The Medieval Ismailis of The Iranian Lands
The Medieval Ismailis of The Iranian Lands
The Medieval Ismailis of The Iranian Lands
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2000 Brill
2000 The Institute of Ismaili Studies
The Medieval Ismls of the Iranian Lands
Farhad Daftary
Reference
Hillenbrand, Carole (ed.) Studies in Honour of Clifford Edmund Bosworth Vol.II The Sultans Turret:
Studies in Persian and Turkish Culture, Brill: Leiden Boston, Koln, 2000 pp. 43-81
Abstract
This article chronicles the main events and personalities associated with the Ism`l Da'wa in Persian
speaking lands. Beginning with the nascent and divergent Ism`l groups and communities that were
established following the death of the sixth Imam Ja`far al-Sdiq in 148/765, the article presents an
historical survey of the process by which the Da'wa was spread throughout the region.
The founding of the Ftimid state in 297/909; the rivalry between the Ftimids and the Qarmita; the
consolidation and unification of the Da'wa; the establishment of the Nizr Alamt state by Hasan-i
Sabbah in 483/1090 these and other factors are considered in relation to their impact on the extent
and influence political, cultural and intellectual of the Persian Ism`l communities.
Attention is brought to bear also on the manner in which the Alamt state both expressed and in turn
strengthened the re-affirmation of Persian language and culture as a protest against the political
dominance of the Turkish dynasties.
Keywords
D'i, Da'wa, Al-Da'wa al-Hadiya, Al- Da'wa al Jadida, Al- Da'wa al Qadima, Nizri,
Mustalis Qiyama, Muhammad b. Ahmad al-Nasafi, Al-Sijistni, Hmid al-Din al-Kirmni,
Ftimids, Nsir-i Khusraw, Hasan-i Sabbah, Alamt, Khursn, Transoxania, Qarmita,
Smnids, Byids, Seljuqs, al-Muayyad fil-Din al-Shirzi, Badakhshan, Rdbr, Quhistan,
Anjudan, Hasan aladhikrihil-salam, Qiyama
A major Sh` Muslim community, the Ism`ls have had a long and eventful history dating to the
middle of the 2
nd
/8
th
century. After obscure beginnings in southern Iraq, the Ism`l da'wa or mission
spread rapidly to eastern Arabia, Yemen, Syria, and other Arab lands as well as North Africa where
the Ism`ls founded their own state, the Ftimid caliphate, in 297/909. Meanwhile, the Ism`l
da'wa had been extended to many regions of the Iranian lands, from Khzistan in southwestern Persia
and Daylam in the southern shores of the Caspian Sea to Khursn and Transoxania in Central Asia.
Belonging to a variety of ethnic groupings and socio-cultural milieux, the Ism`ls in time elaborated
diverse intellectual and literary traditions in Arabic, Persian and Indic languages. At present, the
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Ism`ls are scattered in more than twenty-five countries of Asia, the Middle East, Africa, Europe
and North America.
Of all the Ism`l communities which have survived to our own times, those of the Iranian lands and
Yemen have had the longest continuous histories. This study, presented respectfully to Professor C.
Edmund Bosworth who has so meticulously studied over several decades the history and cultures of
the peoples of the Iranian lands, aims to provide a historical overview of the medieval Ism`l com-
munities of these lands and their prominent d'is or missionaries, who were also their community's
scholars and authors. The Iranian Ism`ls are primarily Persian-speaking and, since 487/1094 have
belonged to the majoritarian Nizr community of Ism`lsm. The Iranian Ism`ls, now situated
mainly within the borders of Iran, Afghanistan and Tajikistan as well as in Hunza and other northern
areas of Pakistan, along with the Khoja Ism`ls of Indian origins and other Nizr Ism`ls of the
world, currently acknowledge H.H. Prince Karim Aga Khan IV as their forty-ninth imam or spiritual
leader.
On the Imam Ja`far al-Sdiq's death in 148/765, the Imm Shi`is who had acquired their prominence
in his imamate, split into various groups. Later Imm heresiographers identify two of these Kfan-
based splinter groups as the earliest Ism`ls. One group, the so-called pure Ism`liyya, denied the
death of Ism`l, Ja`far al-Sdiqs eldest son and original heir-designate, and awaited his return as the
Mahdi or qa'im. A second group, acknowledging Ism`ls death in his father's lifetime, now
recognized Ism`l 's son Muhammad as their new imam; this group became known as the
Mubrakiyya, named after Ism`l 's epithet of al-Mubrak (the Blessed One).
1
Few details are known
about the subsequent history of the early Ism`ls until the middle of the 3
rd
/9
th
century. Soon after
148/765, when the bulk of the Immiyya recognized the imamate of Ism`l's half-brother Ms al-
Kzim (d. 183/799, later counted as the seventh imam of the Twelver Shi`is, Muhammad b. Ism`l
left the permanent residence of the `Alids in Medina and went into hiding to avoid `Abbsid persecu-
tion, initiating the dawr al-satr or period of concealment in early Ism`l history. It is certain that
Muhammad b. Ism`l spent the latter part of his life in Khzistan, where he had some following in
addition to the bulk of the Mubrakiyya who lived clandestinely in Kufa. In fact, Khzistan in
southwestern Persia remained the scene of the activities of early Ism`l leadership for several
decades.
