About Iran                                     


                                                            About Iran

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Education

News and current events

Did you know?

Alcohol was invented by Mohammad Zakariya Rāzi in 8th century A.D. more...

Human Powered Aircraft According to historical documents, the first human being who flew successfully was an Iranian scientist who tied the wings to himself and escaped from Second Shāhpūr (Shahpoor) prison about 1800 years ago more...

Gas Laser The first type of laser was Gas Laser (which is being widely used in medical systems & industry) and it was invented by Ali Javān an Iranian physicist in MIT (1960 A.D.). more...

Persian font

Link to other resources on Iran

Country profile
  • Iran is located in South West Asia (between the Persian Gulf and the Caspian Sea).
  • Iran is one of the world's most mountainous countries.
  • Iran's population is estimated at 70 million. (1993)
  • Land Area: 1,648,000 sq. km. (Iran ranks sixteenth in size among the countries of the world)
  • Capital : Tehran with 20 million population. (1993)
  • Iran Leader (English, Farsi)
  • Iran President (English, Farsi)
  • Iran Parliament (English, Farsi)

24 Provinces

Boundries

               North:
  • Azarbaijan (611 km)
  • Armenia (35 km)
  • Caspian Sea (740 km)
  • Turkmanestan (992 km)

    East:
  • Afghanistan (936 km)
  • Pakistan (909 km)

    South:
  • Persian Gulf (1,620 km)
  • Gulf of Oman (820 km)

    West:
  • Iraq (1,458 km)
  • Turkey (499 km)

Languages (1993)
  • Farsi and Farsi dialects 58%
  • Turkic and Turkic dialects 26%
  • Kurdish 9%
  • Luri 2%
  • Bloch 1%
  • Arabic 1%
  • Turkish 1%
  • other 2%

Religions (1993)
  • Shi'a Muslim 95%
  • Sunni Muslim 4%
  • Zoroastrian, Jewish, Christian, and Baha'i 1%

Natural resources
Petroleum, Natural gas, Coal,
Chromium, Copper, Iron ore,
Lead, Manganese, Zinc, Sulfur

Life expectancy (1993)
  • Male: 64.37 years
  • Female: 66.19 years

Telecommunications (1993)

  • Microwave radio relay extends throughout country (system centered in Tehran)
  • Broadcast stations: 77 AM, 3 FM, 28 TV
  • Satellite earth stations: 2 Atlantic Ocean INTELSAT and 1 Indian Ocean INTELSAT
  • HF radio and microwave radio relay to Turkey, Pakistan, Syria, Kuwait, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan
  • Submarine fiber optic cable to UAE


* Information from United States Federal Research Division.

Ethnic divisions (1993)

  • Fars 51%
  • Azerbaijani 24%
  • Gilaki and Mazandarani 8%
  • Kurd 7%
  • Arab 3%
  • Lur 2%
  • Baloch 2%
  • Turkmen 2%
  • other 1%

 

Farsi alphabet

Below is list of Farsi characters and it's english equivalance.
Many of the characters in farsi have two symbol, first one for when it used at the beginning and middle of the word and second one for when it used at the end of word.
Farsi characters are written from right to left and numbers from left to right.
There are many font styles in farsi which is not introduced here.
Note: A (as in Ashley) & E (as in Eric) & O (as in Ocean) are not written when used in middle of word, but pronounced.

 
Characters (right to left)
T
P
B
A & O & E
& Ā

Ā
Kh
H
Ch
J
S
Pronounced like
"s" in measure.

Z
R
Z
D
Take the sound of
it's following vowel

Z
S
Sh
S
Gh
F
Z
T
Gh
N
M
L
G
K
  Y & Ī
H
V & O & Ū
Numbers (left to right)
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9

Iran national flags

Current flag of Iran




Flag of Iran before Islamic Revolution




Flag of Iran during Ghājār (Kajar)



Flag of Iran 1700 A.D.


Music of  Iran (traditional)

Of the many ancient societies that have affected the course of human civilization, Persia has been one of the few that persistently maintained its identity and individuality. This notion is reflected in its classical music.

Like other Middle Eastern music, the music of Iran is modal in nature. Iranian classical music is usually performed by small ensembles of variable size. These groups typically consist of the singer, one or two accompanying melodic instruments (either of kamanche, tar, santur,

Picture

 sehtar, or nay) and perhaps a rhythmic instrument, such as the dombak or the zarb.  The most important instruments are listed below.
 

The Sehtar is a four stringed lute with two strings of steal and two strings of brass. The neck length fretting has the same  range as the tar, from C to G. It is there, however, where the similarity ends. The body of

the sehtar is a single  pear shape, made entirely out of wood, with some small holes drilled in the outside face of the wood to aid sound projection. However, because of this method of construction, the sehtar is markedly quieter than the tar   Also, unlike the tar, the player plucks the strings with the nail of the index finger, instead of using a plectrum.
 

The Santur is generally considered the most important of Persian melody instruments. It is a struck zither or dulcimer.  The body consists of a trapezoid-shaped wooden case that has a longer end about 3 ft wide and a shorter end about 14 in wide. Arranged in quadruple sets, the 72 metal strings run across the width of the instrument and are sounded with two thin hardwood hammers.  In a typical Persian music ensemble, the leader of the group is the santur player and tends to sit in the middle of the line up.
 

Today, the Tar is the most widely used plucked string instrument in Iran. It is a fretted lute with six strings, five of steel and one of brass. It has a long neck and a double bellied sound box, over which is streched a thin sheep 

Picture

skin membrane. The tunings of the strings are changed according to the dastgah that is being played, and the 26 frets are movable. The strings are plucked with a plectrum.
 

The Kamanche is a bowed spiked fiddle, similar to a rebab, or a small version of the standard cello. It is actually about the same size as a viola, and its four metal strings are generally tuned in the same manner as a violin. The ornate body is usually a wooden hemisphere coverred with thin sheepskin membrane. Oddly, the instrument's bridge runs diagonally across its membrane.
 

The Nay is the simplest and  probably the oldest instrument used in the performance of classical music. It is a vertical reed flute with six finger holes in the front and one in the back.  It is extremely difficult to play well. As being of particularly simple construction, it is hard to obtain a pure

Picture

tone. Unlike many instruments used in purely Persian music, the nay  is also used outside of Iran such as in Arabic music and in Balkan folk music.
 

The Dombak is the chief percussion instrument of Persian classical music. It is a one-headed drum that is carved of a single piece of wood, and is  open on the bottom. Across the larger, upper part of the body is streched a sheepskin membrane that is glued into place. Thus, the instrument cannot be tuned; the performer prepares it for a piece by warming the membrane over a heater.
 

