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		<title>Iran: A Brief History</title>
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				<description><![CDATA[<p>From the US assassination of Iranian commander Qasem Soleimani to the ongoing case of the jailed mother Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, Iran has scarcely been out of the headlines in recent months. But how far back does the history of Iran stretch?</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/iran-a-brief-history/">Iran: A Brief History</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com">Precision Background Screening</a>.</p>
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<figure class="wp-block-image size-large"><img src="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Flag-of-Iran-1024x768.jpg" alt="Flag of Iran" class="wp-image-2119" srcset="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Flag-of-Iran-1024x768.jpg 1024w, https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Flag-of-Iran-300x225.jpg 300w, https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Flag-of-Iran-768x576.jpg 768w, https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Flag-of-Iran-1536x1152.jpg 1536w, https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/05/Flag-of-Iran-2048x1536.jpg 2048w" sizes="(max-width: 1024px) 100vw, 1024px" /></figure>



<p>From the US assassination of Iranian commander <a href="https://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-50979463">Qasem Soleimani</a> to the ongoing case of the jailed mother Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe, Iran has scarcely been out of the headlines in recent months. But how far back does the history of Iran stretch? Here, Professor Ali M Ansari from the University of St Andrews charts the country’s historical lineage, the emergence of Islam and Shiism, and Iran’s attempts to reconcile its traditions with the modern world.</p>



<p>Iran enjoys
one of the richest historical lineages of any modern state stretching back
several thousand years. This history can be broadly divided into three epochs:
the pre-Islamic ancient period (c559 BC to 651 AD); the Islamic era (651 AD to
1800 AD); and the modern era, defined by its encounter with Western modernity
from around 1800.</p>



<h4>The pre-Islamic ancient period</h4>



<p>‘Iranian’
history proper begins with the migration of the Iranian tribes from <a href="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/cultures-of-the-middle-east/">Central Asia</a> onto what is now known as
the Iranian plateau in the 2nd millennium BC. But organised human settlement
developed much earlier and Elamite civilisation in south western Iran –
southern Iraq today – emerged in the third millennium. By the 1st millennium
BC, two distinct Iranian states emerged in the form of the Medes and Persians
and their emphatic entrance onto the world stage began with the accession of
Cyrus II in 559 BC.</p>



<p>The
Achaemenid Persian Empire grew to become the largest contiguous land empire
then known to man, impressing both friend and foe alike with its relatively
benign administration drawing on religious ideas that would later be associated
with Zoroastrianism, the pre-Islamic religion of Iran identified with the
mantra “good words, good thoughts and good deeds”. It looms large in the
Western imagination because of its failed attempts to conquer the Greek states
and its subsequent defeat at the hands of Alexander the Great some 150 years
later in the 330s BC. Hellenized rule under Alexander’s successors – the
Seleucids – lasted a century until the arrival of a new Iranian dynasty from
the east, the Parthians.</p>



<h4>The Parthian Empire</h4>



<p>The Parthian Empire reshaped
Iranian history by importing myths and legends from the east and supplanting
the Achaemenids in popular memory. This decentralised kingdom – in which the
king was first among equals; a king <em>over</em>
other kings, if you will – made up for its fractiousness with longevity (it is
the longest lived of all Iranian dynasties) and proved a serious foe to the
emergent Roman empire, inflicting upon it one of its greatest defeats. This was
at the plains of Carrhae in 53 BC, where the Roman commander Crassus (famous
for his defeat of Spartacus) was decisively defeated by a smaller Parthian
force largely composed of horse archers, losing some two-thirds of his legions
and several ‘eagles’ [Romans Standards]. After 500 years, in 224 AD the
Parthians were in turn overthrown by another dynasty, this time from the
heartlands of Persia itself, the Sasanians.</p>



<p>The Sasanians were undoubtedly
the heirs of the Parthians but their empire was more centralised and the ‘king
of kings’ was more than a first among equals. Administration was consolidated
and Zoroastrianism was promoted as an official and increasingly well-defined
creed. In time Sasanian kings, most notably Khusrau II, would come to symbolise
all that was good about pre-Islamic Iran and its administration.</p>



<p>Like their predecessors, the
Sasanians proved formidable opponents to the Roman and then Byzantine Empires,
engaging in a cycle of conflicts which ultimately exhausted both empires and
made them vulnerable to hitherto unforeseen challenges.</p>



