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Ilkhanate

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Land of Iran
ایران‌زمین
1256–1335[1]
The Ilkhanate under Ghazan
The Ilkhanate under Ghazan
Status
Capital
Official languages
Persian (lingua franca, official, administration, documents)[2]
Common languagesUnofficial:
Religion
GovernmentMonarchy
Khan 
• 1256–1265
Hulagu Khan
• 1316–1335
Abu Sa'id
Area
1310 est.[7][8]3,750,000 km2 (1,450,000 sq mi)
Preceded by
Succeeded by
Mongol Empire
Abbasid Caliphate
Nizari Ismaili state
Sultanate of Rum
Kingdom of Georgia
Qutlugh-Khanids
Ayyubid dynasty
Salghurids
Anatolian beyliks
Jalayirids
Chobanids
Muzaffarids
Kartids
Sarbadars
Injuids
Mihrabanids
Eretnids
Kingdom of Georgia
Anatolian beyliks
Mamluks
Sutayids

The Ilkhanate or Il-khanate was a Mongol khanate founded in the southwestern territories of the Mongol Empire. It was ruled by the Il-Khans or Ilkhanids (Persian: ایلخانان, romanizedĪlkhānān), and known to the Mongols as Hülegü Ulus (lit.'people / state of Hülegü').[9] The Ilkhanid realm was officially known as the Land of Iran or simply Iran.[10][11] It was established after Hülegü, the son of Tolui and grandson of Genghis Khan, inherited the West Asian and Central Asian part of the Mongol Empire after his brother Möngke Khan died in 1259.

The Ilkhanate's core territory lies in what is now the countries of Iran, Azerbaijan, and Turkey. At its greatest extent, the Ilkhanate also included parts of modern Iraq, Syria, Armenia, Georgia, Afghanistan, Turkmenistan, Pakistan, part of modern Dagestan, and part of modern Tajikistan. Later Ilkhanid rulers, beginning with Ghazan in 1295, converted to Islam. In the 1330s, the Ilkhanate was ravaged by the Black Death. The last ilkhan, Abu Sa'id Bahadur Khan, died in 1335, after which the Ilkhanate disintegrated.

The Ilkhanid rulers, although of non-Iranian origin, tried to advertise their authority by tying themselves to the Iranian past, and they recruited historians to present the Mongols as heirs to the Sasanian Empire (224–651).[12] Native intellectuals interested in their own history interpreted the unification by the Mongols as a revival of their long-lost dynastic tradition, and the concept of "Land of Iran" (Irān-zamin) was considered an important ideology and was further developed by the later Safavid Empire (1501–1736). Similar to the development in China under the Yuan dynasty, the revival of the concept of territorial unity, although not intended by the Mongols, became a lasting legacy of Mongol rule in Iran.[13]

Definition

[edit]

According to the historian Rashid al-Din Hamadani, Kublai Khan granted his brother Hülegü the title ilkhan after Hülegü's defeat of Ariq Böke, another brother. The term ilkhan here means "khan of the tribe, khan of the ulus", and this lesser khanship refers to the initial deference to Möngke Khan and his successors as Great Khans of the Mongol Empire. The title ilkhan carried by the descendants of Hulagu and, later, other Borjigin princes in Persia, does not appear in the sources until after 1260.[14]

History

[edit]

Origin

[edit]

When Muhammad II of Khwarazm ordered a contingent of merchants, dispatched by the Mongols, to be killed, Genghis Khan declared war on the Anushtegin dynasty in 1219. The Mongols overran the empire, occupying the major cities and population centers between 1219 and 1221. Iran was ravaged by the Mongol detachment under Jebe and Subutai, who left the area in ruin. Transoxiana also came under Mongol control after the invasion.[15]

Muhammad II's son Jalal ad-Din Mingburnu returned to Iran in c. 1224 after fleeing to India. The rival Turkic states, which were all that remained of his father's empire, quickly declared their allegiance to Jalal. He repulsed the first Mongol attempt to take Central Persia. However, Jalal ad-Din was overwhelmed and crushed by Chormaqan's army sent by the Great Khan Ögedei in 1231. During the Mongol expedition, Azerbaijan and the southern Persian dynasties in Fars and Kerman voluntarily submitted to the Mongols and agreed to pay tribute.[16]

Ilkhanid depiction of mounted warriors pursuing enemies, from Rashid al-Din's Jami' al-tawarikh, early 14th century

To the west, Hamadan and the rest of Persia was secured by Chormaqan. The Mongols invaded Armenia and Georgia in 1234 or 1236, completing the conquest of the Kingdom of Georgia in 1238. They began to attack the western parts of Bagratid Armenia, which was under the Seljuks, the following year. By 1237 the Mongol Empire had subjugated most of Persia (including modern-day Azerbaijan), Armenia, Georgia (excluding Abbasid Iraq and Ismaili strongholds), as well as all of Afghanistan and Kashmir.[17] After the battle of Köse Dağ in 1243, the Mongols under Baiju occupied Anatolia, while the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm and the Empire of Trebizond became vassals of the Mongols.[18]