Picture

The Zarb is a larger version of the Tombak. The playing technique of these drums is comparable, though not particularly similar, to the Indian Tabla-- the players produce different sounds from a single drum according to how and where they strike the surface with their fingers.  For instance, hitting

the center of the drum produces a deep booming sound, whereas hitting the rim makes a high pitched ricky-ticky sound. The combination of these sounds produces the distinctive rhythm.

The following selections are an example of classical Iranian music.  RealPlayer 5.0 and a 28.8 kbps minimum connection is required.
 

Video
Sound
Sound
Sound
Sound
Sound
Sound
Sound
Sound
Sound
Sound

Ensemble (1)

Video

Ensemble (2)

Dashti Tune

Sound

Overture Playing in Esfahan Mode

Ensemble Playing in Esfahan Mode

Sound

Flute in Mahoor Mode

Ensemble Playing in Mahoor Mode

Sound

Nay  in Shoor Mode by Hassan Kasaee

It’s Autumn by Badizadeh

Sound

Sehtar by Ahmad Ebadi

Ey Iran

Sound

Tar by Jalil Shahnaz

Santur & Zarb

Sound

Chahar Mezrab of Saba (Ghanoon) by Malihe Saeedi

Santur by Faramarz Paivar

Sound

Kamancheh in Afshari Mode by Ali Asghar Bahari

Santur in Mahoor Mode (1)

Sound

A Mahoor Song

Santur in Mahoor Mode (2)

Sound

A Shoor Song

Santur Solo

Sound

A Shushtari Song

Download RealPlayer 5.0 to Listen.

Iranian calendar

Current Persian Calendar

Iranian calendar originated 550 BC.
After the conversion of the vast majority of Iranians to Islam, the ancient Iranian calendar was adjusted to begin with the year of the Prophet Muhammad's immigration to Medina (the hijrah), equivalent to AD 622 in the Gregorian calendar.
New year is first day of Spring (21 of March or 1 of Farvardin), the vernal equinox.
Spring
1 - Farvardin
(Achievement force - The Guardian Angels)
(31 days)
March 21 - April 20
Ghooch (Aries)

2 - Ordeebehesht
(Best of purity - Highest Asha - Presides over fire)
(31 days)
April 21 - May 21
Gāv (Taurus)

3 - Khordad
(Good health - Wholeness)
(31 days)
May 22 - June 21
Do Peykar (Gemini)
Summer
4 - Teer
(Rain star - The Star Sirius)
(31 days)
June 22 - July 22
Kharchang (Cancer)

5 - A Mordad
(Imortality - Life)
(31 days)
July 23 - August 22
Sheer (Leo)

6 - Shahrivar
(Good deed - Desirable Dominion)
(31 days)
August 23 - September 22
Khooshe (Virgo)
Autumn
7 - Mehr
(Friendship, kindness)
(30 days)
September 23 - October 22
Tarāzoo (Libra)

8 - Aban
(Waters)
(30 days)
October 23 - November 21
Kaj Dom (Scorpio)

9 - Azar
(Fire)
(30 days)
November 22 - December 21
Kamān (Sagittarius)
Winter
10 - Day
(Creator/God)
(30 days)
December 22 - January 20
Boz (Capricorn)

11 - Bahman
(Good thought - Good Mind or Purpose)
(30 days)
January 21 - February 19
Zarf (Aquarius)

12 - Esfand
(Holy Devotion)
(29 days) if leap year (30 days)
February 20 - March 20
Māhi (Pisces)

History of Iran (political)

This page will be updated as I collect more information about each era in Iran's political history.
This page is not complete, but since I've been getting many email requests to put this page up, I decided to publish this page now and update it as I continue my research.

Early tribes forming
Old time 9000 - 2000 B.C. Beginning of civilization in Mesopotamia and west of Iran 
Confederation of tribes
Before Arian 2320 - 1032 B.C. Native tribes and dynesties of Iran and Mesopotamia Area 
Arian migration to Iran 1400 - 600 B.C.  
Mād (Medes) 708 - 549 B.C. Dīūkes (Deiokes)  Ejdehāk (Astyages) 
United kingdom
Hakhāmaneshī (Achamenides) 549 - 330 B.C. Kūrosh (Cyrus)  Dāryūsh (Darius) III 
Kingdom
War with Eskandar e Maghdūnī (Alexander from Mecadonia) 334 - 323 B.C.  
Solūkīan (Selucid) 312 - 256 B.C. Sūlūkūs (Selecus)  Āntīākūs (Antiocus) III 
Uprising of Pārthā against Solūkīan (Parthians against Selucid) 256 - 250 B.C.  
Ashkānīān - Pārthā (Arsacids - Parthians) 250 B.C. - 220 A.D. Arashk  Ardavān V 
Sāsānīān (Sasanian) 224 - 652 A.D. Ardeshīr e Pāpakān  Yazdgerd III 
War with Arabs 634 - 643 A.D.  
Arab Dynasties 639 - 839 A.D. Omavīān, Abbāsīān 
Iranian resistence againt Arabs occupation in various areas of Iran (Molūk al tavāyef) 839 - 1042 A.D. Tāherīān (839-874)
Saffārīān (874-911)
Sāmānīān (Samanid)(900-1001)
Āle Zīār (932-1000)
Āle Būye (952-1079)
Ghaznavīān (1001-1042)
Īlak Khānīān (1001-1201) 
Saljūghīān (Saljuks) 1042 - 1226 A.D. Toghrol  Toghrol 
Khārazm Shāhīān 1232 - 1253 A.D. Soltān Mohammad 
War with Changīzkhān e Moghol (Gengiskhan from Mongolia) 1253 - 1290 A.D.  
Īlkhānīān 1290 - 1399 A.D. Holākū khān  Malek Ashraf 
Molūk al tavāyef - Uprising againt Moghols (Mongolia) 1353 - 1370 A.D. Āle Jalāyer
Āle Mozafar
Sarbedārān 
Teymūrīān 1370 - 1507 A.D. Teymūr  Babur 
Safavīeh (Safavid) 1500 - 1736 A.D. Esmāyīl  Soltān Hosein 
Ghājār (Kajar) 1796 - 1925 A.D. Āghā Mohammad Khān  Ahmad Shāh 
Pahvalī 1925 - 1979 A.D. Rezā Shāh  Mohammad Rezā 
Islamic Revolusion 1978 - 1979 A.D. Leader Rūhollāh Khomeinī (1901 - 1988)
Start of the Iran Republic era. 
Islamic Republic
Islamic Republic of Iran 1979 - 2002 A.D. Leader and President 

Reference:

  • History of Ancient Iran by Hassan Pīrnia
  • Lapse of time by Abdolhossein Zarinkūb
  • IRAN - A Country Study by United States Federal Research Division.
  • Iran History a research by University of Cambridge
  • Iran History by Peter Avery Iranology prof. from University of Cambridge
  • A glimpse at the history of Iran by Farshid Eghbal
  • With help of Betty Nouri history teacher

Universities in Iran

Newspapers

MirzaAli Editor

Old time


From 9000 - 2000 B.C. there were many cultures and tribes ruling the area.

