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Index

于Revolutions of the End of Time: Apocalypse, Revolution and Reaction in the Persianate World
著者:
Saïd Amir Arjomand
Saïd Amir Arjomand
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Index

Abāqā, Il-Khan 48
ʿAbbas I, Shah 109, 145–146
ʿAbbās III, late Safavid 160, 162
Abbasid (Hashemite ) Revolution 12, 18, 24, 27–28
ʿAbd al-Karim Samʿāni 30
ʿAbdallāh al-ʿAzzām 205
ʿAbdallāh Ansāri, Khwāja 30, 130
‘Abdallāh b. Mas‘ud 2
ʿAbdi Beg 93–94, 97, 107
Abrishamchi, Mehdi 193–194
Abu ʿAbdallāh al-Shiʿi 98
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi al-Qurayshi 204, 206–208
Abu Bakr b. Mirānshāh 22
Abu Bakr b. Saʿd b. Zangi, atabeg 40–41
Abu’l-Fayz Khan 160
Abu’l-Fazl Bayhaqi 12–13
Abu’l-Hasan Kharaqāni 30
Abu’l-Khayr/Shaybāni dynasty 115
Abu’l-Sharaf Jorbāzqāni 19
Abu’l-Soʿud (Ebu’s-suʿud) al-ʿEmādi 120, 122–125
Abu Mansur Tusi 26
Abu Mashʿar 17
Abu Moslem Khorāsāni 28, 100–101, 203
Abu Moslem Nāma 91
Abu Musʿab al-Suri 205
Abu Rayhān Biruni 26
Abu Saʿid, Il-Khan 50
advice to kings 12, 37–41, 51
al-ʿAdliyya al-sulaymāniyya  124
Afghan interregnum (1722–1729) 140, 144–158
Afghans 142
Abdāli 147, 152–5, 159
Ghelzai 146–48, 152–4, 159
Afghanistan 127–138, 148–159, 205
Conversion to Islam 127
Āfrids 133, 135
Afshār dynasty 162
Afzal al-Din Kermāni 18–19, 142
Afshār dynasty 162
Ahad-dād Rawshani 136
Ahmad b. Fahd al-Hilli 67
Ahmad Ahsā’i, Shaykh 170
Ahmad Jāmi, Shaykh 130
Ahmad Khan/Shah Abdāli (Dorrāni) 162
Ahmad Lor 58–60
Ahmadinejad, Mahmud 185, 189
Ahmed, Ottoman prince 98, 103, 105, 119
Akbar, Mughal 112, 135–136
Akhi Ahmed Shah 49
akhi brotherhoods 42, 52. fotowwat
Akhi Evrān 52
Akhi Mohammad Divāna 49
Akhi Muʿazzam Sharaf al-Din 52
Akhi Yaʿqub 52
Akhlāq-e ʿAlā’i  119
Akhlāq-e Jalāli 83–85
Akhlāti, Sayyed Hosayn 58–59, 62, 72, 76
ʿAlāʾ al-Dawla Zu’l-Qadr 102
ʿAlāʾ al-Din Kayqobād 36, 49
ʿAlāʾim al-zohur (The signs of manifestation) 180–181
Al-e Ahmad, Jalal 195
Aleppo 64–65
ʿAli Shir Navāʾi 99
ʿAli al-Aʿlā, Horufi leader 54–58, 60, 65
as God’s deputy 57
ʿAli al-Karaki, Shaykh 101, 120
ʿAli Pasha 105
ʿAli-Qoli Khan Shāmlu 155
Almohad revolution 10n24, 29, 137, 204n14
Alvand Mirzā, Āq Qoyunlu 99
Amānallāh Khan Afghan 150–512
Amasya 96, 98
Amir al-mu’minin 121, 125
Amir ʿAli Dāmghāni 53
Amir Mo’ayyad 52
Amir Nurallāh 58
Anatolia 36, 39–40, 42, 46–52, 86–89, 95–105
conversion to Islam 42, 47, 148
Ankara, akhi “republic” of 44, 52
Battle of 61
Antalya 98
Apocalyptic traditions
revival of the southern Arabian 204–06
Zoroastrian 205
Apocalypticism 1–2, 5
and occult sciences 61–66
and politics 4, 81, 188–196
and transfer of sovereignty 12
realized apocalypticism 33
of DAESH 203–208. Mahdism, messianism, millennialism
Āq Qoyunlu 45, 82–84
Āqā Mohammad Khan Qājār 140, 163–164
Āqsarāʾi 49–50
Arab revolutions of 2011 10, 98
Arafat, Yasser 186
Ardabil 88–96, 153
Arghun, Il-Khan 21, 49
Armenians 149–151, in Jolf
Asrār al-khilāfa (Secrets of the caliphate) 122
ʿasabiyya (group solidarity) 6, 137, 202, 204
atabegs  18–19
ʿAttār, Farid al-Din 33, 39, 130
Aubin, Jean 86, 106–107
awliyāʾ Allāh (friends of God) 31, 39, 58, 69–71, 77, 124, 131
ʿayyārān 30, 41–44
ʿAyn al-Qozāt Hamadāni 30, 130
Azali Babis 179–180
Azerbaijan 59–60, 82, 99–100, 105, 116, 128
ʿAziz b. Ardashir Astarābādi Baghdādi 20
bāb (gate) 170
Bābā Eshāq, called Bābā Rasul Allāh 48
Bābā Qodrati, Hajj Mohammad 155–156
Bābā Shāhqoli (Șahkulu) 103–106, 108
Bābāʾi rebellion 48, 51, 88
Babi movement 171–175
its urban social base 174
its uprisings in Badasht 173
Nayriz 173, 181
Zanjan 173–174
Bābor, Zahir al-Din Mohammad, Mughal 111–113, 127
Badāyeʿ al-waqāyeʿ (Marvelous events) 113
Badr militia, Iraqi Shiʿite 207
Baghdad 40, 82, 100, 107, 174, 202, 207
Bahādur khan 115
Bahādur Shah 128
Bahā’ullāh, Mirzā Hosayn ʿAli Nuri 174
Bahai religion 174
bakht (fortune) 16, 21–22
Bakhtiyāris 146
Balkh 29, 39, 99
Baluchis 144, 147–148, 154, 159
Banu al-Asfar (the Blond People) 81, 87
Barquq, Mamluk Sultan 59, 72
Bāyandor. see Āq Qoyunlu
Bāyazid Ansāri/Rawshani 127–134, 159
his Mahdihood 132, 134
Bāyazid Bastāmi 29–30, 131
Baybars, Malek al-Zaher (Mamluk Sultan) 17, 48
Bāyezid I, Yıldırım, Ottoman Sultan 44
Bāyezid II, Ottoman Sultan 23, 86, 98, 102, 108, 116–117, 119–121