In 1236 Ögedei commanded Greater Khorasan to be restored and the city of Herat repopulated. The Mongol military governors mostly made camp in the Mughan plain in what is now Azerbaijan. Realizing the danger posed by the Mongols, the rulers of Mosul and the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia submitted to the Great Khan. Chormaqan divided Transcaucasia into three districts based on the Mongol military hierarchy.[19] In Georgia, the population was temporarily divided into eight tumens.[20] In 1244, Güyük Khan stopped raising of revenue from districts in Persia as well and offered tax exemptions to others.[21] In accordance with a complaint by the governor Arghun Aqa, Möngke Khan prohibited ortogh-merchants (Mongol-contracted Muslim traders)[22][23] and nobles from abusing relay stations and civilians in 1251.[24] He ordered a new census and decreed that each man in the Mongol-ruled West Asia must pay in proportion to his property. Persia was divided between four districts under Arghun. Möngke Khan granted the Kartids authority over Herat, Jam, Pushang (Fushanj), Ghor, Khaysar, Firuz-Kuh, Gharjistan, Farah, Sistan, Kabul, Tirah, and Afghanistan.[25]

Hulegu Khan

[edit]
Hulagu Khan, founder of the Ilkhanate, with his Christian queen Doquz Khatun
A Mongol horse archer of the 13th century

Hulegu Khan, third son of Tolui, grandson of Genghis Khan, and brother of both Möngke Khan and Kublai Khan, was the first khan of the Ilkhanate. Immediately after his brother Möngke's accession as Great Khan in 1251, Hulagu was appointed as administrator of North China, however in the following year, North China was assigned to Kublai and Hulagu tasked with conquering the Abbasid Caliphate. He was given a fifth of the entire Mongol army for the campaign and he took his sons Abaqa and Yoshmut along with him. Hulagu also took with him many Chinese scholars and astronomers, from whom the famous Persian astronomer Nasir al-Din al-Tusi learned about the mode of the Chinese calculating tables.[26] An observatory was built on a hill of Maragheh. Taking over from Baiju in 1255, Hulagu established Mongol rule from Transoxiana to Syria. He destroyed the Nizari Ismaili state and the Abbasid Caliphate in 1256 and 1258 respectively. In 1258, Hulagu proclaimed himself ilkhan (subordinate khan). After that he advanced as far as Gaza, briefly conquering Ayyubid Syria and Aleppo in 1260. Möngke's death forced Hulagu to return to Mongolia to attend the kuriltai for the next Great Khan. He left a small force of around 10,000 behind in Palestine that was defeated at the battle of Ain Jalut by the Mamluks of Egypt.[27]

Due to the suspicious deaths of three Jochid princes in Hulagu's service, Berke of the Golden Horde declared war on Hulagu in 1262. According to Mamluk historians, Hulagu might have massacred Berke's troops and refused to share his war booty with Berke. Berke sought a joint attack with Baybars and forged an alliance with the Mamluks against Hulagu. The Golden Horde dispatched the young prince Nogai to invade the Ilkhanate but Hulagu forced him back in 1262. The Ilkhanid army then crossed the Terek River, capturing an empty Jochid encampment, only to be routed in a surprise attack by Nogai's forces. Many of them were drowned as the ice broke on the frozen Terek River.[28][29]

Silver dirham of Hulagu minted in Urmia, with the title Qa'an al-'Azam (Greatest Khagan). Before the reign of Ghazan, Ilkhans referred to the great Mongol khans in the coin inscriptions and official documents.[30]

In 1262, Hulagu gave Greater Khorasan and Mazandaran to Abaqa and northern Azerbaijan to Yoshmut. Hulagu himself spent his time living as a nomad in southern Azerbaijan and Armenia. During his early rule, the Ilkhanate experienced mass revolts by its subjects, with the exception of the Seljukids and Artuqids in Anatolia and Mardin. It was not until Shams al-Din Juvayni was appointed as vizier after 1262 that things started calming down and a more sustainable administration was implemented.[31]

Hulagu fell ill in February 1265 after several days of banquets and hunting. He died on 8 February and his son Abaqa succeeded him in the summer.[31]

Middle period (1265–1291)

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The successor states of the Mongol Empire, its vassals, and neighbors in the early 1300s.

Upon Abaqa's accession, he immediately faced an invasion by Berke of the Golden Horde, which ended with Berke's death in Tiflis. In 1270, Abaqa defeated an invasion by Ghiyas-ud-din Baraq of the Chagatai Khanate. Abaqa's brother Tekuder sacked Bukhara in retaliation. In 1277, the Mamluks invaded Anatolia and defeated the Mongols at the Battle of Elbistan. Stung by the defeat, Abaqa executed the local regent Mu'in-ad-Din Pervane and replaced him with the Mongol prince Qongqortai. In 1281, Abaqa sent Mongke Temur against the Mamluks, but he too was defeated at Homs.[32]

