manichaeism, 49–50, 52

  and Zoroastrianism, 7

  Dunsterville, Lionel, 214

  East India Company (EIC), 135, 177–178

  Eastern Orthodox Church, 53

  Ebadi, Shirin, 287, 294

  Ebtehaj, Abol-Hassan, 240

  Economy

  Ahmadinejad’s failure to deliver on, 286

  and conquests of Nader Shah, 157, 160, 162, 163

  difficulties under Mozaffar od-Din, 200–201

  growth from 1963

  to later 1970s, 246–247

  and growth in 1950s and 1960s, 240–241

  and industry under Reza Khan, 224

  inflation/out of control in 1970s, 247–248

  and late Safavid, 148

  in mid-1800s and foreigners, 194

  and Rafsanjani’s market freedom, 275

  revitalization under Abbasids, 80

  and sanctions by U.S., 275, 304, 311

  and Schuster and Russian desire to keep Iran poor, 209

  when Reza Shah came to power in 1926, 222

  in WWI and its aftermath, 214

  Education, 199, 224, 242, 247

  under Islamic Republic, 276–277

  Egypt, 17, 23, 30, 54

  Elam and Elamites, 2, 21

  Election, Iranian, Presidential of 2009

  demonstrations after, 296, 298–299, 301

  fraud suspicions with, 295–297

  governmental legitimacy harmed by, 302

  and Green Movement, 300–302

  and internal regime problems, 300, 303

  and probable fraud causing crisis, 299–300

  public opinion polls on, 301–302

  Revolutionary Guard Corps strengthened by, 300–301

  rumors explaining results of, 297

  U.S. policy decisions and, 300

  voter motivations in, 297–298

  Election, Iranian, Presidential of 2013, 304–305

  Emam Reza shrine, 212, 227

  Emami, Saeed, 278

  Emams, Shia, 127, 128

  Esma‘il, 131–134, 141–142

  Esma‘il III, 166, 168

  Ettela‘at newspaper, 265

  Eumenes of Cardia, 29

  Ezra, 25

  Family Protection Law, 252

  Famines, 194, 214

  Al-Farabi, 81

  Farazdaq, 261

  Farrokhzad, Forugh, 226

  Fascist political movements, 229

  Fath Ali Shah, 176–177, 182, 184, 185

  Fatima (daughter of Mohammad), 71, 76–77, 124, 133

  Fedai, 250, 267

  Ferdowsi, Abolqasem, 37, 60–61, 86, 105, 117

  Ferguson, Niall, 286

  Fiqh, 253

  Fisher, H. A. L., 123

  Fitzgerald, Edward, 91

  Forms only shadow of real world, 108, 109

  Foruhar, Dariush and Parvaneh, 252, 253, 278

  Four Journeys (Molla Sadra), 244

  France, 178, 179, 180, 231

  Fravashi, 9, 34

  Free will, 92

  Freedom Movement, 253, 257, 265, 267

  Frye, Richard N., 125

  Fusus al-Kikam, Seals of Wisdom (Ibn Arabi), 108, 244

  Ganji, Akbar, 287

  Gardane, Count (Claude Matthieu), 179, 180

  Garden of Truth, The (Sana’i), 95

  Gaumata, 17

  Genghis Khan, 100, 118

  Georgia, 178

  Gerard of Cremona, 82

  Germany, 213–214, 228

  Al-Ghazali, 95

  Ghaznavids, 84, 86–87, 88, 89, 90, 104

