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Abbasid Caliphate
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Adil Shah
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Afghanistan
Afghans
Afsharid dynasty
Agriculture of Iran
Ahmad Shah Abdali
Airlines of Iran
Ak Koyunlu
Akkadian Empire
Aksumite Empire
Alaouite dynasty
Alavids
Allegations of Iranian state terrorism
Almohad Caliphate
Almoravid dynasty
Angevin Empire
Anglo-Iranian Oil Company
Anti-Iranianism
Armenian Language
Armenians in Iran
Aryan
Asalouyeh
Ashraf Khan
Assembly of Experts
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Austrian Empire
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Azerbaijan
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Bactria-Margiana Archaeological Complex
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Bonyad
Bornu Empire
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Chupanids
Cinema of Iran
City and Village Councils of Iran
Common Era
Communications in Iran
Constitution of Islamic Republic of Iran
Construction in Iran
Culture of Iran
Danish Colonial Empire
Delhi Sultanate
Delhi Sultanate#Tughlaq
Demographics of Iran
Durrani Empire
Durrani dynasty
Durranis
Dutch Empire
Dynasty
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سلسله افشار
The Afsharid dynasty
←
←
1736–1796
→
→
Flag
Coat of arms
Afsharid Kingdom before the conquest of India, Oman, and Northern Central Asia
Capital
Mashhad
Language(s)
Persian
Government
Monarchy
Shah
Nader Shah (first)
Shahrokh (last)
History
- Afsharid dynasty begins
1736
- Afsharid dynasty ends
1796
History of Greater Iran
until the rise of modern nation-states
Pre-modern
Pre-Islamic
BCE
Prehistory
Proto-Elamite civilization
3200–2800
Elamite dynasties
2800–550
Bactria-Margiana Complex
2200–1700
Kingdom of Mannai
10th–7th cent.
Median Empire
728–550
Achaemenid Empire
550–330
Seleucid Empire
330–150
Greco-Bactrian Kingdom
250-125
Parthian Empire
248–CE 224
CE
Kushan Empire
30–275
Sassanid Empire
224–651
Hephthalite Empire
425–557
Kabul Shahi kingdom
565–879
Islamic
Patriarchal Caliphate
637–651
Umayyad Caliphate
661–750
Abbasid Caliphate
750–1258
Tahirid dynasty
821–873
Alavid dynasty
864–928
Saffarid dynasty
861–1003
Samanid dynasty
819–999
Ziyarid dynasty
928–1043
Buyid dynasty
934–1055
Ghaznavid Empire
975–1187
Ghori dynasty
1149–1212
Seljuk Empire
1037–1194
Khwarezmid dynasty
1077–1231
Ilkhanate
1256–1353
Kartids dynasty
1231-1389
Muzaffarid dynasty
1314–1393
Chupanid dynasty
1337–1357
Jalayerid dynasty
1339–1432
Timurid Empire
1370–1506
Qara Qoyunlu Turcomans
1407–1468
Aq Qoyunlu Turcomans
1378–1508
Safavid Empire
1501–1722*
Mughal Empire
1526–1857
Hotaki dynasty
1722–1729
Afsharid dynasty
1736–1750
* or 1736
Zand Dynasty
1750-1794
Durrani Empire
1794-1826
Qajar Dynasty
1794-1925
The Afsharids (Persian: سلسله افشار) were members of an Iranian dynasty of Turkmen origin from Khorasan who ruled Persia in the 18th century. The dynasty was founded in 1736 by the military commander Nader Shah who deposed the last member of the Safavid dynasty and proclaimed himself King of Iran. During Nader's reign, Iran reached its greatest extent since the Sassanid Empire. After his death, most of his empire was divided between the Zands and the Durranis, and Afsharid rule was confined to a small local state in Khorasan. Finally, the Afsharid dynasty was overthrown by Mohammad Khan Qajar in 1796.
The dynasty was named after the Turkic Afshar tribe to which Nader belonged. The Afshars had migrated from Turkestan to Azerbaijan in the 13th century. In the early 17th century, the Persian Shah Abbas the Great moved many Afshars from Azerbaijan to Khorasan to defend the north-eastern borders of his state against the Uzbeks. Nader belonged to the Qereqlu branch of the Afshars.1
Contents
1 Foundation of the dynasty
2 Nader's conquests and the succession problem
3 Civil war and downfall of the Afsharids
4 List of Afsharid Monarchs
5 Family tree
6 See also
7 References
8 External links
//
Foundation of the dynasty
Nader Shah was born as Nader Qoli into a humble semi-nomadic family of Khorasan, where he became a local warlord.2 His path to power began when the Ghilzai Shah Mahmud overthrew the weak Safavid shah Soltan Hosein in 1722. At the same time, Ottoman and Russian forces seized Persian land. Nader joined forces with Soltan Hosein's son Tahmasp II and led the resistance against the Ghilzai Afghans, driving their leader Ashraf Khan out of the capital in 1729 and establishing Tahmasp on the throne. Nader fought to regain the lands lost to the Ottomans and restore Persian control of the Afghans. While he was away in the east fighting the Ghilzais, Tahmasp allowed the Ottomans to retake territory in the west. Nader, disgusted, had Tahmasp deposed in favour of his baby son Abbas III in 1732. Four years later, after he had recaptured most of the lost Persian lands, Nader was confident enough to have himself proclaimed shah in his own right at a ceremony on the Moghan Plain.3
Nader's conquests and the succession problem
Nader initiated a new religious policy aimed at reconciling Shia with Sunni Islam. The Safavid dynasty had relied heavily on the support of Shi'ites, but many soldiers in Nader's army were Sunnis. Nader also wanted to set himself up as a rival of the Ottoman sultan for supremacy within the Muslim world, which would have been impossible had he remained an orthodox Shi'ite.4
Sind silver rupee, under the Afsharid Shahs of Iran 18th century.