  • Īlām (Elamites) in Between caspian sea and Persian golf, in Zāgros (Zagros) mountain.
  • Sūmer (Sumer) in south of Beinol Nahrein (Mesopotamia).
  • Akkad in current north and central Arāqh (Iraq).
  • Āshūr (Asyria) in Iran's Āzarbāījān (Azerbaijan) and Sūrīeh (Syria).
  • Hīt (Hitties) current Turkey
Important events
  • Prophet Nūh (Noah)
  • First city built at Susa
  • c. 3900 B.C.
  • Sumerians invent the wheel (4000-3500 B.C.)
  • Rise of Egypt (4000-3500 B.C.)
  • Egyptians develop the Solar calendar and build elaborate tombs - pyramids (3000 - 2500 B.C.)
  • Invention of writing on clay tablets 3000 B.C.
  • The Haji Firuz Tepe Wine Jar, discovered in Iran, is the oldest archaeological finding of wine-making in the world. (5000 B.C.)

Old time

Early Farming Communities 9000-5000 B.C.
9000 B.C. - Beginning cultivation of wild wheat and barley and domestication of dogs and sheep; inaugurating of change from food gathering to food producing culture - Kārīm Shāhīr (Karim Shahir) in Zagros foothills.
7000 B.C. - At Jarmo, oldest known permanent settlement: crude mud houses, wheat grown from seed, herds of goats, sheep, and pigs.
6000 B.C. - Migration of northern farmers settle in region from Babylon to Persian Gulf. Hassuna culture introduces irrigation, fine pottery, permanent dwellings; dominates culture for 1000 years, develops trade from Persian Gulf to Mediterranean.
Īlām (Elamite) is forming
Pre-Sumerians 5000-3500 B.C.
5000 B.C. - Ubaidians develop first divisions of labor, mud brick villages, first religious shrines. Small temple at Eridu - earliest example of an offering table and niche for cult object.
4500 B.C.
4000 B.C. - Semitic nomads from Syria and Arabian peninsula invade southern Mesopotamia, intermingle with Ubaidian population Temple at Tepe Gawra built - setting style for later examples.
Bronze Age
Sumerians 3500-2000 B.C.
3500 B.C. - Sumerians settle on banks of Forāt (Euphrates) Temple at Eridu - zigguratprototype
First cities are build in Īlām and Sūmer
3500-3100 B.C. - The first city-states evolve during the Uruk Period
3000 B.C. - Democratic assemblies give way to kingships, evolve into hereditary monarchies.
Kish - leading Sumerian city Introduction of pictographs to keep administrative records.
3-D statues, e.g. Warka head.
White Temple - ziggurat traditional design.
Temple at Tell Uqair - mosaic decorations.
cuneiform land sales formal contracts.
Eridu and Kish - simple palaces.
"Standard of Ur" - war-peace plaque, religious statues, gold and silver artifacts buried in tombs of Ur.
Sumerians of Abu Salabikh - first poetry.

Īlām (Elamite) reached Literacy by 3000 B.C., Its capital, Sūsh (Susa) exercised considerable influence in Valley affairs.

2750 B.C. - Gilgamesh (king of Uruk Dynesty), hero of Sumerian legends, reigns as king of Erech
2700 B.C. - A flood devastates Mesopotamia. This is probably at the same time as Nūh (Noah)
2500 B.C. - Lugalannemudu of Abab unites city states which vie for domination for 200 years.
Reign of Sargon - founder of the Akkadian Empire.
Indo-Europeans (Hittites) enter Asia Minor
2200 B.C. - The Akkadian Empire collapses 2112-2095 B.C. - Ur-Nammu founds Ur's 3rd. dynasty; dedicates ziggurat at Ur moon-god Nanna, sets up early law code. Gudea, Prince of Lagsh, art and lit patron,magnificant statues produced in his honor.
Susa becomes part of Elam
2000 B.C. - Īlām (Elamites) attack and destroy Ur.
Īlām (Elamites) 6000-1000 B.C.
Īlām (Susiana)
According to Mesopotamian texts the Eastern part of their land - Īlām - was occupied by a people called the Elamites. Indigenous to the country, and speaking an agglutinative non-Semitic language still not well understood to this day. Khuzestan was the center of their loosely organized federation of states which stretched north into Lurestan, south to Fars and as far as Bushehr on the Gulf.
Susa was always the pride and joy of the Elamites and later the Persians, a city that stood for 5000 years until totally sacked and raised to the ground by the Mongols in the 13th Century AD, maybe a reason why we have to refer to the Mesopotamian texts for the history of Īlām.
The Elamites' mountainous land gave them wood, marble, alabaster, lapis lazuli, metal ores, precious stones all of which were sought by the Mesopotamians who were rich agriculturally but short on raw materials. Susa soon became a trading center with routes stretching as far as Sistan, Balouchestan, Afghanistan and India.
The love hate relationship that existed between the Elamites and their Mesopotamian neighbors, the Assyrians, heightened circa 647 BC when Īlām, then a mighty kingdom, fell to Ashurbanipal. He recorded his devastation of Susa as an act of avenge for the humiliations the Elamites had inflicted on the Mesopotamians over the centuries. "I devastated the land of Īlām and on their lands I sowed salt" he said ......
NOTES: Important Elamite Cities such as Awan or Simash are still to be located. Other important Elamite sites however have been excavated such as Choga Zanbil, Haft Tepe and Susa on the Khuzestan Plain; and Anshan on the Marv Dasht plain near Persepolis in Fars.