Baysonghor Mirzā 76–78
Bedreddin Mahmud, Kadi[oğlu] of Samawna 53, 59, 61–66, 79–81, 86–87
his millennial uprising 64–66
its connection with the Horufi movement 65–66, 68
its social basis 64, 66
Beheshti, Sayyed Mohammad Hosayni 192
Berbers 98, 133, 137
Bestāmi, ʿAbd al-Rahmān 62–63, 79–81, 131
Bidābādi, Āqā Mohammad 187
Brack, Jonathan 48
Brethren of Purity (ekhwān al-safāʾ), Cairene 58–59, 63
British East India Company 154–155
Browne, Edward G. 180
Bukhara 115–116, 160
Bürkülje Mustafā 66
Bursa 52, 79–80, 104
Bustān 40
Cairo 58–59, 62–63, 65
Caldwell, Malcolm 196
Caliphate 119
Abbasid 119, 123
of God (khelāfat Allāh) 82–85
of the Prophet 121–123
the ruler as God’s Deputy 37, 74, 83, 93, 117
as the Deputy of the Merciful (khalifat al-Rahmān) 83–85, 113–122
Cambodian (Red Khmer) Revolution 184, 196
Castro, Fidel 185
Chaldiran, Battle of 105, 109
Charisma of the Mahdi 9, 105
its routinization 9–10, 105–109, 183–184, 199–200
Chinggisid restoration in the Uzbek empire 115–116
Chinggis Khan 12, 20–22, 33–34, 44–45, 159–161
his imperial principle 61, 115–116
the Yasa of 4, 78, 161
Chiliasm. see millennialism
Chishti Sufi order 127, 130
Chobān, Amir 49
Chamran, Mustafa 184–186
Chamran, Mehdi 185
Cohn, Norman 6
clerical monarchy 199–201
Collapse of the Safavid empire, a revolution in world history 140, 165–166
as proto-modern Persianate revolutio regni 140–144
as Tocquevillian 165
and the Khaldunian model 159, 165–166
and foreign armed intervention 151–153, 161–162
its causes 140–148
its process 140
power struggle, in Isfahan 149–155
in Kerman 148–149, 154, 157–158
in Mashhad 141, 147, 154–156
in Qazvin 150–151
in Sistan 154–158
in Yazd 154, 157–158
on the Persian Gulf littoral 156–158
Condorcet 141
confessional ambiguity, age of 34–42, 53
disestablishment of Islam 34–36
rivalry between the Sufi shaykhs and the ʿolamā’ 35–36
Constantinople (Byzantium), conquest of 45, 63, 80–81, 87, 205
constitutional politics. see revolution, process of
Constitutional Revolution of 1906–1911, 178–182, 197
as prelude to the advent of the Mahdi 179–181
Corps of the Guards of the Islamic Revolution 186, 200
counter-elite (dispossessed notables) as revolutionary leaders 62, 64, 67, 104–05, 120–21, 187, 199
counter-revolution 8
Sunni 111–126
exiles of Safavid revolution as its proponents 112–125
as preemptive reaction to apocalyptic Mahdism 8–10, 71–85, 117
and fatwās against the Qezelbāsh 114, 119–120
and orthodox (Sunni) reform 82–85
counter-millennial sovereignty 10
The Cry of the Owl (sayhat al-bum) on the Events of Rum 63
Cuban Revolution 184–185
DAESH 185, 201–208
comparison with the IRI 206–207
its anathemization of the nation-state 206–207
its counter-Shiʿite doomsday apocalypticism 206, 208
Neo-Khaldunian pattern 202–204
online recruitment 201–202, 208
rejection of Islamic ideology for prophetic methodology 206
Dabiq 203–204
Dastur al-moluk 153
Dawr tribe 133
Dawlat (turn in power) 6, 11–24, 41, 142
as the state 6, 17, 153–154, 160–161
Dajjāl (Antichrist) 57, 192
Daniel, Book of 11, 14, 81, 168
Dāneshmand-nāma 47
Davvāni, Jalāl al-Din Mohammad 82–85, 119
darvish 30, 41, 43
dervishes as political leaders 52–53. Sufism, antinomian
Deccan, the 31, 45, 102, 111, 129
Dede ʿOmar Rawshani 131
Delhi 160, 162
Delhi Sultanate 17, 19, 31, 127
Didār-e Farrahi va fotuhāt-e akhir al-zamān (The divine encounter and the revelations
of the end of time) 196
Diyarbekir (Diyār Bakr) 96, 99–100, 102
Dorr-e maknun 80
Dutch East India Company (VOC) 154–157
Ebrāhim-e Adham 29–30
Ebrāhim-Soltān, Timurid 74
Edris Bedlisi 23, 83–84, 105, 116–122
Empires, Turko-Mongolian-Persianate 10, 44–45, 61
Āq Qoyunlu 23, 82–84, 89–90, 98–102
Il-Khanid 20–21, 47–52
its disintegration 47, 52–53
Mongol 20, 33–34
Mughal (Timurids of India) 111–112
of Nāder Shah 139, 158–166
Ottoman 61–66
Safavid 89, 106–109
End of Time (ākhir al-zamān) ix, 1–2, 63, 67–71, 74, 81, 94, 132, 181, 186, 193, 196, 203–208
the Mahdi of 51, 73, 121, 128, 169, 186, 191
malāhem (tribulations) of 63
the revolution (enqelāb) of 191–192
English (Puritan) Revolution 168–169
enqelāb (revolution) 11–24, 141. 144, 158, 163, 191
Entezār, mazhab-e eʿterāz (Expectation, the religion of protest) 191
Epic of Kings (Shāhnāma) 26, 43
Erāqi, Fakhr al-Din 40