<h4>The Islamic era</h4>



<p>In the 7<sup>th</sup> century a
new power emerged from the Arabian Peninsula – Islam. Defeating the Byzantines,
the Muslim Arab armies eventually conquered and absorbed the Sasanian empire
into the new Caliphate. The Iranian empire was too large a morsel for the
Caliphate to fully digest, with the result that Iranian ideas on the nature and
practice of ‘just’ government and culture began to shape the way in which the
Caliphate developed.</p>



<p>Islam transformed the Iranian
world view, but the political and religious culture of the Islamic world was in
turn shaped by the profound legacy of ancient Iran and many of the leading
administrative and scientific minds of the classical Islamic age including the
polymath Ibn Sina (Avicenna) and the famous vizierial (ministerial) family of
the Barmakids, emanated from the Iranian world.</p>



<p>Indeed the emphatic influence of
the Iranian world was made clear with the emergence of the Abbasid Caliphate in
749 AD and the transfer of the capital from Damascus to the newly founded city
of Baghdad (around 762 AD), not far from the old Sasanian capital. This Iranian
turn was exemplified by the development of the ‘new’ Persian language, now empowered
with the adoption of the Arabic alphabet to become the lingua franca of the
eastern Islamic world, and in time one of the great literary languages of the
world.</p>



<p>The Islamic era would witness
another profound development in the history of Iran with the entrance of the
Turkic peoples from central Asia from the 11th century, but most
consequentially with the eruption of the Mongols (nomadic warriors from the
steppes of inner Asia) in the 13th century. The <a href="https://www.worldhistory.org/Mongol_Empire/">Mongol</a> conquest
facilitated the migration of the Turkic tribes onto the plateau – forcing a
knock-on migration of Iranians onto the Anatolian plateau – fundamentally
altering the political economy of the country from one which was largely
sedentary to one with a significant nomadic component, especially in the
northern parts of the country.</p>



<p>Moreover, Mongol and Turkic words
(such as ‘Khan’) feed into the Persian language adding further dimension to the
vocabulary of an already rich and diverse language. In economic terms, however,
the wave of nomadic invasions beginning with the Mongols and culminating in the
devastation wrought by Tamerlane in the 14th century, resulted in widespread
economic dislocation. It was to be many years before the economic lifeblood
returned in any meaningful sense.</p>



<p>At the same time, taking the long
view, the Mongol conquests ensured that ‘Iran’ as a distinct political entity
re-emerged after centuries of seclusion within the wider Islamic world. It says
something of the cultural confidence and richness of Iranian civilisation that
it was able to re-form as a distinct state in its own right and by the 16th
century a new dynasty was to emerge which would add further layers to this
distinctiveness.</p>



<p>Iran had been absorbed into the
Caliphate but had retained its own language and culture such that it began to
influence the shape and direction of travel of the Islamic world. Even the
Turkic nomads would in turn come to appreciate the cultural powerhouse that
Iran and the Persian world represented, adopting and adapting many of its
cultural attributes including the Persian language. With the rise of the
Safavids in the 16th century this cultural confidence was given political form
once again and in order to consolidate their position the Safavids imposed the
minority branch of Islam, <a href="https://www.britannica.com/topic/Shii">Shiism</a>, as the new state religion from
1501.</p>



<p>This proved to be something of a
double-edged sword. The adoption of Shiism helped distinguish the Iranian state
from its Ottoman rival to the West. But it also served to hinder political ties
with the Persianate world of the east. Nonetheless, over two centuries the
Safavids oversaw a flourishing of Iranian civilisation, most notably under Shah
Abbas I (1587–1629), the only king after the Islamic conquest to be known as
‘the Great’. Indeed, just as Iranians ascribed all pre-Islamic achievements to
the reign of Khusrau I, so too was Shah Abbas credited with all and any
achievements during the Islamic period.</p>



<p>It was during this period that
the first systematic contacts were made between Iran and Europe, as European
merchants came to establish commercial, and in some cases, political, ties.</p>



<h4>Modern challenges</h4>



<p>It is to Iran’s misfortune that
the period of the most dramatic growth in European power and western
civilisation in the 18th century coincided with a period of political turmoil
within Iran itself. The traumatic fall of the Safavid dynasty in 1722 resulted
in decades of warfare as first Iran re-emerged empowered under the leadership
of Nader Shah (1736–47), only to once again descend into turmoil following his
death.</p>



