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The Mongol City of Ghazaniyya: Destruction, Spatial Reconstruction, and Preservation of the Urban Heritage1
Atri Hatef Naiemi The Mongol City of Ghazaniyya: Destruction, Spatial Reconstruction, and Preservation of the Urban Heritage1 Hülegü Khan (r. 1256-1265), a grandson of Chinggis Khan, founded the Ilkhanate in Iran in 1256 as the southwestern sector of the Mongol Empire. Mongol campaigns in Iran in the thirteenth century caused extensive destruction in different aspects of the Iranians’ social life and built environment. However, the political stability after the arrival of Hülegü intensified the process of urban development. Along with the reconstruction of the cities that had been extensively destroyed during the Mongol attack, the Ilkhans founded a number of new settlements. Their architectural and urban projects were mostly conducted in the northwest of present-day Iran, with some exceptions, for instance the city of Khabushan in Khurasan which was largely rebuilt by Hülegü and the notables of his court.2 In western Iran, Hülegü firstly focused his attention on the reconstruction of Baghdad, but following the designation of Azerbaijan as the headquarters of the Mongols, his urban development activities extended to this region. Maragha was chosen as the first capital of the Mongols and the most 1 This article has been adapted from a lecture presented in November 2019 at the Aga Khan Program in MIT. The research for this project has been facilitated by fellowship held with the Aga Khan program of MIT. I would like to thank Professors Nasser Rabbat and James Wescoat for their hospitality during the four months I spent at MIT in 2019. 2 In addition to Hülegü, Ghazan Khan also erected magnificent buildings in Khabushan. -
The Taliban's Survival
Global-Local Interactions: Journal of International Relations http://ejournal.umm.ac.id/index.php/GLI/index ISSN: 2657-0009 Vol. 1, No. 2, July 2020, Pp. 38-46 THE TALIBAN'S SURVIVAL: FROM POST-2001 INSURGENCY TO 2020 PEACE DEAL WITH THE UNITED STATES Taufiq -E- Faruque Department of International Relations, University of Dhaka, Bangladesh Article Info Abstract Article history: The 2020 United States (US)-Taliban peace deal has essentially made the Received August 18, 2020 Taliban movement as one of the most durable and resilient insurgent groups in Revised November 26, 2020 today's world. Following the 'levels of analysis' of international relations as an Accepted December 04, 2020 analytical framework, this paper explores the reasons behind the survival of the Available online December 12, 2020 Taliban insurgency in an integrative framework that organizes the individual and group, state, and international level dynamics of this insurgency in a single Cite: account. The paper argues that the defection of politically and economically Faruque, Taufiq -E-. (2020). The Taliban’s marginalized individual Afghans, the multilayered and horizontal structure of the Survival: From Post-2001 Insurgency to 2020 Taliban insurgency, regional power configuration in South Asia, and the lack of Peace Deal with The United States. Global- a coherent post-invasion strategy of the US and its allies factored into the Local Interaction: Journal of International survival of the Taliban insurgency that resulted in a peace deal between the Relations, 1(2). Taliban and the US. * Corresponding author. Keywords: Taliban, Afghanistan, insurgency, United States, peace deal Taufiq -E- Faruque E-mail address: [email protected] Introduction It was hard to imagine that the Taliban would be able to mount a resilient challenge to a large-scale commitment of forces by the US and its allies. -
New Discovered Archaeological Sites in Nushki District of Balochistan (A Field Report)