Abaqa's death in 1282 triggered a succession struggle between his son Arghun, supported by the Qara'unas, and his brother Tekuder, supported by the Chinggisid aristocracy. Tekuder was elected khan by the Chinggisids. Tekuder was the first Muslim ruler of the Ilkhanate but he made no active attempt to proselytize or convert his realm. However he did try to replace Mongol political traditions with Islamic ones, resulting in a loss of support from the army. Arghun used his religion against him by appealing to non-Muslims for support. When Tekuder realized this, he executed several of Arghun's supporters, and captured Arghun. Tekuder's foster son, Buaq, freed Arghun and overthrew Tekuder. Arghun was confirmed as ilkhan by Kublai Khan in February 1286.[32]

During Arghun's reign, he actively sought to combat Muslim influence, and fought against both the Mamluks and the Muslim Mongol emir Nawruz in Khorasan. To fund his campaigns, Arghun allowed his viziers Buqa and Sa'd-ud-dawla to centralize expenditures, but this was highly unpopular and caused his former supporters to turn against him. Both viziers were killed and Arghun was murdered in 1291.[32]

Religious shift (1291–1316)

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The Mongol ruler Ghazan, studying the Qur'an
Ilkhanid court scene. The Free Man's Companion to the Niceties of Poems, left frontispiece, 1341, probably Isfahan.[33]

The Ilkhanate started crumbling under the reign of Arghun's brother, Gaykhatu. The majority of Mongols converted to Islam while the Mongol court remained Buddhist. Gaykhatu had to buy the support of his followers and as a result, ruined the realm's finances. His vizir Sadr-ud-Din Zanjani tried to bolster the state finances by adopting paper money from the Yuan dynasty, which remained largely unsuccessful.[tone] Gaykhatu also alienated the Mongol old guard with his alleged sexual relations with a boy. Gaykhatu was overthrown in 1295 and replaced with his cousin Baydu. Baydu reigned for less than a year before he was overthrown by Gaykhatu's officer, Ghazan.[32]

Hulagu's descendants ruled Persia for the next eighty years, tolerating multiple religions, including Shamanism, Buddhism, and Christianity, and ultimately adopting Islam as a state religion in 1295. However, despite this conversion, the Ilkhanids remained opposed to the Mamluks, who had defeated both Mongol invaders and Crusaders. The Ilkhanids launched several invasions of Syria, but were never able to gain and keep significant ground against the Mamluks, eventually being forced to give up their plans to conquer Syria, along with their stranglehold over their vassals the Sultanate of Rum and the Armenian kingdom in Cilicia. This was in large part due to civil war in the Mongol Empire and the hostility of the khanates to the north and east. The Chagatai Khanate in Moghulistan and the Golden Horde threatened the Ilkhanate in the Caucasus and Transoxiana, preventing expansion westward. Even under Hulagu's reign, the Ilkhanate was engaged in open warfare in the Caucasus with the Mongols in the Russian steppes. On the other hand, the China-based Yuan dynasty was an ally of the Ikhanate and also held nominal suzerainty over the latter (the Emperor being also Great Khan) for many decades.[34]

Ghazan converted to Islam under influence of Nawrūz and made Islam the official state religion. Christian and Jewish subjects lost their equal status and had to pay the jizya (minority religion tax). Ghazan gave Buddhists the starker choice of conversion or expulsion and ordered their temples to be destroyed; though he later relaxed this severity.[35] After Nawrūz was deposed and killed in 1297, Ghazan made religious intolerance punishable and attempted to restore relations with non-Muslims.[36][37]

Circular piece of silk with Mongol images, Iran or Iraq, early 14th century. Silk, cotton and gold.[38]

In terms of foreign relations, the Ilkhanids' conversion to Islam had little to no effect on its hostility towards other Muslim states, and conflict with the Mamluks for control of Syria continued. The Battle of Wadi al-Khaznadar, the only major victory by the Mongols over the Mamluk Sultanate, ended the latter's control over Syria for a few months.

For the most part, Ghazan's policies continued under his brother Öljaitü despite suggestions that he might begin to favor Twelver Shi'ism after he came under the influence of the theologians al-Allama al-Hilli and al-Bahrani.[39]

Öljeitü, who had been baptised in Christianity as an infant and had flirted with Buddhism, eventually became a Hanafi Sunni, though he still retained some residual shamanism. In 1309–10, he became a Shi'ite Muslim.[40] An Armenian scribe in 1304 noted the death of "benevolent and just" Ghazan, who was succeeded by Khar-Banda Öljeitü, "who too, exhibits good will to everyone." A colophon from 1306 reports the conversion of Mongols to Islam and "they coerce everyone into converting to their vain and false hope. They persecute, they molest, and torment," including "insulting the cross and the church".[37] Some of the Buddhists who survived Ghazan's assaults made an unsuccessful attempt to bring Öljeitü back into Buddhism, showing they were active in the realm for more than 50 years.[41]

The conversion of Mongols was initially a fairly superficial affair. The process of establishment of Islam did not happen suddenly. Öljeitü's historian Qāshāni records that Kutlushah, after losing patience with a dispute between Hanafi and Shafi'i Sunnis, expressed his view that Islam should be abandoned and Mongols should return to the ways of Genghis Khan. Qāshani also stated that Öljeitü had reverted for a brief period. As Muslims, Mongols showed a marked preference for Sufism, with masters like Safi-ad-Din Ardabili often treated with respect and favour.[42]

Disintegration (1316–1357)

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West Asia in 1345, ten years after the death of Abu Sa'id. The Jalayirids, Chobanids, Muzaffarids, Injuids, Sarbadars, and Kartids took the Ilkhanate's place as the major powers in Iran.