Soon afterwards Nader waged a war against the Afghans and captured Kandahar. In 1738, he invaded Mughal India, massacred 30,000 of the inhabitants of Delhi and in a single campaign captured an incredible amount of wealth, including the legendary Peacock Throne and the Koh-i-Nor diamond.5
After his return from India, Nader fell out with his eldest son Reza Qoli Mirza, who had ruled Persia during his father's absence. Having heard a rumour that Nader was dead, he had prepared to seize the throne by having the Safavid royal captives, Tahmasp and his son Abbas, executed. Nader was not pleased with the young man's behaviour and humiliated him by removing him from the post of viceroy. Nader became increasingly despotic, taxing his subjects heavily to pay for his military campaigns, and his health decayed. When there was an assassination attempt on him during an expedition to Daghestan, Nader blamed Reza and in 1742 had him blinded so he could not succeed to the throne 6 Nader's despotism and excessive demands for tax provoked many revolts. In 1747 while on his way to crush one of them, he was assassinated by two of his own officers. Iran was soon to descend into civil war.7
Civil war and downfall of the Afsharids
After Nader's death, his nephew Ali Qoli (who may have been involved in the assassination plot) seized the throne and proclaimed himself Adil Shah ("The Just Shah"). He ordered the execution of all Nader's sons and grandsons, with the exception of the 13-year old Shahrokh, the son of Reza Qoli.8 Meanwhile, Nadir's former treasurer, Ahmad Shah Abdali, had declared his independence by founding the Durrani Empire in Khorasan. In the process, the eastern territories were lost and in the following decades became part of Afghanistan, the successor-state to the Durrani Empire.
Adil made the mistake of sending his brother Ebrahim to secure the capital Isfahan. Ebrahim decided to set himself up as a rival, defeated Adil in battle, blinded him and took the throne. Adil had reigned for less than a year. Meanwhile a group of army officers freed Shahrokh from prison in Mashhad and proclaimed him shah in October 1748. Ebrahim was defeated and died in captivity in 1750 and Adil was also put to death at the request of Nader Shah's widow. Shahrokh was briefly deposed in favour of another puppet ruler Soleyman II but, although blinded, Shahrokh was restored to the throne by his supporters. He reigned in Mashhad and from the 1750s his territory was mostly confined to Khorasan. In 1796 Mohammad Khan Qajar, the founder of the Qajar dynasty, seized Mashhad and tortured Shahrokh to force him to reveal the whereabouts of Nader Shah's treasures. Shahrokh died of his injuries soon after and with him the Afsharid dynasty came to an end.910
List of Afsharid Monarchs
Nader Shah (1736–1747)
Adil Shah (1747–1748)
Ebrahim (1748)
Shahrukh (1748–1796)
Family tree
Imam Qoli
(d.1704)
Ebrahim Khan
(k.1738)
Nader Shah
1736-1747
Adil Shah
1747-1748
Ebrahim
1748
Reza Qoli Mirza
(b.1719-k.1747
Shahrukh
1748-1796
Nader Mirza
(k.1803)
See also
— Royal house —
Afsharid dynasty
Founding year: 1736
Deposition: 1796
Preceded by
Safavid dynasty
Ruling house of Iran
1736-1750
Succeeded by
House of Zand
List of kings of Persia
List of Shi'a Muslims dynasties
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: Category:Afsharid_Empire
^ Cambridge History of Iran Volume 7, pp.2-4
^ Encyclopedia Iranica
^ Michael Axworthy Iran: Empire of the Mind (Penguin, 2008) pp.153-156
^ Axworthy Iran p.157
^ Axworthy Iran pp.158-159
^ Axworthy Iran pp.160-161
^ Axworthy Iran p.165
^ Cambridge History p.59
^ Axworthy p.168
^ Cambridge History pp.60-62
External links
"Afsharids", Encyclopedia Iranica (mostly about Asharids after Nader Shah)
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Afsharid dynasty: Information from Answers.com
Afsharid Dynasty Of Turkic origin, the Afsharids ruled Iran 1736–96; at its zenith, the dynasty stretched from Iraq to northern India
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the reaction of 79 If he would even opened fire and eliminated 10 000 of these Islamists then the reaction of 79 would have never occurred L Nader Shah Afshar The All Times greatest military genius of Iran Persian Napoleon and the starter of Afsharid Dynasty
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