Safi
Shah Safi I of Persia on horseback carrying a mace
Shah of Iran
Reign28 January 1629 – 12 May 1642
Coronation29 January 1629
PredecessorAbbas I
SuccessorAbbas II
Born1611
Died12 May 1642 (aged 30/31)
Kashan, Iran
Burial
Spouse
HouseSafavi
FatherMohammad Baqer Mirza
MotherDilaram Khanum

Sam Mirza (Persian: سام میرزا) (1611  12 May 1642), better known by his dynastic name of Shah Safi (Persian: شاه صفی), was the sixth Safavid shah (king) of Iran, ruling from 1629 to 1642.

Early life

Safi was given the name Sam Mirza when he was born. He was the son of Mohammad Baqer Mirza, the eldest son of Shah Abbas I, and Dilaram Khanum, a Georgian wife.[1] In 1615, Abbas had Mohammed Baqer killed, fearing he was plotting against his life. Over the next few years, the suspicious Abbas killed or blinded his other sons, leaving his grandson Safi heir to the throne.

Reign

Rostom (also known as Rustam Khan), viceroy of Kartli, eastern Georgia, from 1633 to 1658.

Safi was crowned on 28 January 1629 at the age of eighteen. He ruthlessly eliminated anyone he regarded as a threat to his power, executing almost all the Safavid royal princes as well as leading courtiers and generals. He paid little attention to the business of government and had no cultural or intellectual interests (he had never learned to read or write properly), preferring to spend his time drinking wine or indulging in his addiction to opium. Supposedly, however, he abhorred tobacco smoke as much as his grandfather did, going as far as to have those caught smoking tobacco in public killed by pouring molten lead in their mouths.

The dominant political figure of Safi's reign was Saru Taqi, appointed grand vizier in 1634. Saru Taqi was incorruptible and highly efficient at raising revenues for the state, but he could also be autocratic and arrogant.

Iran's foreign enemies took the opportunity to exploit Safi's perceived weakness. Despite firm initial Safavid successes and humiliating defeats in the Ottoman–Safavid War (1623–1639) by Safi's grandfather and predecessor Shah Abbas the Great, the Ottomans, having had their economy stabilized and military reorganized under the fiercely capable Sultan Murad IV, started making incursions in the west within a year of Safi's ascension to the throne. In 1634 they briefly occupied Yerevan and Tabriz and in 1638 they finally succeeded in recapturing Baghdad Reconquest of Baghdad (1638) and other parts of Mesopotamia (Iraq) which, despite being taken again several times later on in history by the Persians and most notably by Nader Shah, it would all remain in their hands until the aftermath of World War I. Nevertheless, the Treaty of Zuhab which ensued in 1639 put an end to all further wars between the Safavids and the Ottomans. Apart from the Ottoman wars, Iran was troubled by the Uzbeks and Turkmens in the east and briefly lost Kandahar in their easternmost territories to the Mughals in 1638, due to what seems as an act of revenge by their own governor over the region, Ali Mardan Khan, after being dismissed from office.[2]

In 1636 he received a trade delegation from Frederick III, Duke of Holstein-Gottorp, which included Adam Olearius. Olearius wrote a book about this visit in 1647, which was widely published in Europe. In 1639, Safi sent a return delegation to Holstein-Gottorp, bestowing gifts on the Duke.[3] However, the Duke did not succeed in his ultimate aim - starting a regular trading relationship with Iran (and Russia) and making the Duke's newly founded town of Friedrichstadt into a European trade terminus.

Safi died on 12 May 1642 and was buried in Qom. He was succeeded by his son Abbas II. His death was related to heavy drinking. According to one account, found in Archangelo Lamberti's Relation de la Colchide ou Mengrellie (1654), Safi died in a drinking contest with a certain Shedan Chiladze, a renowned Georgian drinking champion invited to Isfahan from Mingrelia.[4]

Family

Consorts

Safi had three wives:

Sons

Safi had five sons:[9]

  • Sultan Mohammad Mirza, succeeded regnally as Abbas II;
  • Tahmasp Mirza (blinded 1642);
  • Bahram Mirza (blinded 1642);
  • Sultan Haidar Mirza (blinded 1642);
  • Ismail Haidar Mirza (blinded 1642);
Daughters

Safi had two daughters:

References

  1. Sussan Babaie and others: Slaves of the Shah (I.B. Tauris, 2003) p.104
  2. Kohn 2007, p. 338
  3. Granlund 2004, p. 58.
  4. Matthee 2005, p. 43.
  5. Babayan, K. (1993). The Waning of the Qizilbash: The Spiritual and the Temporal in Seventeenth Century Iran. Princeton University. pp. 119, 123.
  6. Melville, C. (2021). Safavid Persia in the Age of Empires: The Idea of Iran Vol. 10. The Idea of Iran. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 361. ISBN 978-0-7556-3380-7.
  7. Anchabadze, Z. (2014). European Georgia: (ethnogeopolitics in Caucasus and Ethnogenetical History of Europe). publisher not indicated. p. 63. ISBN 978-9941-0-6322-0.
  8. Sale; et al. (1759). "An Universal history, from the earliest account of time". 26. Printed for T. Osborne: 475. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  9. 1 2 Foundation, Encyclopaedia Iranica (17 May 2021). "ʿABBĀS II". Encyclopædia Iranica. Retrieved 23 November 2021.
  10. Nashat, G.; Beck, L. (2003). Women in Iran from the Rise of Islam to 1800. University of Illinois Press. p. 169. ISBN 978-0-252-07121-8.
  11. Newman, A.J. (2012). Safavid Iran: Rebirth of a Persian Empire. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 105, 108. ISBN 978-0-85773-366-5.

Sources

Further reading

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