- 59 - BI-ANNUAL RESEARCH JOURNAL “BALOCHISTAN REVIEW” ISSN 1810-2174 Balochistan Study Centre, UoB, Quetta (Pak) VOL. XXVIII NO.1, 2013 NEW DISCOVERED ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITES IN NUSHKI DISTRICT OF BALOCHISTAN (A FIELD REPORT) History Farooq Baloch*& Waheed Razzaq† Abstract: Balochistan is known as a mother land of ancient cultures because, of its countless Archaeological sites. Balochistan is divided among three countries, Pakistan, Iran and Afghanistan, and the part Pakistan consists approximately 3, 47,190, square kilometer, and it is 44% out of the total area of Pakistan. It is further divided into 6 Divisions and 30 Districts. Every district has a huge importance by its Archaeological sites which consist on Mounds, Graveyards, Tombs, Inscriptions, Karezes and Ancient Dames etc. Some very important sites are excavated by the Archaeologists, like Mehrgarh in Bolan District, Peerak in Sibi District, Mound of Killi Gul Mohammad in Quetta District, Pariano Ghundai in Zhob District, Anjeera in Kalat District, Bala Kot in Bela District and Meeri Kalat in Kech District, etc., large number of archaeological sites have been discovered but still they are not excavated. On the other side different archaeolocial sites of Balochistan are still unexplored. Many sites are still hidden and not discovered by any Archaeologist, the sites of Nushki District have always been ignored by local peopal and Archaeologists. In the espect of Archaeology Nushki has also many attractive and important archaeological sites. The following research article is about the new discovered Archaeological sites in the Nushki District by a team of Balochistan study centre. The objectives behind this study are to overview the new Archaeological sites in the Nushki District and explain their historical, cultural, anthropological and social importance. -
Landinfo Report Afghanistan Taliban's Organization and Structure
Report Afghanistan: Taliban’s organization and structure Report by Dr. Antonio Giustozzi for Landinfo Report Afghanistan: Taliban’s organization and structure LANDINFO – 23 AUGUST 2017 1 About Landinfo’s reports The Norwegian Country of Origin Information Centre, Landinfo, is an independent body within the Norwegian Immigration Authorities. Landinfo provides country of origin information to the Norwegian Directorate of Immigration (Utlendingsdirektoratet – UDI), the Immigration Appeals Board (Utlendingsnemnda – UNE) and the Norwegian Ministry of Justice and Public Security. Reports produced by Landinfo are based on information from carefully selected sources. The information is researched and evaluated in accordance with common methodology for processing COI and Landinfo’s internal guidelines on source and information analysis. To ensure balanced reports, efforts are made to obtain information from a wide range of sources. Many of our reports draw on findings and interviews conducted on fact-finding missions. All sources used are referenced. Sources hesitant to provide information to be cited in a public report have retained anonymity. The reports do not provide exhaustive overviews of topics or themes, but cover aspects relevant for the processing of asylum and residency cases. Country of origin information presented in Landinfo’s reports does not contain policy recommendations nor does it reflect official Norwegian views. *** This report by Dr. Antonio Giustozzi is commissioned by Landinfo. The content of the report is solely the responsibility of the author and do not necessarily represent the views of The Norwegian Country of Origin Information Centre. © Landinfo 2017 The material in this report is covered by copyright law. Any reproduction or publication of this report or any extract thereof other than as permitted by current Norwegian copyright law requires the explicit written consent of Landinfo. -
Naqshbandi Sufi, Persian Poet
ABD AL-RAHMAN JAMI: “NAQSHBANDI SUFI, PERSIAN POET A Dissertation Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirement for The Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of the Ohio State University By Farah Fatima Golparvaran Shadchehr, M.A. The Ohio State University 2008 Approved by Professor Stephen Dale, Advisor Professor Dick Davis Professor Joseph Zeidan ____________________ Advisor Graduate Program in History Copyright by Farah Shadchehr 2008 ABSTRACT The era of the Timurids, the dynasty that ruled Transoxiana, Iran, and Afghanistan from 1370 to 1506 had a profound cultural and artistic impact on the history of Central Asia, the Ottoman Empire, and Mughal India in the early modern era. While Timurid fine art such as miniature painting has been extensively studied, the literary production of the era has not been fully explored. Abd al-Rahman Jami (817/1414- 898/1492), the most renowned poet of the Timurids, is among those Timurid poets who have not been methodically studied in Iran