Erzinjān 92, 96–99
Esmāʿil the Safavid, Shah 10, 23, 90–109, 159
his divinity 90–92
his poetry as Khatā’i 91–92
his policy of “Shiʿism in one country,” 108–109
Eskandar Mirzā b. ʿOmar Shaykh 58, 61, 72–77
adherence to Horufis 72–73
Eskandarnāma 51
Estevā-nāma 60
European revolutions of 1848 3, 10, 98, 168–169, 175
fanāi’ fil-shaykh (self-annihilation in the master) 132
Fanon, Franz 184, 191
Fardid, Ahmad 194–196
farr (royal charisma) 41
Fatimid Revolution 9–10n24, 29, 170
Fath-ʿAli Khan Dāghestāni 144, 148, 151, 155
Fath-ʿAli Khan Qājār 163–164
Fath-ʿAli Shah (Bābā Khan) 164–165
fatrat 13, 21, 144
Fazlallāh Astarābādi (Horufi) 53–61
Fazlallāh Ruzbehān Khonji Esfahāni 84, 114–115
Fletcher, Joseph 45
fotowwat (chivalry, youth organizations) 30, 35, 41–44, 52–53
French Revolution of 1789 2–3, 7, 24, 141, 165, 167, 183
Freud, Sigmund 11
Gelunābād, Battle of 141, 149
Georgian troops, Safavid 146, 148–149
Germiyān 49–51
Geykhātu, Il-Khan 49–50
ghaybat (occultation of the Hidden Imam) 8–9, 28, 95, 188–191
ghazā (holy raid) 42, 47, 127
Ghazāli, Shaykh Ahmad 30
Ghāzān Khan 20–21, 42
ghāzi (holy warrior) 52, 65, 88
Ghaznin 135–136
Ghiyās al-Din Jamshid Kāshi 73
Ghiyās al-Din Mohammad 58–60
Ghojdovān, Battle of 1512 107–109, 114–115
gholāms (Safavid royal slaves) 145, 147, 150
gholoww (Shiʿite extremism) 86–89
Gilanentz, Petros 141
Gog and Magog 63, 81, 119
Golestān 40–41
Gombroon (Bandar ʿAbbās) 154, 156–158
Gorgin Khan (Shahnavāz) Khan 147
Guerrilla armed struggle (foco) 185–186
Iranian guerrilla organizations
Fedā’yān-e Khalq (Marxist) 185
Mojāhedin-e Khalq-e Mosalmān (Islamist) 185, 193
Peykār (Maoist) 185
Red Shiʿism 185
Guevara, Che 184–185
Gujarat 128–129
Habib al-siyar 94
hādi (righteous guide) 131, 134
Hadiqat al-Haqiqa wa shariʿat al-tariqa  31
Hāfez of Shiraz 16
Hājji Bayrām Vali 52
Hājji Bektāsh 52
Hājji Bektāsh Ilbeg 64
Hājji Sorkha, Horufi leader 59, 61
Halabi, Shaykh Mahmud 188
Hamdallāh Mostawfi 12
Hamza Bāli Effendi’s uprising 131–132
Hasan II b. Mohammad b. Bozorg-Omid 32
Hasan Khalifa Tekelu 103
Hasan Pahlavān 54
Hasan Sabbāh 29, 32
Hashemi-Rafsanjani, Hojjat al-Islam, later President 199
Hasht Behesht 117
Haydar, Safavid Shaykh 88–90, 127
Haydari crown (tāj) 89–90, 95
Hazāra 134–136
Heidegger, Martin 194–195
hejrat 132
Herat 30, 68, 100–101, 111, 113–115, 147–148, 155, 161
Hizbullah in Lebanon 186
Ho Chi Minh 184
Hodgson, Marshall 26–27, 30–31
Hojjatiyya Society 188–189
Homāyun, Mughal 111–112, 127–129
Hong Xiuquan 172, 175–78
as brother of Jesus and Heavenly King 176–79
Horufi movement 53–61, 72, 86
doctrine 54–57, 60
persecution of 57–59
uprisings 59–61, 66
urban social background of members 60–61
Horufiyya 80. Horufi movement
Hosām al-Din Bedlisi 83
Hosayn. see Shiʿite theodicy of martyrdom
Hosayniyya Ershad 191–192
Hülegü, the first Il-Khan 34
Ibn Abi Tāher Tayfur 18, 142
Ibn al-ʿArabi, Shaykh Muhyi al-Din 40, 65, 83
Ibn Bibi 13
Ibn Khaldun, ʿAbd al-Rahmān xxx, 6
Ibrāhim Pasha 122, 124
Ilāh-dād Rawshani 136
Isfahan 54, 58–61, 75, 107, 145, 148–158, 165
Afghan siege of 140–141, 149–150
Imam of the Age. see Lord of Time
Imamate 28–29, 42
Shiʿite theory of 204
its revolutionary modification into “continuous Imamate” 192
Sunni polemics against it 125
Integrative Revolution 13–14, 18, 74
Aristotelian-Paretan 14n26, 24–26
Khaldunian 14, 28–30, 174, 202–208
Irakli (Hercules), king of Georgia 162
Iran, emergence as a nation-state 142, 144, 161–165
its incorporation into the Westphalian international system 152, 162–165
Iran-Iraq War 185, 187–189, 202
Irān-zamin (the land of Iran) 34, 142, 144, 161
Iraq 67, 82, 99–100, 170, 172, 188–189, 201–208
Islām Shah Sur 129, 136
Islamicate civilization 2–5, 27, 29, 31
its dual tribal/urban social structure 6, 165
Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI) 185–189, 192, 195–199, 201, 206
as clerical monarchy 189, 199–201
Islamic Revolution of 1979 in Iran 6–7, 178, 183–200
as a revolution in Shiʿism 198–199
its export 188
Islamic State of the Caliphate/Iraq and Syria. see DAESH
Jacobinism 4, 6, 167–168
Ja‘far, Safavid Shaykh 87–88
Jaʿfar b. Abi Tālib 79
Ja‘far b. Muhammad al-Sādiq 190–191, 212
jafr (science of divination) 12, 63, 77
Jahāngir Khan Sur-e Isrāfil 179–180
Jahān Pahlavān, atabeg 19
