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Shāh ‘Abbās, the English East India Company and the Cannoneers of Fārs

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2019

Abstract

To nineteenth and early twentieth-century scholarship, the early modern expansion of powers like Spain, Portugal, England and Holland, was a necessary preliminary step towards Europe's ultimate domination of the Asian and African continents. Moreover, the relative ease with which colonial powers manhandled regions like North Africa and the Indo-Pak subcontinent suggested that their early modern ‘pioneering’ counterparts must have shared similar experiences. While some historians highlighted superior business concepts (joint-stock companies, profit-sharing) or superior shipbuilding and navigation techniques as the means with which trading powers like the Estado da India and the English East India Company penetrated and overwhelmed Indian Ocean commerce, other scholars boiled it down to the European affinity for using ‘men-of-war, gun, and shot’. The critical underlying assumption of any of these teleological explanations s i that ‘encountered’ cultures were unable to adequately respond to European technology, of course hinting at some deeper and more profound deficiency. Scholarship in recent decades has shorn such confidence and begun to scrutinise this seedling period of interaction between Europe and non-Europe, suggesting that the initial playing ground between ‘encounterer’ and ‘encountered’ was perhaps more level than previously portrayed.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Research Institute for History, Leiden University 2000

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References

Notes

1 Parts of this article were presented at the 1999 Middle East Studies Association meeting in Washington D.C. I would like to thank Kathryn Babayan, Maria Subtelny, and others for their comments.

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23 This is, of course, the ‘price revolution’ of the seventeenth century, which constituted one of the many features of what has been called ‘the seventeenth-century crisis’. See Trevor-Roper, H. R., ‘General Crisis of the Seventeenth Century’ in: Ashton, T. H. ed., Crisis in Europe, 1560-1660, Essays from Past & Present (London 1965)Google Scholar; Hobsbawm, E. J., ‘The Crisis of the Seventeenth Century’, Past & Present V and VI (1954)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Steens-gaard's, N. excellent article in Parker, G. and Smith's, L.edited collection of essays: The General Crisis of the Seventeenth Century (London 1978)Google Scholar.

24 Steensgaard has reconstructed French exports from the Levant for the year 1621-1622 on the basis of a series of ships' manifests. Forty-four ships, sailing from Alexandria, Alexandretta, Smyrna, Acra, Seydon, Tripoli, and Constantinople, carried a total of 137,000 kg of silk, a figure substantially higher than for previous years. Steensgaard, , The Asian Trade Revolution, 185187Google Scholar.

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27 This comes from a farmān issued by the shah in 1608, which describes a ‘Captain Paul a from England’. It is almost certainly Robert Sherley himself, since there were no other Englishmen who had spent any considerable amount of time in Iran. See Maqāmī, , Yeksad va panjāh sanad-i tārīkhī, 21Google Scholar.

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35 His titulature on one farmān, dated 1629 (1039 A.H.), reads ayālat va shaukat va hashamat panāh jalālat va 'adālat va nasfat dastgāh 'alijah amīr al-umarā (the refuge of government, dominion, and magnificence, the epitome of splendour, justice, and equity, chief of the amirs). Untitled Collection of Royal Decrees, Ms., London, British Library, Harley 109, fol. 14a. A review of other Safavid titulature suggests that these were indeed unique, near royal, honorifics for an amir. See Mitchell, Colin Paul, ‘Safavid Imperial Tarassul and the Persian Insha Tradition’, Studia Iranica 37/2 (1997) 195196Google Scholar.

36 Falsafī, Nasr Allāh, Zindagānī-yi Shdh 'Abbās Awwal V (Tehran 1990) 1767Google Scholar.

37 Until the twentieth century, it was believed that Robert Sherley had introduced firearms to the Safavid state. To the contrary, Professor Bacque-Grammont has proved that Shah Ismā'il I (r. 1501-1524) had used cannons in siege warfare. Bacqué-Grammont, Jean-Louis, Les Ottomans, les Safavides, et lewrs Voisins (Leiden 1987) 167168Google Scholar. We also hear from the Venetian ambassador to Shāh Tahmāsp (r. 1524-1576), d'Alessandri, that the Ottoman asylum-seeker, Prince Bayāzīd, brought thirty pieces of artillery as a gift. See d'Allesandri, Vincentio, ‘Narrative of the most Noble Vincentio d'Allesandri’ in: Grey, C. ed., A Narrative of Italian Travels in Persia-in the XVth and XVIth Centuries 49/2 (1873) 228Google Scholar.

