fbpx
Wikipedia

Greater Iran

Greater Iran (Persian: ایران بزرگ, romanizedIrān-e Bozorg) refers to a region covering parts of Western Asia, Central Asia, South Asia, Xinjiang, and the Caucasus, where both Iranian culture and Iranian languages have had a significant presence and impact. Historically, this was a region long-ruled by the dynasties of various Iranian empires,[note 1][1][2][3] under whose rule the local populace incorporated considerable aspects of Persian culture through extensive inter-contact,[note 2] or alternatively where sufficient Iranian peoples settled to still maintain communities who patronize their respective cultures;[note 3] it roughly corresponds geographically to the Iranian plateau and its bordering plains.[4][5] The Encyclopædia Iranica uses the term Iranian Cultural Continent to describe this region.[6]

Median Empire (c. 678 – c. 585 BC) at its greatest extent (c. 585 BC)
Achaemenid Empire (550 BC–330 BC) at its greatest extent (c. 480 BC)
Parthian Empire (247 BC–224 AD) at its greatest extent (c. 96 BC)
Sasanian Empire (224–651) at its greatest extent (c. 620)
Samanid Empire (819–999) at its greatest extent (c. 943)
Saffarid Empire (863–1003) at its greatest extent (c. 879)
Safavid Empire (1501–1736) at its greatest extent (c. 1624)
Afsharid dynasty (1736–1796) at its greatest extent (c. 1747)
Qajar Iran (1789–1925) at its greatest extent (c. 1797)

In addition to the modern state of Iran, the term "Greater Iran" includes all of the territory ruled by various Iranian peoples throughout history, including in Mesopotamia, the eastern half of Anatolia, the South Caucasus, and Central Asia.[7][8] The concept of Greater Iran has its source in the history of the Achaemenid Persian Empire, particularly in the region of Persis (modern-day Fars Province), and overlaps to a certain extent with the history of Iran proper.

In recent centuries, Iran lost many of the territories conquered under the Safavid and Qajar dynasties, including most of Iraq to the Ottoman Turks (via the Treaty of Amasya in 1555 and the Treaty of Zuhab in 1639), western Afghanistan to the British (via the Treaty of Paris in 1857[9] and the MacMahon Arbitration in 1905),[10] and Caucasus territories to the Russians (via the Russo-Persian Wars of the 17th and 19th centuries).[11] The Treaty of Gulistan in 1813 saw Iran cede the regions of modern-day Dagestan, Georgia, and most of Azerbaijan to the Russian Empire.[12][13][14] The Turkmanchey Treaty of 1828 between the Russians and the Iranians decisively ended centuries of Iranian rule over its Caucasian provinces,[15] and forced Iran to cede modern-day Armenia, the remainder of Azerbaijan, as well as Iğdır (in eastern Turkey), and set modern boundaries of Iran along the Aras River.[16]

On the occasion of Nowruz in 1935, the endonym of Iran was adopted as the official international name of Persia by its erstwhile ruler, Reza Shah Pahlavi.[17] However, in 1959, the government of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi announced that both "Persia" and "Iran" could be used interchangeably to refer to the country on a formal basis.[18]

Etymology

The name "Iran", meaning "land of the Aryans", is the New Persian continuation of the old genitive plural aryānām (proto-Iranian, meaning "of the Aryans"), first attested in the Avesta as airyānąm (the text of which is composed in Avestan, an old Iranian language spoken in northeastern Greater Iran, or in what are now Afghanistan, Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Tajikistan).[19][20][21][22] The proto-Iranian term aryānām is present in the term Airyana Vaēǰah, the homeland of Zoroaster and Zoroastrianism, near the provinces of Sogdiana, Margiana, Bactria, etc., listed in the first chapter of the Vidēvdād.[23][24] The Avestan evidence is confirmed by Greek sources: Arianē is spoken of as being between Persia and the Indian subcontinent.[25] However, this is a Greek pronunciation of the name Haroyum/Haraiva (Herat), which the Greeks called 'Aria'[26] (a land listed separately from the homeland of the Aryans).[27][28]

While up until the end of the Parthian period in the 3rd century CE, the idea of "Irān" had an ethnic, linguistic, and religious value, it did not yet have a political import. The idea of an "Iranian" empire or kingdom in a political sense is a purely Sasanian one. It was the result of a convergence of interests between the new dynasty and the Zoroastrian clergy, as we can deduce from the available evidence. This convergence gave rise to the idea of an Ērān-šahr "Kingdom of the Iranians", which was "ēr" (Middle Persian equivalent of Old Persian "ariya" and Avestan "airya").[25]

Definition

Richard Nelson Frye defines Greater Iran as including "much of the Caucasus, Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan and Central Asia, with cultural influences extending to China and western India." According to Frye, "Iran means all lands and peoples where Iranian languages were and are spoken, and where in the past, multi-faceted Iranian cultures existed."[29]

Richard Foltz notes that while "A general assumption is often made that the various Iranian peoples of 'greater Iran'—a cultural area that stretched from Mesopotamia and the Caucasus into Khwarizm, Transoxiana, Bactria, and the Pamirs and included Persians, Medes, Parthians and Sogdians among others—were all 'Zoroastrians' in pre-Islamic times... This view, even though common among serious scholars, is almost certainly overstated." Foltz argues that "While the various Iranian peoples did indeed share a common pantheon and pool of religious myths and symbols, in actuality a variety of deities were worshipped—particularly Mitra, the god of covenants, and Anahita, the goddess of the waters, but also many others—depending on the time, place, and particular group concerned".[30] To the Ancient Greeks, Greater Iran ended at the Indus River located in Pakistan.[31]

According to J. P. Mallory and Douglas Q. Adams most of Western greater Iran spoke Southwestern Iranian languages in the Achaemenid era while the Eastern territory spoke Eastern Iranian languages related to Avestan.[32]

George Lane also states that after the dissolution of the Mongol Empire, the Ilkhanids became rulers of greater Iran[33] and Uljaytu, according to Judith G. Kolbas, was the ruler of this expanse between 1304 and 1317 A.D.[34]

Primary sources, including Timurid historian Mir Khwand, define Iranshahr (Greater Iran) as extending from the Euphrates to the Oxus[35]

Traditionally, and until recent times, ethnicity has never been a defining separating criterion in these regions. In the words of Richard Nelson Frye:[citation needed]

Many times I have emphasized that the present peoples of Central Asia, whether Iranian or Turkic speaking, have one culture, one religion, one set of social values and traditions with only language separating them.

— Richard Nelson Frye

Only in modern times did western colonial intervention and ethnicity tend to become a dividing force between the provinces of Greater Iran. As Patrick Clawson states, "ethnic nationalism is largely a nineteenth-century phenomenon, even if it is fashionable to retroactively extend it."[36] "Greater Iran" however has been more of a cultural super-state, rather than a political one to begin with.

In the work Nuzhat al-Qolub (نزهه القلوب), the medieval geographer Hamdallah Mustawfi wrote:

چند شهر است اندر ایران مرتفع تر از همه
Some cities in Iran are above the rest,
بهتر و سازنده تر از خوشی آب و هوا
better and more productive due to good weather,
گنجه پر گنج در اران صفاهان در عراق
Ganja full of treasure in Arran, and Esfahān in Iraq,
در خراسان مرو و طوس در روم باشد اقسرا
Merv and Tus in Khorasan, and Aksaray in Rûm.

The Cambridge History of Iran takes a geographical approach in referring to the "historical and cultural" entity of "Greater Iran" as "areas of Iran, parts of Afghanistan, and Chinese and Soviet Central Asia".[37] A detailed list of these territories follows in this article.

Background

 
An Ashrafi Coin of Nader Shah (r. 1736–1747), reverse:"Coined on gold the word of kingdom in the world, Nader of Greater Iran and the world-conqueror king."[38]

Greater Iran is called Iranzamin (ایران‌زمین) which means "Iranland" or "The Land of Iran". Iranzamin was in the mythical times as opposed to the Turanzamin the Land of Turan, which was located in the upper part of Central Asia.[39]

In the pre-Islamic period, Iranians distinguished two main regions in the territory they ruled, one Iran and the other Aniran. By Iran they meant all the regions inhabited by ancient Iranian peoples, this region was more extensive in the past. This notion of Iran as a territory (opposed to Aniran) can be seen as the core of early Greater Iran. Later many changes occurred in the boundaries and areas where Iranians lived but the languages and culture remained the dominant medium in many parts of Greater Iran.

As an example, the Persian language (referred to, in Persian, as Farsi) was the main literary language and the language of correspondence in Central Asia and the Caucasus prior to the Russian occupation, Central Asia being the birthplace of modern Persian language. Furthermore, according to the British government, Persian language was also used in Iraqi Kurdistan, prior to the British Occupation and Mandate in 1918–1932.[40]

With Imperial Russia continuously advancing south in the course of two wars against Persia, and the treaties of Turkmenchay and Gulistan in the western frontiers, plus the unexpected death of Abbas Mirza in 1833, and the murdering of Persia's Grand Vizier (Mirza AbolQasem Qa'im Maqām), many Central Asian khanates began losing hope for any support from Persia against the Tsarist armies.[41] The Russian armies occupied the Aral coast in 1849, Tashkent in 1864, Bukhara in 1867, Samarkand in 1868, and Khiva and Amudarya in 1873.

"Many Iranians consider their natural sphere of influence to extend beyond Iran's present borders. After all, Iran was once much larger. Portuguese forces seized islands and ports in the 16th and 17th centuries. In the 19th century, the Russian Empire wrested from Tehran's control what is today Armenia, Republic of Azerbaijan, and part of Georgia. Iranian elementary school texts teach about the Iranian roots not only of cities like Baku, but also cities further north like Derbent in southern Russia. The Shah lost much of his claim to western Afghanistan following the Anglo-Iranian war of 1856-1857. Only in 1970 did a UN sponsored consultation end Iranian claims to suzerainty over the Persian Gulf island nation of Bahrain. In centuries past, Iranian rule once stretched westward into modern Iraq and beyond. When the western world complains of Iranian interference beyond its borders, the Iranian government often convinced itself that it is merely exerting its influence in lands that were once its own. Simultaneously, Iran's losses at the hands of outside powers have contributed to a sense of grievance that continues to the present day." -Patrick Clawson of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy[42]
"Iran today is just a rump of what it once was. At its height, Iranian rulers controlled Iraq, Afghanistan, Western Pakistan, much of Central Asia, and the Caucasus. Many Iranians today consider these areas part of a greater Iranian sphere of influence." -Patrick Clawson[43]
"Since the days of the Achaemenids, the Iranians had the protection of geography. But high mountains and the vast emptiness of the Iranian plateau were no longer enough to shield Iran from the Russian army or British navy. Both literally, and figuratively, Iran shrank. At the beginning of the nineteenth century, Azerbaijan, Armenia, and Afghanistan were Iranian, but by the end of the century, all this territory had been lost as a result of European military action."[44]

Provinces and regions

In the 8th century, Iran was conquered by the Abbassids who ruled from Baghdad. The territory of Iran at that time was composed of two portions: Persian Iraq (western portion) and Khorasan (eastern portion). The dividing region was mostly the cities of Gurgan and Damaghan. The Ghaznavids, Seljuqs and Timurids divided their empires into Iraqi and Khorasani regions. This point can be observed in many books such as Abul Fazl Bayhqi's "Tārīkhi Baïhaqī", Al-Ghazali's Faza'ilul al-anam min rasa'ili hujjat al-Islam and other books. Transoxiana and Chorasmia were mostly included in the Khorasanian region.

West Asia

Bahrain

The "Ajam" and "Huwala" are ethnic communities of Bahrain of Persian origin. The Persians of Bahrain are a significant, influential ethnic community whose ancestors arrived in Bahrain within the last 1,000 years as laborers, merchants and artisans. They have traditionally been merchants living in specific quarters of Manama and Muharraq. Bahrain's Persians who adhere to the Shia sect of Islam are called Ajam and the Persians who adhere to the Sunni sect are called the Huwala; who migrated from Larestan in Iran to the Persian Gulf in the seventeenth and eighteenth century.

The immigration of Persians to Bahrain began with the fall of the Greek Seleucid kingdom, which ruled the island at the time. The Persian Empire successfully invaded, but it is often believed that mass immigration began much later, during the 1600s, when the Safavid shah Abbas the Great conquered Bahrain. After settlement, some of the Persians were effectively Arabized. They usually settled in areas inhabited by the indigenous Baharna, probably because they share the same Shia Muslim faith, however, some Sunni Persians settled in areas mostly inhabited by Sunni Arab immigrants such as Hidd and Galali. In Muharraq, they have their own neighborhood called Fareej Karimi named after a rich Persian man called Ali Abdulla Karimi.