Jahānshāh Qara Qoyunlu 59, 82, 87
Jalāl al-Din Mohammad Khwārazmshāh 13
Jalāl al-Din Rawshani (Jalāla) 133–137
Jalāl al-Din Rumi, Mawlānā 39–40, 48
Jāmeʿ al-tavārikh 21
Jāmeʿ-e soltāni 73
Jamkarān 189
Jamāl al-Din Ay Aba 19
Javānmard-e Qassāb, Abu’l-ʿAbbās Ahmad 43
Javānmardi. see fotowwat
Jāvdān-nāma 54, 56
jihād 128, 133–136, 193
global jihad 201–208
Jonayd, Safavid Shaykh 65, 86–90, 103, 127
Juri, Shaykh Hasan 53
Juriyya dervish order 53
Kabul, Timurid kingdom of 127, 133–137
Kadizāda Musā Čelebi (Rumi) 62, 65
Kāmrān Mirzā 127
kairotic time 3–4
Kalimat al-ʿOlyāʾ, daughter of Fazallāh Horufi 59
Kanz al-Jawāher 121
Karbala 55, 97
Kalāt 161–162
Karim Khan Zand, vakil al-raʿāyā (representative of the subjects) 162–63
Kaysāniyya 89
Kāzem Rashti, Sayyed 170, 172–173
Kemāl Pāshāzāda (Ibn Kamal) 119–124
Keyhān 196
Khādem Beg Khalifa 107
Khalil tribe 133, 135
khāneqāh (Sufi convent) 42, 52, 62, 64, 67, 73, 87, 104, 128
Khārijites (secessionists) 120
of Oman 142, 144
Khalwati Sufi order 130–132
Khāmane’i, Sayyed ʿAli 188
Khomeini, Ayatollah Ruhollāh 186–189, 196–200, 206
as the forerunner of the revolution of the Mahdi 187–188
his acclamation as the Imam 187
routinization of his charisma 199–200
Khorasan 12, 18, 24, 127–132, 140–141, 147–148, 154–157, 161–162, 172–173, 203, 207–208
and the emergence of Persianate Sufism 28–33
Buddhism in 29
its Mazdaean-Manichaean heritage 29–30, 130–131
its conversion to Islam 28
khoruj (uprising) 75, 93, 97
Khwāja/Soltān ʿAli Siāhpush 87
Khwāja Azod al-Din 58
Khwāja Eshāq b. Ārāmshāh Khottalāni 66–67
Khwāju of Kerman 15–17, 142
Khwānd-Amir 94, 100, 110–111
Khwarazm 48, 53, 160–161
Kingship, Persianate 22, 27, 34, 50, 105, 108, 143, 153
as caliphate 37, 74
legitimacy of 14
justice as first principle 13, 31, 40–41
and religion 18–19, 74
and Sufism 32, 36–39, 78–80, 118
“unification of dervishhood and kingship” 89, 101, 117
its institutionalization in the Safavid revolution 109–110
Greek input, 83
king of Islam (pādshāh-e eslām) 36, 42, 45, 50, 78–79, 117
prophets and kings 80
recast as caliphate 117–122
kitāb-e qawānin-e ʿorfiyya-ye ʿothmāniyya 98
Kobravi, Sufi order 36, 39, 67–70
Kojaji, Amir Shams al-Din Zakariyā 100, 106
Konya 48–51
Khwāndiyya Sufi order 101–102
Kurds 146, 149, 159
Lāhijān 95–96, 106
the Sufis of 106–107
Lenin, V.I. 184
Lezghis 141, 144, 151, 153
Lord of the Conjunction (sāheb-qerān) 17, 20–21, 51, 54, 74–75, 81, 91, 121
coupled with the Mahdi 20
Lord of Time (sāhib al-zamān) 39, 54, 68, 83, 91, 96, 115, 173, 187
Lors 146
Lotf-ʿAli Khan Dāghestāni 144
Lotf-ʿAli Khan Zand 163–164
Lutfi Pasha 124–125
Mahdaviyya (Mahdavi movement) 128–129, 136
Mahdi, the (rightly-guided) 1–2, 50–51, 53, 64, 66–67, 104, 188
the mystical 69–71
as Muhammad redivivus 2, 70
as Adam and the Word of God 56
as the myth of revolution xxx
as the Perfect Guide 69–71
Mahdi’s army 52, 94–95, 180n22, 201–203
Mahdi’s deputy 94
his general deputies 169–170
Mahdi Ibn Tumart 9–10n24, 98, 133, 137
Mahdism 1
apocalyptic 1–2
as charismatic messianic leadership 9, 183–184. Shiʿite millennial beliefs, Qa’im-Mahdi
Mahdist Sufi movements 5, 10–11, 127–138
their Shiʿite millennial inflection 53, 55
Mahmud, Ghelzai Afghan 142, 147–148
as governor of Qandahar 148–149
his rule in Isfahan 149–152, 158
Mahram-nāma 57, 59
Malek Mahmud Sistāni 154–156
Malekshāh (Seljuq king) 14
Man Singh 135
Mannheim, Karl 3
Mao 184
Marino Sanudo 92
Martin, Henry 172
Marmuzāt 39
Martha (Halima Begum) 88–89
Maʿruf-e Khattāt 58
Marv, Battle of 108, 113
Marx, Karl 2–3, 167, 169, 192
Marxism-Leninism ix, 2–3, 183, 192
Masʿud Saʿd Salmān 17
Māshā’allāh 17
Mashkur, Mohammad Javad 59
Mazdaean religion 11, 24, 76–77, 97
Mazdakites 77–78, 84
McCants, William 203
Mecca 53, 87–88, 116, 121, 170
seizure of the Kaʿba in 1979 205–206
Medina 88, 93, 121
Mehmān-nāma-ye Bokhārā 114
Mehmed I, Ottoman Sultan 61, 64, 66, 79–80
Mehmed II, the Conqueror 42, 45, 80–81, 98
Meisami, Julie 13
Menhāj-e Serāj Juzjāni 19
Mer’āt al-jamāl (Mirror of beauty) 118
Mersād al-ʿebād men al-mabda ʾ ela’l-maʿād 36, 39
al-Mesbāh fi’l-tasavvuf 39
messianism 1–2, 89
apocalyptic 1–2, 9, 63, 68, 76–78, 80, 169–174, 201
Horufi 57–59
occultist 72–77, 80–81
Shiʿite 44, 45
as charismatic leadership 11, 86, 88–94, 100–101, 106–119, 248
