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Iranian Azerbaijanis

Iranian Azerbaijanis (Persian: آذربایجانی‌های ایران; Azerbaijani: ایران آذربایجانلیلاری [iˈɾɑːn ɑːzæɾbɑjˈdʒɑnlɯlɑɾɯ]), also known as Iranian Azeris, Iranian Turks (Azerbaijani: ایران تورکلری), Persian Turks,[14][15][16] or Persian Azerbaijanis,[17][18] are Iranians of Azerbaijani ethnicity who may speak the Azerbaijani language as their first language. Iranian Azerbaijanis are mainly of Iranian descent.[19][6][20]

Iranian Azerbaijanis
ایران آذربایجانلیلاری
Iranian Azerbaijani folk singers from Tabriz celebrating Nowruz
Regions with significant populations
 Iran12-20 million[1][2][3][4][5]
6–6.5 million
(Arakelova)[6]
16[7][8]–24%[9][10] of Iran's population
 Azerbaijan248,000[11]
 Canada50,000 – 60,000[12]
 United States40,400[13]
Languages
Azerbaijani and Persian
Religion
predominantly Shi'a Islam

Iranian Azerbaijanis are primarily found in and are native to the Iranian Azerbaijan region including provinces of (East Azerbaijan, Ardabil, Zanjan, West Azerbaijan)[21][22][23] and in smaller numbers, in other provinces such as Kurdistan, Qazvin, Hamadan, Gilan, Markazi and Kermanshah.[24] Iranian Azerbaijanis also constitute a significant minority in Tehran, Karaj and other regions.[25][26][27]

Demographics

Azerbaijanis comprise the largest minority ethnic group in Iran. Apart from Iranian Azerbaijan (provinces of West Azerbaijan, East Azerbaijan, Ardabil and Zanjan), Azerbaijani populations are found in large numbers in four other provinces: Hamadan (includes other Turkic ethnic groups such as Afshar, Gharehgozloo, Shahsevan, and Baharloo[28][29]),[30] Qazvin,[31] Markazi,[32] and Kurdistan.[33][34] Azerbaijani-populated of Markazi province includes some parts and villages of Komijan,[35] Khondab,[36] Saveh,[37][38] Zarandieh,[39] Shazand,[40] and Farahan.[37] In Kurdistan, Azerbaijanis are mainly found in villages around Qorveh.[33]

Azerbaijanis have also immigrated and resettled in large numbers in Central Iran, mainly Tehran,[41][a] Qom[41][43][44] and Karaj.[45][46] They have also emigrated and resettled in large numbers in Khorasan.[41] Immigrant Azerbaijani communities have been represented by people prominent not only among urban and industrial working classes but also in commercial, administrative, political, religious, and intellectual circles.[41]

According to the Iranologist Victoria Arakelova, estimating the number of Azeris in Iran has been hampered since the dissolution of the Soviet Union through political doctrines and unreliable biased publications, even though all Iranian censuses are based on religious minorities. She further states that the Iranian Azerbaijani population was popularly inflated in the early 1990s as almost half of the 60 million Iranian population at the time, while in the next decade, the figure decreased to 20 million, which lingered around for years. She puts the number at 6 to 6.5 million.[6]

Ethnic groups

Sub-ethnic groups of the Azerbaijanis within the modern-day borders of Iran following the ceding of the Caucasus to Russia in the 19th century, include the Shahsevan,[47][48][49][50] the Qarapapaqs,[51] the Ayrums,[47] the Bayat,[52] the Qajars,[53] the Qaradaghis,[47][54] and the Gharagozloo.[55]

Background

The Iranian Azerbaijani culture was produced by centuries of a symbiosis and mixture between native and nomadic elements.[56] According to Richard Frye, Iranian Azerbaijanis largely descend from the pre-existing Iranian-speakers, who were Turkified after a massive migration of Oghuz Turks but still exist in smaller pockets,[57] while Olivier Roy writes that the Azerbaijani ethnogenesis involved the Turkification of the natives by Turkomans from Anatolia.[58] According to Russian scholar Rostislav Rybakov, Iranian Azerbaijan was almost fully Turkicized by 14th and 15th centuries, though the local population left its mark in the Azerbaijani culture and language and the ethnic border between the Turkish people and Azerbaijanis was established in the 16th century.[59] Scholars note cultural similarities between modern Persians and Azerbaijanis.[60]

Genetics

A comparative study (2013) on the complete mitochondrial DNA diversity in Iranians has indicated that Iranian Azerbaijanis are more related to the people of Georgia, than they are to other Iranians, as well as to Armenians. The same multidimensional scaling plot demonstrates the intermediate position of Caucasian Azerbaijanis between the Azeris/Georgians and Turks/Iranians groupings.[61] There is no significant difference between Iranian Azerbaijanis and other major ethnic groups of Iran.[62]

According to HLA testing, Azerbaijanis of Iran cluster together with the Turkmens of Gorgan and Kurds and constitute an intermediate position between Iranian populations and Western Siberians, specifically Chuvash, Mansi people, and Buryats (subgroups of Turkic peoples, Ugrians, and Mongols respectively).[63] Several genetic studies show that the Azerbaijanis' gene pool largely overlap with that of the native populations in support of language replacement, including elite dominance, scenarios,[64] while also demonstrating significant genetic influence from Siberia and Mongolia.[65]

History

Background: Dividing of the Azerbaijanis by the Russian Empire

Following the Russo-Persian Wars of 1804–13 and 1826–28, the Caucasian territories of Qajar Iran were ceded to the Russian Empire. The Treaty of Gulistan in 1813 and the Treaty of Turkmenchay in 1828 finalized the borders between the Russian Empire and Qajar Iran.[66][67] The areas to the north of the river Aras, including the territory of the contemporary Republic of Azerbaijan, were Iranian territory until they were occupied by Russia over the course of the 19th century.[68] The Russo-Persian Wars of the 19th century settled the modern-day boundary of Iran, stripping it of all its Caucasian territories and incorporating them into the Russian Empire. The eventual formation of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic in 1918 established the territory of modern Azerbaijan.

As a direct result of Qajar Iran's forced ceding to Russia, the Azerbaijanis are nowadays parted between two nations: Iran and Azerbaijan.[69] Despite living on two sides of an international border, the Azerbaijanis form a single ethnic group.[70]

Russo-Persian War (1826–28)

The burden of the Russo-Persian War (1826–28) was on the tribes of Qaradağ region, who being in front line, provided human resources and provision of the Iranian army. In the wake of the war, a significant fraction of the inhabitants of this area lived as nomadic tribes (ایلات). The major tribes included; Cilibyanlu 1,500 tents and houses, Karacurlu 2500, Haji Alilu 800, Begdillu 200, and various minor groups 500.[71] At the time Ahar, with 3,500 inhabitants, was the only city of Qaradağ.[72] The Haji-Alilu tribe played major rule in the later political developments.

Persian Constitutional Revolution of early twentieth century

During the Persian Constitutional Revolution , Tabriz was at the center of battles which followed the ascent to the throne of Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar on 8 January 1907. The revolutionary forces were headed by Sattar Khan who was originally from Arasbaran.[73][74][75] Haydar Khan Amo-oghli had significant contribution in the inception and progression of the revolution, and introducing leftist ideas into Iranian mainstream politics.[76] During the following tumultuous years, Amir Arshad, the headman of Haji-Alilu tribe, had a major impact on the subsequent political developments in Iran in relation to the status of Iranian Kurds. He is credited with fending off communism from Iran.[77][78]

Role of Iranian Azerbaijani intellectuals in modern Iranian ultra-nationalism

 
Mirza Fatali Akhundzade (also known as Akhundov), celebrated ethnic Azerbaijani author, playwright, philosopher, and founder of modern literary criticism.[79] Born in Nukha to a family originally hailing from Iranian Azerbaijan.

The ill-fated Constitutional Revolution did not bring democracy to Iran. Instead, Rezā Shāh, then Brigadier-General of the Persian Cossack Brigade, deposed Ahmad Shah Qajar, the last Shah of the Qajar dynasty, and founded the Pahlavi dynasty in 1925 and established a despotic monarchy.[80][81] His insistence on ethnic nationalism and cultural unitarism along with forced detribalization and sedentarization resulted in suppression of several ethnic and social groups, including Azerbaijanis.[82] Ironically, the main architect of this totalitarian policy, which was justified by reference to racial ultra-nationalism, was Mirza Fatali Akhundov, an intellectual from Azerbaijan.[83][84] In accordance with the Orientalist views of the supremacy of the Aryan peoples, he idealized pre-Islamic Achaemenid and Sassanid empires, whilst negating the 'Islamization' of Persia by Muslim forces."[85] This idealization of a distant past was put into practice by both the Pahlavi kings, particularly Mohammad Reza Pahlavi who honored himself with the title Āryāmehr, Light of the Aryans.[86] Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in an interview concisely expressed his views by declaring, "we Iranians are Aryans, and the fact that we are not adjacent to other Aryan nations in Europe is just a geographical anomaly.".[87]

Mirza Fatali Akhundov is not the only Azerbaijani intellectual in framing Iranian ultra-nationalism. Hassan Taqizadeh, the organizer of "Iran Society" in Berlin, has contributed to the development of Iranian nationalism. Since 1916 he published "Kaveh" periodical in Farsi language, which included articles emphasizing the racial unity of Germans and Iranians.[88][89] Ahmad Kasravi, Taqi Arani, Hossein Kazemzadeh (Iranshahr) and Mahmoud Afshar advocated the suppression of the Azerbaijani language as they supposed that the multilingualism contradicted the racial purity of Iranians.[90][91] Therefore, It is noteworthy that, contrary to what one might expect, many of the leading agents of the construction of an Iranian bounded territorial entity came from non-Persian-speaking ethnic minorities, and the foremost were the Azerbaijanis, rather than the nation's titular ethnic group, the Persians.

Pan-Turkism

The most important political development affecting the Middle East at the beginning of the twentieth century was the collapse of the Ottoman and the Russian empires. The idea of a greater homeland for all Turks was propagated by pan-Turkism, which was adopted almost at once as a main ideological pillar by the Committee of Union and Progress and somewhat later by other political caucuses in what remained of the Ottoman Empire. On the eve of World War I, pan-Turkist propaganda focused chiefly on the Turkic-speaking peoples of the southern Caucasus, in Iranian Azerbaijan and Turkistan in Central Asia, with the ultimate purpose of persuading them all to secede from the larger political entities to which they belonged and to join the new pan-Turkic homeland.

It was this latter appeal to Iranian Azerbaijanis which, contrary to pan-Turkist intentions, caused a small group of Azerbaijani intellectuals to become the most vociferous advocates of Iran's territorial integrity and sovereignty. If in Europe "romantic nationalism responded to the damage likely to be caused by modernism by providing a new and larger sense of belonging, an all-encompassing totality, which brought about new social ties, identity and meaning, and a new sense of history from one's origin on to an illustrious future,"(42) in Iran after the Constitutional movement romantic nationalism was adopted by the Azerbaijani Democrats as a reaction to the irredentist policies threatening the country's territorial integrity. In their view, assuring territorial integrity was a necessary first step on the road to establishing the rule of law in society and a competent modern state which would safeguard collective as well as individual rights. It was within this context that their political loyalty outweighed their other ethnic or regional affinities.