From the 6th century BC to the 3rd century BC, Bahrain was a prominent part of the Persian Empire by the Achaemenids dynasty. It was referred to by the Greeks as "Tylos", the centre of pearl trading, when Nearchus discovered it while serving under Alexander the Great.[45] From the 3rd century BC to the arrival of Islam in the 7th century AD, the island was controlled by two other Iranian dynasties, the Parthians and the Sassanids.

In the 3rd century AD, the Sassanids succeeded the Parthians and controlled the area for four centuries until the Arab conquest.[46] Ardashir, the first ruler of the Iranian Sassanid dynasty marched to Oman and Bahrain and defeated Sanatruq[47] (or Satiran[48]), probably the Parthian governor of Bahrain.[49] He appointed his son Shapur I as governor. Shapur constructed a new city there and named it Batan Ardashir after his father.[48] At this time, it incorporated the southern Sassanid province covering the Persian Gulf's southern shore plus the archipelago of Bahrain.[49] The southern province of the Sassanids was subdivided into three districts; Haggar (now al-Hafuf province, Saudi Arabia), Batan Ardashir (now al-Qatif province, Saudi Arabia), and Mishmahig (now Bahrain Island)[48] (In Middle-Persian/Pahlavi it means "ewe-fish").[50]

 
Ghaznavids at their greatest extent

By about 130 BC, the Parthian dynasty brought the Persian Gulf under their control and extended their influence as far as Oman. Because they needed to control the Persian Gulf trade route, the Parthians established garrisons along the southern coast of the Persian Gulf.[46] through warfare and economic distress, been reduced to only 60.[51] The influence of Iran was further undermined at the end of the 18th century when the ideological power struggle between the Akhbari-Usuli strands culminated in victory for the Usulis in Bahrain.[52]

An Afghan uprising led by Hotakis of Kandahar at the beginning of the 18th century resulted in the near-collapse of the Safavid state.[53] In the resultant power vacuum, Oman invaded Bahrain in 1717, ending over one hundred years of Persian hegemony in Bahrain. The Omani invasion began a period of political instability and a quick succession of outside rulers took power with consequent destruction. According to a contemporary account by theologian, Sheikh Yusuf Al Bahrani, in an unsuccessful attempt by the Persians and their Bedouin allies to take back Bahrain from the Kharijite Omanis, much of the country was burnt to the ground.[54] Bahrain was eventually sold back to the Persians by the Omanis, but the weakness of the Safavid empire saw Huwala tribes seize control.[55]

In 1730, the new Shah of Persia, Nadir Shah, sought to re-assert Persian sovereignty in Bahrain. He ordered Latif Khan, the admiral of the Persian navy in the Persian Gulf, to prepare an invasion fleet in Bushehr.[53] The Persians invaded in March or early April 1736 when the ruler of Bahrain, Shaikh Jubayr, was away on hajj.[53] The invasion brought the island back under central rule and to challenge Oman in the Persian Gulf. He sought help from the British and Dutch, and he eventually recaptured Bahrain in 1736.[56] During the Qajar era, Persian control over Bahrain waned[53] and in 1753, Bahrain was occupied by the Sunni Persians of the Bushire-based Al Madhkur family,[57] who ruled Bahrain in the name of Persia and paid allegiance to Karim Khan Zand.

During most of the second half of the eighteenth century, Bahrain was ruled by Nasr Al-Madhkur, the ruler of Bushehr. The Bani Utibah tribe from Zubarah exceeded in taking over Bahrain after war broke out in 1782. Persian attempts to reconquer the island in 1783 and in 1785 failed; the 1783 expedition was a joint Persian-Qawasim invasion force that never left Bushehr. The 1785 invasion fleet, composed of forces from Bushehr, Rig, and Shiraz was called off after the death of the ruler of Shiraz, Ali Murad Khan. Due to internal difficulties, the Persians could not attempt another invasion.[58] In 1799, Bahrain came under threat from the expansionist policies of Sayyid Sultan, the Sultan of Oman, when he invaded the island under the pretext that Bahrain did not pay taxes owed.[59] The Bani Utbah solicited the aid of Bushire to expel the Omanis on the condition that Bahrain would become a tributary state of Persia. In 1800, Sayyid Sultan invaded Bahrain again in retaliation and deployed a garrison at Arad Fort, in Muharraq island and had appointed his twelve-year-old son Salim, as Governor of the island.[59][60]

 
Qajar dynasty at its greatest extent

Many names of villages in Bahrain are derived from the Persian language.[61] These names were thought to have been as a result influences during the Safavid rule of Bahrain (1501–1722) and previous Persian rule. Village names such as Karbabad, Salmabad, Karzakan, Duraz, Barbar were originally derived from the Persian language, suggesting that Persians had a substantial effect on the island's history.[61] The local Bahrani Arabic dialect has also borrowed many words from the Persian language.[61] Bahrain's capital city, Manama is derived from two Persian words meaning 'I' and 'speech'.[61][contradictory]

In 1910, the Persian community funded and opened a private school, Al-Ittihad school, that taught Farsi amongst other subjects.[62] According to the 1905 census, there were 1650 Bahraini citizens of Persian origin.[63]

Historian Nasser Hussain says that many Iranians fled their native country in the early 20th century due to a law king Reza Shah issued which banned women from wearing the hijab, or because they feared for their lives after fighting the English or to find jobs. They were coming to Bahrain from Bushehr and the Fars province between 1920 and 1940. In the 1920s, local Persian merchants were prominently involved in the consolidation of Bahrain's first powerful lobby with connections to the municipality in an effort to contest the municipal legislation of British control.[63]

Bahrain's local Persian community has heavily influenced the country's local food dishes. One of the most notable local delicacies of the people in Bahrain is mahyawa, consumed in Southern Iran as well, is a watery earth brick coloured sauce made from sardines and consumed with bread or other food. Bahrain's Persians are also famous in Bahrain for bread-making. Another local delicacy is "pishoo" made from rose water (golab) and agar agar. Other food items consumed are similar to Persian cuisine.

Iraq

Throughout history, Iran always had strong cultural ties with the region of present-day Iraq. Mesopotamia is considered the cradle of civilization and the place where the first empires in history were established. These empires, namely the Sumerian, Akkadian, Babylonian, and Assyrian, dominated the ancient middle east for millennia, which explains the great influence of Mesopotamia on the Iranian culture and history, and it is also the reason why the later Iranian and Greek dynasties chose Mesopotamia to be the political center of their rule. For a period of around 500 years, what is now Iraq formed the core of Iran, with the Iranian Parthian and Sasanian empire having their capital in what is modern-day Iraq for the same centuries-long time span. (Ctesiphon)

Of the four residences of the Achaemenids named by HerodotusEcbatana, Pasargadae or Persepolis, Susa and Babylon—the last [situated in Iraq] was maintained as their most important capital, the fixed winter quarters, the central office of bureaucracy, exchanged only in the heat of summer for some cool spot in the highlands.[64] Under the Seleucids and the Parthians the site of the Mesopotamian capital moved a little to the north on the Tigris—to Seleucia and Ctesiphon. It is indeed symbolic that these new foundations were built from the bricks of ancient Babylon, just as later Baghdad, a little further upstream, was built out of the ruins of the Sassanian double city of Seleucia-Ctesiphon.[64]

— Iranologist Ehsan Yarshater, The Cambridge History of Iran,[64]
 
The Cyrus Cylinder, written in Babylonian cuneiform in the name of the Achaemenid king, Cyrus the Great, describes the Persian takeover of Babylon (An ancient city in modern-day Iraq).
 
An 1814 map of Persia at time of Qajar dynasty

According to Iranologist Richard N. Frye:[65][66]

Throughout Iran's history the western part of the land has been frequently more closely connected with the lowlands of Mesopotamia (Iraq) than with the rest of the plateau to the east of the central deserts [the Dasht-e Kavir and Dasht-e Lut].

— Richard N. Frye, The Golden Age of Persia: The Arabs in the East

Between the coming of the Abbasids [in 750] and the Mongol onslaught [in 1258], Iraq and western Iran shared a closer history than did eastern Iran and its western counterpart.

— Neguin Yavari, Iranian Perspectives on the Iran–Iraq War[66]

Testimony to the close relationship shared by Iraq and western Iran during the Abbasid era and later centuries, is the fact that the two regions came to share the same name. The western region of Iran (ancient Media) was called 'Irāq-e 'Ajamī ("Persian Iraq"), while central-southern Iraq (Babylonia) was called 'Irāq al-'Arabī ("Arabic Iraq") or Bābil ("Babylon").

For centuries the two neighbouring regions were known as "The Two Iraqs" ("al-'Iraqain"). The 12th century Persian poet Khāqāni wrote a famous poem Tohfat-ul Iraqein ("The Gift of the Two Iraqs"). The city of Arāk in western Iran still bears the region's old name, and Iranians still traditionally call the region between Tehran, Isfahan and Īlām "ʿErāq".

During the medieval ages, Mesopotamian and Iranian peoples knew each other's languages because of trade, and because Arabic was the language of religion and science at that time. The Timurid historian Ḥāfeẓ-e Abru (d. 1430) wrote of Iraq:[67]

The majority of inhabitants of Iraq know Persian and Arabic, and from the time of the domination of Turkic people the Turkish language has also found currency.

— Ḥāfeẓ-e Abru

Iraqis share religious and certain cultural ties with Iranians. The majority of Iranians are Twelver Shia (an Islamic sect established in Iraq), although the majority of Iranians were Sunni Muslims and did not convert to Shia until the Safavids forced Shi'ism in Iran.

Iraqi culture has commonalities with the culture of Iran. The Mesopotamian cuisine also has similarities to the Persian cuisine, including common dishes and cooking techniques. The Iraqi dialect has absorbed many words from the Persian language.[68]

There are still cities and provinces in Iraq where the Persian names of the city are still retained – e.g., ’Anbār and Baghdad. Other cities of Iraq with originally Persian names include Nokard (نوكرد) --> Haditha, Suristan (سورستان) --> Kufa, Shahrban (شهربان) --> Muqdadiyah, Arvandrud (اروندرود) --> Shatt al-Arab, and Asheb (آشب) --> Amadiya,[69] Peroz-Shapur --> Anbar (town)

In the modern era, the Safavid dynasty of Iran briefly reasserted hegemony over Iraq in the periods of 1501–1533 and 1622–1638, losing Iraq to the Ottoman Empire on both occasions (via the Treaty of Amasya in 1555 and the Treaty of Zuhab in 1639). Ottoman hegemony over Iraq was reconfirmed in the Treaty of Kerden in 1746.

Following the fall of the Ba'athist regime in 2003 and the empowerment of Iraq's majority Shī'i community, relations with Iran have flourished in all fields. Iraq is today Iran's largest trading partner in regard to non-oil goods.[70]

Many Iranians were born in Iraq or have ancestors from Iraq,[71] such as the Chairman of Iran's Parliament Ali Larijani, the former Chief Justice of Iran Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi, and the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Iran Ali Akbar Salehi, who were born in Najaf and Karbala respectively. In the same way, many Iraqis were born in Iran or have ancestors from Iran,[71] such as Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani, who was born in Mashhad.

Kurdistan

Culturally and historically Kurdistan has been a part of what is known as Greater Iran. Kurds speak a Northwestern Iranian language known as Kurdish. Many aspects of Kurdish culture are related to the other peoples of Greater Iran, examples include Newroz[72] and Simurgh.[73] Some historians and linguists, such as Vladimir Minorsky,[74] have suggested that the Medes, an Iranian people[75] who inhabited much of western Iran, including Azerbaijan and Kurdistan, might have been forefathers of modern Kurds.

Caucasus

North Caucasus

 
Sassanian fortress in Derbent, Dagestan. Now inscribed on Russia's UNESCO world heritage list since 2003.