and the Islamic Revolution in Iran 189–200
and modern myth of revolution 2
“realized” 2, 4, 9, 12, 81, 194
Marxism-Leninism as 2–3, 183, 192. Mahdism
Michele Membré 94
millennialism 1–2, 8–9, 93, 168–169
its containment 8–10, 105–109, 201–203
Buddhist 3–4
in early modern Germany 3
medieval Christian 4, 81n32
of the Fifth Monarchy Men 168
Russian Orthodox 3–4, 179
Sufi in the Indian subcontinent 127–129 Shiʿite millennial beliefs
Mir Sayyed Sharif Jorjāni 73
Mir Wais b. Shah ʿAlam 147
Mirānshāh b. Timur 55, 57
mirrors for princes. see advice to kings
Mirzā Mehdi Khan Astarābādi 160–161
Mirzā Mohammad Hakim 127, 133–136
Mirzā Rafiʿā Ansāri 153
Moʿezz al-Din Ghuri 31
Moghan assembly 160
Mohammad ʿAli Bārforushi, Molla 172
Mohammad ʿAli Zanjāni, Akhund 173–174
Mohammad Hasan Khān Eʿtemād al-Saltana 24
Mohammad Khan Baluch 154, 156
Mohammad Mohsen Mostawfi 141, 144, 149
Mohammad Reza Shah 198
Mohammad Sādiq al-Sadr, Ayatollah 202
Mohammad-Amin Āqā Mashhadi 155
Mohammad-Taqi Āqā Mashhadi 155
Mohammadzai 133–135
Mohmand 133, 135
Moin, Afzar 111
Moʿin al-Din Parvāna 39, 48
mojadded (Sunni renewer) 78, 82, 114
mojtahed 164, 181–182
Mokāfāt-nāma 141–144
Mokhtār’s uprising in Kufa 2, 28n9
Mollābāshi (royalchaplain) 148, 159–160
Monāzara-ye bazm o razm 76–77
Möngke Qāʾān 20, 34
Mongol revolution 33–34
morshed-e kāmel (the Perfect Guide) 68, 71, 110, 112
monshi (chancery secretary) 83, 85, 116, 119
Montehā 81
Moshir al-Dawla Pirniā 181
mostazʿafin (the disinherited) as the wretched of the earth 190–92
Motahhari, Mortaza 194
motivation of revolutionary action 1–2, 11
by millennial beliefs 1–2, 86–98, 105, 169–182
by the modern myth of revolution 1–3, 167–169, 178
substitution of the former by the latter 169, 178–180, 196
combination of the two in the myth of the Islamic Revolution 183–186, 192–194
Muhsin al-Fadli 207
multiple sovereignty 148–158
Muqtadā al-Sadr 201–203
Murād I, Ottoman Sultan 52
Murād II, Ottoman Sultan 62, 79–81
Musā al-Kāzem 67
Musā Čelebi (Ottoman) 63–65, 72
Mustafā, “the false” 62, 65
Muzaffar II of Gujarat 128
myth of revolution 1
millennial 1–4, 167–169, 179–181
modern 2–4, 167–169, 178, 183
as the new Islam 3
as the Revolution 184
as the Third World revolution 184–186, 191
myth of the Islamic Revolution 184, 191–194, 197
Nafasat al-masdur 78
Najaf 159
Najm al-Din Kobrā, Shaykh 36
Najm al-Din Tashi 50
Najm al-Din Rāzi 36–39, 48, 51
Najm al-Din Zargar Rashti 107
Nanjing 175–178
Nasavi, Shehāb al-Din Mohammad 13
Nāder Shah Afshār 139, 154–166
Napoleon 164–165, 186
Nasāyeh-e Shāhrokhi 78–79
Nāser al-Din Shah 24
al-Nāser li-Din Allāh, Abbasid caliph 35
Nasr, Sayyed Hossein 194
Nāzem al-Eslām Kermāni 179–182
Nazm al-soluk fi mosammarāt al-moluk  80
Nesimi, ʿEmād al-Din 55, 66, 91
Nezām al-Molk Tusi 14–15
Nezāri Ismaʿilism 32–33
its transformation into a Sufi order 33, 46, 101–102
nodba prayer 191
Nur-ʿAli Khalifa Rumlu 23
nur-e Mohammadi (the light of Mohammad) 130–131
Nurbakhsh, Sayyed Mohammad 67–71, 83, 86, 131
his final conception of Mahdiheood 69–71
social background of his followers 67–68
ʿObayd Allāh Ahrār, Khwāja 115
ʿObayd Allāh Khan, Uzbek 111, 113–115
occult sciences 72–73, 76–78, 80
occultation. see ghaybat
Ögödei Qāʾān 20
Olugh Beg, Timurid 58, 73
Orkhān 52
Ovays, Jalayerid Soltān 22, 54–55
Pahlavi dynasty 197–198
Pakhtun region 129
Palestinian Liberation Organization (PLO) 185–186
Pashtu 133–134
Pashtun tribes 129, 133–137
patrimonialism, nomadic 44, 112, 122, 162
patrimonial monarchy 9, 162, 165, 181
Persianate Islam 27, 29–31
formation of 28–42, 46
Persianate polity 29, 31
Perso-Russian wars 164
Peter the Great 151
Petraeus, General David 203–204
Pir Jamāl Ardestāni 131
Pir-e rawshan. see Bāyazid Ansāri
political ethic, Persianate 40–41, 49–50, 80, 83–85
and Aristotelian political science 6, 40, 83
theory of imperial autocracy 75, 78–79, 117–119. advice to kings
Persianate world, the 10–11, 26–27
its intellectual elite 58–59, 63–64
the Persian language in the emergence of 27–42
Pol Pot 196–197
political astrology 15, 17–18
Pollock, Sheldon 27
Popper, Karl 196
Prophecy 8–10
and the End of Time 9, 72, 88–89, 95–96
ex eventu 225, 253, 267
Muhammad’s 101–105
prophets 9, 34, 74, 90–93, 110
the gentile prophet (al-nabiyy al-ummi) 74, 90, 100.