 Before Arian


Before Mād (Medes) There were 5 Dynasties which ruled a part or all of Iran as well as other near contries like Iraq, Syria, etc.
Important events
  • Prophet Ebrāhīm (Ibrahim) (19th - 17th century B.C.)
  • Prophet Mūsā (Moses) (13th - 12th century B.C.)
  • Prophet Zartosht (Zoroaster) (1750 B.C.)
  • Technique for making steel (1500 - 1000 B.C.)
  • Trojan Wars (1193-1184 B.C.)
First Dynasty: (from ~2320 B.C. 2068 B.C.)
It was ruled by Bābel (Babylians).
The bigest king of this dynasty is the sixth king in the dynasty Hamūrābī (ruled from 2123 B.C. - 2080 B.C.)
His laws (one of the oldest constitusion) have been carved on a stone, being kept at Louver museum in Paris, France.
On 2093 B.C. Hamūrābī, concured Īlām (Elemite) and send Īlām's king out of their capitol Lārsā.
At this time Īlām had it's own dynasy called Anzāly dynasty.
Second dynasty: (2067 B.C. - 1710 B.C.)
Hīt (Hittities) took the power from Bābel (Babylians).
First king were Īlūmāīlū. They were located in todays Turkey.
Third dynasty: (1760 B.C. - 1185 B.C.)
Kāsī that lived on west of Iran ( today's Iraq and Khūzestān) defeated second dynasty and started third dynasty. Bābel (Babylian) have been taken over by Ashūr (Asyrian) twice (1275 B.C. and 1100 B.C.) At this time Bābel (Babylians) and Egypt made a good relationship.
Fourth dynasty (1184 B.C. - 1053 B.C.)
From a tribe called Pāsh.
Fifth dynasty (1052 B.C. - 1032 B.C.)
From a tribe called Bāzī.
Gūtī (Guti) :2230-2110 B.C.
There is very little known about the people called the Guti ..... Mountain people of ancient Mesopotamia who lived primarily around Hamadan in the central Zagros Range. The Guti were a strong political force throughout the 3rd and 2nd millennia BC especially about 2230 when they swept down into Babylonia (southern Mesopotamia), overthrowing the Akkadian empire (ruled at that time either by Naram-Sin or by his son Shar-Kali Sharri) and traditionally took over control of most of the region. The Gutian rulers, in power a little more than a century (until circa 2110 BC), do not appear to have held all of Babylonia during this whole period; there is evidence of independent rulers in various parts of Babylonia such as Gudea at Lagash. Very little is known about the Gutian domination and the period appears to have been one of general political turmoil and cultural stagnation.
The dynasty of Guti traditionally ended about 2110 when Utu-Khegal of Uruk defeated Tirigan, the last king of the Gutian dynasty. Although the Guti from their home in the Zagros continued to menace the subsequent dynasties and kingdoms they were never again able to take control of southern Mesopotamia
Lūllūbī (Lullubi)
Ancient group of tribes that inhabited the Sherizor plain in the Zāgros Mountains of western Iran. A warlike people, they were especially active during the reign of the Akkadian King Naram-Sin (reigned circa 2254 - 2218 BC) and at the end of the dynasty of Akkad (2334 - 2154 BC). The Lullubi were apparently subjugated by Naram-Sin, who commemorated his triumph on a masterpiece of Mesopotamian sculpture, the Naram-Sin stele; the tribes, however, soon regained their independence and resumed harassment of southern Mesopotamia, helping to bring an end to the Akkadian empire. Later overshadowed by their more powerful neighbours, the Lullubi remained a source of unrest almost to the end of Mesopotamian history ......
Stele of victory of Naram-Sin, King of Agade (2291 - 2255 BC) found at Susa, whither it had been brought by the Elamite King Shutruk-Nakhkhunte as part of the 'booty of Sippar'. This celebrates a victory over the Lullubi. In mountainous and wooded country the Akkadian monarch is depicted at the head of his troops protected by the symbols of his deities. Wearing a horned headdress to signify his own divinity and carrying a bow, he tramples the enemy beneath his feet. Bow and arrow appear to be the principal weapons, apart from the spear and the axe (note the absence of any type of shield)
Kāssī (Kassites) (1530 - 1170)
History has been unkind to the Kassites, a people who come onto the stage of history in the one of the most chaotic periods in the Middle East. In the middle of the second millenium BC Indo-European peoples began vast and chaotic migrations out of Europe towards Persia and India; this migration was powered by a stunning new technology: the military use of horses and chariots. These invasions displaced many peoples who began to migrate in many directions, and some headed towards Mesopotamia and Palestine. These were Asian people who had adopted Indo-European authority and military structures and many of them were invaders who set up miniature kingdoms dotting the landscape of the Middle East and Asia Minor. The Hittites were the most successful of these new invaders. But they didn't control the center of Mesopotamia, the city of Babylon for very long before another Indo-European people, the Kassites, roared in and dominated a large part of Mesopotamia. The Hittite empire continued for several hundred years, but the Kassites would dominate the center of Mesopotamia both militarily and commercially ....
After storming into Babylon, they renamed the city Karanduniash and made their capital in a new city that they built from scratch, Dur Kurigalzu. In this respect we can see in the dim dust of history an attempt to do something new culturally in Mesopotamia. But the Kassites are gone within a blink of an eye, as wave after wave of migrations put pressure on their fragile hold on power. By 1200 BC all the great Indo-European kingdoms, that great human experiment in transforming Mesopotamia into an Indo-European culture, have been weakened by the incessant troubles of war and invasion, and the Assyrians, a Semitic people angered by Indo-European domination, would return the area to Semitic control. Under the Assyrian King Ashur-Dan, the last Kassite king was driven from the Babylonian throne in the twelfth century BC .....
History, of course, is written by the winners. We know very little about the Kassites except that their conquerors felt that they were barbarians and savages.

Arian migration to Iran



Aryan or Indo-European is the general name given to the people thought to be originated from the steppe of central and southern Asia. Around 2500-2000 BC., these people started to emigrate to the warmer places in the south or west. Most scholars think of this as the beginning of the distinction between Indo-European tribes. Tribes who emigrated to the west became the ancestors of Germans, Slavs, Greeks, Latins, and probably Celts. People who chose the south as their destination came to be known as Indo-Iranians. There are also a rather small group of people who most likely chose not to participate in this great migration. These later entered the pages of history as Scythians and Sarmatians, although they are also believed to be nomadic Indo-Iranians since their language and customs are closely tide to the Ancient Persians.
Migration
First wave comming down on east between Caspian sea and Aral lake.
From Soghd to Marv. then to Harāt, Nīsāyeh, Kābol.
To Rokhej and Hīlmand, Sīstān Lake
This area were to hot, so they moved towards west.
Khorāsān to Damāvand and Rey.

Second wave comming down on west between Black sea and Caspian sea.
Down to Armenia, Azerbaijan, Zāgros.

some of them stayed behind above Ghafghāz (Caucasus) mountain and north west of caspian sea. They call them self Sakās (Scythians).

Native Iranians:
- Kāssū (Kūsian) in the west
- Īlām (Elamite) in the south west
Aryan tribes in Iran
Mād (Medians): central and north-western parts.
Pārs (Persians): In south and south-western parts.
Parthav or Pārt (Parthians): north-eastern and eastern parts.
The Prophet Zoroaster (1000 B.C.)
was one of the first prophets to introduce the concepts of: monotheism, duality of good and evil, mankind's free choice between the two alternatives, messianic redemption, resurrection, final judgement, heaven (the word "paradise" comes from Old Persian), hell and the notion of an almighty, kind, loving and forgiving God. He believed man's salvation in life and in the afterlife could only be ensured through Good Thoughts, Good Words and Good Deeds. Many of these concepts had a profound influence on Judaism, Christianity and Islam. Persians adopted Zoroastrianism at a time when Greeks and, later, Romans still practiced polytheistic religions.

