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Qizilbash Afterwards: The Afshars in Urmiya from the Seventeenth to the Nineteenth Century
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2022
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The aim of this paper is to investigate historical change that occurred in a Turkic tribal group, the Afshars in Urmiya, western Azerbaijan, from the seventeenth to the nineteenth century. The Afshars were important in Iranian history as part of the Qizilbash tribal confederation that contributed to the rise of the Safavids, and as the founders of the Afsharid dynasty. Their branch in Urmiya also played notable roles in the civil wars of the eighteenth century.
Numerous attempts have been made by scholars to show the political and military role of the Qizilbash in the early Safavid period. However, few studies have dealt with their later history. Recently, Kathryn Babayan argued that as a result of the centralization policy of Shah ᶜAbbas (r. 1587-1629), the Qizilbash lost their power and their political and spiritual cohesion, but after that we know little about their actual situation. More than twenty years ago, Ann Lambton pointed out that the collapse of the Safavids caused a resurgence of tribes like the Afshars and Qajars, in the eighteenth century, but the process of and reasons for this “resurgence” have never been examined.
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References
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10. TAF, 46-48.
11. TAA, 1006-7, 1018-19,1035.
12. TAB, 414, 417. Although this place name is written as ṢDMRH, ṢDMRD OR ṢDMZD in both the Tehran edition and the manuscript of the British Library (add. 27241), apparently it refers to Saymarah near Hamadan, Nihavand, and Khurramabad.
13. TAA, 1018. According to A. Kasravi, Qasim Sultan migrated to Urmiya after the fall of the city. Although Kasravi does not indicate his sources, Köprülü, Oberling, and Takash all agree with him. See Tabrizi, Sayyid Ahmad Aqa (Kasravi), “Īl-i Afshār,” Āyandah 2 (1306 Sh.): 601Google Scholar; F. Köprülü, İslam Ansiklopedisi, “AVŞAR;” ᶜAla al-Din Takash, “Qāsim Khān dar ra˒s-i īl-i Afshār,” Armaghān 27: 4/5 (2537): 262Google Scholar.
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31. TAF, 86-87. According to TAF, Fath ᶜAli Khan charkhchī-bāshī was also an Urmiya Afshar and was later appointed governor of Urmiya, but according to Muhammad Kazim, the charkhchī-bāshī was from Khurasan and Nadir's brother-in-law (AAN, 1039), so the governor of Urmiya seems to have been another Fath ᶜAli Khan, perhaps of the Arashlu subgroup.
32. JN, 134-35; TAF, 78. See also the farmān of Nadir Shah dated 1151/1738 in ᶜAli Karimiyan, “Bāzkhwānī-i chand farmān-i Nādir Shāh Afshār,” Ganjīnah-yi Asnād 25/26 (1376 Sh.): 13,19Google Scholar.
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34. TAF, 92.
35. JN, 425-26; AAN, 1125.
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37. Fath ᶜAli Khan Arashlu was the most influential general of the army of Azad Khan. Azad Khan married a daughter of Muhammad Qasim Khan Qasimlu, and appointed her brother, Muhammad Musa Khan, deputy governor of Urmiya.
38. ᶜAbd al-Razzaq Beg, Tajribat, 1: 84–85Google Scholar; TAF, 220-21.
39. TAF, 95, 115.
40. Takash and Oberling say the Qasimlu subgroup descended from Qasim Sultan, but they provide no evidence (Takash, “Qāsim Khān,” 262; Oberling, “Afshar”). All sources agree that Qasim Sultan and his son Kalb ᶜAli Khan were of the Imanlu subgroup; and at least in TAF the Qasimlu subgroup existed at the time of the migration.'
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51. TAF, 392-93. In a raqam of ᶜAbbas Mirza, which was issued at the time of the appointment of Malik Qasim Mirza, the prince and the Afshars were compared to a pearl and a pearl oyster respectively. See Qa˒im Maqam Farahani, Munsha˒āt-i Qāyim Maqām Farāhānī, ed. Sayyid Badr al-Din Yaghma˒i (Tehran, 1373 Sh.), 123Google Scholar.
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53. Mirza, Jahangir, Tārīkh-i Naw, 142Google Scholar. Prices for other places are as follows: Maraghah 10,000, Marand 15,000, Savujbulaq 15,000 (tumans). This is one of the earliest examples of the sale of offices in the Qajar period.
54. Ibid. 155, 169; TAF, 414-6.
55. Malik Qasim Mirza was dismissed as the result of a petition from the Afshar chiefs to the governor-general of Azerbaijan (TAF, 430-31). Yusuf Khan's appeal forced Muhammad Sharif Klian to leave office (TAF, 450-1). Sultan Ahmad Mirza's dismissal was caused by insurrections of lūṭīs who were stirred up by the Afshars and ᶜulamā (TAF, 513-20).
56. TAF, 259, 273, 278.
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61. Jamshid Khan Qasimlu Majd al-Saltanah became the governor-general of Azerbaijan, and fought against the Ottoman Army as a commandant at the time of the Constitutional Revolution and during World War I. ᶜAbd al-Samad Khan Imanlu ᶜAzim al-Saltanah, who served in the Afshar regiments, was the governor of Urmiya, and tried to quell the Assyrian riots during World War I. (See Dihqan, Sarzamīn-i Zardusht, 248, 250, 417, 527; Nikitine, “Les Afšārs”, 107-108; Kaviyanpur, Ahmad, Tārīkh-i Riżā˒iyya [Tehran, 1344 Sh.], 285–87Google Scholar)
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