political religion 3–6
power structure. see structure of domination
al-Qaeda in Iraq 203
Qahtāni Mahdi 205
Qā’im, the (riser, redresser) 2, 169, 171–174, 205
Qa’im of the Resurrection 32, 171–173
Qa’im-Mahdi 2, 9, 28, 32
Qājār, tribe 90, 98, 159, 163
dynasty 159, 169, 174–175
patrimonial state 164–165
Qandahar 129, 147–150
Qanun-e Homāyuni 111
Qānun-e shāhanshāhi 117–118
qānun-nāma 82
Qarāmān (Karaman) 48–49, 79, 96
Qahtāni 205
Qalandar Esmāʿil 153
Qara Qoyunlu 45, 53, 55, 57, 59, 66, 82, 87
Qara Yusof 55
Qaragöz Pasha 102, 104
Qāyeni, Shāhrokh’s Shaykh al-Islam 78
Qāzi ʿIsā Sāvaji 84
Qāzizāda-ye Rumi 58, 73
Qazvin 68, 101, 140, 147, 150–151, 158
Qazvini, Mohammad 24
Qelich Arslān 17
Qezelbāsh/Kizilbash (red heads) 48, 89, 106
confederation of Turkmen tribes 97–98, 100
clans of
Afshār 96, 154
Ayqutoghlu 90, 96
Bāybortly 98
Khenselu 98
Ostājlu 96, 98, 106–107
Qājār 90, 98
Qāramānlu 90, 98, 100
Qarajadāghlu 96, 98
Rumlu 96
Shāmlu 90, 96, 98, 106–107
Tekelu 96–98
Varsaq 96
and Zu’l-Qadr 96, 100
Qezelbāsh cavalry 145–146, 150, 152
Qiyāmat-nāma 57
Qohestān 67
Qollar-āqāsi 145, 150
Qorqud, Ottoman prince 98, 102–103
qotb (axis mundi) 131
Qotb al-Din Aybek 17
Qubilai Qāʾān 34
Qumran War Scroll 205
Qurchi-bāshi 145, 150, 156
Rashid al-Din Fazlallāh 20–21
Rashid al-Din Maybodi 30
Rashid Khan Rawshani 136
Rasht 107, 119, 153, 163, 182, 184
Rationalization. see Charisma of the Mahdi, its routinization
Rawshani movement 129–138
Rayy 68
Raziya, Delhi Sultan 19
Reaction. see counter-revolution
Resālat al-Hodā 69–70
Resurrection (qiyāmat) 32–33, 57, 91, 170, 179–180, 193, 195
revolutio regni xx, 19, 23–24
revolution 1–10
apocalyptic motivation of 1–4
causes of 5, 7, 13–14, 99–100, 106–107, 143–144
reversal of the causal order 169, 178–180
conceptions of, Marxist-Leninist 2–3
Persianate conception of 11–25, 28, 139–144
consequences of 5, 7–8, 86, 109–110, 139
export of 102–107, 139–140, 159
Mahdist 86–109, 127–133-38
periodization of 86, 106–109
process of revolution
as constitutional politics 9, 106–09
revolutionary power struggle 9, 86, 98–107
its opportunity structure revolution and counter-revolution 5, 9–10, 64
revolution and liminality 2–4
structural models of 5, 7, 13
Aristotelian-Paretan (counter-elites’) Integrative Revolution 5–6
Constitutive Revolution 5
Khaldunian (from peripheries of empires) 5–7, 86, 95–98, 127, 133–38, 159, 165–66, 174
Tocquevillian (centralization of power) 7, 109, 139–40, 165
modified 5–7, 197
teleology of
institutionalization of value-ideas 7
Third World revolution 190–192. Abbasid (Hashemite ) Revolution; Arab revolutions; Cambodian Revolution; Cuban Revolution; Constitutional Revolution; English (Puritan) Revolution; European revolutions of 1848; Islamic Revolution; Mahdist movements; Mongol revolution; Safavid revolution, Sasanian Revolution
Revolutionism. see modern myth of revolution
Reza Shah 197–198
Rostam Beg, Āq Qoyunlu 89
Robertson, Roland 201
Rum. see Anatolia
Rumelia 53, 61–66, 72, 86
Rumlu, Hasan 23, 99
Russian revolutions of 1905 and 1917 179
al-sāʿa (the Hour of Apocalypse) 12, 63, 71, 76, 80, 203
Sabzavar 52–53, 156
Saʿd b. Abu Bakr, atabeg 40
Saʿd al-Din Hammuya 39, 65
Saʿdallāh Khan Abdāli 147
Saddam Hussein 201–202
Saʿdi of Shiraz, Shaykh Mosleh al-Din 15–16, 40–41, 142
Sadr al-Din Musā Safavi 87
Sadr al-Din Qonavi 40
Sadr City 202
Sā’en al-Din Torka 58, 72–78
Safvat al-safā 95
Safi al-Din Ardabili 87, 95
Safi Mirzā, Safavid 156–157
Safavid revolution 11, 86–109, 137–138
Safavid Sufi order 87–95
in Anatolia 65, 98, 103–05, 120–21
its kalifas (representatives) 88–92, 97, 103–107
Sāheb Fakhr al-Din 49
sahwa (tribal awakening) 203–204
Saints, Sufi. see awliyāʾ Allāh
Samak-e ʿayyār 43–44
Samarqand 47, 58, 62, 73, 113, 127, 129
Samanids 27, 29, 31
Sanāʾi, Majdud b. Ādam 30–32
Sarbedār movement (“republic”) 52–53
Sarkisyanz, Manuel 3–4
Sasanian Revolution 112
Sayyed Ahmad Khan, Safavid 154, 157–158
Sayyed ʿAli Mohammad, the bāb 170–175
as the Mahdi and the Qa’im of the Resurrection 171–173
Christian and Horufi influences 172
Sayyed Amir Eshāq 59
Sayyed Mohammad b. Fallāh, the “Radiant” (Moshaʿshaʿ) 131
Sayyed Mohammad Gisu-darāz 130