The failure of the Democrats in the arena of Iranian politics after the Constitutional movement and the start of modern state-building paved the way for the emergence of the titular ethnic group's cultural nationalism. Whereas the adoption of integrationist policies preserved Iran's geographic integrity and provided the majority of Iranians with a secure and firm national identity, the blatant ignoring of other demands of the Constitutional movement, such as the call for the formation of a society based on law and order, left the country still searching for a political identity. The ultimate purpose was to persuade these populations to secede from the larger political entities to which they belonged and join the new pan-Turkic homeland.[92] It was the latter appeal to Iranian Azerbaijanis, which, contrary to Pan-Turkist intentions, caused a small group of Azerbaijani intellectuals to become the strongest advocates of the territorial integrity of Iran.[92]

After the constitutional revolution in Iran, a romantic nationalism was adopted by Azerbaijani Democrats as a reaction to the pan-Turkist irredentist policies threatening Iran's territorial integrity.[92] It was during this period that Iranism and linguistic homogenization policies were proposed as a defensive nature against all others.[92] Contrary to what one might expect, foremost among innovating this defensive nationalism were Iranian Azerbaijanis.[92] They viewed that assuring the territorial integrity of the country was the first step in building a society based on law and a modern state.[92] Through this framework, their political loyalty outweighed their ethnic and regional affiliations.[92] The adoption of these integrationist policies paved the way for the emergence of the titular ethnic group's cultural nationalism.[92]

World War II and Soviet intervention

In late 1941 Soviet forces invaded Iran in coordination with British Army under an operation known as Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran. Their forces broke through the border and moved from the Azerbaijan SSR into Iranian Azerbaijan. Reza Shah was forced by the invading British to abdicate in favor of his son Mohammad Reza Pahlavi who replaced his father as Shah on the throne on 16 September 1941. At the aftermath of a four-year-long tumultuous period the Azerbaijan People's Government, a Soviet puppet state, was established in Tabriz, perhaps through direct involvement of the Soviet leadership.[93][citation needed] This government autonomously ruled the province from November 1945 to November 1946.[94] However, the Soviet soon realized their idea was premature, the mass of the population did not support separatism;[95] under largely Western pressure, the Soviet troops withdrew in 1946, which resulted in the quick collapse of the Azerbaijan People's Government.[94]

Iranian Azerbaijani migration to Azerbaijan

Beginning in the 1850s, many Iranian Azerbaijanis opted to become work migrants and seek job opportunities in the Russian Empire, primarily in the economically booming Azerbaijani-populated part of the Caucasus. Due to them being Persian subjects, Russian offices often recorded them as "Persians". The migrants referred to one another as hamshahri ("compatriot") as an in-group identity. The word was adopted by the Azerbaijani-speaking locals as həmşəri and has since been applied by them to Iranian Azerbaijani migrants in general. Already in the nineteenth century, the word also spread to urban varieties of Russian of Baku and Tiflis in the form of gamshara (гамшара) or amshara (амшара), where it was, however, used with a negative connotation to mean "a raggamuffin".[96][97] In the Soviet times, the word was borrowed into the Russian slang of Ashkhabad and was used to refer to forestallers.[98]

Iranian Azerbaijanis often worked menial jobs, including on dyer's madder plantations in Guba where 9,000 out of 14,000 Iranian Azerbaijani contract workers were employed as of 1867.[99] In the 1886 economic report on the life of the peasantry of the Guba district, Yagodynsky reported frequent cases of intermarriage between the Iranian work migrants and local women which prompted the former to settle in villages near Guba and quickly assimilate. Children from such families would be completely integrated in the community and not be regarded as foreigners or outsiders by its residents.[100]

 
Sattar Khan, Iranian Azerbaijani, was a key figure in the Iranian Constitutional Revolution and is held in great esteem by many Iranians.

Starting from the late nineteenth century, Baku was another popular destination for Iranian Azerbaijanis, thanks to its highly developing oil industry. By the beginning of the twentieth century, they already constituted 50% of all the oil workers of Baku,[101] and numbered 9,426 people in 1897, 11,132 people in 1903 and 25,096 people in 1913.[102] Amo-oghli and Sattar Khan notably worked in the Baku oil fields before returning to Iran and engaging in politics.

In 1925, there were 45,028 Iranian-born Azerbaijanis in the Azerbaijan SSR.[103] Of those, 15,000 (mostly oil workers, port and navy workers and railway workers) had retained Iranian citizenship by 1938 and were concentrated in Baku and Ganja. In accordance with the 1938 decision of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, residents of Azerbaijan with Iranian citizenship were given 10 days to apply for Soviet citizenship and were then relocated to Kazakhstan. Those who refused (numbering 2,878 people) became subject to deportation back to Iran immediately.[104] Some naturalized Iranian Azerbaijanis were later accused of various anti-Soviet activities and arrested or even executed in the so-called "Iranian operation" of 1938.[105]

After the fall of the Azerbaijan People's Government in 1946, as many as 10,000 Iranian Azerbaijani political émigrés relocated to Soviet Azerbaijan, fleeing the inevitable repressions of the Shah's government.[106] Notable Azerbaijanis of Iranian descent living in Azerbaijan included writers Mirza Ibrahimov and Mir Jalal Pashayev, singers Rubaba Muradova and Fatma Mukhtarova, actress Munavvar Kalantarli, poets Madina Gulgun and Balash Azeroghlu and others.

Islamic republic era and today

However, with the advent of the Iranian Revolution in 1979, the emphasis shifted away from nationalism as the new government highlighted religion as the main unifying factor. Within the Islamic Revolutionary government there emerged an Azerbaijani nationalist faction led by Ayatollah Kazem Shariatmadari, who advocated greater regional autonomy and wanted the constitution to be revised to include secularists and opposition parties; this was denied.[107] Other Azerbaijanis played an important rule in the revolution including Mir-Hossein Mousavi, Mehdi Bazargan, Sadeq Khalkhali, and Ali Khamenei.

Azerbaijanis make up 25%[citation needed] of Tehran's population and 30.3%[108] – 33%[26][109] of the population of the Tehran Province. Azerbaijanis in Tehran live in all of the cities within Tehran Province.[110] They are by far the largest ethnic group after Persians in Tehran and the wider Tehran Province.[111]

In October 2020, several protests erupted in Iranian cities, including the capital Tehran and Tabriz, in support of Azerbaijan in its conflict with Armenia over the Nagorno-Karabakh region.[112][113] Iranian Azerbaijani demonstrators chanted pro-Azerbaijan slogans and clashed with Iran's security forces.[114]

Politics and society

 
Iran's supreme leader Ali Khamenei, as the highest-ranking official in Iran, is an Iranian Azerbaijani.

Generally, Iranian Azerbaijanis were regarded as "a well integrated linguistic minority" by academics prior to Iran's Islamic Revolution.[115][116] Despite friction, they came to be well represented at all levels of, "political, military, and intellectual hierarchies, as well as the religious hierarchy.".[117]: 188  In addition, the current Supreme Leader of Iran, Ali Khamenei, is half Azerbaijani.[118] In contrast to the claims of de facto discrimination of some Iranian Azerbaijanis, the government claims that its policy in the past 30 years has been one of pan-Islamism, which is based on a common Islamic religion of which diverse ethnic groups may be part, and which does not favor or repress any particular ethnicity, including the Persian majority.[119] Persian language is thus merely used as the lingua franca of the country, which helps maintain Iran's traditional centralized model of government. More recently, the Azerbaijani language and culture is being taught and studied at the university level in Iran, and there appears to exist publications of books, newspapers and apparently, regional radio broadcasts too in the language.[120] Furthermore, Article 15 of Iran's constitution reads:

The use of regional and tribal languages in the press and mass media, as well as for teaching of their literature in schools, is allowed in addition to Persian.[121]

According to Professor. Nikki R. Keddie of UCLA: "One can purchase newspapers, books, music tapes, and videos in Azerbaijani and Kurdish, and there are radio and television stations in ethnic areas that broadcast news and entertainment programs in even more languages".[122]

Azerbaijani nationalism has oscillated since the Islamic revolution and recently escalated into riots over the publication in May 2006 of a cartoon that many Azerbaijanis found offensive.[123][124] The cartoon was drawn by Mana Neyestani, an ethnic Azerbaijani, who was fired along with his editor as a result of the controversy.[125][126]

Another series of protests took place in November 2015, in the cities of Iranian Azerbaijan including Tabriz, Urmia, Ardabil and Zanjan, in response to an episode of a popular children's program called Fitileh which had depicted what was seen as a racist image of Azerbaijanis. Mohammad Sarafraz director-general of the IRIB[127] and Davud Nemati-Anarki, the head of the public relations department, officially apologised for the "unintentional offense" caused by the program.[128] Protests were also held in July 2016 in Tehran, Tabriz, Urmia, Maragheh, Zanjan, Ahar, Khoy, and Ardabil in response to "denigration of Azerbaijanis by the state media". Plastic bullets were shot at protesters and several people were arrested.[129][130]

Despite sporadic problems, Azerbaijanis are an intrinsic community within Iran.[131] Currently, the living conditions of Iranian Azerbaijanis closely resemble that of Persians:

The life styles of urban Azeri do not differ from those of Persians, and there is considerable intermarriage among the upper classes in cities of mixed populations. Similarly, customs among Azeri villagers do not appear to differ markedly from those of Persian villagers.[25]

Iranian Azerbaijanis are in high positions of authority with the Azerbaijanis Ayatollah Ali Khamenei currently sitting as the Supreme Leader. Azerbaijanis in Iran remain quite conservative in comparison to most Azerbaijanis in the Republic of Azerbaijan. Nonetheless, since the Republic of Azerbaijan's independence in 1991, there has been renewed interest and contact between Azerbaijanis on both sides of the border. Andrew Burke writes:

Azeri are famously active in commerce and in bazaars all over Iran their voluble voices can be heard. Older Azeri men wear the traditional wool hat and their music and dances have become part of the mainstream culture. Azeris are well integrated and many Azeri Iranians are prominent in Persian literature, politics and clerical world.[132]

According to Bulent Gokay:

The Northern part of Iran, that used to be called Azerbaijan, is inhabited by 17 million Azeris. This population has been traditionally well integrated with the multi-ethnic Iranian state.[133]

Richard Thomas, Roger East, and Alan John Day state:

The 15–20 million Azeri Turks living in northern Iran, ethnically identical to Azeris, have embraced Shia Islam and are well integrated into Iranian society[134]

According to Michael P. Croissant:

Although Iran's fifteen-million Azeri population is well integrated into Iranian society and has shown little desire to secede, Tehran has nonetheless shown extreme concern with prospects of the rise of sentiments calling for union between the two Azerbaijans.[135]

While Iranian Azerbaijanis may seek greater linguistic rights, few of them display separatist tendencies. Extensive reporting by Afshin Molavi, an Iranian Azerbaijani scholar, in the three major Azerbaijani provinces of Iran, as well as among Iranian Azerbaijanis in Tehran, found that separatist sentiment was not widely held among Iranian Azerbaijanis. Few people framed their genuine political, social and economic frustration – feelings that are shared by the majority of Iranians – within an ethnic context.[131]

According to another Iranian Azerbaijani scholar, Dr. Hassan Javadi – a Tabriz-born, Cambridge-educated scholar of Azerbaijani literature and professor of Persian, Azerbaijani and English literature at George Washington University – Iranian Azerbaijanis have more important matters on their mind than cultural rights. "Iran's Azerbaijani community, like the rest of the country, is engaged in the movement for reform and democracy," Javadi told the Central Asia Caucasus Institute crowd, adding that separatist groups represent "fringe thinking." He also told EurasiaNet: "I get no sense that these cultural issues outweigh national ones, nor do I have any sense that there is widespread talk of secession."[131]

Culture

Iranian Azerbaijanis, a Turkic speaking people, are culturally a part of the Iranian peoples and have influenced Iranian culture.[136] At the same time, they have influenced and been influenced by their non-Iranian neighbors, especially Caucasians and Russians. Azerbaijani music is distinct music that is tightly connected to the music of other Iranian peoples such as Persian music and Kurdish music, and also the music of the Caucasian peoples. Although the Azerbaijani language is not an official language of Iran it is widely used, mostly orally, among the Iranian Azerbaijanis.