and the West. Although, Jami was recognized by his contemporaries as a major authority in several disciplines, such as science, philosophy, astronomy, music, art, and most important of all poetry, he has yet not been entirely acknowledged in the post Timurid era. This dissertation highlights the significant contribution of Jami, the great poet and Sufi thinker of the fifteenth century, who is regarded as the last great classical poet of Persian literature. It discusses his influence on Persian literature, his central role in the Naqshbandi Order, and his input in clarifying Ibn Arabi's thought. Jami spent most of his life in Herat, the main center for artistic ability and aptitude in the fifteenth century; the city where Jami grew up, studied, flourished and produced a variety of prose and poetry. -
Mughal-Afghan Conflict in South Asia: Origin and Development
TAKATOO Issue 11 Volume6 46 January – June 2014 Mughal-Afghan Conflict in South Asia: Origin and Development Himayatullah Yaqubi Abstract: Afghans and Mughals remained at war with each-others not only in the mainland of India but also along the porous north-western border inhibited largely by the Afghans. In fact, Zahir-ud-Din Babur, the founder of Mughal Dynasty, had faced the Afghan danger not only in border areas but also had to compete with them for the throne of Delhi. However, very little academic work has been done to discover the origin of their conflict that took the contour of an un-ending rivalry between the two nations. The Afghans in general, throughout the Mughal rule in India, never reconciled with them and most of the time resisted their intrusions. The paper aims at to dig out the actual cause or causes of their conflict and its development in historical perspective. The objective is to relocate roots of their relationship in Kabul when Ulegh Beg Mirza, brother of Umar Shaikh Mirza, was ruling over there. In addition, its effects, on the Indian political events that unfolded during Babur and Humayun times, would be judged to comprehend its true nature. It would be judged that how their relationship in Kabul fashioned future Indian political discourse between the two nations. Mughal-Afghan Relations in Kabul After the death of Timur, there was chaos in his vast empire. His vast empire was divided amongst his four sons; Miran Shah, Jahangir, Amir Shaikh and Shah Rukh Mirza. In the family of Timur, Abu Said was the son of Sultan Muhammad Mirza, grandson of Miran Shah and grand-grandson of Timur. -
Tadhkirat Al-Sh.U Lara
Mir Dawlatshah Samarqandi Tadhkirat al-sh.u lara Mir Dawlatshah Samarqandi was the son of Amir Ala'uddawla Bakhtishah Isfarayini, one of Shahrukh's courtiers, and nephew of the powerful Amir Firozshah. Unlike his fore- bears, who "passed their time as aristocrats in ostentatiousness and opulence," Mir Dawlatshah, who was of a dervish bent and had some poetic talent, "sought seclusion and contented himself with a life of spiritual poverty and rustication to acquire learning and perfection."! At the age of fifty he began his Tadhkirat al-shu'ara (Memorial of poets), anecdotes about and short biographies of 150 Persian poets, ancient and modern, which he completed in 892/1487. The judgment of Mir Ali-Sher Nawa'i, to whom the work was dedicated, was that "anyone who reads it will realize the merit and talent of the compiler." Although the book deals primarily with poets, since poets generally were inextricably bound to royal patrons, it contains valuable anecdotal information on many pre- Timurid, Timurid and Turcoman rulers. The synopses of rulers' careers and anecdotes illustrative of their characters included by Dawlatshah are translated and given here. * SULTANUWAYS JALAYIR2 out of a greedy poet's house is a difficult task," and gave him the candlestick. That [po288] It is said that one night Khwaja is how rulers rewarded poets in bygone Salman [Sawaji] was drinking in Sultan times.... Uways's assembly. As he departed, the sultan ordered a servant to light the way Dilshad Khatun was the noblest and for him with a candle in a golden candle- most beautiful lady of her time. -
'Castle of Dreams' Walks Off with Two Awards in Turkey