Sayyed Mohammad Jaunpuri 127–128
his Mahdihood 128
Sayyed Khundmir, Mahdavi leader 128
Science of letters (ʿilm al-horuf) 54, 65, 72, 79–80
science of the saints 80. occult sciences
Seal of the Saints (khātam al-awliyāʾ) 39, 69, 78, 129
Seal of the Prophets (khātam al-nabiyyin) 69
Second Coming of Jesus 55, 57
Selim I, Ottoman Sultan 45, 103, 105, 119–121
Selim-nāma 121
Seljuqs xxx, 14
of Kerman 18–19
of Rum xxx, 13, 17, 36–40
Seljuqshāh Begum 83–84
The Shadow of God and the Hidden Imam 184
Shāh Neʿmatollāh Vali 73
Shāh Qāsem Nurbakhsh 71
Shāh Qāsem Tabrizi 121
Shāh Shojāʿ, Mozaffarid 55
Shah Shojāʿ of Kerman 43
shāhanshāh (king of kings) 43, 91, 101, 142, 160–161
Shāhrokh, Timurid 44, 57–59, 67–68, 74–79, 84
Shams al-Din Lāhiji 107
Shaqq al-qamar 77
Sharaf al-Din Mahmud Daylami 84, 106
Sharaf al-Din ʿAli Yazdi 58, 72–75
Shariʿati, ʿAli 189–194
Shaybāni Khan Uzbek, Mohammad 108, 113–114
Shaykh ʿOmar Rawshani 133–136
Shehanshāh, Ottoman prince 104
Sher Shah Sur 127–129
Shervān 88, 96
Shervānshāh 55, 99
Sihanouk, Norodom 198
Shiʿa: Extremist (ghulāt) 86–88
Imami (Twelver) 8–9, 28, 46, 93, 125, 169
in India 111–112
in Iraq 202, 205–206
Akhbāri 170, 174
Shaykhi 170
Ismāʿili 28–29, 32, 61, 67, 101–102, 132, 170. Nezāri Ismaʿilism
Shiʿism
establishment by Esmāʿil the Safavid 100–101
as the Jaʿfari rite (madhhab) under Nāder 159–160
Shiʿite hierocracy 164, 169–170, 187
as “general deputies” of the Hidden Imam 169–170, 191–192, 199
its anti-millennial clericalism 181–182, 201–203
challenges to its authority, by the Babis 171–175, 178–181
by the constitutionalists 181–182
by the modernizing state 181–182, 197–198
its independence from the state 198–199
Shiʿite millennial beliefs 1–2, 82
and mobilization for ghazā 47–49
and oppositional mobilization against Turko-Mongolian domination 53–71
and preemptive royal appropriation 50–51, 64, 71, 81n32, 113–115, 120, 125. See also counter-revolution
and Sufism 47–48, 66–70
in the Islamic Revolution of 1979 in Iran 183, 186–191, 196
their Sunni appropriation by DAESH 201, 203–205
Shiʿite theodicy of martyrdom 48, 55, 57–60, 97, 144
Shiʿitization 28, 35
of Sufi Mahdist movements 47–48, 52, 55, 66–70
and the veneration of ʿAli 47, 52
sipāhis 64, 102–104
Siyāsat-nāma 14
social stratification into estates 10, 42–46
their segregation 44
Turkish military
ruling (ʿaskeri) 10, 44–45
nomadic tribesmen 47–51, 84–85
Persian/Tajik civilian
urban notables 52, 60–61
clerical (ʿolamāʾ) 7, 18, 57, 132, 170
Sufi shaykhs 30, 35
craftsmen 155. see also fotowwat
subjects (raʿiyyat) 10, 40–44, 161, 207
Society of God Worshippers in Guangxi 175–176
Sohravardi, Shaykh Abu Hasf ʿOmar 35–36, 42
Sohravardi, Shehāb al-Din Yahyā 30
Soltān Ahmed, Āq Qoyunlu 84–85
Soltān-ʿAli Safavi 90
Soltān-Ashraf Afghan 150–151
as Ashraf Shah 152–55
Soltān-Ebrāhim Safavi 90, 96
Soltān-Ebrāhim, the Shaykh-Shah 87
Soltān-Hosayn Bayqarā 99
Soltān-Hosayn, Safavid Shah 140–152
as Mollā Hosayn 146
Soltān-Khalil, Āq Qoyunlu 83–84
Soltān-Mohammad, Safavid 156–157
Soltān-Mohammad b. Baysonghor 75
Soltān-Morād, Āq Qoyunlu 99–102
Soltān-Murād, Ottoman prince 119
Soltān-e jemri (the “beggar Sultan”) 49
Soleymān, Safavid Shah 145, 157
soluk (spiritual wayfaring) 33, 38, 51, 79–80
Soluk al-moluk 114–115
Sorush 187
sovereignty (saltanat) 163–164
counter-millennial 10
Āq Quyunlu 82–85
Mughal 111–112
Ottoman 10, 79–82, 116–122
Timurid 72–79
Safavid 109–110, 169
Uzbek 10, 112–116
Qur’anic verses on transfer of 12, 18, 37–38, 76, 109, 164. Lord of the Conjunction
soyurghāl 84
Spengler, Oswald 195
state, the. see structure of domination
structure of domination 74–75, 169–170
breakdown of (state-breakdown) 7, 139–148, 165
fragility of 142–143
Mahdistic 5
state-hierocracy duality in Qājār Iran 181–184
Sufism, Persianate 5, 28–30, 89
antinomian (dervishes) 52
Abdāl of Rum 43, 88
Haydaris 43
Malāmatis (Melamis) 43, 131–32, 136
Qalandars 43, 53, 89
ascetic 39, 41
formation of 29–42
as inner-worldly mysticism 37, 39–40, 46
the Janus face of 71
suppression of 101–102, 144
synergy with Shiʿism 35, 39, 66–70, 110, 114. Mahdist Sufi movements
Sufi shaykhs 30, 35–39
Suleymān the Lawgiver, Ottoman Sultan 10, 45, 119–126