Literature

Jahan Shah (r. 1438–67), the Qara Qoyunlu ("black sheep") ruler of Iran was a master poet. He compiled a diwan under the pen-name Haqiqi. Shah Isma'il (1487–1524), who used the pen-name Khata'i, was a prominent ruler-poet and has, apart from his diwan compiled a mathnawi called Deh-name, consisting of some eulogies of Ali, the fourth Caliph of early Islam.[137] After the Safavid era, Azerbaijani could not sustain its early development. The main theme of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries was the development of verse-folk stories, mainly intended for performance by Ashughs in weddings. The most famous among these literary works are Koroghlu,[138] Ashiq Qərib, and Kərəm ilə Əsli.

Following the establishing of Qajar dynasty in Iran Azerbaijani literature flourished and reached its peak by the end of the nineteenth century. By then, journalism had been launched in Azerbaijani language and social activism had become the main theme of literary works. The most influential writers of this era are Fathali Akhondzadeh[139] and Mojez Shabestari.

Pahlavi era was the darkest[citation needed] period for Azerbaijani literature. The Azerbaijani language was banned in official spheres with the advent of Reza Shah's reign,[140] including at schools.[141][142] This prohibition was formally abolished after the Islamic revolution, though the Azerbaijanis haven't enjoyed much cultural freedom since then.[143] Writers of Azerbaijan, such as Gholam-Hossein Saedi, Samad Behrangi and Reza Barahani, published their works in Persian. The only exception was Mohammad-Hossein Shahriar, who is famous for his verse book, Heydar Babaya Salam;[144] simply he was too mighty to be censored. Shahriar's work was an innovative way of summarizing the Cultural identity in concise poetic form and was adapted by a generation of lesser-known poets, particularly from Qareh Dagh region, to record their oral traditions. One remarkable example is Abbas Eslami, known with his pen-name Barez, (1932–2011)[145] who described the melancholic demise of his homeland in a book titled mourning Sabalan.[146] Another example is Mohamad Golmohamadi's long poem, titled I am madly in love with Qareh Dagh (قاراداغ اؤلکه‌سینین گؤر نئجه دیوانه‌سی ام), is a concise description of the region's cultural landscape.[147]

The long-lasting suppression finally led to a generation of revolutionary poets, composing verses by allegoric allusion to the imposing landscape of Azerbaijan:

Sahand, o mountain of pure snow,
Descended from Heaven with Zoroaster
Fire in your heart, snow on your shoulders,
with storm of centuries,
And white hair of history on your chest ...

Yadollah Maftun Amini (born in 1926)[148]

After the Islamic revolution of 1979, however, great literary works have not yet appeared and glory days of fifteenth century ruler-poets is not on the horizon. The contemporary literature is restricted to oral traditions, such as bayaties.[149][150]

Music

Traditional Azerbaijani music can be classified into two categories: the music of "ashugh" and the "mugham". Mugham, despite its similarity to Persian classic music and utmost importance in Azerbaijan, has not been popular among Iranian Azerbaijanis. The ashugh music had survived in the mountainous region of Qaradağ and presently is identified as the representative of the cultural identity of Azerbaijanis. Recent innovative developments, aiming to enhance the urban-appealing aspects of this ashugh performances, has drastically enhanced the status of ashugh music. The opening of academic-style music classes in Tabriz by master ashughs, such as Ashig Imran Heidari and Ashig Changiz Mehdipour, has greatly contributed to the ongoing image building.

Art

Living in the crossroads of many civilizations, Azerbaijani artisans have developed a rich tradition of decorative arts including rugs, lace, printed textiles, jewelry, vessels made of copper, engraved metals, wooden articles, and ceramics. Among these, carpet weaving stands out as the acme of Azerbaijani art.

Carpet weaving

Tabriz is one of the main centers of carpet weaving in Iran. At present 40% of Iranian carpet exports are originated from Tabriz.[151] These carpets are generally known as Tabriz rugs. Another carpet weaving center is Ardebil, which, despite being overshadowed by Tabriz in recent years, has produced the finest carpets in past. The two most famous Iranian rugs in the world had been woven in Ardebil in 1540. One is hung in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London, and the other is in the Los Angeles County Museum of Arts. These carpets have silk warps and contain over thirty million knots.[152]

The acme of carpet weaving art is manifested in Verni,[153][154] which was originated in Nagorno-Karabakh. Verni is a carpet-like kilim with a delicate and fine warp and woof, which is woven without a previous sketch, thanks to the creative talents of nomadic women and girls. Verni weavers employ the image of birds and animals (deer, rooster, cat, snake, birds, gazelle, sheep, camel, wolf and eagle) in simple geometrical shapes, imitating the earthenware patterns that were popular in prehistoric times.[155] A key décor feature, which is intrinsic to many Vernis, is the S-element. Its shape varies, it may resemble both figure 5 and letter S. This element means "dragon" among the nomads. At present, Verni is woven by the girls of Arasbaran Tribes, often in the same room where the nomadic tribes reside,[156] and is a significant income source for about 20,000 families in Qaradagh region.[157][158] Verni weavers employ the image of birds and animals in simple geometrical shapes, imitating the earthenware patterns that were popular in prehistoric times.

Religion

The majority of Azerbaijanis are followers of Shia Islam. Azerbaijanis commemorate Shia holy days (ten first days of the holy month of Muharram) at least with the same intensity as other Iranians. In metropolitan cities with mixed ethnic composition, such as Tehran, Azerbaijanis are thought to be more intense in their expression of religious ritual than their Persian counterparts.[159] There is also a small minority of Azerbaijanis who practice the Baháʼí Faith.[160] Also in recent years, some Azerbaijanis in Iran have begun converting to Christianity,[161] which is strictly prohibited and can result in imprisonment.[162]

Notable people

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Some estimates have suggested that one-third of the population of Tehran is Azeri,[30][42][verification needed] the Iranologist Victoria Arakelova however notes in peer-reviewed journal Iran and the Caucasus that the wide-spread "cliché" among residents of Tehran on the number of Azerbaijanis in the city ("half of Tehran consists of Azerbaijanis"), cannot be taken "seriously into consideration".[6] Arakelova adds that the number of Tehran's inhabitants who have migrated from northwestern areas of Iran, who are currently Persian-speakers "for the most part", is not more than "several hundred thousands", with the maximum being one million.[6]

References

  1. ^ Swietochowski & Collins (1999, p. 165): Today, Iranian Azerbaijan has a solid majority of Azeris with an estimated population of at least 15 million (over twice the population of the Azerbaijani Republic). (1999)
  2. ^ "Iran". Ethnologue. from the original on 4 September 2019. Retrieved 26 October 2018. Ethnic population: 15,900,000
  3. ^ Elling, Rasmus Christian. Minorities in Iran: Nationalism and Ethnicity after Khomeini, Palgrave Macmillan, 2013. Excerpt: "The number of Azeris in Iran is heavily disputed. In 2005, Amanolahi estimated all Turkic-speaking communities in Iran to number no more than 9 million. CIA and Library of congress estimates range from 16 to 24 percent—that is, 12–18 million people if we employ the latest total figure for Iran's population (77.8 million). Azeri ethnicsts, on the other hand, argue that overall number is much higher, even as much as 50 percent or more of the total population. Such inflated estimates may have influenced some Western scholars who suggest that up to 30 percent (that is, some 23 million today) Iranians are Azeris." [1] 5 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  4. ^ Potter, Lawrence G. (2014). Sectarian Politics in the Persian Gulf. Oxford University Press. p. 290. ISBN 978-0-19-937726-8. Retrieved 14 January 2023.
  5. ^ Bani-Shoraka, Helena (1 July 2009). "Cross-generational bilingual strategies among Azerbaijanis in Tehran". International Journal of the Sociology of Language. 2009 (198): 106. doi:10.1515/IJSL.2009.029. ISSN 1613-3668. S2CID 144993160. The latest figures estimate the Azerbaijani population at 24% of Iran's 70 million inhabitants (NVI 2003/2004: 301). This means that there are between 15 and 20 million Azerbaijanis in Iran.
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    As far as Iran is concerned, it is widely argued that Iranian nationalism was born as a state ideology in the Reza Shah era, based on philological nationalism and as a result of his innovative success in creating a modern nation-state in Iran. However, what is often neglected is that Iranian nationalism has its roots in the political upheavals of the 19th century and the disintegration immediately following the Constitutional revolution of 1905– 9. It was during this period that Iranism gradually took shape as a defensive discourse for constructing a bounded territorial entity – the "pure Iran" standing against all others. Consequently, over time there emerged among the country's intelligentsia a political xenophobia which contributed to the formation of Iranian defensive nationalism. It is noteworthy that, contrary to what one might expect, many of the leading agents of the construction of an Iranian bounded territorial entity came from non-Persian-speaking ethnic minorities, and the foremost were the Azeris, rather than the nation's titular ethnic group, the Persians.

    ....

    In the middle of April 1918, the Ottoman army invaded Azerbaijan for the second time.

    ...

    Contrary to their expectations, however, the Ottomans did not achieve impressive success in Azerbaijan. Although the province remained under quasi-occupation by Ottoman troops for months, attempting to win endorsement for pan-Turkism ended in failure.

    ...

    The most important political development affecting the Middle East at the beginning of the twentieth century was the collapse of the Ottoman and the Russian empires. The idea of a greater homeland for all Turks was propagated by pan-Turkism, which was adopted almost at once as a main ideological pillar by the Committee of Union and Progress and somewhat later by other political caucuses in what remained of the Ottoman Empire. On the eve of World War I, pan-Turkist propaganda focused chiefly on the Turkic-speaking peoples of the southern Caucasus, in Iranian Azerbaijan and Turkistan in Central Asia, with the ultimate purpose of persuading them all to secede from the larger political entities to which they belonged and to join the new pan-Turkic homeland. It was this latter appeal to Iranian Azeris which, contrary to pan-Turkist intentions, caused a small group of Azeri intellectuals to become the most vociferous advocates of Iran's territorial integrity and sovereignty. If in Europe ‘romantic nationalism responded to the damage likely to be caused by modernism by providing a new and larger sense of belonging, an all-encompassing totality, which brought about new social ties, identity and meaning, and a new sense of history from one's origin on to an illustrious future’,(42) in Iran after the Constitutional movement romantic nationalism was adopted by the Azerbaijani Democrats as a reaction to the irredentist policies threatening the country's territorial integrity. In their view, assuring territorial integrity was a necessary first step on the road to establishing the rule of law in society and a competent modern state which would safeguard collective as well as individual rights. It was within this context that their political loyalty outweighed their other ethnic or regional affinities. The failure of the Democrats in the arena of Iranian politics after the Constitutional movement and the start of modern state-building paved the way for the emergence of the titular ethnic group's cultural nationalism. Whereas the adoption of integrationist policies preserved Iran's geographic integrity and provided the majority of Iranians with a secure and firm national identity, the blatant ignoring of other demands of the Constitutional movement, such as the call for the formation of a society based on law and order, left the country still searching for a political identity.