  Ghuluww (extreme), 130, 131, 141

  Gibbon, Edward, 51, 62

  Gnostics, 49, 53, 94

  Golestan, Garden of Roses (Sa‘di), 110, 111

  Golhak protest of 1906, 202–203

  Gorbachev, Mikhail, 270

  Gordian, Emperor, 46

  Gotarzes, 33

  Governmental system

  and Abbas the Great, 135, 137–138

  and Abbasids, 78, 80, 84

  changes made by Sassanids, 47–48, 59–60

  Iranian election of 2009

  harming legitimacy of, 302

  Mohammad Reza Shah’s failure to establish representative, 252

  more representative than most Middle Eastern countries, 287

  and Nader Shah, 161

  in Qajar state, 183–184

  and religion controlled by state in 1990s, 271–272

  and resiliency of Persian scholar-bureaucrats, 120

  of Seljuk Turks according to Persianate Abbasid model, 90

  and Siyasat-Nameh or The Book of Government, 90

  and velayat-e faqih established by Khomeini, 253–254, 263–264

  Grand Bargain, 284, 289, 293

  Great Game, The, 187

  Greeks, 23–24, 32, 48, 81

  Green Movement, 300–302

  Griboyedov, Alexander, 182, 184

  Guardian Council, 264, 286, 297, 304, 306

  Gulf War in 1991, 274

  Gunpowder, 135, 141

  Hadiqat al-haqiqa, The Garden of Truth (Sana’i), 95–96

  Hadith, 82, 83, 172

  Hadrian, 42

  Haeri, Shaykh Abdolkarim, 244

  Hafez (Shams al-Din Mohammad Shirazi), 87, 112–115, 116, 118

  Hajji Firoz Tepe, 2

  Hajji Mirza Aqasi, 187

  Al-Hallaj, 94

  Hamas, 286, 290

  Harun al-Rashid, 84

  Hebrew script, 10

  Hecht, Anthony, 46–47

  Hedayat, Sadeq, 225, 255

  Hephtalite Huns, 58, 59, 63

  Heraclius, Emperor, 64–65

  Herat, 120, 192

  Herodotus, 1, 4, 9, 15, 18, 19, 27, 251

  Hezbollah, 263, 265, 266, 272, 286, 290

  Hezekiah, 13

  Hidden Emam, 188, 204, 253, 261

  Hijra, 70

  Hokumat-e Eslami: Velayat-e Faqih (Khomeini), 253

  Holocaust, 230, 290

  Hormuz, straits of, 135

  Hormuzd, 55, 56

  Hormuzd IV, 63, 66

 
Hosein (son of Ali, grandson of Mohammad), 77, 123–124, 126–127, 173–175

  House of Justice (adalatkhaneh), 202

  Hoveyda, Amir Abbas, 253, 263

  Hulagu, 104

  Human rights issues, 250, 252, 279

  Hunayn ibn Ishaq, 81

  IAEA. See International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)

  Ibn Arabi, 108–109, 138, 244, 260, 270

  Ibn Khaldun, 72, 83, 118–120

  Ibsen, Henrik, 111–112

  Ijtihad, 172

  Imperial Bank of Persia, 194–195

  India

  conquests in by Nader Shah, 157–158

  invasion of and establishment of Delhi Sultanate, 104–105

  and Iran’s importance to Britain, 212

  Moghul Empire, 139, 157–158

  and Timur, 118

  Indo-European family of peoples, 1

  Infant mortality rate, 247

  International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA), 291, 304, 310