Mād (Medes)



Media (Medes)
Ancient country of northwestern Iran, generally corresponding to the modern regions of Azerbaijan, Kurdistan, and parts of Kermanshah. Media first appears in the texts of the Assyrian King Shalmaneser III (858 - 824 BC), in which peoples of the land of Mada are recorded. The inhabitants came to be known as Medes.
Media or Medes or Madai = "middle land"
1) a people descended from the son of Japheth and who inhabited the territory of Media
2) land inhabited by the descendants of Japheth; located northwest of Persia proper, south and southwest of the Caspian Sea, east of Armenia and Assyria, and west and northwest of the great salt desert of Iran. (Hebrew Dictionary)
Important events
  • Buddha (560-483 B.C.)
  • Confusius 551-479
  • Jina 540-468
  • Lao-Tzu, 6th Century
  • Milesian Philosophers, 625-525
  • Babylonian Captivity, 586-36
  • Pythagoras 580-500
Media: (Hebrew Madai)
We first hear of this people in the Assyrian cuneiform records, under the name of Amada, about BC 840. They appear to have been a branch of the Aryans, who came from the east bank of the Indus, and were probably the predominant race for a while in the Mesopotamian valley. They consisted for three or four centuries of a number of tribes, each ruled by its own chief, who at length were brought under the Assyrian yoke. From this subjection they achieved deliverance and formed themselves into an empire under Cyaxares (BC 633). This monarch entered into an alliance with the king of Babylon, and invaded Assyria, capturing and destroying the city of Nineveh (BC 625), thus putting an end to the Assyrian monarchy. Media now rose to a place of great power, vastly extending its boundaries. But it did not long exist as an independent kingdom. It rose with Cyaxares, its first king, and it passed away with him; for during the reign of his son and successor Astyages, the Persians waged war against the Medes and conquered them, the two nations being united under one monarch, Cyrus the Persian (BC 558). The "Cities of the Medes" are first mentioned in connection with the deportation of the Israelites on the destruction of Samaria. Soon afterwards Isaiah speaks of the part taken by the Medes in the destruction of Babylon. Daniel gives an account of the reign of Darius the Mede, who was made viceroy by Cyrus. The decree of Cyrus, Ezra informs us, was found in "the palace that is in the province of the Medes" or Ecbatana of the Greeks, which is the only Median city mentioned in Scripture.
Capital Hamedān (Ecbatana)
Kings
Dīūkes (Deiokes) (708 - 655 B.C.)
Farvartīsh (Phraortes) (655 - 633 B.C.)
Hovakhshatar (Cyaxares) (633 - 585 B.C.)
Āshdāhāk (Astyages) (584 - 550 B.C.)

Territory map

Mād (Medes)

Hakhāmaneshī (Achamenides)


The Achamenides were one of the Persian tribes. The Persians were also one of the Aryan tribes.
From the Assyrian inscriptions it is clear that the Parsua were subordinates to them, from the time if Shalmaneser (731-713 B.C.) to the rule of Asarhaddon (662 B.C.). Herodotus, the Greek historian, wrote about the lineage of the Achaemenians. He believed the Parsua were Persians, who were divided into six tribes who lived in villages and cities, and four tribes who lived in tents.
Important events
  • Death of Kūrosh e Bozorg (Cyrus the Great) in 530 B.C.
Hakhāmaneshī (Achamenides) Tribe:
Founded by Hakhamanesh (Achaemenes) in 749 B.C.
Chīshpīsh I (Teispes I)
Kambūzyeh I (Cambyses I)
Kūrosh I (Cyrus I)
Chīshpīsh II (Teispes II)
Divided into two branches:
One ancester of Kūrosh (Cyrus) the great
the other ancestor of Dāryūsh I (Darius I)
Hakhāmaneshī (Achamenides) dynasty
Capital Perspolis (Perspolis)
Kings
Kūrosh (Cyrus) (550 - 529 B.C.)
Kambūzyeh (Cambyses) (530 - 522 B.C.)
Daryūsh I (Darius I) (522 - 486 B.C.)
Khashāyār I (Xerxes I) (485 - 465 B.C.)
Ardeshīr I (Artaxerxes I) (465 - 424 B.C.)
Khashāyār II (Xerxes II) (423 B.C.)
Daryūsh II (Darius II) (423 - 404 B.C.)
Ardeshīr II (Artaxerxes II) (404 - 359 B.C.)
Ardeshīr III (Artaxerxes III) (359 - 338 B.C.)
Arshāk (Arshak) (338 - 336 B.C.)
Daryūsh III (Darius III) (336 - 330 B.C.)

Territory map

Hakhāmaneshī (Achamenides)

War with Eskandar e Maghdūnī (Alexander from Mecadonia)



Alexander defeated Darius during three major engagements.

  • In 334 BC at the river Granicus (Turkey).
  • In 333 BC near the town of Issus (southern Turkey).
  • In 331 BC Alexander's final victory, at Gaugamela (Iraq).
Eskandar (Alexander) ruled.
330 - 323 B.C.
Separation of Maghdūnīe (Mecadonia) empire
323 - 312 B.C.

Solūkīan (Selucid)

Kings
Sūlūkūs I (Selocus I) (312 - 281 B.C.)
Āntīcūs I (Anticus I) (281 - 271 B.C.)
Āntīcūs II (Anticus II) (271 - 246 B.C.)
Sūlūkūs II (Selocus II) (246 - 226 B.C.)
Sūlūkūs III (Selocus III) (226 - 223 B.C.)
Āntīcūs III (Anticus III) (223 - 187 B.C.)

Territory map

Solūkīan (Selucid)

Uprising of Pārthā against Solūkīan (Parthians against Selucid)


From a tribe called Pārt (Parth) Arashk the First founded Ashkāniān dynesty. They lived in current Khorāsān.
Arashk started uprising againt Solukian and finaly defeated them.