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iranian, azerbaijanis, this, article, about, azerbaijanis, general, azerbaijani, people, persian, آذربایجانی, های, ایران, azerbaijani, ایران, آذربایجانلیلاری, iˈɾɑːn, ɑːzæɾbɑjˈdʒɑnlɯlɑɾɯ, also, known, iranian, azeris, iranian, turks, azerbaijani, ایران, تورکلر. This article is about Iranian Azerbaijanis For Azerbaijanis in general see Azerbaijani people Iranian Azerbaijanis Persian آذربایجانی های ایران Azerbaijani ایران آذربایجانلیلاری iˈɾɑːn ɑːzaeɾbɑjˈdʒɑnlɯlɑɾɯ also known as Iranian Azeris Iranian Turks Azerbaijani ایران تورکلری Persian Turks 14 15 16 or Persian Azerbaijanis 17 18 are Iranians of Azerbaijani ethnicity who may speak the Azerbaijani language as their first language Iranian Azerbaijanis are mainly of Iranian descent 19 6 20 Iranian Azerbaijanisایران آذربایجانلیلاریIranian Azerbaijani folk singers from Tabriz celebrating NowruzRegions with significant populationsEast AzerbaijanWest AzerbaijanArdabilZanjanQazvinHamadan Internal migration TehranAlborzQom Minority MarkaziGilanKurdistanKermanshahGolestan Iran12 20 million 1 2 3 4 5 6 6 5 million Arakelova 6 16 7 8 24 9 10 of Iran s population Azerbaijan248 000 11 Canada50 000 60 000 12 United States40 400 13 LanguagesAzerbaijani and PersianReligionpredominantly Shi a IslamThis article contains special characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols Iranian Azerbaijanis are primarily found in and are native to the Iranian Azerbaijan region including provinces of East Azerbaijan Ardabil Zanjan West Azerbaijan 21 22 23 and in smaller numbers in other provinces such as Kurdistan Qazvin Hamadan Gilan Markazi and Kermanshah 24 Iranian Azerbaijanis also constitute a significant minority in Tehran Karaj and other regions 25 26 27 Contents 1 Demographics 1 1 Ethnic groups 2 Background 2 1 Genetics 3 History 3 1 Background Dividing of the Azerbaijanis by the Russian Empire 3 2 Russo Persian War 1826 28 3 3 Persian Constitutional Revolution of early twentieth century 3 4 Role of Iranian Azerbaijani intellectuals in modern Iranian ultra nationalism 3 5 Pan Turkism 3 6 World War II and Soviet intervention 3 7 Iranian Azerbaijani migration to Azerbaijan 3 8 Islamic republic era and today 4 Politics and society 5 Culture 5 1 Literature 5 1 1 Music 5 2 Art 5 2 1 Carpet weaving 5 3 Religion 6 Notable people 7 See also 8 Notes 9 ReferencesDemographicsMain articles Ethnicities in Iran and Demographics of Iran Azerbaijanis comprise the largest minority ethnic group in Iran Apart from Iranian Azerbaijan provinces of West Azerbaijan East Azerbaijan Ardabil and Zanjan Azerbaijani populations are found in large numbers in four other provinces Hamadan includes other Turkic ethnic groups such as Afshar Gharehgozloo Shahsevan and Baharloo 28 29 30 Qazvin 31 Markazi 32 and Kurdistan 33 34 Azerbaijani populated of Markazi province includes some parts and villages of Komijan 35 Khondab 36 Saveh 37 38 Zarandieh 39 Shazand 40 and Farahan 37 In Kurdistan Azerbaijanis are mainly found in villages around Qorveh 33 Azerbaijanis have also immigrated and resettled in large numbers in Central Iran mainly Tehran 41 a Qom 41 43 44 and Karaj 45 46 They have also emigrated and resettled in large numbers in Khorasan 41 Immigrant Azerbaijani communities have been represented by people prominent not only among urban and industrial working classes but also in commercial administrative political religious and intellectual circles 41 According to the Iranologist Victoria Arakelova estimating the number of Azeris in Iran has been hampered since the dissolution of the Soviet Union through political doctrines and unreliable biased publications even though all Iranian censuses are based on religious minorities She further states that the Iranian Azerbaijani population was popularly inflated in the early 1990s as almost half of the 60 million Iranian population at the time while in the next decade the figure decreased to 20 million which lingered around for years She puts the number at 6 to 6 5 million 6 Ethnic groups Sub ethnic groups of the Azerbaijanis within the modern day borders of Iran following the ceding of the Caucasus to Russia in the 19th century include the Shahsevan 47 48 49 50 the Qarapapaqs 51 the Ayrums 47 the Bayat 52 the Qajars 53 the Qaradaghis 47 54 and the Gharagozloo 55 BackgroundMain article Origin of the Azerbaijanis The Iranian Azerbaijani culture was produced by centuries of a symbiosis and mixture between native and nomadic elements 56 According to Richard Frye Iranian Azerbaijanis largely descend from the pre existing Iranian speakers who were Turkified after a massive migration of Oghuz Turks but still exist in smaller pockets 57 while Olivier Roy writes that the Azerbaijani ethnogenesis involved the Turkification of the natives by Turkomans from Anatolia 58 According to Russian scholar Rostislav Rybakov Iranian Azerbaijan was almost fully Turkicized by 14th and 15th centuries though the local population left its mark in the Azerbaijani culture and language and the ethnic border between the Turkish people and Azerbaijanis was established in the 16th century 59 Scholars note cultural similarities between modern Persians and Azerbaijanis 60 Genetics A comparative study 2013 on the complete mitochondrial DNA diversity in Iranians has indicated that Iranian Azerbaijanis are more related to the people of Georgia than they are to other Iranians as well as to Armenians The same multidimensional scaling plot demonstrates the intermediate position of Caucasian Azerbaijanis between the Azeris Georgians and Turks Iranians groupings 61 There is no significant difference between Iranian Azerbaijanis and other major ethnic groups of Iran 62 According to HLA testing Azerbaijanis of Iran cluster together with the Turkmens of Gorgan and Kurds and constitute an intermediate position between Iranian populations and Western Siberians specifically Chuvash Mansi people and Buryats subgroups of Turkic peoples Ugrians and Mongols respectively 63 Several genetic studies show that the Azerbaijanis gene pool largely overlap with that of the native populations in support of language replacement including elite dominance scenarios 64 while also demonstrating significant genetic influence from Siberia and Mongolia 65 HistoryBackground Dividing of the Azerbaijanis by the Russian Empire Main articles Treaty of Gulistan and Treaty of Turkmenchay Following the Russo Persian Wars of 1804 13 and 1826 28 the Caucasian territories of Qajar Iran were ceded to the Russian Empire The Treaty of Gulistan in 1813 and the Treaty of Turkmenchay in 1828 finalized the borders between the Russian Empire and Qajar Iran 66 67 The areas to the north of the river Aras including the territory of the contemporary Republic of Azerbaijan were Iranian territory until they were occupied by Russia over the course of the 19th century 68 The Russo Persian Wars of the 19th century settled the modern day boundary of Iran stripping it of all its Caucasian territories and incorporating them into the Russian Empire The eventual formation of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic in 1918 established the territory of modern Azerbaijan As a direct result of Qajar Iran s forced ceding to Russia the Azerbaijanis are nowadays parted between two nations Iran and Azerbaijan 69 Despite living on two sides of an international border the Azerbaijanis form a single ethnic group 70 Russo Persian War 1826 28 The burden of the Russo Persian War 1826 28 was on the tribes of Qaradag region who being in front line provided human resources and provision of the Iranian army In the wake of the war a significant fraction of the inhabitants of this area lived as nomadic tribes ایلات The major tribes included Cilibyanlu 1 500 tents and houses Karacurlu 2500 Haji Alilu 800 Begdillu 200 and various minor groups 500 71 At the time Ahar with 3 500 inhabitants was the only city of Qaradag 72 The Haji Alilu tribe played major rule in the later political developments Persian Constitutional Revolution of early twentieth century During the Persian Constitutional Revolution Tabriz was at the center of battles which followed the ascent to the throne of Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar on 8 January 1907 The revolutionary forces were headed by Sattar Khan who was originally from Arasbaran 73 74 75 Haydar Khan Amo oghli had significant contribution in the inception and progression of the revolution and introducing leftist ideas into Iranian mainstream politics 76 During the following tumultuous years Amir Arshad the headman of Haji Alilu tribe had a major impact on the subsequent political developments in Iran in relation to the status of Iranian Kurds He is credited with fending off communism from Iran 77 78 Role of Iranian Azerbaijani intellectuals in modern Iranian ultra nationalism Mirza Fatali Akhundzade also known as Akhundov celebrated ethnic Azerbaijani author playwright philosopher and founder of modern literary criticism 79 Born in Nukha to a family originally hailing from Iranian Azerbaijan The ill fated Constitutional Revolution did not bring democracy to Iran Instead Reza Shah then Brigadier General of the Persian Cossack Brigade deposed Ahmad Shah Qajar the last Shah of the Qajar dynasty and founded the Pahlavi dynasty in 1925 and established a despotic monarchy 80 81 His insistence on ethnic nationalism and cultural unitarism along with forced detribalization and sedentarization resulted in suppression of several ethnic and social groups including Azerbaijanis 82 Ironically the main architect of this totalitarian policy which was justified by reference to racial ultra nationalism was Mirza Fatali Akhundov an intellectual from Azerbaijan 83 84 In accordance with the Orientalist views of the supremacy of the Aryan peoples he idealized pre Islamic Achaemenid and Sassanid empires whilst negating the Islamization of Persia by Muslim forces 85 This idealization of a distant past was put into practice by both the Pahlavi kings particularly Mohammad Reza Pahlavi who honored himself with the title Aryamehr Light of the Aryans 86 Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in an interview concisely expressed his views by declaring we Iranians are Aryans and the fact that we are not adjacent to other Aryan nations in Europe is just a geographical anomaly 87 Mirza Fatali Akhundov is not the only Azerbaijani intellectual in framing Iranian ultra nationalism Hassan Taqizadeh the organizer of Iran Society in Berlin has contributed to the development of Iranian nationalism Since 1916 he published Kaveh periodical in Farsi language which included articles emphasizing the racial unity of Germans and Iranians 88 89 Ahmad Kasravi Taqi Arani Hossein Kazemzadeh Iranshahr and Mahmoud Afshar advocated the suppression of the Azerbaijani language as they supposed that the multilingualism contradicted the racial purity of Iranians 90 91 Therefore It is noteworthy that contrary to what one might expect many of the leading agents of the construction of an Iranian bounded territorial entity came from non Persian speaking ethnic minorities and the foremost were the Azerbaijanis rather than the nation s titular ethnic group the Persians Pan Turkism Main article Pan Turkism The most important political development affecting the Middle East at the beginning of the twentieth century was the collapse of the Ottoman and the Russian empires The idea of a greater homeland for all Turks was propagated by pan Turkism which was adopted almost at once as a main ideological pillar by the Committee of Union and Progress and somewhat later by other political caucuses in what remained of the Ottoman Empire On the eve of World War I pan Turkist propaganda focused chiefly on the Turkic speaking peoples of the southern Caucasus in Iranian Azerbaijan and Turkistan in Central Asia with the ultimate purpose of persuading them all to secede from the larger political entities to which they belonged and to join the new pan Turkic homeland It was this latter appeal to Iranian Azerbaijanis which contrary to pan Turkist intentions caused a small group of Azerbaijani intellectuals to become the most vociferous advocates of Iran s territorial integrity and sovereignty If in Europe romantic nationalism responded to the damage likely to be caused by modernism by providing a new and larger sense of belonging an all