Dagestan remains the bastion of Persian culture in the North Caucasus with fine examples of Iranian architecture like the Sassanid citadel in Derbent, the strong influence of Persian cuisine, and common Persian names amongst the ethnic peoples of Dagestan. The ethnic Persian population of the North Caucasus, the Tats, remain, despite strong assimilation over the years, still visible in several North Caucasian cities. Even today, after decades of partition, some of these regions retain Iranian influences, as seen in their old beliefs, traditions and customs (e.g. Norouz).[76]

South Caucasus

According to Tadeusz Swietochowski, the territories of Iran and the republic of Azerbaijan usually shared the same history from the time of ancient Media (ninth to seventh centuries b.c.) and the Persian Empire (sixth to fourth centuries b.c.).[77]

Intimately and inseparably intertwined histories for millennia, Iran irrevocably lost the territory that is nowadays Azerbaijan in the course of the 19th century. With the Treaty of Gulistan of 1813 following the Russo-Persian War (1804-1813) Iran had to cede eastern Georgia, its possessions in the North Caucasus and many of those in what is today the Azerbaijan Republic, which included the khanates of Baku, Shirvan, Karabakh, Ganja, Shaki, Quba, Derbent, and parts of Talysh. These Khanates comprise most of what is today the Republic of Azerbaijan and Dagestan in Southern Russia. In the Treaty of Turkmenchay of 1828 following the Russo-Persian War (1826-1828), the result was even more disastrous, and resulted in Iran being forced to cede the remainder of the Talysh Khanate, the khanates of Nakhichevan and Erivan, and the Mughan region to Russia. All these territories together, lost in 1813 and 1828 combined, constitute all of the modern-day Republic of Azerbaijan, Armenia, and southern Dagestan. The area to the North of the river Aras, among which the territory of the contemporary republic of Azerbaijan were Iranian territory until they were occupied by Russia in the course of the 19th century.[78][79][80][81][82][83]

Many localities in this region bear Persian names or names derived from Iranian languages and Azerbaijan remains by far Iran's closest cultural, religious, ethnic, and historical neighbor. Azerbaijanis are by far the second-largest ethnicity in Iran, and comprise the largest community of ethnic Azerbaijanis in the world, vastly outnumbering the number in the Republic of Azerbaijan. Both nations are the only officially Shia majority in the world, with adherents of the religion comprising an absolute majority in both nations. The people of nowadays Iran and Azerbaijan were converted to Shiism during exactly the same time in history. Furthermore, the name of "Azerbaijan" is derived through the name of the Persian satrap which ruled the contemporary region of Iranian Azerbaijan and minor parts of the Republic of Azerbaijan in ancient times.[84][85] In 1918, the Azerbaijani Musavat party adopted the name for the nation upon the independence of the former territories under the Russian Empire.

Early in antiquity, Narseh of Persia is known to have had fortifications built here. In later times, some of Persia's literary and intellectual figures from the Qajar period have hailed from this region. Under intermittent Iranian suzerainty since antiquity, it was also separated from Iran in the mid-19th century, by virtue of the Gulistan Treaty and Turkmenchay Treaty.

که تا جایگه یافتی نخچوان
Oh Nakhchivan, respect you've attained,
بدین شاه شد بخت پیرت جوان
With this King in luck you'll remain.
---Nizami

Central Asia

 
Painted clay and alabaster head of a Zoroastrian priest wearing a distinctive Bactrian-style headdress, Takhti-Sangin, Tajikistan, Greco-Bactrian kingdom, 3rd-2nd century BC.[86]

Khwarazm is one of the regions of Iran-zameen, and is the home of the ancient Iranians, Airyanem Vaejah, according to the ancient book of the Avesta. Modern scholars believe Khwarazm to be what ancient Avestic texts refer to as "Ariyaneh Waeje" or Iran vij. Iranovich These sources claim that Urgandj, which was the capital of ancient Khwarazm for many years, was actually "Ourva": the eighth land of Ahura Mazda mentioned in the Pahlavi text of Vendidad. Others such as University of Hawaii historian Elton L. Daniel believe Khwarazm to be the "most likely locale" corresponding to the original home of the Avestan people,[87] while Dehkhoda calls Khwarazm "the cradle of the Aryan people" (مهد قوم آریا). Today Khwarazm is split between several central Asian republics.

Superimposed on and overlapping with Chorasmia was Khorasan which roughly covered nearly the same geographical areas in Central Asia (starting from Semnan eastward through northern Afghanistan roughly until the foothills of Pamir, ancient Mount Imeon). Current day provinces such as Sanjan in Turkmenia, Razavi Khorasan Province, North Khorasan Province, and Southern Khorasan Province in Iran are all remnants of the old Khorasan. Until the 13th century and the devastating Mongol invasion of the region, Khorasan was considered the cultural capital of Greater Iran.[88]

Tajikistan

The national anthem in Tajikistan, "Surudi Milli", attests to the Perso-Tajik identity, which has seen a large revival, after the breakup of the USSR. Their language is almost identical to that spoken in Afghanistan and Iran, and their cities have Persian names, e.g. Dushanbe, Isfara, Rasht Valley, Garm, Murghab, Vahdat, Zar-afshan river, Shurab, and Kulob,[89] Rudaki, considered by many as the father of modern Persian poetry, was from the modern day region of Tajikistan.

Turkmenistan

Turkmenistan was the home of the Parthian Empire (Nisa). Merv is also where the half-Persian caliph al-Mamun put his capital. The city of Eshgh Abad (some claim that the word is actually the transformed form of "Ashk Abad" literally meaning "built by Ashk", the head of Arsacid dynasty) is yet another Persian word meaning "city of love", and like East Iran, Afghanistan, and Uzbekistan, it was once part of Airyanem Vaejah.

Uzbekistan

Uzbekistan has a significant local Tajik population. The famous Persian cities of Afrasiab, Bukhara, Samarkand, Shahrisabz, Andijan, Khiveh, Navā'i, Shirin, Termez, and Zar-afshan are located here. These cities are the birthplace of the Islamic era Persian literature. The Samanids, who claimed inheritance to the Sassanids, had their capital built here.

ای بخارا شاد باش و دیر زی
Oh Bukhara! Joy to you and live long!
شاه زی تو میهمان آید همی
Your King comes to you in ceremony.
---Rudaki

Afghanistan

The modern state of Afghanistan was part of Sistan and Greater Khorasan regions, and hence was recognized with the name Khorasan (along with regions centered on Merv and Nishapur), which in Pahlavi means "The Eastern Land" (خاور زمین in Persian).[90]

Nowadays, the region of Afghanistan is where Balkh is located, home of Rumi, Rabi'a Balkhi, Sanāī Ghaznawi, Jami, Khwaja Abdullah Ansari and was many other notables in Persian literature came from.

ز زابل به کابل رسید آن زمان
From Zabul he arrived to Kabul
گرازان و خندان و دل شادمان
Strutting, happy, and mirthful
---Ferdowsi in Shahnama

Xinjiang

The Tashkurgan Tajik Autonomous County regions of China harbored a Tajik population and culture.[91] Chinese Tashkurgan Tajik Autonomous County was always counted as a part of the Iranian cultural & linguistic continent with Kashgar, Yarkand, and Hotan bound to the Iranian history.[92]

South Asia

Pakistan

There is considerable influence of Iranian-speaking peoples in Pakistan. The region of Baluchistan is split between Pakistan and Iran and Baluchi, the majority of languages of the Baluchistan province of Pakistan are also spoken in Southeastern Iran. In fact, the Chagai Hills and the western part of Makran district were part of Iran till the Durand Line was drawn in the late 1800s.

Pashto which is spoken in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and FATA of Pakistan and Afghanistan is an Iranian language.


Historical and modern maps of Iran

Treaties

See also

Notes and references

Explanatory footnotes

  1. ^ These include the Medes, Achaemenids, Parthians, Sasanians, Samanids, Saffarids, Safavids, Afsharids and Qajars).
  2. ^ For example, those regions and peoples in the North Caucasus that were not under direct Iranian rule.
  3. ^ Such as in the western parts of South Asia, Bahrain and Tajikistan.