  Iran and Iranians

  first inscriptions referring to, 45

  formal use of name in 1935, 226

  idea of, about culture/language not race/territory, 3

  identity of, 45, 117

  map of modern, 260

  Median state to become empire of, 5

  special sense of status among Middle Eastern nations, 285

  Iran/Contra affair, 269, 273

  Iran/Iraq war, 267–269, 274, 275

  Iranian settlers/migrations, 1, 2–3, 4, 6

  Iraq

  and Iran/Iraq war, 267–269, 274, 275

  shrine cities of southern, 132, 268

  Al-Iraqi, Fakhroddin, 107–110

  Iraq War (Second Gulf War), 288–289

  Ironside, General, 216–218, 219

  Isfahan, 118, 135, 136, 150, 152, 153, 167, 169, 249

  Islam, 69–71

  and al-Afghani, 198

  conversion of Iranians to, 75

  and corrupt authority vs. pious austerity, 126

  and earliest relations with Jews, 70

  and Manichaeism, 51

  and Mu‘tazilis vs. traditionalist Sunni ulema, 82–83

  and strict rules under Maljesi, 147

  Islamic Republic of Iran

  establishment of, 263

  and reconstruction, 274–276

  and reform platform of Katami, 277–281

  and repression of immorality in public, 289

  and sovereignty of its borders, 289

  still space for dissent and change, 287

  and women, 276–277

  Islamic Republic Party (IRP), 264, 266

  Islamic State (IS), 311

  Ismaili or “Sevener” branch of Shi‘ism/Assassins, 103–104, 128

  Israel

  and Ahmadinejad, 290–291

  early conquest of and deportations to Iran, 9

  emigration to, 279

  Iran’s hostile relationship towards, 278, 280, 284

  and nuclear-armed Iran, 286–287, 292, 310–311

  See also Jews and Judaism

  Ja‘far al-Sadiq, 128

  Jalal al-Din, 103

  Jami, 115

  Jangali movement, 212, 213, 214, 218

  JCPOA. See Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA)

  Jerusalem, 14–15, 25, 65

  Jesuits, 128

  Jesus of Nazareth, 5, 50, 52, 110

  Jews and Judaism, 9–10

  attacks and persecution of, 103, 140, 186–187, 208

  attitudes towards in late nineteenth century, 198–199

  and constitution of 1906

  and Majles, 204

  emigration to Israel and US, 279

  in 1930s, 229

  Mazdaen influence on, 9–10

  and Mohammad, 69, 70

  and Mohammad Reza Shah, 251–252

  and orphaned children helped to Palestine, 230

  and Parthians, 34, 40

  and sacking of Christian Jerusalem in 614, 65

  saving of by Sardari in France, 231

  and Shapur, 50

  tolerance towards, 14–15, 57, 74, 157

  under Islamic Republic, 279–280

  See also Israel

  Jizya tax, 74

  Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action (JCPOA), 309–310, 312