encompassing totality which brought about new social ties identity and meaning and a new sense of history from one s origin on to an illustrious future 42 in Iran after the Constitutional movement romantic nationalism was adopted by the Azerbaijani Democrats as a reaction to the irredentist policies threatening the country s territorial integrity In their view assuring territorial integrity was a necessary first step on the road to establishing the rule of law in society and a competent modern state which would safeguard collective as well as individual rights It was within this context that their political loyalty outweighed their other ethnic or regional affinities The failure of the Democrats in the arena of Iranian politics after the Constitutional movement and the start of modern state building paved the way for the emergence of the titular ethnic group s cultural nationalism Whereas the adoption of integrationist policies preserved Iran s geographic integrity and provided the majority of Iranians with a secure and firm national identity the blatant ignoring of other demands of the Constitutional movement such as the call for the formation of a society based on law and order left the country still searching for a political identity The ultimate purpose was to persuade these populations to secede from the larger political entities to which they belonged and join the new pan Turkic homeland 92 It was the latter appeal to Iranian Azerbaijanis which contrary to Pan Turkist intentions caused a small group of Azerbaijani intellectuals to become the strongest advocates of the territorial integrity of Iran 92 After the constitutional revolution in Iran a romantic nationalism was adopted by Azerbaijani Democrats as a reaction to the pan Turkist irredentist policies threatening Iran s territorial integrity 92 It was during this period that Iranism and linguistic homogenization policies were proposed as a defensive nature against all others 92 Contrary to what one might expect foremost among innovating this defensive nationalism were Iranian Azerbaijanis 92 They viewed that assuring the territorial integrity of the country was the first step in building a society based on law and a modern state 92 Through this framework their political loyalty outweighed their ethnic and regional affiliations 92 The adoption of these integrationist policies paved the way for the emergence of the titular ethnic group s cultural nationalism 92 World War II and Soviet intervention In late 1941 Soviet forces invaded Iran in coordination with British Army under an operation known as Anglo Soviet invasion of Iran Their forces broke through the border and moved from the Azerbaijan SSR into Iranian Azerbaijan Reza Shah was forced by the invading British to abdicate in favor of his son Mohammad Reza Pahlavi who replaced his father as Shah on the throne on 16 September 1941 At the aftermath of a four year long tumultuous period the Azerbaijan People s Government a Soviet puppet state was established in Tabriz perhaps through direct involvement of the Soviet leadership 93 citation needed This government autonomously ruled the province from November 1945 to November 1946 94 However the Soviet soon realized their idea was premature the mass of the population did not support separatism 95 under largely Western pressure the Soviet troops withdrew in 1946 which resulted in the quick collapse of the Azerbaijan People s Government 94 Iranian Azerbaijani migration to Azerbaijan Beginning in the 1850s many Iranian Azerbaijanis opted to become work migrants and seek job opportunities in the Russian Empire primarily in the economically booming Azerbaijani populated part of the Caucasus Due to them being Persian subjects Russian offices often recorded them as Persians The migrants referred to one another as hamshahri compatriot as an in group identity The word was adopted by the Azerbaijani speaking locals as hemseri and has since been applied by them to Iranian Azerbaijani migrants in general Already in the nineteenth century the word also spread to urban varieties of Russian of Baku and Tiflis in the form of gamshara gamshara or amshara amshara where it was however used with a negative connotation to mean a raggamuffin 96 97 In the Soviet times the word was borrowed into the Russian slang of Ashkhabad and was used to refer to forestallers 98 Iranian Azerbaijanis often worked menial jobs including on dyer s madder plantations in Guba where 9 000 out of 14 000 Iranian Azerbaijani contract workers were employed as of 1867 99 In the 1886 economic report on the life of the peasantry of the Guba district Yagodynsky reported frequent cases of intermarriage between the Iranian work migrants and local women which prompted the former to settle in villages near Guba and quickly assimilate Children from such families would be completely integrated in the community and not be regarded as foreigners or outsiders by its residents 100 Sattar Khan Iranian Azerbaijani was a key figure in the Iranian Constitutional Revolution and is held in great esteem by many Iranians Starting from the late nineteenth century Baku was another popular destination for Iranian Azerbaijanis thanks to its highly developing oil industry By the beginning of the twentieth century they already constituted 50 of all the oil workers of Baku 101 and numbered 9 426 people in 1897 11 132 people in 1903 and 25 096 people in 1913 102 Amo oghli and Sattar Khan notably worked in the Baku oil fields before returning to Iran and engaging in politics In 1925 there were 45 028 Iranian born Azerbaijanis in the Azerbaijan SSR 103 Of those 15 000 mostly oil workers port and navy workers and railway workers had retained Iranian citizenship by 1938 and were concentrated in Baku and Ganja In accordance with the 1938 decision of the Central Committee of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union residents of Azerbaijan with Iranian citizenship were given 10 days to apply for Soviet citizenship and were then relocated to Kazakhstan Those who refused numbering 2 878 people became subject to deportation back to Iran immediately 104 Some naturalized Iranian Azerbaijanis were later accused of various anti Soviet activities and arrested or even executed in the so called Iranian operation of 1938 105 After the fall of the Azerbaijan People s Government in 1946 as many as 10 000 Iranian Azerbaijani political emigres relocated to Soviet Azerbaijan fleeing the inevitable repressions of the Shah s government 106 Notable Azerbaijanis of Iranian descent living in Azerbaijan included writers Mirza Ibrahimov and Mir Jalal Pashayev singers Rubaba Muradova and Fatma Mukhtarova actress Munavvar Kalantarli poets Madina Gulgun and Balash Azeroghlu and others Islamic republic era and today However with the advent of the Iranian Revolution in 1979 the emphasis shifted away from nationalism as the new government highlighted religion as the main unifying factor Within the Islamic Revolutionary government there emerged an Azerbaijani nationalist faction led by Ayatollah Kazem Shariatmadari who advocated greater regional autonomy and wanted the constitution to be revised to include secularists and opposition parties this was denied 107 Other Azerbaijanis played an important rule in the revolution including Mir Hossein Mousavi Mehdi Bazargan Sadeq Khalkhali and Ali Khamenei Azerbaijanis make up 25 citation needed of Tehran s population and 30 3 108 33 26 109 of the population of the Tehran Province Azerbaijanis in Tehran live in all of the cities within Tehran Province 110 They are by far the largest ethnic group after Persians in Tehran and the wider Tehran Province 111 In October 2020 several protests erupted in Iranian cities including the capital Tehran and Tabriz in support of Azerbaijan in its conflict with Armenia over the Nagorno Karabakh region 112 113 Iranian Azerbaijani demonstrators chanted pro Azerbaijan slogans and clashed with Iran s security forces 114 Politics and societyMain article Ethnicities in Iran Iran s supreme leader Ali Khamenei as the highest ranking official in Iran is an Iranian Azerbaijani Generally Iranian Azerbaijanis were regarded as a well integrated linguistic minority by academics prior to Iran s Islamic Revolution 115 116 Despite friction they came to be well represented at all levels of political military and intellectual hierarchies as well as the religious hierarchy 117 188 In addition the current Supreme Leader of Iran Ali Khamenei is half Azerbaijani 118 In contrast to the claims of de facto discrimination of some Iranian Azerbaijanis the government claims that its policy in the past 30 years has been one of pan Islamism which is based on a common Islamic religion of which diverse ethnic groups may be part and which does not favor or repress any particular ethnicity including the Persian majority 119 Persian language is thus merely used as the lingua franca of the country which helps maintain Iran s traditional centralized model of government More recently the Azerbaijani language and culture is being taught and studied at the university level in Iran and there appears to exist publications of books newspapers and apparently regional radio broadcasts too in the language 120 Furthermore Article 15 of Iran s constitution reads The use of regional and tribal languages in the press and mass media as well as for teaching of their literature in schools is allowed in addition to Persian 121 According to Professor Nikki R Keddie of UCLA One can purchase newspapers books music tapes and videos in Azerbaijani and Kurdish and there are radio and television stations in ethnic areas that broadcast news and entertainment programs in even more languages 122 Azerbaijani nationalism has oscillated since the Islamic revolution and recently escalated into riots over the publication in May 2006 of a cartoon that many Azerbaijanis found offensive 123 124 The cartoon was drawn by Mana Neyestani an ethnic Azerbaijani who was fired along with his editor as a result of the controversy 125 126 Another series of protests took place in November 2015 in the cities of Iranian Azerbaijan including Tabriz Urmia Ardabil and Zanjan in response to an episode of a popular children s program called Fitileh which had depicted what was seen as a racist image of Azerbaijanis Mohammad Sarafraz director general of the IRIB 127 and Davud Nemati Anarki the head of the public relations department officially apologised for the unintentional offense caused by the program 128 Protests were also held in July 2016 in Tehran Tabriz Urmia Maragheh Zanjan Ahar Khoy and Ardabil in response to denigration of Azerbaijanis by the state media Plastic bullets were shot at protesters and several people were arrested 129 130 Despite sporadic problems Azerbaijanis are an intrinsic community within Iran 131 Currently the living conditions of Iranian Azerbaijanis closely resemble that of Persians The life styles of urban Azeri do not differ from those of Persians and there is considerable intermarriage among the upper classes in cities of mixed populations Similarly customs among Azeri villagers do not appear to differ markedly from those of Persian villagers 25 Iranian Azerbaijanis are in high positions of authority with the Azerbaijanis Ayatollah Ali Khamenei currently sitting as the Supreme Leader Azerbaijanis in Iran remain quite conservative in comparison to most Azerbaijanis in the Republic of Azerbaijan Nonetheless since the Republic of Azerbaijan s independence in 1991 there has been renewed interest and contact between Azerbaijanis on both sides of the border Andrew Burke writes Azeri are famously active in commerce and in bazaars all over Iran their voluble voices can be heard Older Azeri men wear the traditional wool hat and their music and dances have become part of the mainstream culture Azeris are well integrated and many Azeri Iranians are prominent in Persian literature politics and clerical world 132 According to Bulent Gokay The Northern part of Iran that used to be called Azerbaijan is inhabited by 17 million Azeris This population has been traditionally well integrated with the multi ethnic Iranian state 133 Richard Thomas Roger East and Alan John Day state The 15 20 million Azeri Turks living in northern Iran ethnically identical to Azeris have embraced Shia Islam and are well integrated into Iranian society 134 According to Michael P Croissant