Ashkānīān - Pārthā (Arsacids - Parthians)



The Parthian Empire is a fascinating period of Persian history closely connected to Greece and Rome. Ruling from 247 BC to AD 228 in ancient Persia (Iran), the Parthians defeated Alexander the Great's successors, the Seleucids, conquered most of the Middle East and Southwest Asia, and built Parthia into an Eastern superpower. The Parthian empire revived the greatness of the Achaemenid empire and counter balanced Rome's hegemony in the West. Parthia at one time occupied areas now in Iran, Iraq, Turkey, Armenia, Azerbaidzhan, Turkmenistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, and Israel ......
In 247 BC Arsaces, leader of a Scythians group in Central Asia called the Parni (a branch of the Dahae) is crowned king. He overthrows the Seleucid governor of Parthia in 238 BC and establishes a new nation that lasts for almost 500 years. 95 - 57 BC is referred to as the Parthian 'Dark Age'. Civil wars make the chronology of this period a matter of conjecture. At the height of their power the Parthians were second only to Rome and were the only civilized nation able to stand up to her. The empire began to decline in the 2nd century AD and the rebellion of Ardashir of Persis in 220 AD was its death knell. The last Parthian king, Ardavān (Artabanos) IV, was killed in the battle of Hormuzdagan in 224 AD and Ardashir became the first Sasanian king ......
Important events
  • Prophet Jesus
  • Beginning of christian year
  • Wars with Roman

The Parthians were a subgroup of the nomadic steppe culture known to us as the Scythians. Tradition has it that they conquered the region known in the ancient period as Parthia (now part of Iran) during the mid 4th century BC under Arsaces I. Arsaces I was the leader of a small nomadic group known as the Parni which were a part of the Dahae confederation of tribes centered around the eastern Caspian in present day Turkistan. Under Arsaces I and most of Arsaces II's reign the Parthians managed to maintain their independence, as demonstrated by the existence of coins for these kings, despite repeated attempts by their neighbors, particularly the Seleucid monarchs who had once ruled the area, to conquer them
Kings
Arashk - Ashk I (250 - 248 B.C.)
Tirdād I - Ashk II (248 - 214 B.C.)
Ardavān I - Ashk III (214 - 196 B.C.)
Feriyāpat - Ashk IV (196 - 181 B.C.)
Farhad I - Ashk V (181 - 174 B.C.)
Mehrdad I - Ashk VI (174 - 136 B.C.)
Farhad II - Ashk VII (136 - 127 B.C.)
Ardavān II - Ashk VIII (127 - 124 B.C.)
Mehrdad II - Ashk IX (124 - 76 B.C.)
Santrūk - Ashk X (76 - 67 B.C.)
Farhad III - Ashk XI (67 - 60 B.C.)
Mehrdad III - Ashk XII (60 - 56 B.C.)
Orod I - Ashk XIII (56 - 37 B.C.)
Farhad IV - Ashk XIV (37 - 2 B.C.)
Farhad V - Ashk XV (2 B.C. - 4 A.D.)
Orod II - Ashk XVI (4 - 8 A.D.)
Vonon I - Ashk XVII (8 - 17 A.D.)
Ardavan III - Ashk XVIII (17 - 42 A.D.)
Bardān - Ashk XIX (40 - 45 A.D.)
Gūdarz - Ashk XX (42 and 46 - 51 A.D.)
Vonon II - Ashk XXI (51 - 52 A.D.)
Belāsh I - Ashk XXII (52 - 78 A.D.)
Paker II - Ashk XXIII (78 - 110 A.D.)
Khosro - Ashk XXIV (110 - 130 A.D.)
Bekāsh II - Ashk XXV (130 - 149 A.D.)
Belāsh III - Ashk XXVI (149 - 190 A.D.)
Belash IV - Ashk XXVII (191 - 209 A.D.)
Belash V - Ashk XXVIII (209 - 216 A.D.)
Ardavān V - Ashk XXIX (216 - 218 A.D.)
Civilwar against Ashkāniān
220 - 223 A.D.

Pārs-hā (Persians) againt Pārthā (Parthians)

 

Territory map

Ashkānīān (Arsacids)

Sāsānīān (Sasanian)


At the beginning of the third century, several local families each lead by their own chief, ruled in the province of Pārs (Pars). Their main work was guarding and taking care of the fire temples. One of these families was the Bāzrangī (Bazrangis) who ruled in Estakhr (Istakhr). Sassan, a priest of the Ānāhīd (Anahid) temple, married one of the daughters of Bāzranī (Bazrangi) chief. His heir Pāpak (Papak) used his position for advancement and placed his son, Ardeshīr (Ardeshir) as the Argbod (chief of the castle) of Dārābgerd (Darabgird).
In 212 A.D. after subduing the chiefs of Pars, Ardeshir became their leader. Papak wrote a letter to Adravān (Artabanus) V requesting the position of Argbod for his son, Shāpūr (Shapur) and Ardavān (Artabanus) agreed to this. After Papak passed away, Shapur took his place as ruler. A struggle for the leadership of the province of Pars took place between Shapur and his brother Ardeshir. However, Shapur suddenly died and Adreshir came to power. Again Iran would become powerful, led by a family from province of Pars.
Important events
  • Prophet Mohammad 570-632 A.D.
  • Beginning of the Muslem Year 622 A.D.
  • Death of the prophet Māni, the founder of Manichaesim (274 A.D.)
  • Mazdakism (End of 5th and 6th c)
Kings
Ardeshīr (Ardeshir) I (224 - 240 A.D.)
Shāpūr (Shapur) I (240 - 272 A.D.)
Hormīzd (Hormizd) I (272 - 273 A.D.)
Bahrām (Bahram) I (273 - 276 A.D.)
Bahrām (Bahram) II (276 - 293 A.D.)
Bahrām (Bahram) III (293 A.D.)
Nārses (Narses) (293 - 301 A.D.)
Hormīzd (Hormizd) II (302 - 309 A.D.)
āzar Nārses (Azar Narses) (309 A.D.)
Shāpūr (Shapur) II (The Great) (310 - 379 A.D.)
Ardeshīr (Adreshir) II (379 - 383 A.D.)
Shāpūr (Shapur) III (383 A.D.)
Bahrām (Bahram) IV (388 - 399 A.D.)
Yazdgerd (Yazdgird) I (399 - 421 A.D.)
Bahrām (Bahram) V (421 - 439 A.D.)
Yazdgerd (Yazdgird) II (439 - 459 A.D.)
Hormīzd (Hormizd) III (457 - 459 A.D.)
Fīrūz (Feroz) (459 - 484 A.D.)
Belāsh (Balash) (484 - 488 A.D.)
Ghobād (Kobad) I (488 - 531 A.D.)
Khosrow Anūshirvān (Khosrow Anoushirvan) (531 - 579 A.D.)
Hormīzd (Hormizd) IV (579 - 590 A.D.)
Khosrow Parvīz (Khosrow Parviz) (591 - 628 A.D.)
Ghobād (Kobad) II (628 A.D.)
Ardeshīr (Adreshir) III (628 - 629 A.D.)
Shahrbāraz (Shahrbaraz) III (629 A.D.)
Khosrow (Khosrow) III (629 - 630 A.D.)
Javānshīr (Javanshir) (630 A.D.)
Pūrāndokht (Pourandokt) (630 - 631 A.D.) First woman to rule
Goshtāsp (Gushtasp) (631 A.D.)
Hormīzd (Hormizd) V (631 A.D.)
Khosrow (Khosrow) IV (631 A.D.)
Fīrūz (Feroz) II (631 A.D.)
Khosrow (Khosrow) V (631 A.D.)
Yazdgerd (Yazdgird) III (632 - 652 A.D.)