<p>As a little-known footnote in
history, it was Nader Shah’s invasion and defeat of the Mughal Empire in 1739
that paradoxically opened up India to European penetration in the 18<sup>th</sup>
century. And by the time Iran emerged from its turmoil by the end of the 18<sup>th</sup>
century it faced a whole new challenge in the Russian and British empires.
These were not just political threats but ideological ones with self-confident
European powers who were not in awe of Iranian civilisation – on the contrary,
they regarded the political economy of the Iranian state to be archaic and
dependent on the authority and despotic power of its kings.</p>



<p>European
power approached the world with new ideas about the organisation of the state,
the rule of law and constitutionalism, all of which were alien to the Iranian
world but which gained traction among a group of intellectuals who regarded the
salvation of Iran in the adoption of these new and innovative forms of
political and economic organisation. Iranians, so used to educating the world,
found themselves in the reluctant position of being the student. Throughout the
19th century Iranian intellectuals and activists sought to promote reform but
were faced with the objections of reactionary elements within Iran (most
notably a monarchy reluctant to concede power) and with the ambivalence of
imperial European powers ultimately more anxious to maintain the balance of
power.</p>



<p>Eventually, at the turn of the 20<sup>th</sup>
century, in 1906, the first of Iran’s revolutions – the Constitutional
Revolution – established a parliamentary system on the British model, complete
with a constitution and separation of powers. It was a seminal moment that
altered the political landscape of the country. But its ambitions were high and
its promise remained unfulfilled as a new dynasty – the Pahlavis (1925–79) –
sought to impose revolution from above.</p>



<p>With the emergence of the
Pahlavis in 1925 the revolutionary impetus of 1906 was adopted with some vigour
by the new monarch supported initially by many of the intellectuals of the
period who were anxious to see the creation of a modern state that would enable
their many reforms to education and the judicial system to be realised. Reza
Shah’s rule oversaw a transformation of the country but the reforms he oversaw
were only partially fulfilled, with the growth in the power of the state not
being matched by a growth in civil society and civic rights.</p>



<p>Overthrown following an Allied
occupation (1941–46) in the turmoil of the Second World <a href="https://precisionbackgroundscreening.com/which-war-was-deadliest/">War</a>, he was succeeded by his young
son Mohammad Reza Shah (1941–79) who for the first period of his reign had to
contend with growing factionalism as well as the continued interference of
foreign powers. The crisis over the continued Soviet occupation of Azerbaijan
was resolved in 1946, but a more serious crisis over Iran’s oil industry
resulted in an Anglo-American orchestrated coup to overthrow the nationalist
prime minister Dr Mohammad Mosaddeq who had encouraged the Shah to reign rather
than rule. As with the revolution of 1906, the coup of 1953 was to cast a long
shadow over Iranian politics and the Shah struggled to emerge from it.</p>



<h4>Royal autocracy and the ‘Islamic’
revolution</h4>



<p>In the 1960s the Shah felt strong
enough to launch a ‘White’ revolution of his own, further transforming the
socio-economic landscape of the country but failing to match these dramatic
changes with a measure of political reform. Indeed, far from democratising, the
1970s witnessed a retrenchment of royal autocracy. Political stagnation with
social and economic change proved to be a combustible combination to which was
added a religious revival centred on the figure of Ayatollah Khomeini. By 1978
the Shah, faced with opposition from nationalists, the left and the religious
groups, found himself no longer master of his political domain, increasingly at
a loss as to how to react to the groundswell of discontent.</p>



<p>He went into exile in January
1979. Two weeks later Ayatollah Khomeini returned to the adulation of the
crowds (pictured above) and in short order the monarchy was replaced by an
Islamic Republic. But this new ‘Islamic’ revolution proved no more successful
in reconciling Iran’s traditions with the challenges of modernity. The seizure
of the US Embassy in November 1979 and the start of a protracted war with Iraq
in 1980, which lasted to 1988, both scarred and defined the emergent Islamic
Republic. Rampant factionalism was not expunged by the violent suppression of
the Left, and the Islamic Republic has been characterised by fierce debates
over the nature and character of the state dividing between those who favour
the republican institutions and those who seek the establishment of an Islamic
government.</p>



<p>The dominance of the ‘Islamists’
and the growing autocracy of the ‘supreme leader’ indicate that the problems of
1906 remain unresolved and that 1979 simply witnessed the ‘crown’ being
replaced by the ‘turban’.</p>



<p>If you found this
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