Citation footnotes

  1. ^ Marcinkowski, Christoph (2010). Shi'ite Identities: Community and Culture in Changing Social Contexts. LIT Verlag Münster. p. 83. ISBN 978-3-643-80049-7.
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-04-23.
  3. ^ Richard Nelson Frye, The Harvard Theological Review, Vol. 55, No. 4 (Oct. 1962), pp. 261–268 I use the term Iran in an historical context[...]Persia would be used for the modern state, more or less equivalent to "western Iran". I use the term "Greater Iran" to mean what I suspect most Classicists and ancient historians really mean by their use of Persia—that which was within the political boundaries of States ruled by Iranians.
  4. ^ "IRAN i. LANDS OF IRAN". Encyclopædia Iranica.
  5. ^ Dialect, Culture, and Society in Eastern Arabia: Glossary. Clive Holes. 2001. Page XXX. ISBN 978-90-04-10763-2.
  6. ^ . columbia.edu. Archived from the original on 2015-11-27. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  7. ^ Frye, Richard Nelson (1962). "Reitzenstein and Qumrân Revisited by an Iranian, Richard Nelson Frye, The Harvard Theological Review, Vol. 55, No. 4 (Oct. 1962), pp. 261–268". The Harvard Theological Review. 55 (4): 261–268. doi:10.1017/S0017816000007926. JSTOR 1508723. S2CID 162213219.
  8. ^ International Journal of Middle East Studies. (2007), 39: pp 307–309 Copyright © 2007 Cambridge University Press.
  9. ^ Erik Goldstein (1992). Wars and peace treaties, 1816-1991. Psychology Press. pp. 72–73. ISBN 978-0-203-97682-1.
  10. ^ Sir Percy Molesworth Sykes (1915). A history of Persia, Volume 2. Macmillan and co. p. 469. Macmahon arbitration persia.
  11. ^ Roxane Farmanfarmaian (2008). War and peace in Qajar Persia: implications past and present. Psychology Press. p. 4. ISBN 978-0-203-93830-0.
  12. ^ India. Foreign and Political Dept. (1892). A Collection of Treaties, Engagements, and Sunnuds, Relating to India and Neighbouring Countries: Persia and the Persian Gulf. G. A. Savielle and P. M. Cranenburgh, Bengal Print. Co. pp. x (10). treaty of gulistan.
  13. ^ Mikaberidze, Alexander (2015). Historical Dictionary of Georgia. Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 348–349. ISBN 978-1-4422-4146-6. Persia lost all its territories to the north of the Aras River, which included all of Georgia, and parts of Armenia and Azerbaijan.
  14. ^ Olsen, James Stuart; Shadle, Robert (1991). Historical Dictionary of European Imperialism. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 314. ISBN 978-0-313-26257-9. In 1813 Iran signed the Treaty of Gulistan, ceding Georgia to Russia.
  15. ^ Fisher et al. 1991, p. 329.
  16. ^ Abbas Amanat (1997). Pivot of the universe: Nasir al-Din Shah Qajar and the Iranian Monarchy, 1831-1896. I.B.Tauris. p. 16. ISBN 978-1-86064-097-1.
  17. ^ Kenneth M. Pollack (2005). The Persian puzzle: the conflict between Iran and America. Random House, Inc. p. 38. ISBN 978-0-8129-7336-5.
  18. ^ Yarshater, Ehsan Persia or Iran, Persian or Farsi 2010-10-24 at the Wayback Machine, Iranian Studies, vol. XXII no. 1 (1989).
  19. ^ William W. Malandra (2005-07-20). "ZOROASTRIANISM i. HISTORICAL REVIEW". Retrieved 2011-01-14.
  20. ^ Nicholas Sims-Williams. "EASTERN IRANIAN LANGUAGES". Retrieved 2011-01-14.
  21. ^ "IRAN". Retrieved 2011-01-14.
  22. ^ K. Hoffmann. "AVESTAN LANGUAGE I-III". Retrieved 2011-01-14.
  23. ^ "ĒRĀN-WĒZ". iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  24. ^ "ZOROASTER ii. GENERAL SURVEY". iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  25. ^ a b Ahmad Ashraf. "IRANIAN IDENTITY ii. PRE-ISLAMIC PERIOD". Retrieved 2011-01-14.
  26. ^ Ed Eduljee. "Haroyu". heritageinstitute.com. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  27. ^ Ed Eduljee. "Aryan Homeland, Airyana Vaeja, Location. Aryans and Zoroastrianism". heritageinstitute.com. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  28. ^ Ed Eduljee. "Aryan Homeland, Airyana Vaeja, in the Avesta. Aryan lands and Zoroastrianism". heritageinstitute.com. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  29. ^ Frye, Richard Nelson, Greater Iran, ISBN 978-1-56859-177-3 p.xi
  30. ^ Richard Foltz, "Religions of the Silk Road: Premodern Patterns of globalization", Palgrave Macmillan, rev. 2nd edition, 2010. pg 27
  31. ^ J.M. Cook, "The Rise of the Achaemenids and Establishment of Their Empire" in Ilya Gershevitch, William Bayne Fisher, J. A. Boyle "Cambridge History of Iran", Vol 2. pg 250. Excerpt: "To the Greeks, Greater Iran ended at the Indus".
  32. ^ Mallory, J. P.; Adams, D. Q. (1997), Encyclopedia of Indo-European culture, London and Chicago: Fitzroy-Dearborn, ISBN 978-1-884964-98-5. pg 307: "Dialectically, Old Persian is regarded as a southwestern Iranian language in contrast to the east Iranian Avestan which covered most of the rest of Greater Iran. However, it is important to note that during the Achaemeid era, the official language of the empire was Aramaic, which was the mother tongue of the ancient [Iraqis], since it was the language of literature, religion, and science at that time. [Aramaic] language had a great impact on Persian and survived as the dominant language in the middle east until the [Islamic conquest].
  33. ^ George Lane, "Daily Life in the Mongol Empire", Greenwood Publishing Group, 2006. pg 10" The year following 1260 saw the empire irrevocably split but also signaled the emergence of the two greatest achievements of the house of Chinggis, namely the Yuan dynasty of greater China and the Il-Khanid dynasty of greater Iran.
  34. ^ Judith G. Kolbas, "The Mongols in Iran", Excerpt from 399: "Uljaytu, Ruler of Greater Iran from 1304 to 1317 A.D."
  35. ^ Mīr Khvānd, Muḥammad ibn Khāvandshāh, Tārīkh-i rawz̤at al-ṣafā. Taṣnīf Mīr Muḥammad ibn Sayyid Burhān al-Dīn Khāvand Shāh al-shahīr bi-Mīr Khvānd. Az rū-yi nusakh-i mutaʻaddadah-i muqābilah gardīdah va fihrist-i asāmī va aʻlām va qabāyil va kutub bā chāphā-yi digar mutamāyiz mībāshad.[Tehrān] Markazī-i Khayyām Pīrūz [1959-60]. ایرانشهر از کنار فرات تا جیهون است و وسط آبادانی عالم است. Iranshahr stretches from the Euphrates to the Oxus, and it is the center of the prosperity of the World.
  36. ^ Patrick Clawson. Eternal Iran. Palgrave Macmillan. 2005 ISBN 978-1-4039-6276-8 p.23
  37. ^ The Cambridge History of Iran, Vol. III: The Seleucid, Parthian and Sasanian Periods, Ehsan Yarshater, Review author[s]: Richard N. Frye, International Journal of Middle East Studies, Vol. 21, No. 3. (Aug. 1989), pp.415.
  38. ^ Numista: Ashrafi - Nader Afshar Type A2; Širâz mint.
  39. ^ Dehkhoda Dictionary, Dehkhoda, see under entry "Turan"
  40. ^ "The old www.cogsci.ed.ac.uk server". ed.ac.uk. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  41. ^ Homayoun, N. T., Kharazm: What do I know about Iran?. 2004. ISBN 978-964-379-023-3, p.78
  42. ^ Patrick Clawson. Eternal Iran. Palgrave. 2005. Coauthored with Michael Rubin. ISBN 978-1-4039-6276-8 p.9,10
  43. ^ Patrick Clawson. Eternal Iran. Palgrave. 2005. Coauthored with Michael Rubin. ISBN 978-1-4039-6276-8 p.30
  44. ^ Patrick Clawson. Eternal Iran. Palgrave. 2005. Coauthored with Michael Rubin. ISBN 978-1-4039-6276-8 p.31-32
  45. ^ Life and Land Use on the Bahrain Islands: The Geoarchaeology of an Ancient ... by Curtis E. Larsen p. 13
  46. ^ a b Bahrain by Federal Research Division, page 7
  47. ^ Robert G. Hoyland, Arabia and the Arabs: From the Bronze Age to the Coming of Islam, Routledge 2001p28
  48. ^ a b c Security and Territoriality in the Persian Gulf: A Maritime Political Geography by Pirouz Mojtahed-Zadeh, page 119
  49. ^ a b Conflict and Cooperation: Zoroastrian Subalterns and Muslim Elites in ... By Jamsheed K. Choksy, 1997, page 75
  50. ^ Yoma 77a and Rosh Hashbanah, 23a
  51. ^ Juan Cole, Sacred Space and Holy War, IB Tauris, 2007 p52
  52. ^ Are the Shia Rising? Maximilian Terhalle, Middle East Policy, Volume 14 Issue 2 Page 73, June 2007
  53. ^ a b c d Bashir 1979, p. 7.
  54. ^ Autobiography of Sheikh Yusuf Al Bahrani published in Interpreting the Self, Autobiography in the Arabic Literary Tradition, Edited by Dwight F. Reynolds, University of California Press Berkeley 2001
  55. ^ The Autobiography of Yūsuf al-Bahrānī (1696–1772) from Lu'lu'at al-Baḥrayn, from the final chapter An Account of the Life of the Author and the Events That Have Befallen Him featured in Interpreting the Self, Autobiography in the Arabic Literary Tradition, Edited by Dwight F. Reynolds, University of California Press Berkeley 2001 p221
  56. ^ Charles Belgrave, The Pirate Coast, G. Bell & Sons, 1966 p19
  57. ^ Ahmad Mustafa Abu Hakim, History of Eastern Arabia 1750–1800, Khayat, 1960, p78
  58. ^ Bashir 1979, p. 46.
  59. ^ a b Bashir 1979, p. 47.
  60. ^ James Onley, The Politics of Protection in the Gulf: The Arab Rulers and the British Resident in the Nineteenth Century, Exeter University, 2004 p44
  61. ^ a b c d Al-Tajer, Mahdi Abdulla (1982). Language & Linguistic Origins In Bahrain. Taylor & Francis. pp. 134, 135. ISBN 978-0-7103-0024-9.
  62. ^ Shirawi, May Al-Arrayed (1987). Education in Bahrain - 1919-1986, An Analytical Study of Problems and Progress (PDF). Durham University. p. 60.
  63. ^ a b Fuccaro, Nelida (2009-09-03). Histories of City and State in the Persian Gulf: Manama Since 1800. p. 114. ISBN 978-0-521-51435-4.
  64. ^ a b c Yarshater, Ehsan (1993). The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 3. Cambridge University Press. p. 482. ISBN 978-0-521-20092-9. Of the four residences of the Achaemenids named by HerodotusEcbatana, Pasargadae or Persepolis, Susa and Babylon—the last [situated in Iraq] was maintained as their most important capital, the fixed winter quarters, the central office of bureaucracy, exchanged only in the heat of summer for some cool spot in the highlands. Under the Seleucids and the Parthians the site of the Mesopotamian capital moved a little to the north on the Tigris—to Seleucia and Ctesiphon. It is indeed symbolic that these new foundations were built from the bricks of ancient Babylon, just as later Baghdad, a little further upstream, was built out of the ruins of the Sassanian double city of Seleucia-Ctesiphon.
  65. ^ Frye, Richard N. (1975). The Golden Age of Persia: The Arabs in the East. Weidenfeld and Nicolson. p. 184. ISBN 978-0-7538-0944-0. [..] throughout Iran's history the western part of the land has been frequently more closely connected with the lowlands of Mesopotamia than with the rest of the plateau to the east of the central deserts.
  66. ^ a b Yavari, Neguin (1997). Iranian Perspectives on the Iran-Iraq War; Part II. Conceptual Dimensions; 7. National, Ethnic, and Sectarian Issues in the Iran–Iraq War. University Press of Florida. p. 80. ISBN 978-0-8130-1476-0. Between the coming of the 'Abbasids and the Mongol onslaught, Iraq and western Iran shared a closer history than did eastern Iran and its western counterpart.
  67. ^ Morony, Michael G. "IRAQ AND ITS RELATIONS WITH IRAN". IRAQ i. IN THE LATE SASANID AND EARLY ISLAMIC ERAS. Encyclopædia Iranica. Retrieved 11 February 2012. Persian remained the language of most of the sedentary people as well as that of the chancery until the 15th century and thereafter, as attested by Ḥāfeẓ-e Abru (d. 1430) who said, "The majority of inhabitants of Iraq know Persian and Arabic, and from the time of the domination of Turkic people the Turkish language has also found currency: as the city people and those engaged in trade and crafts are Persophone, the Bedouins are Arabophone, and the governing classes are Turkophone. But, all three peoples (qawms) know each other's languages due to the mixture and amalgamation."
  68. ^ Csató, Éva Ágnes; Isaksson, Bo; Jahani, Carina (2005). Linguistic Convergence and Areal Diffusion: Case Studies from Iranian, Semitic and Turkic. Routledge. p. 177. ISBN 978-0-415-30804-5.
  69. ^ See: محمدی ملایری، محمد: فرهنگ ایران در دوران انتقال از عصر ساسانی به عصر اسلامی، جلد دوم: دل ایرانشهر، تهران، انتشارات توس 1375.: Mohammadi Malayeri, M.: Del-e Iranshahr, vol. II, Tehran 1375 Hs.
  70. ^ . Tehran Times. 9 January 2013. Archived from the original on 11 March 2013. Retrieved 8 February 2013.
  71. ^ a b . Mehr News Agency. 31 August 2007. Archived from the original on 29 December 2010. Retrieved 8 February 2013.
  72. ^ [1][permanent dead link]
  73. ^ Encyclopædia Iranica: Arvand-Rud, by M. Kasheff. – Retrieved on 18 October 2007.
  74. ^ Gershevitch, Ilya (1967). "Professor Vladimir Minorsky". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland. 99 (1/2): 53–57. doi:10.1017/S0035869X00125638. JSTOR 25202975.
  75. ^ "Media". Encyclopedia Britannica. Retrieved 9 December 2015.
  76. ^ Encyclopædia Iranica: "Caucasus Iran" article, p.84-96.
  77. ^ Historical Background Vol. 3, Colliers Encyclopedia CD-ROM, 02-28-1996
  78. ^ Swietochowski, Tadeusz (1995). Russia and Azerbaijan: A Borderland in Transition. Columbia University Press. pp. 69, 133. ISBN 978-0-231-07068-3.
  79. ^ L. Batalden, Sandra (1997). The newly independent states of Eurasia: handbook of former Soviet republics. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 98. ISBN 978-0-89774-940-4.
  80. ^ E. Ebel, Robert, Menon, Rajan (2000). Energy and conflict in Central Asia and the Caucasus. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 181. ISBN 978-0-7425-0063-1.
  81. ^ Andreeva, Elena (2010). Russia and Iran in the great game: travelogues and orientalism (reprint ed.). Taylor & Francis. p. 6. ISBN 978-0-415-78153-4.
  82. ^ Çiçek, Kemal, Kuran, Ercüment (2000). The Great Ottoman-Turkish Civilisation. University of Michigan. ISBN 978-975-6782-18-7.
  83. ^ Ernest Meyer, Karl, Blair Brysac, Shareen (2006). Tournament of Shadows: The Great Game and the Race for Empire in Central Asia. Basic Books. p. 66. ISBN 978-0-465-04576-1.
  84. ^ Houtsma, M. Th. (1993). First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1913–1936 (reprint ed.). BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-09796-4.
  85. ^ Schippmann, Klaus (1989). Azerbaijan: Pre-Islamic History. Encyclopædia Iranica. pp. 221–224. ISBN 978-0-933273-95-5.
  86. ^ LITVINSKII, B. A.; PICHIKIAN, I. R. (1994). "The Hellenistic Architecture and Art of the Temple of the Oxus" (PDF). Bulletin of the Asia Institute. 8: 47–66. ISSN 0890-4464. JSTOR 24048765.
  87. ^ Daniel, E., The History of Iran. 2001. ISBN 978-0-313-30731-7, p.28
  88. ^ Lorentz, J. Historical Dictionary of Iran. 1995. ISBN 978-0-8108-2994-7
  89. ^ [2][permanent dead link]
  90. ^ Dehkhoda, Dehkhoda dictionary, Tehran University Press, p.8457
  91. ^ See Encyclopædia Iranica, p. 443, for Persian settlements in southwestern China; Iran-China Relations for more on the historical ties.
  92. ^ "Persian language in Xinjiang" (زبان فارسی در سین کیانگ). Zamir Sa'dollah Zadeh (دکتر ضمیر سعدالله زاده). Nameh-i Iran (نامه ایران) V.1. Editor: Hamid Yazdan Parast (حمید یزدان پرست). ISBN 978-964-423-572-6 Perry–Castañeda Library collection under DS 266 N336 2005.