Art & Culture November 4, 2019 3 This Day in History (November 4) ‘Castle of Dreams’ Walks Off Today is Monday; 13th of the Iranian month of Aban 1398 solar hijri; corresponding to 6th of the Islamic month of Safar 1441 lunar hijri; and November 4, 2019, of the Christian Gregorian Calendar. 837 lunar years ago, on this day in 604 AH, the famous Persian poet and mystic, Jalal od-Din Mohammad Balkhi Rumi, was born to Iranian parents With Two Awards in Turkey in Wakhsh, a town located on the river of the same name in Balkh, Greater Best Actor Award, the Best Director Award, and Khorasan. Wakhsh is now in Tajikistan while Balkh is in Afghanistan. The most important influences upon him, besides his scholarly father Baha od-Din the Golden Goblet. Walad who was connected to the spiritual lineage of the Iranian Gnostic Najm The film has also won two awards at the Batumi od-Din Kubra, were the Persian poets Attar Naishapuri and Sana’i Ghaznavi. International Art-House Film Festival in Georgia He was hardly ten years when the family had to flee Khorasan towards Iraq and was selected as the best film according to because of the barbaric Mongol invasion. After a sojourn in Baghdad and critics in the West and East Eurasian Film Festival travel to the holy cities of Mecca and Medina, followed by a brief stay in (Orenburg, Russia). Damascus, he settled in Konya in Anatolia which was under the Persianate Seljuq Sultanate of Roum – hence his title Rumi. At the age of 67, he passed Best director award of the 4th Slemani away in Konya, where he produced his magnum opus the “Mathnawi”, and International Film Festival in Iraq and best film where his shrine has become a place of pilgrimage for Sufis. -
Sikhана20/C7на21/B10 for Further Sikh Painting on Ivory, See 03589 (IS)
Sikh 20/C7 21/B10 For further Sikh painting on ivory, see 03589 (IS) to 03608 (IS), fiche 56/G657/A11, and IS 1421952 to IS 1671954, fiche 57/E9G10, in the Company Painting Other media: Painting on ivory section. 03534/1 (IS) 20/C8 Sikh lancer in chainmail on horseback Punjab Plains, c18401845 03534/2 (IS) 20/C9 Sikh horseman Punjab Plains, c18401845 03534/3 (IS) 20/C10 Sikh warrior with breastplate on horseback Punjab Plains, c18401845 03534/4 (IS) 20/C11 Sikh warrior in chainmail on horseback Punjab Plains, c18401845 IM 2:331917 20/C12 Guru Nanak with followers and attendants Popular Sikh, Lahore or Amritsar, c1870 IM 2:511917 20/D1 Sikh Railway train Popular Sikh, Lahore or Amritsar, c1870 IM 561936 20/D2 Maharaja Ranjit Singh (17801839) Punjab Plains, c1840 IM 571936 20/D3 Maharajah Kharak Singh (18021840) Punjab Plains, c1840 IM 581936 20/D4 Nau Nihal Singh (18211840) Punjab Plains, c1840 IM 591936 20/D5 Raja Dhian Singh (17961843) on horseback Punjab Plains, c1840 IM 601936 20/D6 Hira Singh (c18161844) Punjab Plains, c1840 IS 371949 20/D7 Maharaja Gulab Singh (17921857) of Jammu taking his bath prior to doing worship Punjab Plains, c1835 IS 4791950 20/D8 Two Sikhs on horseback Punjab Plains, c1835 IS 4801950 20/D9 Maharaja Ranjit Singh (17801839) on horseback Punjab Plains, c18351840 IS 4871950 20/D10 Two gentry Punjab Plains, c18401850 IS 4881950 20/D11 Two Sikh cultivators Sikh, 19 th century IS 4891950 20/D12 Two Sikh Akalis Punjab Plains, c18401850 IS 1891951 -
Dr. Bakhtiyar Babadjanov – Selected Bibliography May 2018
Dr. Bakhtiyar Babadjanov – Selected Bibliography May 2018 Books 1. „Mujaddid Reformation: how to fix Islam and Muslims?“ In: Russia – Central Asia. Politics and Islam in the late XVIII – early XX centuries. Moscow, 2010. Vol. 2, p. 56-80. 2. Kokand Khanate: Power, Politics, Religion // Tokyo-Tashkent: Yangi nashr, 2010 (in Russian). 3. Masterpieces of Architectural Epigraphy in Uzbekistan. Tashkent: Sharq, 2011-2016, Vol. “Samarkand. Shah-I Zindah”; “Samarkand. Registan”; “ Kashkadaria. Shahrisabz. Aq-Sarai”; “Khorezm Khiva” etc… (12 volumes). Editor, the author of Russian and English translations. 4. Bakhtiyar Babajanov, Ashirbek Muminov, Anke von Kügelgen (eds.) Disputes on Muslim Authority in Central Asia (20th Century): Critical Editions and Source Studies. Almaty: Daik-Press, 2007, 272 pp. 5. Bakhtiyar Babajanov, Maria Szuppe (eds.), Les inscription persanes de Chār Bakr, necropole familiale des khwāja Jūybary près de Boukhara (Corpus Inscriptionum Iranicarum, vol. XXXI: Uzbekistan). London: Corpus Inscriptionum Iranicarum, 2002, 340 pp. 6. Bakhtiyar Babajanov, Ashirbek Muminov, Jürgen Paul (eds.): Schaibanidische Grabinschriften. