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PART IV - The end of the tribal confederacy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 March 2012

Richard Tapper
Affiliation:
School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London
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Summary

Life was good for the rebel tribes in the äshrarliq times; you wouldn't believe the destruction they caused. They would go and raid in other countries and bring back the plunder. They would not go at the command of the chiefs, no one knew or cared about what anyone else said or did; the chiefs should have come together and decided to stop the anarchy, but in fact they were the cause of it. A different sound came out of every young man's mouth; that was äshrarliq.

Hajji Vali Khan of Khalifali, interview in summer camp, August 1964.

Fifty years ago was the time of rebellion (äshrarliq), there was no government (hökümät), no Shah, it was the time of the khans (khankhan). Whoever was powerful (güjlü) himself would pillage, plunder, steal and rob – that was khankhan. If a man had much influence (parti) and many horsemen, then he would get ahead. This continued until 1340 [1921–2], when Reza Shah became Shah of Iran and restored the government, then they collected the Shahsevan guns and the khankhans disappeared, the villages prospered, food was plentiful…

Amanollah Gobadi, interview in Pir-Evatlu village, August 1963.

For some years after the closure of the Moghan frontier, no major political disturbances brought the Shahsevan tribes to the attention of the central government, or to that of the representatives of the two imperial powers who had earlier been interested in their situation.

Type
Chapter
Information
Frontier Nomads of Iran
A Political and Social History of the Shahsevan
, pp. 217 - 220
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1997

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