General references

External links

greater, iran, also, indo, persian, culture, persian, ایران, بزرگ, romanized, irān, bozorg, refers, region, covering, parts, western, asia, central, asia, south, asia, xinjiang, caucasus, where, both, iranian, culture, iranian, languages, have, significant, pr. See also Indo Persian culture Greater Iran Persian ایران بزرگ romanized Iran e Bozorg refers to a region covering parts of Western Asia Central Asia South Asia Xinjiang and the Caucasus where both Iranian culture and Iranian languages have had a significant presence and impact Historically this was a region long ruled by the dynasties of various Iranian empires note 1 1 2 3 under whose rule the local populace incorporated considerable aspects of Persian culture through extensive inter contact note 2 or alternatively where sufficient Iranian peoples settled to still maintain communities who patronize their respective cultures note 3 it roughly corresponds geographically to the Iranian plateau and its bordering plains 4 5 The Encyclopaedia Iranica uses the term Iranian Cultural Continent to describe this region 6 Median Empire c 678 c 585 BC at its greatest extent c 585 BC Achaemenid Empire 550 BC 330 BC at its greatest extent c 480 BC Parthian Empire 247 BC 224 AD at its greatest extent c 96 BC Sasanian Empire 224 651 at its greatest extent c 620 Samanid Empire 819 999 at its greatest extent c 943 Saffarid Empire 863 1003 at its greatest extent c 879 Safavid Empire 1501 1736 at its greatest extent c 1624 Afsharid dynasty 1736 1796 at its greatest extent c 1747 Qajar Iran 1789 1925 at its greatest extent c 1797 This article contains Persian text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols In addition to the modern state of Iran the term Greater Iran includes all of the territory ruled by various Iranian peoples throughout history including in Mesopotamia the eastern half of Anatolia the South Caucasus and Central Asia 7 8 The concept of Greater Iran has its source in the history of the Achaemenid Persian Empire particularly in the region of Persis modern day Fars Province and overlaps to a certain extent with the history of Iran proper In recent centuries Iran lost many of the territories conquered under the Safavid and Qajar dynasties including most of Iraq to the Ottoman Turks via the Treaty of Amasya in 1555 and the Treaty of Zuhab in 1639 western Afghanistan to the British via the Treaty of Paris in 1857 9 and the MacMahon Arbitration in 1905 10 and Caucasus territories to the Russians via the Russo Persian Wars of the 17th and 19th centuries 11 The Treaty of Gulistan in 1813 saw Iran cede the regions of modern day Dagestan Georgia and most of Azerbaijan to the Russian Empire 12 13 14 The Turkmanchey Treaty of 1828 between the Russians and the Iranians decisively ended centuries of Iranian rule over its Caucasian provinces 15 and forced Iran to cede modern day Armenia the remainder of Azerbaijan as well as Igdir in eastern Turkey and set modern boundaries of Iran along the Aras River 16 On the occasion of Nowruz in 1935 the endonym of Iran was adopted as the official international name of Persia by its erstwhile ruler Reza Shah Pahlavi 17 However in 1959 the government of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi announced that both Persia and Iran could be used interchangeably to refer to the country on a formal basis 18 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Definition 3 Background 4 Provinces and regions 4 1 West Asia 4 1 1 Bahrain 4 1 2 Iraq 4 2 Kurdistan 4 3 Caucasus 4 3 1 North Caucasus 4 3 2 South Caucasus 4 4 Central Asia 4 4 1 Tajikistan 4 4 2 Turkmenistan 4 4 3 Uzbekistan 4 4 4 Afghanistan 4 4 5 Xinjiang 4 5 South Asia 4 5 1 Pakistan 5 Historical and modern maps of Iran 6 Treaties 7 See also 8 Notes and references 8 1 Explanatory footnotes 8 2 Citation footnotes 8 3 General references 9 External linksEtymologyThe name Iran meaning land of the Aryans is the New Persian continuation of the old genitive plural aryanam proto Iranian meaning of the Aryans first attested in the Avesta as airyanam the text of which is composed in Avestan an old Iranian language spoken in northeastern Greater Iran or in what are now Afghanistan Uzbekistan Turkmenistan and Tajikistan 19 20 21 22 The proto Iranian term aryanam is present in the term Airyana Vaeǰah the homeland of Zoroaster and Zoroastrianism near the provinces of Sogdiana Margiana Bactria etc listed in the first chapter of the Videvdad 23 24 The Avestan evidence is confirmed by Greek sources Ariane is spoken of as being between Persia and the Indian subcontinent 25 However this is a Greek pronunciation of the name Haroyum Haraiva Herat which the Greeks called Aria 26 a land listed separately from the homeland of the Aryans 27 28 While up until the end of the Parthian period in the 3rd century CE the idea of Iran had an ethnic linguistic and religious value it did not yet have a political import The idea of an Iranian empire or kingdom in a political sense is a purely Sasanian one It was the result of a convergence of interests between the new dynasty and the Zoroastrian clergy as we can deduce from the available evidence This convergence gave rise to the idea of an Eran sahr Kingdom of the Iranians which was er Middle Persian equivalent of Old Persian ariya and Avestan airya 25 DefinitionRichard Nelson Frye defines Greater Iran as including much of the Caucasus Iraq Afghanistan Pakistan and Central Asia with cultural influences extending to China and western India According to Frye Iran means all lands and peoples where Iranian languages were and are spoken and where in the past multi faceted Iranian cultures existed 29 Richard Foltz notes that while A general assumption is often made that the various Iranian peoples of greater Iran a cultural area that stretched from Mesopotamia and the Caucasus into Khwarizm Transoxiana Bactria and the Pamirs and included Persians Medes Parthians and Sogdians among others were all Zoroastrians in pre Islamic times This view even though common among serious scholars is almost certainly overstated Foltz argues that While the various Iranian peoples did indeed share a common pantheon and pool of religious myths and symbols in actuality a variety of deities were worshipped particularly Mitra the god of covenants and Anahita the goddess of the waters but also many others depending on the time place and particular group concerned 30 To the Ancient Greeks Greater Iran ended at the Indus River located in Pakistan 31 According to J P Mallory and Douglas Q Adams most of Western greater Iran spoke Southwestern Iranian languages in the Achaemenid era while the Eastern territory spoke Eastern Iranian languages related to Avestan 32 George Lane also states that after the dissolution of the Mongol Empire the Ilkhanids became rulers of greater Iran 33 and Uljaytu according to Judith G Kolbas was the ruler of this expanse between 1304 and 1317 A D 34 Primary sources including Timurid historian Mir Khwand define Iranshahr Greater Iran as extending from the Euphrates to the Oxus 35 Traditionally and until recent times ethnicity has never been a defining separating criterion in these regions In the words of Richard Nelson Frye citation needed Many times I have emphasized that the present peoples of Central Asia whether Iranian or Turkic speaking have one culture one religion one set of social values and traditions with only language separating them Richard Nelson Frye Only in modern times did western colonial intervention and ethnicity tend to become a dividing force between the provinces of Greater Iran As Patrick Clawson states ethnic nationalism is largely a nineteenth century phenomenon even if it is fashionable to retroactively extend it 36 Greater Iran however has been more of a cultural super state rather than a political one to begin with In the work Nuzhat al Qolub نزهه القلوب the medieval geographer Hamdallah Mustawfi wrote چند شهر است اندر ایران مرتفع تر از همه Some cities in Iran are above the rest بهتر و سازنده تر از خوشی آب و هوا better and more productive due to good weather گنجه پر گنج در اران صفاهان در عراق Ganja full of treasure in Arran and Esfahan in Iraq در خراسان مرو و طوس در روم باشد اقسرا Merv and Tus in Khorasan and Aksaray in Rum The Cambridge History of Iran takes a geographical approach in referring to the historical and cultural entity of Greater Iran as areas of Iran parts of Afghanistan and Chinese and Soviet Central Asia 37 A detailed list of these territories follows in this article Background An Ashrafi Coin of Nader Shah r 1736 1747 reverse Coined on gold the word of kingdom in the world Nader of Greater Iran and the world conqueror king 38 Greater Iran is called Iranzamin ایران زمین which means Iranland or The Land of Iran Iranzamin was in the mythical times as opposed to the Turanzamin the Land of Turan which was located in the upper part of Central Asia 39 In the pre Islamic period Iranians distinguished two main regions in the territory they ruled one Iran and the other Aniran By Iran they meant all the regions inhabited by ancient Iranian peoples this region was more extensive in the past This notion of Iran as a territory opposed to Aniran can be seen as the core of early Greater Iran Later many changes occurred in the boundaries and areas where Iranians lived but the languages and culture remained the dominant medium in many parts of Greater Iran As an example the Persian language referred to in Persian as Farsi was the main literary language and the language of correspondence in Central Asia and the Caucasus prior to the Russian occupation Central Asia being the birthplace of modern Persian language Furthermore according to the British government Persian language was also used in Iraqi Kurdistan prior to the British Occupation and Mandate in 1918 1932 40 With Imperial Russia continuously advancing south in the course of two wars against Persia and the treaties of Turkmenchay and Gulistan in the western frontiers plus the unexpected death of Abbas Mirza in 1833 and the murdering of Persia s Grand Vizier Mirza AbolQasem Qa im Maqam many Central Asian khanates began losing hope for any support from Persia against the Tsarist armies 41 The Russian armies occupied the Aral coast in 1849 Tashkent in 1864 Bukhara in 1867 Samarkand in 1868 and Khiva and Amudarya in 1873 Many Iranians consider their natural sphere of influence to extend beyond Iran s present borders After all Iran was once much larger Portuguese forces seized islands and ports in the 16th and 17th centuries In the 19th century the Russian Empire wrested from Tehran s control what is today Armenia Republic of Azerbaijan and part of Georgia Iranian elementary school texts teach about the Iranian roots not only of cities like Baku but also cities further north like Derbent in southern Russia The Shah lost much of his claim to western Afghanistan following the Anglo Iranian war of 1856 1857 Only in 1970 did a UN sponsored consultation end Iranian claims to suzerainty over the Persian Gulf island nation of Bahrain In centuries past Iranian rule once stretched westward into modern Iraq and beyond When the western world complains of Iranian interference beyond its borders the Iranian government often convinced itself that it is merely exerting its influence in lands that were once its own Simultaneously Iran s losses at the hands of outside powers have contributed to a sense of grievance that continues to the present day Patrick Clawson of the Washington Institute for Near East Policy 42 Iran today is just a rump of what it once was At its height Iranian rulers controlled Iraq Afghanistan Western Pakistan much of Central Asia and the Caucasus Many Iranians today consider these areas part of a greater Iranian sphere of influence Patrick Clawson 43 Since the days of the Achaemenids the Iranians had the protection of geography But high mountains and the vast emptiness of the Iranian plateau were no longer enough to shield Iran from the Russian army or British navy Both literally and figuratively Iran shrank At the beginning of the nineteenth century Azerbaijan Armenia and Afghanistan were Iranian but by the end of the century all this territory had been lost as a result of European military action 44 Provinces and regionsIn the 8th century Iran was conquered by the Abbassids who ruled from Baghdad The territory of Iran at that time was composed of two portions Persian Iraq western portion and Khorasan eastern portion The dividing region was mostly the cities of Gurgan and Damaghan The Ghaznavids Seljuqs and Timurids divided their empires into Iraqi and Khorasani regions This point can be observed in many books such as Abul Fazl Bayhqi s Tarikhi Baihaqi Al Ghazali s Faza ilul al anam min rasa ili hujjat al Islam and other books Transoxiana and Chorasmia were mostly included in the Khorasanian region West Asia Bahrain See also Persians in Bahrain Huwala and Ajam of