as champion of Sunni orthodoxy 122–123
as the Mahdi 121
as Roman Caesar 122
sultanate (saltanat) 83
soltān (ruler) as the shadow of God 83
Sunni Islam 42, 78, 82, 101, 113–114, 119, 122
Sur-e Isrāfil 179–180
Syria 17, 55, 60, 96–97, 103, 117, 121, 203–208
tabarrāʾis 100–101
Tabriz 54–55, 59, 65–66, 84–85, 88–89, 96–100, 105, 111, 113, 116–117, 150–153
Tadhkerat al-moluk 145
Tahmāsb, Shah 94, 101, 109, 122, 124
Tahmāsp II (Tahmāsb Mirzā) 150–151, 154–158, 160, 163
Tahmāsb-qoli (Nāder) 154–156, 158, 161
Taiping Revolution 172, 175–178
Taiping tien-kuo (Heavenly Kingdom of the Great Peace) 172, 176
as realized messianism 178
its asceticism 177
women in its social background 176–177
Tāj al-Din Yazdi 22–23
Tālesh 90, 95–96, 151
Tamhidāt 130
Tārikh-e Afzal 18
Tegüder (Ahmad), Il-Khan 21
Tehran 147–148, 154–155, 186, 207
the University of 194
Tekke-eli 65, 97, 103
The History of the Late Revolutions of Persia 139
theocracy. see clerical monarchy
timār 64, 96, 102–104
Timur (Tamerlane) 21, 44–45, 61, 74–75, 160
Timurtāsh 50–51, 62
Tirāh 133–135
Tocqueville, Alexis de 3, 7, 167
Togrel II, Seljuq Sultan 19
Toynbee, Arnold 26–27
Treaties, of Constantinople in 1723, 152
of Finkenstein in 1807
Golestan in 1812 and Turkamanchai in 1828 164
Transoxiana 28, 31, 33, 37, 48, 113–114
Turkmen, of Anatolia 48–51, 64, 88, 96
of Iran 84–85, 89
under Nāder 154, 159, 165
Turko-Mongolian domination 44–45
millennial popular challenges to 52–61, 68, 86
Turluk Hu Kemāl 66
uj (Byzantine frontier) 47–49, 88–89
frontier millennialism 48–52
Üljeitü (Mohammad Khodā-banda) 21, 42
Ulus Chaghatay 44
Ulus Hülegü 34
Ulus Jochi (the Golden Horde) 34
Usama bin Laden 205
Uzbeks 147, 159
Uzun Hasan Āq Qoyunlu 82–84, 88–90, 99
Vāez Kāshefi, Molla Hosayn 113
Vāsefi, Mawlānā Zayn al-Din Mahmud 113–115
velāyat (friendship of God) 69, 110
as Sufi sainthood 69, 131
the age of 54, 69
its Shiʿite conception 109–110
velāyat-e faqih (mandate of the jurist) 187, 189, 199
its institutionalization as Leadership (rahbari) of the IRI 198–99
Voegelin, Eric 3
Waziristan 129, 134–137
Westoxification (gharbzadegi) 195
world renunciation (tark-e donyā) 29, 37, 39, 112, 127, 132
Xiao Chaogui 175–177
Yahyā Dawlat-ābādi 179
Yahyā Subh-e Azal, Mirzā 174–175, 179
Yang Xiuqing 176–178
Yaʿqub, Āq Qoyunlu 23, 84–85, 99, 116
Yār Ahmad Khuzāni 107
Yazicizāda Ahmed Bijān 12, 79–81, 89
Yusof ʿĀdelshāh of Bijāpur 111
Yusufzais 133–135
Zafarnāma (Book of Victory) 74–75
Zahir al-Din Bābor, Timurid prince 23
Zarqāwi, Abu Musā 203, 205
Zarrinkub, ʿAbdol-Hosayn 54, 69
Zarrin-Tāj Baraghāni, the Qurratal-ʿAyn 171–174
zohur (manifestation) 50, 56–57, 93, 96, 170, 174, 179–181, 186, 192
Zoroastrians 148–150

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Revolutions of the End of Time: Apocalypse, Revolution and Reaction in the Persianate World

Cover Revolutions of the End of Time: Apocalypse, Revolution and Reaction in the Persianate World
ISBN:
9789004517158
出版社:
Brill
印刷出版日期:
02 Dec 2022
  • Subjects
    • Middle East and Islamic Studies
      • Iran & Persian Studies
Front Matter
Preliminary Material
Copyright page
Preface
Abbreviations
Chapter 1 Introduction
Chapter 2 Shiʿism, Sufism, and the Symbolism of Kingship in the Formation of Persianate Islam
Chapter 3 Sufism and Shiʿite Millennialism in the Il-Khanid and Timurid Empires
Chapter 4 Royal Reactions to Apocalyptic Messianism and the Reinforced Legitimation of Autocracy
Chapter 5 The Causes and Process of Shah Esmāʿil’s Mahdist Revolution
Chapter 6 Sunni Reactions to the Safavid Mahdist Revolution and the Ottoman Imperial Counter-Revolution
Chapter 7 The Mahdi of Light and His Millenarian Revolution in Tribal Afghanistan
Chapter 8 The Fall of the Safavid Empire as a Revolution in World History
Chapter 9 The Persistence of Apocalyptic Mahdism and the Coming of the Modern Myth of Revolution
Chapter 10 The Millennial Motivation and Significance of the Islamic Revolution of 1979 in Iran
Excursus A Sunni Apocalypse at Last: the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria
Back Matter
References
Index

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