Although Iran s fifteen million Azeri population is well integrated into Iranian society and has shown little desire to secede Tehran has nonetheless shown extreme concern with prospects of the rise of sentiments calling for union between the two Azerbaijans 135 While Iranian Azerbaijanis may seek greater linguistic rights few of them display separatist tendencies Extensive reporting by Afshin Molavi an Iranian Azerbaijani scholar in the three major Azerbaijani provinces of Iran as well as among Iranian Azerbaijanis in Tehran found that separatist sentiment was not widely held among Iranian Azerbaijanis Few people framed their genuine political social and economic frustration feelings that are shared by the majority of Iranians within an ethnic context 131 According to another Iranian Azerbaijani scholar Dr Hassan Javadi a Tabriz born Cambridge educated scholar of Azerbaijani literature and professor of Persian Azerbaijani and English literature at George Washington University Iranian Azerbaijanis have more important matters on their mind than cultural rights Iran s Azerbaijani community like the rest of the country is engaged in the movement for reform and democracy Javadi told the Central Asia Caucasus Institute crowd adding that separatist groups represent fringe thinking He also told EurasiaNet I get no sense that these cultural issues outweigh national ones nor do I have any sense that there is widespread talk of secession 131 CultureIranian Azerbaijanis a Turkic speaking people are culturally a part of the Iranian peoples and have influenced Iranian culture 136 At the same time they have influenced and been influenced by their non Iranian neighbors especially Caucasians and Russians Azerbaijani music is distinct music that is tightly connected to the music of other Iranian peoples such as Persian music and Kurdish music and also the music of the Caucasian peoples Although the Azerbaijani language is not an official language of Iran it is widely used mostly orally among the Iranian Azerbaijanis Literature Jahan Shah r 1438 67 the Qara Qoyunlu black sheep ruler of Iran was a master poet He compiled a diwan under the pen name Haqiqi Shah Isma il 1487 1524 who used the pen name Khata i was a prominent ruler poet and has apart from his diwan compiled a mathnawi called Deh name consisting of some eulogies of Ali the fourth Caliph of early Islam 137 After the Safavid era Azerbaijani could not sustain its early development The main theme of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries was the development of verse folk stories mainly intended for performance by Ashughs in weddings The most famous among these literary works are Koroghlu 138 Ashiq Qerib and Kerem ile Esli Following the establishing of Qajar dynasty in Iran Azerbaijani literature flourished and reached its peak by the end of the nineteenth century By then journalism had been launched in Azerbaijani language and social activism had become the main theme of literary works The most influential writers of this era are Fathali Akhondzadeh 139 and Mojez Shabestari Pahlavi era was the darkest citation needed period for Azerbaijani literature The Azerbaijani language was banned in official spheres with the advent of Reza Shah s reign 140 including at schools 141 142 This prohibition was formally abolished after the Islamic revolution though the Azerbaijanis haven t enjoyed much cultural freedom since then 143 Writers of Azerbaijan such as Gholam Hossein Saedi Samad Behrangi and Reza Barahani published their works in Persian The only exception was Mohammad Hossein Shahriar who is famous for his verse book Heydar Babaya Salam 144 simply he was too mighty to be censored Shahriar s work was an innovative way of summarizing the Cultural identity in concise poetic form and was adapted by a generation of lesser known poets particularly from Qareh Dagh region to record their oral traditions One remarkable example is Abbas Eslami known with his pen name Barez 1932 2011 145 who described the melancholic demise of his homeland in a book titled mourning Sabalan 146 Another example is Mohamad Golmohamadi s long poem titled I am madly in love with Qareh Dagh قاراداغ اؤلکه سینین گؤر نئجه دیوانه سی ام is a concise description of the region s cultural landscape 147 The long lasting suppression finally led to a generation of revolutionary poets composing verses by allegoric allusion to the imposing landscape of Azerbaijan Sahand o mountain of pure snow Descended from Heaven with Zoroaster Fire in your heart snow on your shoulders with storm of centuries And white hair of history on your chest Yadollah Maftun Amini born in 1926 148 After the Islamic revolution of 1979 however great literary works have not yet appeared and glory days of fifteenth century ruler poets is not on the horizon The contemporary literature is restricted to oral traditions such as bayaties 149 150 Music Traditional Azerbaijani music can be classified into two categories the music of ashugh and the mugham Mugham despite its similarity to Persian classic music and utmost importance in Azerbaijan has not been popular among Iranian Azerbaijanis The ashugh music had survived in the mountainous region of Qaradag and presently is identified as the representative of the cultural identity of Azerbaijanis Recent innovative developments aiming to enhance the urban appealing aspects of this ashugh performances has drastically enhanced the status of ashugh music The opening of academic style music classes in Tabriz by master ashughs such as Ashig Imran Heidari and Ashig Changiz Mehdipour has greatly contributed to the ongoing image building Art Living in the crossroads of many civilizations Azerbaijani artisans have developed a rich tradition of decorative arts including rugs lace printed textiles jewelry vessels made of copper engraved metals wooden articles and ceramics Among these carpet weaving stands out as the acme of Azerbaijani art Carpet weaving Tabriz is one of the main centers of carpet weaving in Iran At present 40 of Iranian carpet exports are originated from Tabriz 151 These carpets are generally known as Tabriz rugs Another carpet weaving center is Ardebil which despite being overshadowed by Tabriz in recent years has produced the finest carpets in past The two most famous Iranian rugs in the world had been woven in Ardebil in 1540 One is hung in the Victoria and Albert Museum in London and the other is in the Los Angeles County Museum of Arts These carpets have silk warps and contain over thirty million knots 152 The acme of carpet weaving art is manifested in Verni 153 154 which was originated in Nagorno Karabakh Verni is a carpet like kilim with a delicate and fine warp and woof which is woven without a previous sketch thanks to the creative talents of nomadic women and girls Verni weavers employ the image of birds and animals deer rooster cat snake birds gazelle sheep camel wolf and eagle in simple geometrical shapes imitating the earthenware patterns that were popular in prehistoric times 155 A key decor feature which is intrinsic to many Vernis is the S element Its shape varies it may resemble both figure 5 and letter S This element means dragon among the nomads At present Verni is woven by the girls of Arasbaran Tribes often in the same room where the nomadic tribes reside 156 and is a significant income source for about 20 000 families in Qaradagh region 157 158 Verni weavers employ the image of birds and animals in simple geometrical shapes imitating the earthenware patterns that were popular in prehistoric times Ardebil Carpet Tabriz Carpet Haris Carpet Qaradagh Carpet Vern Religion The majority of Azerbaijanis are followers of Shia Islam Azerbaijanis commemorate Shia holy days ten first days of the holy month of Muharram at least with the same intensity as other Iranians In metropolitan cities with mixed ethnic composition such as Tehran Azerbaijanis are thought to be more intense in their expression of religious ritual than their Persian counterparts 159 There is also a small minority of Azerbaijanis who practice the Bahaʼi Faith 160 Also in recent years some Azerbaijanis in Iran have begun converting to Christianity 161 which is strictly prohibited and can result in imprisonment 162 Notable peopleMain article List of Iranian AzerbaijanisSee alsoPeoples of the Caucasus Peoples of the Caucasus in IranNotes Some estimates have suggested that one third of the population of Tehran is Azeri 30 42 verification needed the Iranologist Victoria Arakelova however notes in peer reviewed journal Iran and the Caucasus that the wide spread cliche among residents of Tehran on the number of Azerbaijanis in the city half of Tehran consists of Azerbaijanis cannot be taken seriously into consideration 6 Arakelova adds that the number of Tehran s inhabitants who have migrated from northwestern areas of Iran who are currently Persian speakers for the most part is not more than several hundred thousands with the maximum being one million 6 References Swietochowski amp Collins 1999 p 165 harvtxt error no target CITEREFSwietochowskiCollins1999 help Today Iranian Azerbaijan has a solid majority of Azeris with an estimated population of at least 15 million over twice the population of the Azerbaijani Republic 1999 Iran Ethnologue Archived from the original on 4 September 2019 Retrieved 26 October 2018 Ethnic population 15 900 000 Elling Rasmus Christian Minorities in Iran Nationalism and Ethnicity after Khomeini Palgrave Macmillan 2013 Excerpt The number of Azeris in Iran is heavily disputed In 2005 Amanolahi estimated all Turkic speaking communities in Iran to number no more than 9 million CIA and Library of congress estimates range from 16 to 24 percent that is 12 18 million people if we employ the latest total figure for Iran s population 77 8 million Azeri ethnicsts on the other hand argue that overall number is much higher even as much as 50 percent or more of the total population Such inflated estimates may have influenced some Western scholars who suggest that up to 30 percent that is some 23 million today Iranians are Azeris 1 Archived 5 April 2015 at the Wayback Machine Potter Lawrence G 2014 Sectarian Politics in the Persian Gulf Oxford University Press p 290 ISBN 978 0 19 937726 8 Retrieved 14 January 2023 Bani Shoraka Helena 1 July 2009 Cross generational bilingual strategies among Azerbaijanis in Tehran International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2009 198 106 doi 10 1515 IJSL 2009 029 ISSN 1613 3668 S2CID 144993160 The latest figures estimate the Azerbaijani population at 24 of Iran s 70 million inhabitants NVI 2003 2004 301 This means that there are between 15 and 20 million Azerbaijanis in Iran a b c d e Arakelova Victoria 2015 On the Number of Iranian Turkophones Iran amp the Caucasus 19 3 279 282 doi 10 1163 1573384X 20150306 JSTOR 43899203 Archived from the original on 4 February 2021 Retrieved 18 September 2020 Iran The World Factbook Retrieved 26 August 2013 Iran PDF Library of Congress May 2008 Archived PDF from the original on 16 March 2015 Retrieved 26 August 2013 Iran Ethnologue Archived from the original on March 9 2001 Retrieved 5 July 2015 Gheissari Ali 2 April 2009 Contemporary Iran Economy Society Politics Oxford University Press p 300 ISBN 978 0 19 988860 3 As of 2003 the ethnic classifications are estimated as Azeri 24 percent Immigrant Languages of Azerbaijan Ethnologue 2013 Archived from the original on 27 August 2013 Retrieved 27 August 2013 Reza Moridi Azerbaijani diaspora in Canada news az Archived from the original on 2013 10 02 New Page 1 web mit edu Archived from the original on 2011 11 25 MacCagg William O Silver Brian D 10 May 1979 Soviet Asian ethnic frontiers Pergamon Press ISBN 9780080246376 Archived from the original on 27 July 2020 Retrieved 20 June 2015 via Google Books Binder Leonard 10 May 1962 Iran Political Development in a Changing Society University of California Press Archived from the original on 27 July 2020 Retrieved 20 June 2015 via Google Books Hobbs Joseph J 13 March 2008 World Regional Geography Cengage Learning ISBN 978 0495389507 Archived from the original on 11 August 2020 Retrieved 20 June 2015 via Google Books Richard Nelson Frye Persia Allen amp Unwin 1968 pp 17 in World War II contact with brethren in Soviet Azerbaijan likewise were not overly cordial since the Persian Azeris are committed to Iranian culture and consider