Bahrain The Ajam and Huwala are ethnic communities of Bahrain of Persian origin The Persians of Bahrain are a significant influential ethnic community whose ancestors arrived in Bahrain within the last 1 000 years as laborers merchants and artisans They have traditionally been merchants living in specific quarters of Manama and Muharraq Bahrain s Persians who adhere to the Shia sect of Islam are called Ajam and the Persians who adhere to the Sunni sect are called the Huwala who migrated from Larestan in Iran to the Persian Gulf in the seventeenth and eighteenth century The immigration of Persians to Bahrain began with the fall of the Greek Seleucid kingdom which ruled the island at the time The Persian Empire successfully invaded but it is often believed that mass immigration began much later during the 1600s when the Safavid shah Abbas the Great conquered Bahrain After settlement some of the Persians were effectively Arabized They usually settled in areas inhabited by the indigenous Baharna probably because they share the same Shia Muslim faith however some Sunni Persians settled in areas mostly inhabited by Sunni Arab immigrants such as Hidd and Galali In Muharraq they have their own neighborhood called Fareej Karimi named after a rich Persian man called Ali Abdulla Karimi Buyid Dynasty From the 6th century BC to the 3rd century BC Bahrain was a prominent part of the Persian Empire by the Achaemenids dynasty It was referred to by the Greeks as Tylos the centre of pearl trading when Nearchus discovered it while serving under Alexander the Great 45 From the 3rd century BC to the arrival of Islam in the 7th century AD the island was controlled by two other Iranian dynasties the Parthians and the Sassanids In the 3rd century AD the Sassanids succeeded the Parthians and controlled the area for four centuries until the Arab conquest 46 Ardashir the first ruler of the Iranian Sassanid dynasty marched to Oman and Bahrain and defeated Sanatruq 47 or Satiran 48 probably the Parthian governor of Bahrain 49 He appointed his son Shapur I as governor Shapur constructed a new city there and named it Batan Ardashir after his father 48 At this time it incorporated the southern Sassanid province covering the Persian Gulf s southern shore plus the archipelago of Bahrain 49 The southern province of the Sassanids was subdivided into three districts Haggar now al Hafuf province Saudi Arabia Batan Ardashir now al Qatif province Saudi Arabia and Mishmahig now Bahrain Island 48 In Middle Persian Pahlavi it means ewe fish 50 Ghaznavids at their greatest extent By about 130 BC the Parthian dynasty brought the Persian Gulf under their control and extended their influence as far as Oman Because they needed to control the Persian Gulf trade route the Parthians established garrisons along the southern coast of the Persian Gulf 46 through warfare and economic distress been reduced to only 60 51 The influence of Iran was further undermined at the end of the 18th century when the ideological power struggle between the Akhbari Usuli strands culminated in victory for the Usulis in Bahrain 52 An Afghan uprising led by Hotakis of Kandahar at the beginning of the 18th century resulted in the near collapse of the Safavid state 53 In the resultant power vacuum Oman invaded Bahrain in 1717 ending over one hundred years of Persian hegemony in Bahrain The Omani invasion began a period of political instability and a quick succession of outside rulers took power with consequent destruction According to a contemporary account by theologian Sheikh Yusuf Al Bahrani in an unsuccessful attempt by the Persians and their Bedouin allies to take back Bahrain from the Kharijite Omanis much of the country was burnt to the ground 54 Bahrain was eventually sold back to the Persians by the Omanis but the weakness of the Safavid empire saw Huwala tribes seize control 55 The Safavid Empire under Shah Abbas the Great In 1730 the new Shah of Persia Nadir Shah sought to re assert Persian sovereignty in Bahrain He ordered Latif Khan the admiral of the Persian navy in the Persian Gulf to prepare an invasion fleet in Bushehr 53 The Persians invaded in March or early April 1736 when the ruler of Bahrain Shaikh Jubayr was away on hajj 53 The invasion brought the island back under central rule and to challenge Oman in the Persian Gulf He sought help from the British and Dutch and he eventually recaptured Bahrain in 1736 56 During the Qajar era Persian control over Bahrain waned 53 and in 1753 Bahrain was occupied by the Sunni Persians of the Bushire based Al Madhkur family 57 who ruled Bahrain in the name of Persia and paid allegiance to Karim Khan Zand Zands During most of the second half of the eighteenth century Bahrain was ruled by Nasr Al Madhkur the ruler of Bushehr The Bani Utibah tribe from Zubarah exceeded in taking over Bahrain after war broke out in 1782 Persian attempts to reconquer the island in 1783 and in 1785 failed the 1783 expedition was a joint Persian Qawasim invasion force that never left Bushehr The 1785 invasion fleet composed of forces from Bushehr Rig and Shiraz was called off after the death of the ruler of Shiraz Ali Murad Khan Due to internal difficulties the Persians could not attempt another invasion 58 In 1799 Bahrain came under threat from the expansionist policies of Sayyid Sultan the Sultan of Oman when he invaded the island under the pretext that Bahrain did not pay taxes owed 59 The Bani Utbah solicited the aid of Bushire to expel the Omanis on the condition that Bahrain would become a tributary state of Persia In 1800 Sayyid Sultan invaded Bahrain again in retaliation and deployed a garrison at Arad Fort in Muharraq island and had appointed his twelve year old son Salim as Governor of the island 59 60 Qajar dynasty at its greatest extent Many names of villages in Bahrain are derived from the Persian language 61 These names were thought to have been as a result influences during the Safavid rule of Bahrain 1501 1722 and previous Persian rule Village names such as Karbabad Salmabad Karzakan Duraz Barbar were originally derived from the Persian language suggesting that Persians had a substantial effect on the island s history 61 The local Bahrani Arabic dialect has also borrowed many words from the Persian language 61 Bahrain s capital city Manama is derived from two Persian words meaning I and speech 61 contradictory In 1910 the Persian community funded and opened a private school Al Ittihad school that taught Farsi amongst other subjects 62 According to the 1905 census there were 1650 Bahraini citizens of Persian origin 63 Historian Nasser Hussain says that many Iranians fled their native country in the early 20th century due to a law king Reza Shah issued which banned women from wearing the hijab or because they feared for their lives after fighting the English or to find jobs They were coming to Bahrain from Bushehr and the Fars province between 1920 and 1940 In the 1920s local Persian merchants were prominently involved in the consolidation of Bahrain s first powerful lobby with connections to the municipality in an effort to contest the municipal legislation of British control 63 Bahrain s local Persian community has heavily influenced the country s local food dishes One of the most notable local delicacies of the people in Bahrain is mahyawa consumed in Southern Iran as well is a watery earth brick coloured sauce made from sardines and consumed with bread or other food Bahrain s Persians are also famous in Bahrain for bread making Another local delicacy is pishoo made from rose water golab and agar agar Other food items consumed are similar to Persian cuisine Iraq See also Iran Iraq relations Iran Iraq War Persians in Iraq and Asuristan Throughout history Iran always had strong cultural ties with the region of present day Iraq Mesopotamia is considered the cradle of civilization and the place where the first empires in history were established These empires namely the Sumerian Akkadian Babylonian and Assyrian dominated the ancient middle east for millennia which explains the great influence of Mesopotamia on the Iranian culture and history and it is also the reason why the later Iranian and Greek dynasties chose Mesopotamia to be the political center of their rule For a period of around 500 years what is now Iraq formed the core of Iran with the Iranian Parthian and Sasanian empire having their capital in what is modern day Iraq for the same centuries long time span Ctesiphon Of the four residences of the Achaemenids named by Herodotus Ecbatana Pasargadae or Persepolis Susa and Babylon the last situated in Iraq was maintained as their most important capital the fixed winter quarters the central office of bureaucracy exchanged only in the heat of summer for some cool spot in the highlands 64 Under the Seleucids and the Parthians the site of the Mesopotamian capital moved a little to the north on the Tigris to Seleucia and Ctesiphon It is indeed symbolic that these new foundations were built from the bricks of ancient Babylon just as later Baghdad a little further upstream was built out of the ruins of the Sassanian double city of Seleucia Ctesiphon 64 Iranologist Ehsan Yarshater The Cambridge History of Iran 64 The Cyrus Cylinder written in Babylonian cuneiform in the name of the Achaemenid king Cyrus the Great describes the Persian takeover of Babylon An ancient city in modern day Iraq An 1814 map of Persia at time of Qajar dynasty According to Iranologist Richard N Frye 65 66 Throughout Iran s history the western part of the land has been frequently more closely connected with the lowlands of Mesopotamia Iraq than with the rest of the plateau to the east of the central deserts the Dasht e Kavir and Dasht e Lut Richard N Frye The Golden Age of Persia The Arabs in the East Between the coming of the Abbasids in 750 and the Mongol onslaught in 1258 Iraq and western Iran shared a closer history than did eastern Iran and its western counterpart Neguin Yavari Iranian Perspectives on the Iran Iraq War 66 Testimony to the close relationship shared by Iraq and western Iran during the Abbasid era and later centuries is the fact that the two regions came to share the same name The western region of Iran ancient Media was called Iraq e Ajami Persian Iraq while central southern Iraq Babylonia was called Iraq al Arabi Arabic Iraq or Babil Babylon For centuries the two neighbouring regions were known as The Two Iraqs al Iraqain The 12th century Persian poet Khaqani wrote a famous poem Tohfat ul Iraqein The Gift of the Two Iraqs The city of Arak in western Iran still bears the region s old name and Iranians still traditionally call the region between Tehran Isfahan and ilam ʿEraq During the medieval ages Mesopotamian and Iranian peoples knew each other s languages because of trade and because Arabic was the language of religion and science at that time The Timurid historian Ḥafeẓ e Abru d 1430 wrote of Iraq 67 The majority of inhabitants of Iraq know Persian and Arabic and from the time of the domination of Turkic people the Turkish language has also found currency Ḥafeẓ e Abru Iraqis share religious and certain cultural ties with Iranians The majority of Iranians are Twelver Shia an Islamic sect established in Iraq although the majority of Iranians were Sunni Muslims and did not convert to Shia until the Safavids forced Shi ism in Iran Iraqi culture has commonalities with the culture of Iran The Mesopotamian cuisine also has similarities to the Persian cuisine including common dishes and cooking techniques The Iraqi dialect has absorbed many words from the Persian language 68 There are still cities and provinces in Iraq where the Persian names of the city are still retained e g Anbar and Baghdad Other cities of Iraq with originally Persian names include Nokard نوكرد gt Haditha Suristan سورستان gt Kufa Shahrban شهربان gt Muqdadiyah Arvandrud اروندرود gt Shatt al Arab and Asheb آشب gt Amadiya 69 Peroz Shapur gt Anbar town In the modern era the Safavid dynasty of Iran briefly reasserted hegemony over Iraq in the periods of 1501 1533 and 1622 1638 losing Iraq to the Ottoman Empire on both occasions via the Treaty of Amasya in 1555 and the Treaty of Zuhab in 1639 Ottoman hegemony over Iraq was reconfirmed in the Treaty of Kerden in 1746 Following the fall of the Ba athist regime in 2003 and the empowerment of Iraq s majority Shi i community relations with Iran have flourished in all fields Iraq is today Iran s largest trading partner in regard to non oil goods 70 Many Iranians were born in Iraq or have ancestors from Iraq 71 such as the Chairman of Iran s Parliament Ali Larijani the former Chief Justice of Iran Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi and the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Iran Ali Akbar Salehi who were born in Najaf and Karbala respectively In the same way many Iraqis were born in Iran or have ancestors from Iran 71 such as Grand Ayatollah Ali