Öljaitü's son, the last ilkhan, Abu Sa'id Bahadur Khan, was enthroned in 1316. He was faced with rebellion in 1318 by the Chagatayids and Qara'unas in Khorasan, and an invasion by the Golden Horde at the same time. An Anatolian emir, Irenchin, also rebelled. Irenchin was crushed by Chupan of the Taichiud in the Battle of Zanjan-Rud on 13 July 1319. Under the influence of Chupan, the Ilkhanate made peace with the Chagatais, who helped them crush the Chagatayid revolt, and the Mamluks. In 1327, Abu-Sai'd replaced Chupan with "Big" Hasan.[43] Hasan was accused of attempting to assassinate the khan and exiled to Anatolia in 1332. The non-Mongol emirs Sharaf-ud-Din Mahmud-Shah and Ghiyas-ud-Din Muhammad were given unprecedented military authority, which irked the Mongol emirs. In the 1330s, outbreaks of the Black Death ravaged the Ilkhanate and both Abu-Sai'd and his sons were killed by 1335 by the plague.[44] Ghiyas-ud-Din put a descendant of Ariq Böke, Arpa Ke'un, on the throne, triggering a succession of short-lived khans until "Little" Hasan took Azerbaijan in 1338. In 1357, Jani Beg of the Golden Horde conquered Chupanid-held Tabriz for a year, putting an end to the Ilkhanate remnant.[45]

Government

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Map of the Ilkhanate in the Catalan Atlas (1375), with depiction of the ruler. The Ilkhanate flag appears over many cities: .[46]

In contrast to the China-based Yuan dynasty, who excluded the native population from gaining control of high offices, the Ilkhanids ruled their realm through a Central Asian-Persian ("Tajik") administration in partnership with Turco-Mongol military officers. Not all of the Persian administrators were Muslims or members of the traditional families that had served the Seljuqs and Khwarazmians (e.g, the Juvayni family). For example, the Ilkhanate vizier from 1288 to 1291 was Sa'ad al-Dawla, a Jew, while the prominent vizier and historian Rashid-al-Din Hamadani was a Jewish convert to Islam.[47]

The Ilkhanid rulers, who were keen to increase their autonomy, supported their Persian bureaucrats' promotion of the traditional Iranian idea of kingship. The Persian concept of monarchy over a territorial empire, or more specifically, the "Kingship of the Land of Iran" (pādshāhi-ye Irān-zamin), was easily sold to their Mongol masters by these bureaucrats. A lasting effect of the Mongol conquests was the emergence of the "national state" in Iran during the Ilkhanate era.[48]

Gold dinar of Abaqa Khan with Islamic legends in Arabic and Imperial legends in Middle Mongolian.

The Ilkhanate Mongols remained nomadic in their way of life until the end of the dynasty. Their nomadic routes covered central Iraq, northwest Iran, Azerbaijan, and Armenia. The Mongols administered Iraq, the Caucasus, and western and southern Iran directly with the exception of Georgia, the Artuqid sultan of Mardin, and Kufa and Luristan. The Qara'unas Mongols ruled Khorasan as an autonomous realm and did not pay taxes. Herat's local Kart dynasty also remained autonomous. Anatolia was the richest province of the Ilkhanate, supplying a quarter of its revenue while Iraq and Diyarbakir together supplied about 35 percent of its revenue.[49]

In 1330, the annexation of Abkhazia resulted in the reunification of the Kingdom of Georgia. However, tribute received by the Il-Khans from Georgia sank by about three-quarters between 1336 and 1350 because of wars and famines.[50]

Diplomacy

[edit]

The courts of Western Europe made many attempts to ally with the Mongols, primarily with the Ilkhanate, in the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, starting from around the time of the Seventh Crusade in the mid-13th century. (Western Europeans were collectively called 'Franks' – ''Farang', 'Faranji' – by Muslims and Asians in the era of the Crusades.) Despite their shared opposition to the Muslims, primarily the Mamluk Sultanate, no formal alliance ever was concluded.[51]

While Abu Sa'id eventually concluded a peace treaty with the Mamluks in 1322, the rivalry between the two powers continued diplomatically. Abu Sa'id, as a Muslim ruler, sought to demonstrate his legitimacy further abroad in Islamic terms, particularly through efforts to exert influence over the two holy cities of Islam, Mecca and Medina.[52] Even prior to the peace treaty's conclusion, the Ilkhan began sending large and richly-equipped pilgrimage (hajj) caravans from Iraq. In 1330 he went so far as to include, at great cost, an elephant in the caravan.[53][54] He also arranged for his name to be read aloud in the khutba (Friday sermon) in Medina for a time in 1318 and sent the kiswa (the ceremonial cloth covering the Kaaba) to Mecca in 1319.[54] In 1325, Chupan undertook the pilgrimage and sponsored repairs to the water supply in Mecca and the construction of a madrasa (college) and a hammam (bathhouse) in Medina.[53] These actions challenged the primacy of the Mamluks in the Hejaz and provoked the Mamluk sultan, al-Nasir Muhammad, into repeatedly reasserting his dominance in the region by sponsoring his own works there, by purging or replacing local officials, and by undertaking the hajj pilgrimage himself.[55]

