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Guarded Domains of Iran
ممالک محروسه ایران(Persian) Mamâlek-e Mahruse-ye Irân
The main group that contributed to the establishment of the Safavid state was the Qizilbash,[42][43] a Turkish word meaning 'red-head', Turkoman tribes.[44] On the other hand, ethnic Iranians played roles in bureaucracy and cultural affairs.[45]
In the history of Iran after the Muslim conquest of Persia, the Safavid dynasty is considered a turning point. After centuries of rule by non-Iranians kings, the country became an independent power in the Islamic world.[46]
^"... the Order of the Lion and the Sun, a device which, since the 17 century at least, appeared on the national flag of the Safavids the lion representing 'Ali and the sun the glory of the Shiʻi faith", Mikhail Borisovich Piotrovskiĭ, J. M. Rogers, Hermitage Rooms at Somerset House, Courtauld Institute of Art, Heaven on earth: Art from Islamic Lands: Works from the State Hermitage Museum and the Khalili Collection, Prestel, 2004, p. 178.
^ abcRudi Matthee, "SafavidsArchived 2022-09-01 at the Wayback Machine" in Encyclopædia Iranica, accessed on April 4, 2010. "The Persian focus is also reflected in the fact that theological works also began to be composed in the Persian language and in that Persian verses replaced Arabic on the coins." "The political system that emerged under them had overlapping political and religious boundaries and a core language, Persian, which served as the literary tongue, and even began to replace Arabic as the vehicle for theological discourse".
^Ronald W Ferrier, The Arts of Persia. Yale University Press. 1989, p. 9.
^ abJohn R Perry, "Turkic-Iranian contacts", Encyclopædia Iranica, January 24, 2006: "... written Persian, the language of high literature and civil administration, remained virtually unaffected in status and content".
^Cite error: The named reference Cyril Glassé 2003, pg 392 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
^Arnold J. Toynbee, A Study of History, V, pp. 514–515. Excerpt: "in the heyday of the Mughal, Safawi, and Ottoman regimes New Persian was being patronized as the language of literae humaniores by the ruling element over the whole of this huge realm, while it was also being employed as the official language of administration in those two-thirds of its realm that lay within the Safawi and the Mughal frontiers"
^ abcdCite error: The named reference mazzaoui was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
^Ruda Jurdi Abisaab. "Iran and Pre-Independence Lebanon" in Houchang Esfandiar Chehabi, Distant Relations: Iran and Lebanon in the Last 500 Years, IB Tauris 2006, p. 76: "Although the Arabic language was still the medium for religious scholastic expression, it was precisely under the Safavids that hadith complications and doctrinal works of all sorts were being translated to Persian. The ʻAmili (Lebanese scholars of Shiʻi faith) operating through the Court-based religious posts, were forced to master the Persian language; their students translated their instructions into Persian. Persianization went hand in hand with the popularization of 'mainstream' Shiʻi belief."
^Axworthy, Michael (2010). The Sword of Persia: Nader Shah, from Tribal Warrior to Conquering Tyrant. I.B. Tauris. p. 33. ISBN978-0857721938.
^Savory 2007, p. 213, qizilbash normally spoke Azari brand of Turkish at court, as did the Safavid shahs themselves; lack of familiarity with the Persian language may have contributed to the decline from the pure classical standards of former times.
^Cite error: The named reference cambridgesafa was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
^Blow 2009, pp. 165–166. "Georgian, Circassian and Armenian were also spoken [at the court], since these were the mother-tongues of many of the ghulams, as well as of a high proportion of the women of the harem. Figueroa heard Abbas speak Georgian, which he had no doubt acquired from his Georgian ghulams and concubines."
^The New Encyclopedia of Islam, Ed. Cyril Glassé, (Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, 2008), 449.
^Blake, Stephen P., ed. (2013), "Safavid, Mughal, and Ottoman Empires", Time in Early Modern Islam: Calendar, Ceremony, and Chronology in the Safavid, Mughal and Ottoman Empires, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 21–47, doi:10.1017/CBO9781139343305.004, ISBN978-1-107-03023-7, retrieved 2021-11-10
^Ferrier, RW, A Journey to Persia: Jean Chardin's Portrait of a Seventeenth-century Empire, p. ix.
^* Matthee, Rudi. (2005). The Pursuit of Pleasure: Drugs and Stimulants in Iranian History, 1500–1900. Princeton University Press. p. 18; "(...)ethnic Turks generally held military and political power in Iran, whereas ethnic Iranians, called Tajiks, were dominant in the areas of administration and culture. The Safavids, as Iranians of Kurdish ancestry and of nontribal background, did not fit this pattern, although the state they set up with the aid of Turkmen tribal forces of Eastern Anatolia closely resembled this division in its makeup. (...)".
Amoretti, Biancamaria Scarcia; Matthee, Rudi. (2009). "Ṣafavid Dynasty". In Esposito, John L. (ed.) The Oxford Encyclopedia of the Islamic World. Oxford University Press. "Of Kurdish ancestry, the Ṣafavids started as a Sunnī mystical order (...)"
^Aptin Khanbaghi (2006) The Fire, the Star and the Cross: Minority Religions in Medieval and Early. London & New York. IB Tauris. ISBN1-84511-056-0, pp. 130–131
^Anthony Bryer. "Greeks and Türkmens: The Pontic Exception", Dumbarton Oaks Papers, Vol. 29 (1975), Appendix II "Genealogy of the Muslim Marriages of the Princesses of Trebizond"
^"Safavid Iran" at Encyclopædia Iranica, "The origins of the Safavids are clouded in obscurity. They may have been of Kurdish origin (see R. Savory, Iran Under the Safavids, 1980, p. 2; R. Matthee, "Safavid Dynasty" at iranica.com), but for all practical purposes they were Turkish-speaking and Turkified."
^Savory 2007, p. 3, "Why is there such confusion about the origins of this important dynasty, which reasserted Iranian identity and established an independent Iranian state after eight and a half centuries of rule by foreign dynasties?".
^Herzig, Edmund; Stewart, Sarah (2011). Early Islamic Iran. I. B. Tauris.
^Savory 2007, pp. 2–3, ...Turcoman, tribal forces (qizilbash) which had been largely responsible for bringing the Safavids to power....
^Roemer 1986, pp. 213, 353, Chapter: "The Safavid Period".
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