al Sistani who was born in Mashhad Kurdistan Culturally and historically Kurdistan has been a part of what is known as Greater Iran Kurds speak a Northwestern Iranian language known as Kurdish Many aspects of Kurdish culture are related to the other peoples of Greater Iran examples include Newroz 72 and Simurgh 73 Some historians and linguists such as Vladimir Minorsky 74 have suggested that the Medes an Iranian people 75 who inhabited much of western Iran including Azerbaijan and Kurdistan might have been forefathers of modern Kurds Caucasus North Caucasus Sassanian fortress in Derbent Dagestan Now inscribed on Russia s UNESCO world heritage list since 2003 See also History of Dagestan History of Kabardino Balkaria Russo Persian Wars Treaty of Gulistan Treaty of Turkmenchay and Tat people Caucasus Dagestan remains the bastion of Persian culture in the North Caucasus with fine examples of Iranian architecture like the Sassanid citadel in Derbent the strong influence of Persian cuisine and common Persian names amongst the ethnic peoples of Dagestan The ethnic Persian population of the North Caucasus the Tats remain despite strong assimilation over the years still visible in several North Caucasian cities Even today after decades of partition some of these regions retain Iranian influences as seen in their old beliefs traditions and customs e g Norouz 76 South Caucasus See also Azerbaijani people History of Azerbaijan Tat people Iran Tat people Caucasus Safavid conversion of Iran to Shia Islam Old Azeri language Shirvan Arran Caucasus Shirvanshah and Iranian Azerbaijanis According to Tadeusz Swietochowski the territories of Iran and the republic of Azerbaijan usually shared the same history from the time of ancient Media ninth to seventh centuries b c and the Persian Empire sixth to fourth centuries b c 77 Intimately and inseparably intertwined histories for millennia Iran irrevocably lost the territory that is nowadays Azerbaijan in the course of the 19th century With the Treaty of Gulistan of 1813 following the Russo Persian War 1804 1813 Iran had to cede eastern Georgia its possessions in the North Caucasus and many of those in what is today the Azerbaijan Republic which included the khanates of Baku Shirvan Karabakh Ganja Shaki Quba Derbent and parts of Talysh These Khanates comprise most of what is today the Republic of Azerbaijan and Dagestan in Southern Russia In the Treaty of Turkmenchay of 1828 following the Russo Persian War 1826 1828 the result was even more disastrous and resulted in Iran being forced to cede the remainder of the Talysh Khanate the khanates of Nakhichevan and Erivan and the Mughan region to Russia All these territories together lost in 1813 and 1828 combined constitute all of the modern day Republic of Azerbaijan Armenia and southern Dagestan The area to the North of the river Aras among which the territory of the contemporary republic of Azerbaijan were Iranian territory until they were occupied by Russia in the course of the 19th century 78 79 80 81 82 83 Many localities in this region bear Persian names or names derived from Iranian languages and Azerbaijan remains by far Iran s closest cultural religious ethnic and historical neighbor Azerbaijanis are by far the second largest ethnicity in Iran and comprise the largest community of ethnic Azerbaijanis in the world vastly outnumbering the number in the Republic of Azerbaijan Both nations are the only officially Shia majority in the world with adherents of the religion comprising an absolute majority in both nations The people of nowadays Iran and Azerbaijan were converted to Shiism during exactly the same time in history Furthermore the name of Azerbaijan is derived through the name of the Persian satrap which ruled the contemporary region of Iranian Azerbaijan and minor parts of the Republic of Azerbaijan in ancient times 84 85 In 1918 the Azerbaijani Musavat party adopted the name for the nation upon the independence of the former territories under the Russian Empire Early in antiquity Narseh of Persia is known to have had fortifications built here In later times some of Persia s literary and intellectual figures from the Qajar period have hailed from this region Under intermittent Iranian suzerainty since antiquity it was also separated from Iran in the mid 19th century by virtue of the Gulistan Treaty and Turkmenchay Treaty که تا جایگه یافتی نخچوان Oh Nakhchivan respect you ve attained بدین شاه شد بخت پیرت جوان With this King in luck you ll remain Nizami Central Asia Painted clay and alabaster head of a Zoroastrian priest wearing a distinctive Bactrian style headdress Takhti Sangin Tajikistan Greco Bactrian kingdom 3rd 2nd century BC 86 Khwarazm is one of the regions of Iran zameen and is the home of the ancient Iranians Airyanem Vaejah according to the ancient book of the Avesta Modern scholars believe Khwarazm to be what ancient Avestic texts refer to as Ariyaneh Waeje or Iran vij Iranovich These sources claim that Urgandj which was the capital of ancient Khwarazm for many years was actually Ourva the eighth land of Ahura Mazda mentioned in the Pahlavi text of Vendidad Others such as University of Hawaii historian Elton L Daniel believe Khwarazm to be the most likely locale corresponding to the original home of the Avestan people 87 while Dehkhoda calls Khwarazm the cradle of the Aryan people مهد قوم آریا Today Khwarazm is split between several central Asian republics Superimposed on and overlapping with Chorasmia was Khorasan which roughly covered nearly the same geographical areas in Central Asia starting from Semnan eastward through northern Afghanistan roughly until the foothills of Pamir ancient Mount Imeon Current day provinces such as Sanjan in Turkmenia Razavi Khorasan Province North Khorasan Province and Southern Khorasan Province in Iran are all remnants of the old Khorasan Until the 13th century and the devastating Mongol invasion of the region Khorasan was considered the cultural capital of Greater Iran 88 Tajikistan The national anthem in Tajikistan Surudi Milli attests to the Perso Tajik identity which has seen a large revival after the breakup of the USSR Their language is almost identical to that spoken in Afghanistan and Iran and their cities have Persian names e g Dushanbe Isfara Rasht Valley Garm Murghab Vahdat Zar afshan river Shurab and Kulob 89 Rudaki considered by many as the father of modern Persian poetry was from the modern day region of Tajikistan Turkmenistan Turkmenistan was the home of the Parthian Empire Nisa Merv is also where the half Persian caliph al Mamun put his capital The city of Eshgh Abad some claim that the word is actually the transformed form of Ashk Abad literally meaning built by Ashk the head of Arsacid dynasty is yet another Persian word meaning city of love and like East Iran Afghanistan and Uzbekistan it was once part of Airyanem Vaejah Uzbekistan Uzbekistan has a significant local Tajik population The famous Persian cities of Afrasiab Bukhara Samarkand Shahrisabz Andijan Khiveh Nava i Shirin Termez and Zar afshan are located here These cities are the birthplace of the Islamic era Persian literature The Samanids who claimed inheritance to the Sassanids had their capital built here ای بخارا شاد باش و دیر زی Oh Bukhara Joy to you and live long شاه زی تو میهمان آید همی Your King comes to you in ceremony Rudaki Afghanistan The modern state of Afghanistan was part of Sistan and Greater Khorasan regions and hence was recognized with the name Khorasan along with regions centered on Merv and Nishapur which in Pahlavi means The Eastern Land خاور زمین in Persian 90 Nowadays the region of Afghanistan is where Balkh is located home of Rumi Rabi a Balkhi Sanai Ghaznawi Jami Khwaja Abdullah Ansari and was many other notables in Persian literature came from ز زابل به کابل رسید آن زمان From Zabul he arrived to Kabulگرازان و خندان و دل شادمان Strutting happy and mirthful Ferdowsi in Shahnama Xinjiang This article or section possibly contains synthesis of material which does not verifiably mention or relate to the main topic Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page December 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message See also Iran China relations and Tajiks in China The Tashkurgan Tajik Autonomous County regions of China harbored a Tajik population and culture 91 Chinese Tashkurgan Tajik Autonomous County was always counted as a part of the Iranian cultural amp linguistic continent with Kashgar Yarkand and Hotan bound to the Iranian history 92 South Asia Pakistan There is considerable influence of Iranian speaking peoples in Pakistan The region of Baluchistan is split between Pakistan and Iran and Baluchi the majority of languages of the Baluchistan province of Pakistan are also spoken in Southeastern Iran In fact the Chagai Hills and the western part of Makran district were part of Iran till the Durand Line was drawn in the late 1800s Pashto which is spoken in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and FATA of Pakistan and Afghanistan is an Iranian language Historical and modern maps of Iran Map depicting the Achaemenid Empire 1598 German map of the region 1610 map by Dutch map maker Jodocus Hondius showing Bactria and Georgia among the territories 1719 map depiction of Asia 1720 map by Herman Moll 1753 map by Robert de Vaugondy titled Estats du Grand Seigneur en Asie where the color yellow marks the territories of Persia 1808 British map of Persia 1814 map of Persia by John Thomson 19th century British map depicting PersiaTreaties1555 Treaty of Amasya The first treaty between Safavid Persia and the Ottoman Empire splitting the Caucasus and Mesopotamia in a Turkish and Persian sphere 1639 Treaty of Zuhab Iran loses Iraq to the Ottoman Empire 1813 Gulestan Treaty Iran loses a large amount of its land in the Caucasus including eastern half of Georgia southern Dagestan large parts of the Armenian Republic and most of what is today the Azerbaijan Republic 1828 Turkmenchay Treaty Signed by Fath Ali Shah Russia gains sovereignty over the entire Caucasus including Iran s Nakhichivan Nagorno Karabakh the entirety of Armenia and the remainder of the modern day territory of the Republic of Azerbaijan 1857 Paris Treaty Signed by Nasereddin Shah Iran renounces all claims to Herat and parts of Afghanistan in exchange for the evacuation of Iran s southern ports by Great Britain 1881 Akhal Treaty Signed by Nasereddin Shah Iran loses Merv and parts of Khwarazmia in exchange for security guarantees from Russia 1893 Iran transfers to Russia additional regions near the Atrek River that were Iranian under the Akhal Treaty This treaty was signed by General Boutsoff and Mirza Ali Asghar Amin al Sultan on May 27 1893 1907 Persia was to be carved up into three regions according to the Anglo Russian Convention of 1907 1970 Iran abandons sovereignty rights over Bahrain to Great Britain in exchange for Greater and Lesser Tunbs and Abu Musa islands in the Persian Gulf See also Iran portal Religion portalTurkestan Greater Israel Median Empire Achaemenid Empire Persianization List of kings of Persia List of Iranian artifacts abroad Culture of Iran Culture of Azerbaijan Azerbaijani language South Caucasus North Caucasus History of the Caucasus Iranian peoples Iranian studies History of the Kurdish people Kurdish culture Kurdish language Old Azeri language History of Turkey Persianate society Turko Persian tradition Persia Georgia relations List of Persia related topics Yaz culture stan Qanat water management system Pan IranismNotes and referencesExplanatory footnotes These include the Medes Achaemenids Parthians Sasanians Samanids Saffarids Safavids Afsharids and Qajars For example those regions and peoples in the North Caucasus that were not under direct Iranian rule Such as in the western parts of South Asia Bahrain and Tajikistan Citation footnotes Marcinkowski Christoph 2010 Shi ite Identities Community and Culture in Changing Social Contexts LIT Verlag Munster p 83 ISBN 978 3 643 80049 7 Interview with Richard N Frye CNN Archived from the original on 2016 04 23 Richard Nelson Frye The Harvard Theological Review Vol 55 No 4 Oct 1962 pp 261 268 I use the term Iran in an historical context Persia would be used for the modern state more or less equivalent to western Iran I use the term Greater Iran to mean what I suspect most Classicists and ancient historians really mean by their use of Persia that which was within the political boundaries of States ruled by Iranians IRAN i LANDS OF IRAN Encyclopaedia Iranica Dialect Culture and Society in Eastern Arabia Glossary Clive Holes 2001 Page XXX ISBN 978 90 04 10763 2 Columbia College Today columbia edu Archived from the original on 2015 11 27 Retrieved 9 December 2015 Frye Richard Nelson 1962 Reitzenstein and Qumran Revisited by an Iranian Richard Nelson Frye The Harvard Theological Review Vol 55 No 4 Oct 1962 pp 261 268 The Harvard Theological Review 55 4 261 268 doi 10 