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1997, 300 pp. Editions and translations of original source texts in Arabic, Persian and Chagatay 7. Shaykh Khudaydad Ibn Tash Muhammad. Bustan al-Muhibbin. Edition of original text, commentary, translation by B.Babadjanov, M. Kadirova. Turkistan: Myrath, 2006. 8. Manaqib-i Dukchi Ishan (The Biography of Dukchi Ishan – Leader of Andigan Uprising in 1898) Anonim. Original text, translation (in Russian) and commentary by B. Babajanov. Almaty: Daik-Press, 2004. 9. Muhammad Yusuf b. Muhammad Amin Khwaja (Ta’ib). Tuhfa-yi Ta’’ib. Edition of original text, commentary and Introduction by B. Babadjanov, Sh. Vahidov and H. Komatsu. Tashkent-Tokyo: Islamic Area Studies, 2002. -
The Analysis Ofazerbaijani Islamic Architecture During Seljuk, Ilkhanid and Timuriddynasties
ISSN 2090-4304 J. Basic. Appl. Sci. Res., 2(2)1522-1527, 2012 Journal of Basic and Applied © 2012, TextRoad Publication Scientific Research www.textroad.com The Analysis ofAzerbaijani Islamic Architecture during Seljuk, Ilkhanid and Timuriddynasties ShahnazFarmaniSaransari1,*, GholamHosseinMemarian2, Ya`goobAzhand3 Holds PHD in Architecture. Islamic Azad University, University of Science and Research Branch , Iran Associate Professor of science and Technology University, Iran Professor of Tehran University, Iran ABSTRACT Islam religion was developed unprecedentedly from Saudi Arabia into Middle East, the Indus River and over the north of Africa to the Atlantic Ocean in very first centuries. The intrinsic value of Islam aroused millions of people all over the world and unified various nationalities under the authority of Islam. Through exchanging science, techniques and the ancient arts of these tribes with one another, and associating them with Islam, a new era of dignity and glory appeared which was called Islamic Culture and Civilization. After that, the Islamic architecture, within thousands of years of sustained experience, and taking advantage of its high capabilities and creativities, attained in creation of valuable and splendid architectural buildings and left so many masterpieces. Considering the importance and prosperity of various arts in Iran after Islam, it’s been tried in this paper to analyze the Islamic Architecture during Seljuk, Ilkhanid and Timurid dynasties, and its effects on Azerbaijan architecture. KEY WORDS: Islamic Architecture, Azerbaijan, Seljuk dynasty, Ilkhaniddynasty and Timurid dynasty. 1. INTRODUCTION After the foundation of Seljuk dynasty in the first half of the AH 5th C.(AD 11th C.), the most brilliant period of Islamic art began in Iran. -
The Timurids and the Black Sea
The Timurids and the Black Sea Nagy Pienaru At the middle of the penultimate decade of the 14th century, a new player emerged on the political scene of the powers fighting both on land and sea for the domination of sections of the Black Sea coast: the state of Timur Lenk (1370–1405), founded in Central Asia. The diachrony of the direct and multilev- el involvement of the Timurids in the Black Sea consists of two distinct stages: the ascension, during the lifetime of the founder of the Timurid Empire, and the progressive decline, during the reign of Shah Rukh (1409–1447). 1 Timur Lenk and the Black Sea The expansion towards the West promoted by the Tatar conqueror didn’t in- volve the control of a segment of the Black Sea coast, but the political suprem- acy over the Golden Horde, the Ottoman Empire and the Mamluk Sultanate of Egypt, as a preliminary stage of his ambitious project to become an Islamic world power through the conquest of China. The establishment of Timurid domination over the South-eastern corner of the Black Sea, in the area of modern Azerbaijan, took place in time. After tak- ing almost full control of Persia, following the campaign known as “the three- year expedition” (1386–1388)1 in the Persian literary sources, Timur pursued his enemy, Ahmed Celayir (1382–1410), entered in Azerbaijan and peacefully oc- cupied Tabriz, a commercial centre that was no longer the main trade hub between the East and the West and supplier of the Black Sea ports. A year before, during the winter of 1385/1386, Timur’s rival, Tokhtamysh (1380–1405), prob- ably aware of the intentions concerning Azerbaijan of the ruler of Samarkand, led a raid against Tabriz through the Pass of Derbent—the single accessible pass from the Eastern Black Sea—and Shirvan.