 

Territory map

Sāsānīān (Sasanian)

War with Arabs



Four major battle between Iran and Arabs:
Ghādesīyeh (Qadasiya)
Jalūla (Jalula)
Nahāvand (Nehavand) in 642 A.D.
Vāj-rūd (Vaj-rud)
Omar ben Khatab 634-643 A.D.
He started the war with Iran.

Arab Dynasties



After Arab occupation of Iran, They ruled for 200 years in Iran.
Omavīān and Abbasīān were two Dynesties rules by Arabs.
Important events
  • Revolt of the Persian general Abū Moslem in Khorasan agains the Umayyads (747 A.D.)
Arab Khalifeh
Mohammad the profit
Abu Bakr 632-634 A.D.
Umar ben Khatab 634-643 A.D.
Osman (Uthman) 643-655 A.D.
Ali ben Ali Taleb 655-771 A.D.
Hassan ben Ali 661 A.D.
Omavīān (Umayed) 661-749 A.D.
Moavieh (Mu'awiya) 661-680 A.D.
Yazid 680-683 A.D.
Adbul Malik Marwan 687-705 A.D.
Walid ben Abdul Malik 705-715 A.D.
Suleyman 715-717 A.D.
Umar be Abdul Aziz 717-720 A.D.
Yazid II 720-724 A.D.
Hisham ben Abdul malik 724-743 A.D.
Walid II 743-744 A.D.
Yazid III 744 A.D.
Ibrahim 744 A.D.
Marwan ben Muhamad 744-750 A.D.
Abbāsīān (Abbasid) 749-7258 A.D.
Abdulah Safah 749-754 A.D.
Abu Ja'far Mansur 754-775 A.D.
Mehdi 775-785 A.D.
Hadi 785-786 A.D.
Harun al-Rashid 768-809 A.D.
Amin 809-813 A.D.
Ma'mun 813-833 A.D.
Mu'tasim 833-842 A.D.
Watheg 844-847 A.D.
Mutawakil 847-861 A.D.
Mohammed Mustansir 861-862
Ahmad Musta'in 862-866 A.D.
Zubayr Mu'tayz 866-869
Mu'tamid 870-892 A.D.
Mu'tazid 892-902 A.D.
18 weak Khalifeh 902-1179 A.D.
Nasir 1179-1225 A.D.
Mustansir 1226-1242 A.D.
Musta'sim 1242-1258 A.D.

 Iranian resistence againt Arabs occupation in various areas of Iran (Molūk al tavāyef)



First Iranian government after Arab invasion was Tāherīān.
Important events
  • Philosopher Fārābī died (950 A.D.)
  • Composition of the greatest epic poem of the Persian language, the Shāhnāmeh of Ferdowsī (994 A.D.)
  • Ebne Sīnā (Avicenna) died (1037 A.D.)
  • Rāzī (865-925 A.D.)
  • Rūdakī
Tāherīān (839 A.D. - 874 A.D.)
was established by Tāher. Capital were Neishābūr.
They were ruling Great Khorāsān (Included Khorāsān, Sīstān, Pakistan and Afghanistan).
They still gave taxes to Khalifeh in Baghdad.
Safārīān (874 A.D. - 911 A.D.)
was established by Ya'ghūb Leis Safār.
It was an uprising in Sīstān against Tāherīān.
At the same time Olavīān starts to fight againt Tāherīān in Māzandarān and Gorgān (Tabarestān).
Safārīān took over entire Great Khorāsān.
Second and last ruler was Omar Leis Safār. He was defeated and killed on 900 A.D. and Safārīān only ruled in Sīstān to 911 A.D.
Sāmānīan (Samanian)
Sāmānīān Tribe (875 A.D. - 900 A.D.)
In 875 A.D. Abbāsīān gave the Sāmānīān the area ruled by Tāherīān.
It was established by Nāsr ebn Ahmad Sāmānī in Māvarā olnahr (Above Oxus River) currently Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Tajikistan.

Sāmānīeh (Samanid) (900 A.D. - 1042 A.D.)
In 911 A.D. Sāmānīān took over all the area ruled by Safārīān and created the Sāmānīān Dynesty.
First king Esmāīl ebn Ahmad Sāmānī. Last king Mansūr ebn Nūh.
Gīl and Deilam uprising
Āle Zīār (932 - ~1000) First Amir: Mardāvīj (Mard aviz)
Second was Voshmgīr and in 943 A.D. lost the war to Abbāssīān and Sāmānīān.
Area: Rey, Ghazvīn, Esfehān, Hamedān, Kāshān, Gorgān.
Third and last was Ghābūs e Voshmgīr only as a Rebels.
Ghaznaviān (1001 A.D. - 1042 A.D.)
Capital Ghazneh in east of Afghanistan. First king Mahmūd, last king Massūd.
Āl e Būyeh (952 A.D. - 1079 A.D.)
First Amīr: Ali ruled Fārs.
His brother Ahmad ruled Kermān.
His other brother Hassan ruled Khūzestān.
Ahmad conqured Baghdad and chosed new Khalifeh for Baghdad. (963 A.D.)
Last king Abo Al Favāres and Kālījār
Īlak Khāniān (1001 A.D. - 1201 A.D.)
Capital Bokhārā ruled only in Māvarā olnahr (Above Oxus River) currently Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan and Tajikistan.

Territory map

Tāherīān


Saffārīān


Sāmānīān


Āle Zīār


Āle Būye

Saljūghīān (Saljuks)



They were originaly at north east of Iran (current Turkestan)
They came down and took over much of Iran from Arab Khalifeh.
Important events
  • Death of the scientist and historian Bīrūnī (1050 A.D.)
  • Death of the theologian and Sūfi Ghazzālī (1111 A.D.)
  • Ghazālī (1058-1111 A.D.)
  • Omar Khayyām (1048-1122 A.D.)
First king Toghrol
in Neyshābūr and Harāt Khorāsān, Gorgān, Tabarestān, Jebāl, Azerbaijan, Baghdad.
Toghrol area : From Forāt in Iraq to Near Lake Aral. From Pars to Shām and Ānatoli in Syria
Died in 1087
Ālob Arsalān
Toghrol nephue
Gorjestān (Georgia), Armanestān (Armenia), Turkey (Bīzāns) suported by Roman Empire.
Defeated Bīzāns army on 1096. He died on 1098
Malekshāh
Barkitaref
Last king was Toghrol


Khārazm Shāhīān



Established the family: Mohamad Nūshtakin govener of Khārazm.
Capital Bokhara
Only king Soltān Mohammad son of Mohamad Nūshtakīn
war with Gharakhatāīān between China and Russia. Defeated them and free people in that area.