Culture

[edit]

Literature

[edit]
Page from a manuscript of the Jami' al-Tawarikh of Rashid al-Din (1314–15 AD, Tabriz). The illustration here depicts Jonah and the whale.[56]

The Ilkhanid period saw the creation of numerous written works devoted to history. They were typically intended for Ilkhanid administrators or even written for a particular ruler. Many of the writers in the early period were scholars who were trained under pre-Mongol dynasties but received patronage under the new regime.[57] The most famous work of this time is the Jami' al-tawarikh ('Compendium of Histories') of Rashid al-Din, initially commissioned by Ghazan but presented to Öljeitü upon its completion in 1307. Its first surviving volume is a history of the Mongol dynasty while the second is a history of the Iranian and Islamic world, along with stories of other cultures.[57] Ghazan also patronized Abu al-Qasim Qashani, who composed the Ta'rikh-i Uljaytu ('History of Öljeitü'), and Shihab al-Din Waṣṣaf, who wrote the Tajziyat al-amṣar wa-tazjiyat al-a'ṣar ('The Allocation of Cities and Propulsion of Epochs'[58]). The latter was intended as a continuation of Ala' al-Din Juvayni's slightly earlier work, Tārikh-i jahangusha ('History of the World Conqueror'[58]) which narrates the fall of the Khwarazmian Empire and the rise of the Mongol Empire. Various other works were also commissioned.[57]

The later years of the Ilkhanate were also marked by interest in the Shahnameh, the Iranian epic by 11th-century poet Firdowsi. Not only were new copies of the work produced, but it also inspired new historical works that copied its style and format, such as those of Hamdallah Mustawfi.[57]

Arts

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A page from the Great Mongol Shahnameh (early 14th century), with a miniature painting illustrating mourners gathered around the body of Alexander the Great[59]

Among the arts patronized by the Ilkhans, the most important were the arts of the book. The major centers of manuscript production and illumination were Mosul and Baghdad in Iraq.[60] They matched the quality of contemporary production in the Mamluk Sultanate and may have influenced the latter,[60] as there are artistic similarities between Mamluk and Ilkhanid manuscripts.[61] One notable development in this period is the production of manuscripts with very large pages, up to 70 by 50 centimetres (28 in × 20 in) in size, with accordingly large scripts, particularly in muhaqqaq style. Illustrations were common and are found in works on a variety of topics such as history, nature, religion, and astronomy.[60] Among these was also an increased production of copies of the Shahnameh. The most celebrated copy is the Great Mongol Shahnameh, a large manuscript probably produced for Abu Sa'id in the 14th century. Its pages include highly expressive illustrations that reflect influences from across Eurasia, including China and Europe.[60] Some two dozen large-scale Qur'ans have survived and are among the most impressive artistically-produced Qur'ans created up to this point. They were each produced over many years – one of the smaller examples from Baghdad took four years to transcribe and eight years to decorate – and feature elaborate multi-coloured frontispieces with geometric designs similar to those seen in Ilkhanid architecture such as the Sultaniyya Mausoleum.[62][60]

Double frontispiece for a Qur'an commissioned by Öljeitü and completed in 1313 in Hamadan[63]

High-quality silk textiles were also produced under the Ilkhanids.[64] The most important surviving example – possibly the only one definitively attributable to the Ilkhanate – is the large fragment of a burial robe for Duke Rudolf IV of Austria (d. 1365), which was made from an Iranian import. The textile was originally manufactured in an Ilkhanid state workshop, most likely in Tabriz, and bears the name and titles of Abu Sa'id after 1319. It is woven in lampas and compound weaves in tan and red colours, with gold wefts.[65] It features a motif of broad alternating bands: one set of stripes is filled with a repeating pattern of rhomboids and ornate medallions with vegetal motifs and peacocks in between them, while the other stripes are filled with large epigraphic inscriptions in Arabic script. Between these are narrower bands filled with other animals.[65][66] The use of this piece for a royal funerary shroud in Europe suggests that Iranian textiles were still highly prized abroad during this period.[64]

In metalwork, Ilkhanid productions were often larger and more richly-decorated than earlier Iranian works.[64] Major centers of production included Tabriz and Shiraz.[67] Surviving pieces are often made of brass inlaid with copper, a type known in previous periods, as well as brass inlaid with gold, a newer trend used for more costly court objects.[68] Among these examples is the base of the largest preserved candlestick from Islamic-era Iran, commissioned by one of Öljeitü's viziers in 1308–09 and measuring 32.5 centimetres (13 in) high.[68][69] Objects in gold and silver were likely also important but no examples have survived.[64]

A bowl in the lajvardina technique, produced in Ilkhanid Iran, late 13th or early 14th century[70]

