Frontier Nomads of Iran: A Political and Social History of the Shahsevan

Ön Kapak
Cambridge University Press, 28 Ağu 1997 - 429 sayfa
Richard Tapper's 1997 book, which is based on three decades of ethnographic fieldwork and extensive documentary research, traces the political and social history of the Shahsevan, one of the major nomadic peoples of Iran. The story is a dramatic one, recounting the mythical origins of the tribes, their unification as a confederacy, and their decline under the Pahlavi Shahs. The book is intended as a contribution to three different debates. The first concerns the riddle of Shahsevan origins, while another considers how far changes in tribal social and political formations are a function of relations with states. The third discusses how different constructions of the identity of a particular people determine their view of the past. In this way, the book promises not only to make a major contribution to the history and anthropology of the Middle East and Central Asia, but also to theoretical debates in both disciplines.
 

İçindekiler

The Safavid state and the origins of the Shahsevan
35
Shahsevan traditions
58
Traditions of the other tribes
67
Moghan and Ardabil in Safavid times
83
The rise of the Shahsevan confederacy
93
Nazar Ali Khan Shahsevan of Ardabil
111
The Shahsevan tribal confederacy
129
The Shahsevan tribes in the Great Game
147
Settlement and detribalization
283
93
289
Shahsevan identity and history
315
The Shahsevan of Kharaqan and Khamseh
349
Lists and histories of Shahsevan tribes
356
Some Shahsevan voices
375
Bibliography
389
Index of topics
412

The Shahsevan nomads in the midnineteenth century
169
Nomads and commissars in Moghan
190
The end of the tribal confederacy
217
The Shahsevan the Constitution the Great War and after
248

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