  Jordan, 288

  Julian, Roman Emperor, 55–56

  Justice, 21, 57

  Justinian, Byzantine Emperor, 62

  Ka‘ba of Mecca, 71

  Kadivar, Mohsen, 274

  Karbala, 77, 124–125, 126–127, 173–175, 268, 287

  Karim Khan Zand, 166, 168, 169, 184, 253

  Kashani, Ayatollah Abol-Ghasem, 237, 240, 245

  Kasravi, Ahmad, 233–234, 238

  Katouzian, Homa, 45, 287

  Kavad I, 58–61

  Kavad II, 65

  Kayhan newspaper, 265

  Kermani, Mirza Reza, 198

  Khadija (wife of Mohammad), 71

  Khamenei, Ayatollah Ali, 269, 273, 284, 295, 300, 302, 306–308

  Ahmadinejad’s public dispute with, 303

  Ahmadinejad’s reelection supported by, 297

  Khanaqas, Sufi, 94

  Kharijites, 76, 126

  Khatami, Mohammad, 277–281, 284, 296–297, 300

  Khomeini, Ayatollah Ruhollah, 243–244, 245, 303, 306

  arrest in 1963, 242

  article attacking in 1978, 256

  attacks upon U.S. government in 1963–4, 242, 243, 245

  and Bazargan as prime minster, 262

  becomes leading opponent to shah in 1963–4, 245

  and constitution, 245, 264

  criticism of closed-minded mullahs, 271

  death of in 1989, 269–270

  and denunciation of Persepolis event, 251

  exile of in 1964, 243, 245

  and fatwa vs. The Satanic Verses, 270, 273

  and government by ulema, 253–254

  and Ibn Arabi and Perfect Man, 108, 244, 260–261

  and letter to Gorbachev, 270–271

  and protection of Jews, 279

  return to Iran in February 1979, 258, 259–260

  and Revolutionary Council, 262

  and silencing of opposing Shi‘a leaders, 264

  and violence/repression, 262, 263, 265, 266

  Khorasan, 77, 80, 95, 103, 151

  Khorasani, Mohammad Kazem, 206–207

  Khorramites, 15, 83, 130

  Khosraw Anushirvan, 31, 59–60, 61–63

  Khosraw Parvez, 64–66

  Khosraw va Shirin (Nizami Ganjavi), 96

  Khwarezm, 100

  Kiarostami, Abbas, 293

  Kimiya-ye sa‘a-dat, The Alchemy of Happiness (al-Ghazali), 95

  Al-Kindi, 81

  Kingship, Sassanid concept of, 57

  Komitehs (revolutionary committees), 262

  Konya, 105

  Kuchek Khan, 212, 218

  Kuh-e Nur diamond, 158, 165

  Kurdish Democratic Party (KDP), 267

  Kurds and Kurdistan, 161, 262–263

  Land reform, 242, 246

  Layla and Majnoun (Nizami Ganjavi), 96–97

  Leonidas, 25

  Lezges of Daghestan, 159–160, 181

  Life expectancy, 276

  Literature

  banning of works by Hedayat, 225

  great body had been created by fifteenth century, 115

  and shu‘biyya movement, 79

  under Reza Khan, 225–226

  See also Poetry

  Lotf Ali Khan Zand, 170–171

  Love, 85, 96, 97, 98, 113, 116

  Macedon and Macedonians, 25, 26–30

  Machiavelli, Niccolo, 90, 148

  Macrinus, 43

  Madreseh tradition, 138, 140

  Magi, 9, 15, 17–20, 50, 53

  Magian wine (mey-e moghaneh), 93

  Mahmud Ghilzai, 150

  Majles or national assembly, 203–204, 206, 208, 211, 212, 231

  and Anglo-Persian agreement of 1919, 216


  attack upon by Mohammad Ali Shah, 207

  blocked by hardliner elements during Khatami presidency, 281

  and parties to support Mohammad Reza, 240, 250

  and Reza Khan, 219–220, 222, 224–225

  Schuster’s comments on, 210

  and seats for minorities, 279

  under Khomeini constitution, 264

  Makhmalbaf, Moshen and Samira, 293

  Malcolm, John, 171, 177, 178, 196

  Maleki, Khalil, 238

  Malkom Khan, 195, 196

  Al-Ma‘mun, 80–81

  Mandaeans, 50

  Mani, 49–51

  Manichaeism, 49–53, 59

  Al-Mansur, 79, 81

  Mantiq al-tayr, The Conference of the Birds (Attar), 97–100

  Marduk, 14, 25

  Marja, 173, 207

  Marlowe, Christopher, 221

  Martyrdom, 267–268

  Maryam Begum, 146, 147, 149

  Mashdad shrine, 137

  Mashhad University, 255

  Mashruteh (constitution), 202–205, 264. See also Constitutional Revolution of 1905–1911

  Masnavi of Rumi, 106

  Massagetae, 15

  Maurice, Emperor, 63, 64

  Mazdaism, 7, 8, 9, 10, 15

  and accession of Darius, 19–20

  and Ardashir, 44

  and Arsacids and Sassanids, 34

  becomes Zoroastrianism, 55

  and brotherhoods of fifteenth century, 130

  codification of under Sassanids, 54–55

  and fire altars by Sassanids, 49

  influence on Judaism, 10

  and Manichaeism, 49, 50–51

  massacres at Ray and Istakhr by invading Arabs, 75

  and Mithraism, 41–42

  and Shahnameh, 86

  and shu‘ubiyya movement, 79

  systematic recording of texts of, 40

  See also Avesta; Zoroaster and Zoroastrianism

  Mazdak, 59, 60–61

  Mazdakism, 15, 59, 61, 83

  Mecca, 69, 70, 71, 123, 125–126

  Medes and Median Empire, 4–5, 12

  Medina, 69–70

  “Mental reservation,” 128

  Merv massacre, 100, 102

  Mesopotamia, 2, 42

  Messiah, 8, 51, 129

  Migration, internal, 246

  Military matters

  and cavalry and dehqans, 60

  and cavalry exercises of Nader, 153

  during Achaemenid empire, 26

  and expansion of army under Reza Shah, 222–223

  of Fath Ali Shah no match for European powers, 182–183

  and feminine approach, 28–29

  and financial overextension, 184

  and military revolution by Nader Shah, 161–162

  and Mithraism, 41

  and oil revenue and U.S. aid, 239–240

  and Parthian arrows, 34, 36

  Roman tortoise/armor, 39, 40

  and Safavids, 135, 141

  and testing of Shahab III missile, 281

  and use of horses by time of Darius III, 26

  Millspaugh, Arthur, 223, 232

  Mind, empires of future are, 283

 

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