Ceramic production was of good quality but not as fine and as diverse as pottery from the preceding century.[60] The type most commonly attributed to Ilkhanid Iran is the so-called "Sultanabad" ceramics. These were made of a softer white paste with a green or gray-brown slip. Bowls of this type were typically underglaze-painted with animal figures with a background of leaves.[64] Kashan remained an important center of lustreware production until the late 13th century, although it ceased producing ceramic vessels after 1284 and then produced only tiles until 1340.[65][64] The designs were less accomplished than in previous periods but they started to incorporate new Chinese-inspired motifs such as lotuses and simurghs.[65] Starting around the 1270s or 1280s, a new style of expensive ceramic started to be produced, known as lajvardina, from the Persian word for lapis lazuli. These often had a deep blue or sometimes blue-ish turquoise glaze and were then overglaze-painted with red, black, white, and gold colours. These have been found at Takht-i Sulaymān and they may have replaced the pre-Mongol mina'i ceramics.[71][64]

Legacy

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A ship under the Ilkhanate flag (), sailing the Indian Ocean towards the coast of India under the control of the Delhi Sultanate (), in the Catalan Atlas (1375).[72]

The emergence of the Ilkhanate had an important historical impact in West Asia. The establishment of the unified Mongol Empire had significantly eased trade and commerce across Asia. The communications between the Ilkhanate and the Yuan Dynasty headquartered in China encouraged this development.[73][74] The dragon clothing of Imperial China was used by the Ilkhanids, the Chinese Huangdi (Emperor) title was used by the Ilkhanids due to heavy influence upon the Mongols of the Chinese system of politics. Seals with Chinese characters were created by the Ilkhanids themselves besides the seals they received from the Yuan dynasty which contain references to a Chinese government organization.[75]

Abu Sa'id Bahadur Khan's Imperial edict (Firman) in Persian language with two bilingual East Asian-style seals in Chinese and Arabic.

The Ilkhanate also helped to pave the way for the later Safavid dynastic state, and ultimately the modern country of Iran. Hulagu's conquests had also opened Iran to Chinese influence from the east. This, combined with patronage from his successors, would develop Iran's distinctive excellence in architecture. Under the Ilkhans, Iranian historians also moved from writing in Arabic to writing in their native Persian tongue.[76]

The rudiments of double-entry accounting were practiced in the Ilkhanate; merdiban was then adopted by the Ottoman Empire. These developments were independent from the accounting practices used in Europe.[77] This accounting system was adopted primarily as the result of socio-economic necessities created by the agricultural and fiscal reforms of Ghazan Khan in 1295–1304.

Ilkhan as a tribal title in 19th/20th century Iran

[edit]

The title ilkhan resurfaced among the Qashqai nomads of southern Iran in the 19th century. Jan Mohammad Khan started using it in 1818/19, and this was continued by all the following Qashqai leaders. The last Qashqai ilkhan was Nasir Khan, who in 1954 was pushed into exile after his support of Mohammad Mosaddegh. When he returned during the Islamic Revolution in 1979, he could not regain his previous position and died in 1984 as the last Ilkhan of the Qashqai.[78]

Ilkhans

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House of Hulagu (1256–1335; Ilkhanate Mongol kings)

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After the Ilkhanate, the regional states established during the disintegration of the Ilkhanate raised their own candidates as claimants.

House of Ariq Böke

[edit]

House of Hulagu (1336–1357)

[edit]

House of Hasar

[edit]

Claimants from eastern Persia (Khurasan):

  • Togha Temür (c. 1338–1353) (recognized by the Kartids 1338–1349; by the Jalayirids 1338–1339, 1340–1344; by the Sarbadars 1338–1341, 1344, 1353)
  • Luqman (1353–1388) (son of Togha Temür and the protégé of Timur)

Family tree (House of Hulagu)

[edit]

Genealogy of Ulus of Hülegü

[edit]
House of Borjigin

Khamag Mongol/Mongol Empire
Il-Khanate

Yesügei
r. 1161–1171
Temüjin
r. 1206–1227
Jochi-Ghasar
Tolui
Regent
r. 1227–1229
Tur
Hülegü
r. 1256–1265
Ariq-Böke
r. 1259–1264
Ibugan
YoshmutAbaqa
r. 1265–1282
Tegüder
r. 1282–1284
TaraqaiMöngke-TemürMalik-TimurImugan
SogaiArghun
r. 1284–1291
Qayqatu
r. 1291–1295
Baydu
r. 1295–1295
AmbarchiMingqanBaba
Yusuf-ShahGhazan
r. 1295–1304
Öljaitü
r. 1304–1316
Ala-FrangAliTimurSöseSutay
Sulayman
r. 1339–1343
Abu Sa'id
r. 1316–1335
Sati-Beg
r. 1338–1339
Jahan-Timur
r. 1339–1340
Musa
r. 1336–1336
Yul-QutluqArpa
r. 1335–1336
Taghay-Timur
r. 1335–1353
Anushirwan
r. 1343–1357
Muhammad
r. 1336–1338
Amir Wali
r. 1353–1384
Luqman
r. 1384–1388
Pirak
r. 1388–1406
Sultan-Ali
r. 1406–1407

See also

[edit]