their destiny to be with the Persians rather than with other Turks Tadeusz Swietochowski Russian Azerbaijan 1905 1920 The Shaping of a National Identity in a Muslim Community Cambridge University Press 2004 pg 192 2 Archived 2016 04 01 at the Wayback Machine Excerpt identity with the Persian Azerbaijanis Roy Olivier 2007 The new Central Asia I B Tauris p 6 ISBN 978 1 84511 552 4 The mass of the Oghuz who crossed the Amu Darya towards the west left the Iranian plateaux which remained Persian and established themselves more to the west in Anatolia Here they divided into Ottomans who were Sunni and settled and Turkmens who were nomads and in part Shiite or rather Alevi The latter were to keep the name Turkmen for a long time from the 13th century onwards they Turkised the Iranian populations of Azerbaijan who spoke west Iranian languages such as Tat which is still found in residual forms thus creating a new identity based on Shiism and the use of Turkish These are the people today known as Azeris Frye R N IRAN v PEOPLES OF IRAN 1 A General Survey Encyclopaedia Iranica XIII pp 321 326 Iran Turkic speaking Groups countrystudies us Archived from the original on 2011 08 19 Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations S Z Archived 2016 01 31 at the Wayback Machine Volume 4 of Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations Ethnic and National Groups Around the World James Minahan ISBN 0 313 31617 1 ISBN 978 0 313 31617 3 Author James Minahan Publisher Greenwood Publishing Group 2002 ISBN 0 313 32384 4 ISBN 978 0 313 32384 3 Length 2241 pages CIAO www ciaonet org Archived from the original on 2007 12 01 Michael Knuppel E Turkic Languages of Persia Encyclopaedia Iranica Archived from the original on 2013 09 21 Retrieved 2013 09 19 a b Library of Congress Country Studies Iran Azarbaijanis Iran Azarbaijanis Archived from the original on 2011 07 04 Retrieved 2011 03 30 accessed March 2011 a b Chapter 2 The Society and Its Environment People and Languages Turkic speaking Groups Azarbaijanis in A Country Study Iran Library of Congress Country Studies Table of Contents Archived 2007 03 13 at the Wayback Machine last accessed 19 November 2008 The Turkish Language in Iran Archived 2013 10 05 at the Wayback Machine By Ahmed Kasravi latimeria Prof Dr Evan Siegal Journal of Azerbaijani Studies 1998 Vol 1 No 2 6 Khazar University Press ISSN 1027 3875 فرمانداري همدان hamedan hm ir Archived from the original on 2013 11 01 Retrieved 2013 08 26 electricpulp com Turkic Languages of Persia An Overview Encyclopaedia Iranica www iranicaonline org Archived from the original on 2013 09 21 a b Iran Azerbaijanis Library of Congress Country Studies December 1987 Archived from the original on 23 March 2015 Retrieved 13 August 2013 Plan review and assess the country s culture indicators indicators Ghyrsbty report Qazvin Province General Council of the Order of the Executive Director is responsible for planning and policy Mansoor Vaezi run company experienced researchers Us ISBN 978 600 6627 53 3 Publication Status Tehran Institute Press book published in 1391 appearance 268 p table the color diagrams colored part National Bibliography Number 2887000 plan review and assess the country s culture indicators indicators Ghyrsbty report Markazi Province General Council of the Order of the Executive Director is responsible for planning and policy Mansoor Vaezi run company experienced researchers Us ISBN 978 600 6627 63 2 Publication Status Tehran Institute Press book published in 1391 appearance 276 p table the color diagrams colored part a b Kordestan Encyclopaedia Britannica 2009 Encyclopaedia Britannica Online 5 Apr 2009 Government of Kurdistan Province Archived 2013 05 10 at the Wayback Machine People and culture English Komijan County IRIB Aftab Channel 2009 Archived from the original on January 21 2014 Retrieved August 19 2013 Khondab County IRIB Aftab Channel 2008 Archived from the original on August 31 2013 Retrieved August 19 2013 a b Markazi Province Office of Culture and Islamic Guidance Markazi Province Archived from the original on February 25 2013 Retrieved August 18 2012 Saveh County IRIB Aftab Channel August 2013 Archived from the original on September 1 2013 Retrieved August 19 2013 Zarandieh County Office of Culture and Islamic Guidance Markazi Province Archived from the original on November 3 2013 Retrieved August 19 2013 Shazand County Office of Culture and Islamic Guidance Markazi Province Archived from the original on December 28 2013 Retrieved August 19 2013 a b c d Azerbaijan vi Population and its Occupations and Culture Encyclopaedia Iranica August 18 2011 Archived from the original on October 2 2012 Retrieved August 18 2012 National Bibliography Number 2887741 plan review and assess the country s culture indicators indicators Ghyrsbty report Tehran Province General Council of the Order of the Executive Director is responsible for planning and policy Mansoor Vaezi run company experienced researchers Us ISBN 978 600 6627 42 7 Publication Status Tehran Institute Press book published in 1391 appearance 296 p table the color diagrams colored part National Bibliography Number 2890690 plan review and assess the country s culture indicators indicators Ghyrsbty report Tehran 199066 Mashhad 292341 Isfahan 170017 Tabriz 18481 Karaj 278252 Shiraz 251703 Ahwaz 176403 Qom 207877 General Council of the Order of the Executive Director is responsible for planning and policy Mansoor Vaezi run company experienced researchers Us ISBN 978 600 6627 68 7 Publication Status Tehran Institute Press book published in 1391 appearance 296 p table the color diagrams colored part National Bibliography Number 2878470 plan review and assess the country s culture indicators indicators Ghyrsbty report Qom Province General Council of the Order of the Executive Director is responsible for planning and policy Mansoor Vaezi run company experienced researchers Us ISBN 978 600 6627 54 0 Publication Status Tehran Institute Press book published in 1391 appearance 270 p table the color diagrams colored part National Bibliography Number 2890577 plan review and assess the country s culture indicators indicators Ghyrsbty report Alborz Province General Council of the Order of the Executive Director is responsible for planning and policy Mansoor Vaezi run company experienced researchers Us ISBN 978 600 6627 39 7 Publication Status Tehran Institute Press book published in 1391 appearance 291 p table the color diagrams colored part The Turkish Language in Iran Archived 2013 10 05 at the Wayback Machine By Ahmed KASRAVI latimeria Prof Dr Evan Siegal Journal of Azerbaijani Studies 1998 Vol 1 No 2 6 Khazar University Press ISSN 1027 3875 a b c Azerbajdzhancy in Russian Bolshaya sovetskaya enciklopediya M Sovetskaya enciklopediya 1969 1978 Archived from the original on 2017 07 06 Institut etnologii i antropologii im N N Mikluho Maklaya Kavkazskij etnograficheskij sbornik www history az Archived from the original on 2013 12 16 Savina V I 1980 Etnonimy i toponimii Irana Onomastika Vostoka M Nauka p 151 Volkova N G 1996 Etnonimiya v trudah ekonomicheskogo obsledovaniya Kavkaza 1880 h godov Imya i etnos obshie voprosy onomastiki etnonimiya antroponimiya teonimiya toponimiya sbornik M In t etnologii i antropologii pp 24 30 ISBN 978 5 201 00825 3 Azerbajdzhancy armyane ajsory Narody Perednej Azii M Izd vo Akademii nauk SSSR 1957 p 286 Rossijskij etnograficheskij muzej Glossarij Bayaty permanent dead link James Stuart Olson Lee Brigance Pappas Nicholas Charles Pappas An Ethnohistorical dictionary of the Russian and Soviet empires Archived 2016 01 31 at the Wayback Machine KAJAR The Kajars are considered a subgroup of the Azerbaijanis Historically they have been a Turkic Tribe who lived in Armenia In the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries when the Safavids tried to conquer the region the Kajars settled in the Karabakh Khanate of western Azerbaijan Agha Mohammed a Kajar leader overturned the Zend dynasty in Iran and established Kajar control in the area This arrangement lasted u il Reza Shah came to power in Iran in 1925 The Kajar population today exceeds 35 000 people the vast majority of whom live in Iran Azerbajdzhancy armyane ajsory Narody Perednej Azii M Izd vo Akademii nauk SSSR 1957 p 284 Azerbaijani South ethnologue com Archived from the original on 2013 07 03 de Planhol Xavier 2012 Iran i Lands of Iran Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol XIII 2 pp 204 211 Frye Richard 2012 Iran v Peoples of Iran 1 General Survey Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol XIII 3 pp 321 326 Roy Olivier 2000 The New Central Asia The Creation of Nations NYU Press p 6 ISBN 9780814776094 Retrieved 1 April 2023 History of the East Transcaucasia in 11th 15th centuries in Rostislav Borisovich Rybakov editor History of the East 6 volumes v 2 East during the Middle Ages Chapter V 2002 ISBN 5 02 017711 3 Vostok v srednie veka V Zakavkaze v XI XV vv Archived from the original on 2011 07 13 Retrieved 2011 03 30 Azerbaijan Archived 2006 05 17 at the Wayback Machine Columbia Encyclopedia retrieved 8 June 2006 Derenko M Malyarchuk B Bahmanimehr A Denisova G Perkova M Farjadian S amp Yepiskoposyan L 2013 Complete Mitochondrial DNA Diversity in Iranians Archived 2015 01 02 at the Wayback Machine PLoS ONE 8 11 e80673 Farjadian S Ghaderi A December 2007 HLA class II similarities in Iranian Kurds and Azeris International Journal of Immunogenetics 34 6 457 463 doi 10 1111 j 1744 313x 2007 00723 x ISSN 1744 3121 PMID 18001303 S2CID 22709345 Neighbor joining tree based on Nei s genetic distances and correspondence analysis according to DRB1 DQA1 and DQB1 allele frequencies showed a strong genetic tie between Kurds and Azeris of Iran The results of AMOVA revealed no significant difference between these populations and other major ethnic groups of Iran Arnaiz Villena Antonio Palacio Gruber Jose Muniz Ester Rey Diego Nikbin Behrouz Nickman Hosein Campos Cristina Martin Villa Jose Manuel Amirzargar Ali 2017 Origin of Azeris Iran according to HLA genes International Journal of Modern Anthropology 10 115 138 doi 10 4314 ijma v1i10 5 Retrieved 30 March 2023 Azeris are integrated in the first cluster together with Gorgan Iranian Turkmen population Rey et al 2014 and Kurds Armirzargar et al 2015 and in intermediate position between Iranian populations Gonzalez Galarza et al 2011 and western Siberians Russian Chuvash who live near lower Volga River 126 North Caspian Sea Arnaiz Villena et al 2003 Russian Siberian Mansi from western Siberia Uinuk Ool et al 2002 Russian Mongols Buryat from Baikal Lake region Uinuk Ool et al 2002 and Russian Siberian Todja from western Siberia inhabiting in the northeastern part of Tuva Republic Uinuk Ool et al 2002 Yepiskoposian L et al 2011 The Location of Azaris on the Patrilineal Genetic Landscape of the Middle East A Preliminary Report Iran and the Caucasus 15 1 73 78 doi 10 1163 157338411X12870596615395 Yunusbayev Bayazit Metspalu Mait Metspalu Ene Valeev Albert Litvinov Sergei Valiev Ruslan Akhmetova Vita Balanovska Elena Balanovsky Oleg Turdikulova Shahlo Dalimova Dilbar 2015 04 21 The Genetic Legacy of the Expansion of Turkic Speaking Nomads across Eurasia PLOS Genetics 11 4 e1005068 doi 10 1371 journal pgen 1005068 ISSN 1553 7404 PMC 4405460 PMID 25898006 Our ADMIXTURE analysis Fig 2 revealed that Turkic speaking populations scattered across Eurasia tend to share most of their genetic ancestry with their current geographic non Turkic neighbors This is particularly obvious for Turkic peoples in Anatolia Iran the Caucasus and Eastern Europe but more difficult to determine for northeastern Siberian Turkic speakers Yakuts and Dolgans for which non Turkic reference populations are absent We also found that a higher proportion of Asian genetic components distinguishes the Turkic speakers all over West Eurasia from their immediate non Turkic neighbors These results support the model that expansion of the Turkic language family outside its presumed East Eurasian core area occurred primarily through language replacement perhaps by the elite dominance scenario that is intrusive Turkic nomads imposed their language on indigenous peoples due to advantages in military and or social organization Thus it is likely that migrants of SSM origin interacted with many of the ancestors of contemporary West Eurasian populations but it was the