38 The report that the Russian Czar Ivan sent one hundred pieces of cannon an d five hundred firearms to Qazvīn during the reign of Tahmasp is debatable. Likewise, C.R. Boxer has challenged Inalcik's suggestion that the Portuguese gave the Safavids two hundred pieces of cannon and 10,000 men to fight the Ottomans - there were only 10,000 Portuguese in the entire South Asian theatre of operations. See Inalçik, Halil, ‘The Socio-Political Effects of the Diffusion of Fire-arms in the Middle East’ in: Yapp, M. and Parry, V. J. eds, War, Technology, and Society in the Middle East (Oxford 1975) 195217Google Scholar; Boxer, C. R., ‘Asian Potentates and European Artillery in the 16th-18th centuries: A Footnote to Gibson-Hill’, Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society 38/2 (1965) 156172Google Scholar.

39 Matthee, , ‘Unwalled Cities and Restless Nomads’, 392Google Scholar; Steensgaard, , The Asian Trade Revolution of the Seventeenth Century, 104Google Scholar.

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41 'Abd al-Husain al-Tūsī, Munsha'āt al-Tūsī, Ms., Paris, Bibliothèque Nationale, Persan no. 1838, fol. 302a. See also Röhrborn, Klaus Michael, ‘Staatskanzlei un d Absolutismus in Safavidschen Persien’, Zeitschrift der Deutschen Morgenländischen Gesellschafi 127 (1977) 313343Google Scholar.

42 Rustam Beg, the governor of Āzarbāijān, had originally been the tufangchī bāshī. Roemer, , ‘The Safavid Period’, 281Google Scholar.

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48 Faroughy, , Histoire du Royaume de Hormuz, 97Google Scholar.

49 We know that the Safavids secured this artillery because we hear of the Persian garrison at Qishm firing cannons some three years later in another encounter with the Portuguese. Boxer, C. R., ‘Anglo-Portuguese Rivalry in the Persian Gulf, 1615-1635’ in: Prestage, E. ed., Chapters in Anglo-Portuguese Relations (Watford 1935) 95Google Scholar.

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55 Monnox, , ‘History at Large of the Taking of Ormuz Castle’, 293Google Scholar; Andrada, Ruy Freyre de, Commentaries of Ruy Freyre, 172Google Scholar.

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57 Qādiri, Jarūn nāma, fol. 42b.

58 Qādiri, Jarūn nāma, fol. 46b.

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61 Public Record Office, State Papers, 102/40, pt. 1. See also Ferrier, ‘The European Diplomacy of Shah ‘Abbas I’, 82.

62 Sainsbury, ed., Calendar ofState Papers: Colonial Series, East Indies, China, andPersia VI (1625-1629) 17Google Scholar. It is possible that these might have been later used against the Portuguese since Ruy Freyre describes ‘two Moorish vessels […] laden with fireworks’ joining an English attack on his fleet in January 1628. Andrada, Ruy Freyre de, Commentaries of Ruy Freyre, 201Google Scholar.

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67 Sainsbury, ed., Calendar of State Papers: Colonial Series IV, 376Google Scholar; VI, 127 and 185.

68 I would like to thank Professor Matthee for clarifying this point for me.

69 According to Matthee, components needed to manufacture cannons and gunpowder, saltpetre, charcoal, iron, copper, and tin, were largely unavailable in Iran. Matthee, ‘Unwalled Cities and Restless Nomads’, 396. Also, references to saltpetre and lead appear in Sainsbury, ed., Calendar of State Papers, Colonial Series III, 306Google Scholar; VI, 173.

70 The French traveler, Jean de Thévenot, describes the foundry in Thévenot, Jean de, Suite de Voyage de Levant (part III) (Paris 1689) 463Google Scholar.

71 Public Record Office, State Papers, 104/40, pt. 1, f. 54.

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74 Professor Herzig has done a relatively thorough statistical analysis of Persian raw silk trade. In 1621, English and Persian peddling merchants exported a combined total of 213,000 kg of raw silk through the Levant, while the E.I.C. managed only 37,000 kg. The combined total of both E.I.C. and V.O.C. exports of silk through th e Persian Gulf in 1634 was 112,000 kg, whil e the shipments through the Levant to Marseilles alone is estimated close to 300,000 kg. See Herzig, Edmund, ‘The Value of Iranian Raw Silk Exports in the Safavid Period’, Iranian Studies 25 (1992) 6473CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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