1017 S0017816000007926 JSTOR 1508723 S2CID 162213219 International Journal of Middle East Studies 2007 39 pp 307 309 Copyright c 2007 Cambridge University Press Erik Goldstein 1992 Wars and peace treaties 1816 1991 Psychology Press pp 72 73 ISBN 978 0 203 97682 1 Sir Percy Molesworth Sykes 1915 A history of Persia Volume 2 Macmillan and co p 469 Macmahon arbitration persia Roxane Farmanfarmaian 2008 War and peace in Qajar Persia implications past and present Psychology Press p 4 ISBN 978 0 203 93830 0 India Foreign and Political Dept 1892 A Collection of Treaties Engagements and Sunnuds Relating to India and Neighbouring Countries Persia and the Persian Gulf G A Savielle and P M Cranenburgh Bengal Print Co pp x 10 treaty of gulistan Mikaberidze Alexander 2015 Historical Dictionary of Georgia Rowman amp Littlefield pp 348 349 ISBN 978 1 4422 4146 6 Persia lost all its territories to the north of the Aras River which included all of Georgia and parts of Armenia and Azerbaijan Olsen James Stuart Shadle Robert 1991 Historical Dictionary of European Imperialism Greenwood Publishing Group p 314 ISBN 978 0 313 26257 9 In 1813 Iran signed the Treaty of Gulistan ceding Georgia to Russia Fisher et al 1991 p 329 Abbas Amanat 1997 Pivot of the universe Nasir al Din Shah Qajar and the Iranian Monarchy 1831 1896 I B Tauris p 16 ISBN 978 1 86064 097 1 Kenneth M Pollack 2005 The Persian puzzle the conflict between Iran and America Random House Inc p 38 ISBN 978 0 8129 7336 5 Yarshater Ehsan Persia or Iran Persian or Farsi Archived 2010 10 24 at the Wayback Machine Iranian Studies vol XXII no 1 1989 William W Malandra 2005 07 20 ZOROASTRIANISM i HISTORICAL REVIEW Retrieved 2011 01 14 Nicholas Sims Williams EASTERN IRANIAN LANGUAGES Retrieved 2011 01 14 IRAN Retrieved 2011 01 14 K Hoffmann AVESTAN LANGUAGE I III Retrieved 2011 01 14 ERAN WEZ iranicaonline org Retrieved 9 December 2015 ZOROASTER ii GENERAL SURVEY iranicaonline org Retrieved 9 December 2015 a b Ahmad Ashraf IRANIAN IDENTITY ii PRE ISLAMIC PERIOD Retrieved 2011 01 14 Ed Eduljee Haroyu heritageinstitute com Retrieved 9 December 2015 Ed Eduljee Aryan Homeland Airyana Vaeja Location Aryans and Zoroastrianism heritageinstitute com Retrieved 9 December 2015 Ed Eduljee Aryan Homeland Airyana Vaeja in the Avesta Aryan lands and Zoroastrianism heritageinstitute com Retrieved 9 December 2015 Frye Richard Nelson Greater Iran ISBN 978 1 56859 177 3 p xi Richard Foltz Religions of the Silk Road Premodern Patterns of globalization Palgrave Macmillan rev 2nd edition 2010 pg 27 J M Cook The Rise of the Achaemenids and Establishment of Their Empire in Ilya Gershevitch William Bayne Fisher J A Boyle Cambridge History of Iran Vol 2 pg 250 Excerpt To the Greeks Greater Iran ended at the Indus Mallory J P Adams D Q 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European culture London and Chicago Fitzroy Dearborn ISBN 978 1 884964 98 5 pg 307 Dialectically Old Persian is regarded as a southwestern Iranian language in contrast to the east Iranian Avestan which covered most of the rest of Greater Iran However it is important to note that during the Achaemeid era the official language of the empire was Aramaic which was the mother tongue of the ancient Iraqis since it was the language of literature religion and science at that time Aramaic language had a great impact on Persian and survived as the dominant language in the middle east until the Islamic conquest George Lane Daily Life in the Mongol Empire Greenwood Publishing Group 2006 pg 10 The year following 1260 saw the empire irrevocably split but also signaled the emergence of the two greatest achievements of the house of Chinggis namely the Yuan dynasty of greater China and the Il Khanid dynasty of greater Iran Judith G Kolbas The Mongols in Iran Excerpt from 399 Uljaytu Ruler of Greater Iran from 1304 to 1317 A D Mir Khvand Muḥammad ibn Khavandshah Tarikh i rawz at al ṣafa Taṣnif Mir Muḥammad ibn Sayyid Burhan al Din Khavand Shah al shahir bi Mir Khvand Az ru yi nusakh i mutaʻaddadah i muqabilah gardidah va fihrist i asami va aʻlam va qabayil va kutub ba chapha yi digar mutamayiz mibashad Tehran Markazi i Khayyam Piruz 1959 60 ایرانشهر از کنار فرات تا جیهون است و وسط آبادانی عالم است Iranshahr stretches from the Euphrates to the Oxus and it is the center of the prosperity of the World Patrick Clawson Eternal Iran Palgrave Macmillan 2005 ISBN 978 1 4039 6276 8 p 23 The Cambridge History of Iran Vol III The Seleucid Parthian and Sasanian Periods Ehsan Yarshater Review author s Richard N Frye International Journal of Middle East Studies Vol 21 No 3 Aug 1989 pp 415 Numista Ashrafi Nader Afshar Type A2 Siraz mint Dehkhoda Dictionary Dehkhoda see under entry Turan The old www cogsci ed ac uk server ed ac uk Retrieved 9 December 2015 Homayoun N T Kharazm What do I know about Iran 2004 ISBN 978 964 379 023 3 p 78 Patrick Clawson Eternal Iran Palgrave 2005 Coauthored with Michael Rubin ISBN 978 1 4039 6276 8 p 9 10 Patrick Clawson Eternal Iran Palgrave 2005 Coauthored with Michael Rubin ISBN 978 1 4039 6276 8 p 30 Patrick Clawson Eternal Iran Palgrave 2005 Coauthored with Michael Rubin ISBN 978 1 4039 6276 8 p 31 32 Life and Land Use on the Bahrain Islands The Geoarchaeology of an Ancient by Curtis E Larsen p 13 a b Bahrain by Federal Research Division page 7 Robert G Hoyland Arabia and the Arabs From the Bronze Age to the Coming of Islam Routledge 2001p28 a b c Security and Territoriality in the Persian Gulf A Maritime Political Geography by Pirouz Mojtahed Zadeh page 119 a b Conflict and Cooperation Zoroastrian Subalterns and Muslim Elites in By Jamsheed K Choksy 1997 page 75 Yoma 77a and Rosh Hashbanah 23a Juan Cole Sacred Space and Holy War IB Tauris 2007 p52 Are the Shia Rising Maximilian Terhalle Middle East Policy Volume 14 Issue 2 Page 73 June 2007 a b c d Bashir 1979 p 7 sfn error no target CITEREFBashir1979 help Autobiography of Sheikh Yusuf Al Bahrani published in Interpreting the Self Autobiography in the Arabic Literary Tradition Edited by Dwight F Reynolds University of California Press Berkeley 2001 The Autobiography of Yusuf al Bahrani 1696 1772 from Lu lu at al Baḥrayn from the final chapter An Account of the Life of the Author and the Events That Have Befallen Him featured in Interpreting the Self Autobiography in the Arabic Literary Tradition Edited by Dwight F Reynolds University of California Press Berkeley 2001 p221 Charles Belgrave The Pirate Coast G Bell amp Sons 1966 p19 Ahmad Mustafa Abu Hakim History of Eastern Arabia 1750 1800 Khayat 1960 p78 Bashir 1979 p 46 sfn error no target CITEREFBashir1979 help a b Bashir 1979 p 47 sfn error no target CITEREFBashir1979 help James Onley The Politics of Protection in the Gulf The Arab Rulers and the British Resident in the Nineteenth Century Exeter University 2004 p44 a b c d Al Tajer Mahdi Abdulla 1982 Language amp Linguistic Origins In Bahrain Taylor amp Francis pp 134 135 ISBN 978 0 7103 0024 9 Shirawi May Al Arrayed 1987 Education in Bahrain 1919 1986 An Analytical Study of Problems and Progress PDF Durham University p 60 a b Fuccaro Nelida 2009 09 03 Histories of City and State in the Persian Gulf Manama Since 1800 p 114 ISBN 978 0 521 51435 4 a b c Yarshater Ehsan 1993 The Cambridge History of Iran Volume 3 Cambridge University Press p 482 ISBN 978 0 521 20092 9 Of the four residences of the Achaemenids named by Herodotus Ecbatana Pasargadae or Persepolis Susa and Babylon the last situated in Iraq was maintained as their most important capital the fixed winter quarters the central office of bureaucracy exchanged only in the heat of summer for some cool spot in the highlands Under the Seleucids and the Parthians the site of the Mesopotamian capital moved a little to the north on the Tigris to Seleucia and Ctesiphon It is indeed symbolic that these new foundations were built from the bricks of ancient Babylon just as later Baghdad a little further upstream was built out of the ruins of the Sassanian double city of Seleucia Ctesiphon Frye Richard N 1975 The Golden Age of Persia The Arabs in the East Weidenfeld and Nicolson p 184 ISBN 978 0 7538 0944 0 throughout Iran s history the western part of the land has been frequently more closely connected with the lowlands of Mesopotamia than with the rest of the plateau to the east of the central deserts a b Yavari Neguin 1997 Iranian Perspectives on the Iran Iraq War Part II Conceptual Dimensions 7 National Ethnic and Sectarian Issues in the Iran Iraq War University Press of Florida p 80 ISBN 978 0 8130 1476 0 Between the coming of the Abbasids and the Mongol onslaught Iraq and western Iran shared a closer history than did eastern Iran and its western counterpart Morony Michael G IRAQ AND ITS RELATIONS WITH IRAN IRAQ i IN THE LATE SASANID AND EARLY ISLAMIC ERAS Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 11 February 2012 Persian remained the language of most of the sedentary people as well as that of the chancery until the 15th century and thereafter as attested by Ḥafeẓ e Abru d 1430 who said The majority of inhabitants of Iraq know Persian and Arabic and from the time of the domination of Turkic people the Turkish language has also found currency as the city people and those engaged in trade and crafts are Persophone the Bedouins are Arabophone and the governing classes are Turkophone But all three peoples qawms know each other s languages due to the mixture and amalgamation Csato Eva Agnes Isaksson Bo Jahani Carina 2005 Linguistic Convergence and Areal Diffusion Case Studies from Iranian Semitic and Turkic Routledge p 177 ISBN 978 0 415 30804 5 See محمدی ملایری محمد فرهنگ ایران در دوران انتقال از عصر ساسانی به عصر اسلامی جلد دوم دل ایرانشهر تهران انتشارات توس 1375 Mohammadi Malayeri M Del e Iranshahr vol II Tehran 1375 Hs Iraq plans to send 200 member trade delegation to Iran Tehran Times 9 January 2013 Archived from the original on 11 March 2013 Retrieved 8 February 2013 a b Regional developments are leading to convergence of nations Ahmadinejad Mehr News Agency 31 August 2007 Archived from the original on 29 December 2010 Retrieved 8 February 2013 1 permanent dead link Encyclopaedia Iranica Arvand Rud by M Kasheff Retrieved on 18 October 2007 Gershevitch Ilya 1967 Professor Vladimir Minorsky Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland 99 1 2 53 57 doi 10 1017 S0035869X00125638 JSTOR 25202975 Media Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved 9 December 2015 Encyclopaedia Iranica Caucasus Iran article p 84 96 Historical Background Vol 3 Colliers Encyclopedia CD ROM 02 28 1996 Swietochowski Tadeusz 1995 Russia and Azerbaijan A Borderland in Transition Columbia University Press pp 69 133 ISBN 978 0 231 07068 3 L Batalden Sandra 1997 The newly independent states of Eurasia handbook of former Soviet republics Greenwood Publishing Group p 98 ISBN 978 0 89774 940 4 E Ebel Robert Menon Rajan 2000 Energy and conflict in Central Asia and the Caucasus Rowman amp Littlefield p 181 ISBN 978 0 7425 0063 1 Andreeva Elena 2010 Russia and Iran in the great game travelogues and orientalism reprint ed Taylor amp Francis p 6 ISBN 978 0 415 78153 4 Cicek Kemal Kuran Ercument 2000 The Great Ottoman Turkish Civilisation University of Michigan ISBN 978 975 6782 18 7 Ernest Meyer Karl Blair Brysac Shareen 2006 Tournament of Shadows The Great Game and the Race for Empire in Central Asia Basic Books p 66 ISBN 978 0 465 04576 1 Houtsma M Th 1993 First Encyclopaedia of Islam 1913 1936 reprint ed BRILL ISBN 978 90 04 09796 4 Schippmann Klaus 1989 Azerbaijan Pre Islamic History Encyclopaedia Iranica pp 221 224 ISBN 978 0 933273 95 5 LITVINSKII B A PICHIKIAN I R 1994 The Hellenistic Architecture and Art of the Temple of the Oxus PDF Bulletin of the Asia Institute 8 47 66 ISSN 0890 4464 JSTOR 24048765 Daniel E The History of Iran 2001 ISBN 978 0 313 30731 7 p 28 Lorentz J Historical Dictionary of Iran 1995 ISBN 978 0 8108 2994 7 2 permanent dead link Dehkhoda Dehkhoda dictionary Tehran University Press p 8457 See Encyclopaedia Iranica p 443 for Persian settlements in southwestern China Iran China Relations for more on the historical ties Persian language in Xinjiang زبان فارسی در سین کیانگ Zamir Sa dollah Zadeh دکتر ضمیر سعدالله زاده Nameh i Iran نامه ایران V 1 Editor Hamid Yazdan Parast حمید یزدان پرست ISBN 978 964 423 572 6 Perry Castaneda Library collection under DS 266 N336 2005 General references Fisher William Bayne Avery P Hambly G R G Melville C 1991 The Cambridge History of Iran Vol 7 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 20095 0 Foltz Richard 2015 Iran in World History New York Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 933549 7 Marcinkowski Christoph 2010 Shi ite Identities Community and Culture in Changing Social Contexts Berlin Lit Verlag 2010 ISBN 978 3 643 80049 7 External links Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Greater Iran amp oldid 1132291346, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.