stronger interaction reflected in higher IBD sharing with migrant SSM ancestors that drove Turkicization We performed a permutation test for each western Turkic population and the observed excess of IBD sharing compared to non Turkic neighbors with the SSM area populations was statistically significant Fig 4 and S4 Fig Harcave Sidney 1968 Russia A History Sixth Edition Lippincott p 267 Mojtahed Zadeh Pirouz 2007 Boundary Politics and International Boundaries of Iran A Study of the Origin Evolution and Implications of the Boundaries of Modern Iran with Its 15 Neighbors in the Middle East by a Number of Renowned Experts in the Field Universal p 372 ISBN 978 1 58112 933 5 Swietochowski Tadeusz 1995 Russia and Azerbaijan A Borderland in Transition Columbia University Press pp 69 133 ISBN 978 0 231 07068 3 Archived from the original on 2015 07 13 Retrieved 2015 10 04 Swietochowski Tadeusz Eastern Europe Russia and Central Asia 2003 Archived 2015 10 27 at the Wayback Machine Taylor and Francis 2003 ISBN 1857431375 p 104 Azerbaijani people Encyclopaedia Britannica Archived from the original on 23 January 2012 Retrieved 24 January 2012 R Khanam Encycl Ethnography of Middle East And Central Asia 2005 p 313 Bibliotheque orientale Elzevirienne Volume 52 Volume 55 1887 p 224 Ervand Abrahamian Iran Between Two Revolutions Princeton University Press 1982 p 97 اسماعيل اميرخيزى قيام آذربايجان و ستار خان ۱۹۶۰ كتابفروشى تهران حسین دوستى حماسه ها و حماسه سازان انقلاب مشروطيت با تاءکید بر نقش مردم ارسباران قره داغ باران ۲۰۰۶ Ismaʻil Ra in Ḥaydar Khan Amuʹughli Intisharat i Muʼassasah i Taḥqiq i Raʼin Tehran امیر ارشد کوتاه در باره امیر ارشد قره داغی قره داغ تورکلری سایت سرگرمی تفریحی اهر Archived from the original on 2014 03 09 Retrieved 2014 02 08 Stephanie Cronin The Making of Modern Iran State and Society Under Riza Shah 1921 1941 2007 p 207 Parsinejad Iraj A History of Literary Criticism in Iran 1866 1951 He lived in the Russian Empire Bethesda MD Ibex 2003 p 44 Abrahamian History of Modern Iran 2008 p 91 Roger Homan The Origins of the Iranian Revolution Archived 2016 09 17 at the Wayback Machine International Affairs 56 4 Autumn 1980 673 7 Abrahamian Ervand 1982 Iran Between Two Revolutions Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press pp 123 163 ISBN 9780691053424 OCLC 7975938 Cottam Richard W 1979 Nationalism in Iran Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press p 18 Bayat Mangol 1991 Iran s First Revolution Shi ism and the Constitutional Revolution of 1905 1909 Oxford amp New York Oxford University Press p 145 Adib Moghaddam Arshin 2006 Reflections on Arab and Iranian Ultra Nationalism Monthly Review Magazine 11 06 archived from the original on 2008 11 18 Keddie Nikki R Richard Yann 2006 Modern Iran Roots and Results of Revolution Yale University Press pp 178f ISBN 978 0 300 12105 6 نژاد آریایی BBC Persian 17 May 2012 Archived from the original on 2012 08 22 بهنام جمشید 1386 برلنی ها اندیشمندان ایرانی در برلن 1915 1930 نشر فرزان تهران فشار یزدی محمود 1338 زوال زبان فارسی یعنی زوال ملت ایران در آینده دوره چهارم شماره 4 مسلسل 44 اسفند 1388 صص 268 سیری در گفتمان ناسیونالیسم آریایی در ایران akhbar rooz com Archived from the original on 2013 12 12 افشار ایرج 1372 زندگی طوفانی تهران انتشارات علمی صص181 184 a b c d e f g h Touraj Atabaki Recasting Oneself Rejecting the Other Pan Turkism and Iranian Nationalism in Van Schendel Willem Editor Identity Politics in Central Asia and the Muslim World Nationalism Ethnicity and Labour in the Twentieth Century London GBR I B Tauris amp Company Limited 2001 Actual Quote As far as Iran is concerned it is widely argued that Iranian nationalism was born as a state ideology in the Reza Shah era based on philological nationalism and as a result of his innovative success in creating a modern nation state in Iran However what is often neglected is that Iranian nationalism has its roots in the political upheavals of the 19th century and the disintegration immediately following the Constitutional revolution of 1905 9 It was during this period that Iranism gradually took shape as a defensive discourse for constructing a bounded territorial entity the pure Iran standing against all others Consequently over time there emerged among the country s intelligentsia a political xenophobia which contributed to the formation of Iranian defensive nationalism It is noteworthy that contrary to what one might expect many of the leading agents of the construction of an Iranian bounded territorial entity came from non Persian speaking ethnic minorities and the foremost were the Azeris rather than the nation s titular ethnic group the Persians In the middle of April 1918 the Ottoman army invaded Azerbaijan for the second time Contrary to their expectations however the Ottomans did not achieve impressive success in Azerbaijan Although the province remained under quasi occupation by Ottoman troops for months attempting to win endorsement for pan Turkism ended in failure The most important political development affecting the Middle East at the beginning of the twentieth century was the collapse of the Ottoman and the Russian empires The idea of a greater homeland for all Turks was propagated by pan Turkism which was adopted almost at once as a main ideological pillar by the Committee of Union and Progress and somewhat later by other political caucuses in what remained of the Ottoman Empire On the eve of World War I pan Turkist propaganda focused chiefly on the Turkic speaking peoples of the southern Caucasus in Iranian Azerbaijan and Turkistan in Central Asia with the ultimate purpose of persuading them all to secede from the larger political entities to which they belonged and to join the new pan Turkic homeland It was this latter appeal to Iranian Azeris which contrary to pan Turkist intentions caused a small group of Azeri intellectuals to become the most vociferous advocates of Iran s territorial integrity and sovereignty If in Europe romantic nationalism responded to the damage likely to be caused by modernism by providing a new and larger sense of belonging an all encompassing totality which brought about new social ties identity and meaning and a new sense of history from one s origin on to an illustrious future 42 in Iran after the Constitutional movement romantic nationalism was adopted by the Azerbaijani Democrats as a reaction to the irredentist policies threatening the country s territorial integrity In their view assuring territorial integrity was a necessary first step on the road to establishing the rule of law in society and a competent modern state which would safeguard collective as well as individual rights It was within this context that their political loyalty outweighed their other ethnic or regional affinities The failure of the Democrats in the arena of Iranian politics after the Constitutional movement and the start of modern state building paved the way for the emergence of the titular ethnic group s cultural nationalism Whereas the adoption of integrationist policies preserved Iran s geographic integrity and provided the majority of Iranians with a secure and firm national identity the blatant ignoring of other demands of the Constitutional movement such as the call for the formation of a society based on law and order left the country still searching for a political identity Cold War International History Project Collection 1945 46 Iranian Crisis http www wilsoncenter org index cfm topic id 1409 amp fuseaction va2 browse amp sort Collection amp item 1945 2D46 20Iranian 20Crisis Archived July 15 2010 at the Wayback Machine a b Thomas De Waal The Caucasus an introduction Oxford University Press US 2010 pp 87 Soviet troops moved into Iranian and a shored lived Azerbaijan People s Government in Iran led by the Iranian Azeri Communist Ja far Pishevari was set up in Tabriz in 1945 46 But the Soviet backed puppet state collapsed in 1946 after Soviet forces withdrew again under Western pressure As it turned out the Soviets had to recognize that their ideas on Iran were premature The issue of Iranian Azerbaijan became one of the opening skirmishes of the Cold War and largely under the Western powers pressure Soviet forces withdrew in 1946 The autonomous republic collapsed soon afterward and the members of the Democratic Party took refuge in the Soviet Union fleeing Iranian revenge In Tabriz the crowds that had just recently applauded the autonomous republic were now greeting the returning Iranian troops and Azeri students publicly burned their native language textbooks The mass of the population was obviously not ready even for a regional self government so long as it smacked of separatism Swietochowski Tadeusz 1989 Islam and the Growth of National Identity in Soviet Azerbaijan Kappeler Andreas Gerhard Simon Georg Brunner eds Muslim Communities Reemerge Historical Perspective on Nationality Politics and Opposition in the Former Soviet Union and Yugoslavia Durham Duke University Press pp 46 60 Krugom kak hochu Archived 2016 01 31 at the Wayback Machine Vecherny Tbilisi 10 February 2010 Belova N K Ob othodnichestve iz Severo Zapadnogo Irana v konce XIX nachale XX veka Voprosy istorii M Izd vo Pravda Oktyabr 1956 10 S 114 Russian Turkmen Historical Dictionary central eurasia com Archived from the original on 2013 07 17 Sumbatzade A S Rost torgovogo zemledeliya v Azerbajdzhane vo vtoroj polovine XIX veka K voprosu o razvitii rossijskogo kapitalizma vshir Voprosy istorii M Izd vo Pravda Aprel 1958 4 S 123 Ekonomicheskij byt gosudarstvennyh krestyan v yuzhnoj chasti 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review and assess the country s culture indicators indicators Ghyrsbty report Tehran Province General Council of the Order of the Executive Director is responsible for planning and policy Mansoor Vaezi run company experienced researchers Us ISBN 978 600 6627 42 7 Publication Status Tehran Institute Press book published in 1391 appearance 296 p table the color diagrams colored part Archived copy Archived from the original on 2013 07 01 Retrieved 2013 07 15 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Assessment for Azerbaijanis in Iran UNHCR 31 December 2003 Archived from the original on 2 February 2014 Retrieved 2013 07 05 Azeris World Directory of Minorities and Indigenous People Archived from the original on 2013 09 21 Retrieved 2013 07 05 Protests Erupt In Iran Backing Azerbaijan In Nagorno Karabakh Conflict Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty 2 October 2020 Archived from the original on 9 October 2020 Iran on edge as Azeri 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from the original on 2013 12 03 Retrieved 2014 03 27 اسلامی عباس December 25 2000 یاسلی ساوالان تبریز Archived from the original on 2014 03 29 I am madly in love with Qareh Dagh Archived from the original on 2014 03 29 Gholam Reza Sabri Tabrizi Iran A Child s Story a Man s Experience 1989 Mainstream Publishing Company p 168 بایاتی های آذربایجان 2 انسان شناسی و فرهنگ Archived from the original on 2013 09 21 Retrieved 2013 09 20 بایاتی های آذربایجان 1 انسان شناسی و فرهنگ Archived from the original on 2013 09 21 Retrieved 2013 09 20 Tabriz rug Rami Yelda A Persian Odyssey Iran Revisited authourHOUSE 2012 K K Goswam Advances in Carpet Manufacture 2008 Woodhead Publishing in Textiles p 148 Taqipour Reza An introduction to verni Archived from the original on 2015 02 06 Kilim Embodiment of Iranian art and culture Archived from the original on 2014 03 22 Retrieved 2014 03 25 Verni weaving is a unique art of northwestern Iran Archived from the original on 2014 04 02 Verni a gold mine 2013 09 16 Archived from the original on 2014 03 11 Verni An economic opportunity for Qaradagh Archived from the original on 2014 03 12 R Khanam Encycl Ethnography of Middle East And Central Asia 2005 vol I p 80 Iran bahai library com Archived from the original on 2016 04 13 Three Iranian Azeri Christians Arrested Their Fate Unknown www christiantelegraph com Archived from the original on 2016 08 06 Malinowska Theresa 9 May 2009 The cost of religious conversion in Iran Theresa Malinowska The Guardian Archived from the original on 20 December 2016 Wikimedia Commons has media related to Azerbaijani people in Iran Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iranian Azerbaijanis amp oldid 1151652085, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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