War with Changīzkhān e Moghol (Gengiskhan from Mongolia)



Moghol businessmen were killed at Otrār by order of Ghāyerkhān (ruled the city) on the charge of spy.
Changīz and khalife e Baghdad become alies, and Khalife motivated Changīz to attack Iran.
Soltān Mohammad were affraid of Moghols.
Changīzkhān was in war with Jalāledīn son of Soltān Mohammad for 10 years.
Moghols came even to border of Arāgh (Iraq).
Moghols just killed everyone and burned every thing during this time.
This was more because of revenge than expanding their territories.

Important events
  • Sūfi poet Jalāl al-Dīn Rūmī (1207-1273 A.D.)
  • Death of the poet and moralist Sa'dī (1213-1291 A.D.)
  • Marco Polo journeyed through Persia on his way to China (1271 A.D.)

Īlkhānīān



Holākūkhān came to Iran and established Īlkhānīān dynesty.
He came from Mogholestān (Mongolia)
Important events
  • Hāfez (Hafez) (1320-1390 A.D.)
  • Khājeh Nasīr Tūsī
  • First paper money called Chāv was published for the first time.
  • Kamal Al-Din Farsi
First king: Holākūkhān.
Capitol: Marāgheh
Holākū in 1293 A.D. destroyd Abbasīān Dynesty or Khalife.
Ābāghākhan son of Holākū
Capital went to Tabrīz
Ghazankhān
became Muslem and changed his name to Mahmūd
Aljayto
changed his name to (Mohammad Khodābandeh. Capital Soltānieh near Zanjān
Last king was Malek Ashraf

Uprising againt Moghols (Mongolia)



Once again local tribes stood against foreign dictators and started the uprising against Ilkhanian.
Āle Jalāyer
Āle Mozafar
Sarbedārān

Teymūrīān

Kings
Teymūrīye (Timurids):
Teymūr (Timur), 1393 - 1405
Mīrānshāh (Miranshah) in Western Persia, 1405 - 1408
Khalīl (Khalil) in Western Persia 1409 - 1411, 1405 - 1409
Shāh Rokh Shāh (Shah Rokh Shah) 1409 - 1447
Ūlūgh Bey (Ulugh Beg) 1447 - 1449
Soltān Abū Saīd (Soltan Abu Said) 1451 - 1469

Transoxiana:
Abdol Latīf (Abd al-Latif) 1449 - 1450
Abdollāh (Abd Allah) 1450 - 1451
Abū Saīd (Abu Said) 1451 - 1469
Ahmad 1469 - 1494
Mahmūd (Mahmud) 1494 - 1495
Baysunqur 1495 - 1497
Babur 1497 - 1498
Alī (Ali) 1498 - 1500
Babur (restored) 1500 - 1501

Khurasan:
Babur 1449 - 1457
Mahmūd (Mahmud) 1457 - 1459
Abū Saīd (Abu Said) 1451 - 1469
Husayn Bayqara 1469 - 1506
Badi al-Zaman 1506 - 1507

Safavīeh (Safavid)

Important events

  • Death of the philosopher-gnostic Mollā Sadrā (1640 A.D.)

 

Kings
Esmail 1501 - 1524
Tahmasb 1524 - 1576
Esmail II 1576 - 1577
Sultan Mohammad 1577 - 1587
Shah Abbas I 1587 - 1629
Safi I 1629 - 1642
Abbas II 1642 - 1666
Safi II 1666 - 1694
Shah Soltan Hosseyn 1694 - 1722
Tahmasb II 1722 - 1732
Abbas III 1732 - 1736

Shah Soleyman II (Mir Sayyed Mohammad) 1749 - 1750
Esmail III 1750 - 1773

Ghājār (Kajar)


Agha Mohammad Qajar defeated the last Zand ruler outside Kerman in 1794 and made himself master of the country, beginning the Qajar dynasty that was to last until 1925. Under Fath Ali (1797-1834), Mohammad Shah (1834-48), and Naser ad Din Shah (1848-96) a degree of order, stability, and unity returned to the country.
The Qajars revived the concept of the shah as the shadow of God on earth and exercised absolute powers over the servants of the state. They appointed royal princes to provincial governorships and, in the course of the nineteenth century, increased their power in relation to that of the tribal chiefs, who provided contingents for the shah's army. Under the Qajars, the merchants and the ulama, or religious leaders, remained important members of the community. A large bureaucracy assisted the chief officers of the state, and, in the second half of the nineteenth century, new ministries and offices were created.
Important events
  • War with Russia
  • War with Britain
  • Death of the prime miniter and reformer Amīr Kabīr (1852 A.D.)
  • The Persian Constitutional Revolution (1905 A.D.)
  • First Majles (Majlis) founded (1907)
  • 1st world war
King
Aqa Mohammad Khah 1796 - 1797
Fath Ali Shah 1797 - 1834
Mohammad Shah 1834 - 1848
Naser ed-Din Shah 1848 - 1896
Mozaffar ed-Din Shah 1896 - 1907
Mohammad Ali Shah 1907 - 1909
Ahmad Shah 1909 - 1925
The Constitutional Revolution
The shah's failure to respond to protests by the religious establishment, the merchants, and other classes led the merchants and clerical leaders in January 1906 to take sanctuary from probable arrest in mosques in Tehran and outside the capital. When the shah reneged on a promise to permit the establishment of a "house of justice," or consultative assembly, 10,000 people, led by the merchants, took sanctuary in June in the compound of the British legation in Tehran. In August the shah was forced to issue a decree promising a constitution. In October an elected assembly convened and drew up a constitution that provided for strict limitations on royal power, an elected parliament, or Majlis, with wide powers to represent the people, and a government with a cabinet subject to confirmation by the Majlis. The shah signed the constitution on December 30, 1906. He died five days later. The Supplementary Fundamental Laws approved in 1907 provided, within limits, for freedom of press, speech, and association, and for security of life and property.

Pahvalī

Important events
  • Country name changed from Persia to Iran (1935)
  • 2nd world war
  • White Revolution

Territory map

Pahlavī (Pahlavi)

Islamic Revolution



Islamic Revolution in 22nd of Bahman (11th of February) 1979 A.D.

Territory map

Islamic Revolution

Islamic Republic of Iran


Islamic Republic founded on 12nd of Farvardin (1st of April) 1979 A.D.
Leader: Āyatollāh Khomeinī (1979 - 1988)
Presidents: Banīsadr (Ran away)
Rajāī (Killed)
Leader: Āyatollāh Khāmaneī (1988 - present)
Presidents: Rafsanjānī (2 terms)
Khātamī (2 terms)

 Territory map

Islamic Republic

  

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