Notes

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  1. ^ Biran, Michal (2016). "Il-Khanate Empire". In Dalziel, N.; MacKenzie, J. M. (eds.). The Encyclopedia of Empire. p. 1. doi:10.1002/9781118455074.wbeoe362. ISBN 978-1-118-44064-3.
  2. ^ Fragner 2006, pp. 78–79.
  3. ^ Vajda, Edward (2024). The Languages and Linguistics of Northern Asia. De Gruyter. p. 79. ISBN 9783110556216.
  4. ^ Fragner 2006, p. 78.
  5. ^ Badiee 1984, p. 97.
  6. ^ Vásáry 2016, p. 149.
  7. ^ Turchin, Peter; Adams, Jonathan M.; Hall, Thomas D (December 2006). "East-West Orientation of Historical Empires". Journal of World-Systems Research. 12 (2): 223. ISSN 1076-156X. Retrieved 13 September 2016.
  8. ^ Rein Taagepera (September 1997). "Expansion and Contraction Patterns of Large Polities: Context for Russia". International Studies Quarterly. 41 (3): 496. doi:10.1111/0020-8833.00053. JSTOR 2600793.
  9. ^ Biran, Michael (2016). Dalziel, N.; MacKenzie, J. M. (eds.). "Il-Khanate Empire". The Encyclopedia of Empire: 1–6. doi:10.1002/9781118455074.wbeoe362. ISBN 9781118455074.
  10. ^ Danilenko, Nadja (2020). "In Persian, Please! The Translations of al-Iṣṭakhrī's Book of Routes and Realms". Picturing the Islamicate World: The Story of al-Iṣṭakhrī's Book of Routes and Realms. Brill. p. 101. Connecting to īrān as illustrated in the Shāhnāma, 'land of Iran' rose to the official name for the Ilkhanid realm.
  11. ^ Ashraf, Ahmad (2006). "Iranian Identity iii. Medieval Islamic Period". In Yarshater, Ehsan (ed.). Encyclopædia Iranica, Volume XIII/5: Iran X. Religions in Iran–Iraq V. Safavid period. London and New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul. pp. 507–522. ISBN 978-0-933273-93-1. ... the Mongol and Timurid phase, during which the name 'Iran' was used for the dynastic realm and a pre-modern ethno-national history of Iranian dynasties was arranged.
  12. ^ Danilenko, Nadja (2020). "In Persian, Please! The Translations of al-Iṣṭakhrī's Book of Routes and Realms". Picturing the Islamicate World: The Story of al-Iṣṭakhrī's Book of Routes and Realms. Brill. pp. 94–95.
  13. ^ Hodong Kim (2015). "Was 'da Yuan' a Chinese Dynasty?". Journal of Song-Yuan Studies. 45: 292.
  14. ^ Peter Jackson The Mongols and the West, p. 127
  15. ^ Curtin, Jeremiah (1996). The Mongols : a history. Internet Archive. Conshohocken, Pa. : Combined Books. ISBN 978-0-585-10021-0.
  16. ^ Timothy May Chormaqan, p. 47
  17. ^ Thomas T. Allsen Culture and Conquest in Mongol Eurasia, p. 84
  18. ^ Finlay, George (1851). The history of Greece : from its conquest by the crusaders to its conquest by the Turks, and of the empire of Trebizond ; 1204–1461. Getty Research Institute. Edinburgh : Blackwood.
  19. ^ Aknerts'i, Grigor; Bedrosian, Robert. History of the Nation of Archers.
  20. ^ Kalistriat Salia History of the Georgian Nation, p. 210
  21. ^ C. P. Atwood-Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire, see: Monqe Khan
  22. ^ X. Liu. The Silk Road in World History, Oxford University Press, Oxford, 2010 p. 116
  23. ^ E. Endicott-West. Merchant Associations in Yuan China: The "Ortoy,"Asia Major, Third Series, Vol. 2 No. 2, Academica Sinica, 1989
  24. ^ M. Th. Houtsma E.J. Brill's first encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913–1936, Volume 1, p. 729
  25. ^ Ehsan Yar-Shater Encyclopædia Iranica, p. 209
  26. ^ H. H. Howorth History of the Mongols, vol. IV, p. 138
  27. ^ Atwood 2004, p. 225.
  28. ^ Atwood 2004, p. 480.
  29. ^ Vernadsky 1953, p. 161.
  30. ^ Encyclopædia Britannica: Mongol empire, The Il-Khans in Iran.
  31. ^ a b Atwood 2004, p. 226.
  32. ^ a b c d Atwood 2004, p. 234.
  33. ^ Carboni, Stefano (1994). Illustrated Poetry and Epic Images. Persian paintings of the 1330s and 1340s (PDF). New York: Metropolitan Museum of Art. p. 12.
  34. ^ Christopher P. Atwood Ibid
  35. ^ David Morgan (2015). Medieval Persia 1040–1797. Routledge. p. 72. ISBN 9781317415671.
  36. ^ Timothy May (2016). The Mongol Empire: A Historical Encyclopedia – Volume I. ABC-CLIO. p. 141. ISBN 9781610693400.
  37. ^ a b Angus Donal Stewart (2001). The Armenian Kingdom and the Mamluks: War and Diplomacy During the Reigns of Het'um II (1289–1307). Brill. p. 182. ISBN 978-9004122925.
