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10 - Reconsidering State and Constituency in Seventeenth-Century Safavid Iran: The Wax and Wane of the Munshi

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 November 2017

Colin Mitchell
Affiliation:
Dalhousie University
Paul M. Dover
Affiliation:
Kennesaw State University
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Summary

As noted by Rudi Matthee in his 2010 article ‘Was Safavid Iran an Empire?’, there is a conspicuous absence of comparative studies of early modern empires and political systems across Europe and Asia that engage the Safavid dynasty of Iran (r. 1501–1722). However, what is particularly lacking within the field of Safavid studies is a conversation which addresses the thematic concerns that are currently shaping the study of the Mamluk, Ottoman and Mughal states. Marshall Hodgson, in his seminal study The Venture of Islam, argued that the model of military patronage state best represented the political reality of the post-Mongol Islamic world. Indeed, this notion of military patronage state (MPS) served as the underpinning for the historiographical leviathan of the ‘gunpowder empire’ paradigm. Keen to nuance Hodgson's ideas for a Mamluk setting, Van Steenbergen argues that the model of the MPS does not accept the notion of a unitary state which exists independently of its surrounding constituencies, elite or otherwise. Rather, politics is not conducted on the basis of static institutions, but rather through constituency membership and the act of patronage. Farhat Hasan argued similarly against overly structuralist approaches when examining the political landscape of Mughal India, and he explicitly rejected Stephen Blake's Weberian ‘patrimonial-bureaucratic’ model in favour of a methodology which understood state power in a much more reflexive and fluid manner. In recent years, there have been lively debates regarding how we can look to seemingly quotidian institutions – chanceries, judiciaries, bureaucracies – to understand better the exercise and articulation of power in pre-modern settings. This chapter contributes to these debates by examining the secretarial culture of the seventeenth-century Safavid Empire, in particular the changing roles and fortunes of the ‘state-secretary’ (munshi al-mamalik).

Admittedly, Safavid historians face a number of issues which prevent the ready acceptance of such military or household-specific models, which seem to thrive in Mamluk historiography and other contexts. First and foremost, the Safavid ‘royal’ dynasts came into existence as the spiritual leaders of a militarised millenarian Sufi Order.

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Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
Print publication year: 2016

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