  38. ^ "The making of one of the greatest Islamic art museums in the world". Apollo Magazine. 26 November 2016.
  39. ^ Ali Al Oraibi, "Rationalism in the school of Bahrain: a historical perspective", in Shīʻite Heritage: Essays on Classical and Modern Traditions by Lynda Clarke, Global Academic Publishing 2001 p. 336
  40. ^ Angus Donal Stewart (2001). The Armenian Kingdom and the Mamluks: War and Diplomacy During the Reigns of Het'um II (1289–1307). Brill. p. 181. ISBN 978-9004122925.
  41. ^ Johan Elverskog (2011). Buddhism and Islam on the Silk Road. Harvard University Press. p. 141. ISBN 978-0812205312.
  42. ^ David Morgan (2015). Medieval Persia 1040–1797. Routledge. p. 73. ISBN 9781317415671.
  43. ^ Atwood 2004, p. 235.
  44. ^ Continuity and Change in Medieval Persia By Ann K. S. Lambton
  45. ^ Atwood 2004, p. 236.
  46. ^ Massing, Jean Michel; Albuquerque, Luís de; Brown, Jonathan; González, J. J. Martín (1991). Circa 1492: Art in the Age of Exploration. Yale University Press. p. 29. ISBN 978-0-300-05167-4.
  47. ^ Jackson 2017, p. 412.
  48. ^ Arjomand 2022, p. 34.
  49. ^ Atwood 2004, p. 231.
  50. ^ D. M. Lang, Georgia in the Reign of Giorgi the Brilliant (1314–1346). Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London, Vol. 17, No. 1 (1955), pp. 74–91
  51. ^ "Despite numerous envoys and the obvious logic of an alliance against mutual enemies, the papacy and the Crusaders never achieved the often-proposed alliance against Islam". Atwood, Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire, p. 583, "Western Europe and the Mongol Empire"
  52. ^ May 2018, pp. 250, 253–254.
  53. ^ a b Amitai, Reuven (2023). "The Mongols and the Arab Middle East". In Biran, Michal; Kim, Hodong (eds.). The Cambridge History of the Mongol Empire. Vol. 2. Cambridge University Press. p. 816. ISBN 978-1-009-30197-8.
  54. ^ a b May 2018, p. 254.
  55. ^ May 2018, pp. 254–255.
  56. ^ "The Jami' al-Tawarikh of Rashid al-Din". Khalili Collections. Retrieved 2024-10-29.
  57. ^ a b c d Kamola, Stefan (2019). "Īlkhānids". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Rowson, Everett (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam, Three. Brill. ISBN 9789004161658.
  58. ^ a b Kamola 2019, p. 75.
  59. ^ Blair & Bloom 2011, p. 403.
  60. ^ a b c d e f Bloom, Jonathan M.; Blair, Sheila S., eds. (2009). "Ilkhanid". The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art and Architecture. Vol. 2. Oxford University Press. pp. 184–185. ISBN 9780195309911.
  61. ^ Farhad & Rettig 2016, pp. 104–105.
  62. ^ Blair & Bloom 1995, p. 25.
  63. ^ Ohta, Alison (2022). "The Hamadan Qur'an of Öljaytü: Vestiges of a Binding Tradition". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. 32 (4): 743–761. doi:10.1017/S1356186322000591. ISSN 1356-1863.
  64. ^ a b c d e f g Blair & Bloom 2011, p. 400.
  65. ^ a b c d Blair & Bloom 1995, p. 21.
  66. ^ "The Shroud of Rudolf IV". Dom Museum Wien. Retrieved 2024-10-23.
  67. ^ Blair & Bloom 1995, p. 23.
  68. ^ a b Blair & Bloom 2011, pp. 400–401.
  69. ^ "Candlestick Base". MFA Boston. Retrieved 2024-10-23.
  70. ^ "Bowl". The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved 2024-10-23.
  71. ^ Blair & Bloom 1995, p. 22.
  72. ^ Dang, Baohai; Rong, Xinjiang (9 November 2021). Marco Polo and the Silk Road (in Chinese). Beijing Book Co. Inc.
  73. ^ Gregory G.Guzman – Were the barbarians a negative or positive factor in ancient and medieval history?, The historian 50 (1988), 568–70
  74. ^ Thomas T.Allsen – Culture and conquest in Mongol Eurasia, 211
  75. ^ Ho, Kai-Lung (2008). "Central Asiatic Journal". Central Asiatic Journal. 52. O. Harrassowitz: 46.
  76. ^ Francis Robinson, The Mughal Emperors and the Islamic Dynasties of India, Iran and Central Asia, pp. 19, 36
  77. ^ Cigdem Solas, ACCOUNTING SYSTEM PRACTICED IN THE NEAR EAST DURING THE PERIOD 1220–1350, based on the book RISALE-I FELEKIYYE, The Accounting Historians Journal, Vol. 21, No. 1 (June 1994), pp. 117–135
  78. ^ Foundation, Encyclopaedia Iranica. "Welcome to Encyclopaedia Iranica". iranicaonline.org.

References

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