On the death of Muhammad b. Ism`l, not long after 179/795, the Mubrakiyya themselves split into
two groups. A majority, refusing to accept his death, now acknowledged him as the Mahdi, while an
obscure group traced the imamate in his progeny. Modern scholarship has revealed that for almost a
century after Muhammad b. Ism`l, a group of his descendants worked secretly and systematically as
the central leaders of the earliest Ism`ls to create a unified and expanding Ism`l revolutionary
movement. These leaders, whose Ftimid `Alid genealogy was in due course acknowledged by the
Ism`ls, did not for three generations claim the Ism`l imamate openly in order to safeguard
themselves against 'Abbsid persecution. The first of these leaders, Muhammad b. Ism`l 's son `Abd
Allh, had in fact organized a reinvigorated Ism`l da'wa around the central doctrine of the bulk of
the earliest Ism`ls, viz., the Mahdiship of Muhammad b. Ism`l. Leading an anti-`Abbsid
revolutionary movement in the name of a hidden imam who could not be tracked down by the
'Abbsid agents did indeed hold obvious advantages for `Abd Allh and his next two successors, who
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took every precaution to hide their own true identities as the central leaders of the Ism`lyya. `Abd
Allh, a capable organizer and strategist, spent his youth in the vicinity of Ahwaz in Khzistn. He
eventually settled down in `Askar Mukram, then an economically flourishing town situated some
forty kilometres to the north of Ahwz. Today the ruins of `Askar Mukram, to the south of Shshtar,
are known as Band-i Qr. `Abd Allh lived as a wealthy merchant in `Askar Mukram, from where he
decided to organize an expanding Ism`l movement with a network of d'is operating in different
regions. Thus, Khzistn represented the original base of operations for what was to become the
successful Ism`l da'wa of the 3
rd
/9
th
century. Subsequently, `Abd Allh was forced to flee from
`Askar Mukram due to the hostilities of his enemies; he eventually settled down in Salamiyya, in
central Syria, where the secret headquarters of the early Ism`l da'wa now came to be located for
several decades.
Emergence of the Qarmita
The efforts of `Abd Allh to reorganize the Ism`l movement began to bear concrete results from
around 260/873 when numerous d'is appeared simultaneously in southern Iraq and in different parts
of Persia. Al-Husayn al-Ahwz, who converted Hamdn Qarmat in the Sawd of Kfa, was a Persian
d'i and a close associate of `Abd Allh. Hamdn Qarmat, then, organized the da'wa in southern Iraq,
where the Ism`ls became known as the Qarmita, named after their first local leader. Hamdn's
chief assistant, and one of the most learned dais of the early Ism`ls, was his brother-in-law `Abdn
who himself hailed from Khzistan. `Abdn recruited and trained numerous d'is, who were
dispatched in due course to various regions around the Persian Gulf. Amongst such d'is, who were
of Persian origins and operated in different parts of Persia, particular mention may be made of Ab
Sa`d Hasan b. Bahrm al-Jannb, a native of the port of Jannba (Persian, Ganva) on the northern
shore of the Persian Gulf. Ab Sa`d was initially active with much success in southern Persia, before
being dispatched to Bahrayn in eastern Arabia, where he spread the da'wa successfully among the
indigenous bedouin tribesmen and the Persians residing there. He eventually founded the independent
Qarmat state of Bahrayn which lasted for almost two centuries. There was also Abdn 's own
brother a1-Mamn, who was appointed as d'i in Frs, where the Ism`ls were evidently called the
Mamniyy'a after him.
2
The initiation of the da'wa in the west-central and northwestern parts of Persia, the region designated
as the Jibl by the Arabs, also dates to the early 260s /870s, or possibly earlier, as the Imm scholar
al-Fadl b. Shdhn who died in 260/873 had already written a refutation of the Ism`lyya (Qarmita)
in Persia. The da'wa in the Jibl was initiated by a certain d'i called Khalaf al-Hallj, who was sent
there by the central leader of the Ism`l movement. Khalaf established himself in the village of
Kulayn, in the district of Pashpya near Rayy (to the south of modern-day Tehran), where an
important Imm community already existed; and the area of Rayy continued to serve as the base of
operations for the da'wa in the Jibl. The earliest Ism`ls of Rayy became known as the Khalafiyya,
named after their first local leader. Khalaf was succeeded as the chief d'i of Rayy by his son Ahmad
and then by the latter's chief disciple Ghiyth, a native of Kulayn. Ghiyth extended the da'wa to
Qumm, another important Imm centre in Persia, Kshn, Hamadn and other towns of the Jibl.
Ghiyth also initiated the da'wa in Khursn. However, the efforts of these early d'is of Rayy to
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mobilize rural support for insurrectional purposes, as attempted by Hamdn and 'Abdn in Iraq,
proved futile. The Persian d'is soon adopted a new policy, addressing their message to the ruling
classes. After its initial success in the Jibl, this policy was also implemented in Khursn and Trans-
oxania. It was in accordance with this policy that Ghiyth converted al-Husayn b. Al al-Marwaz, a
prominent amir in the service of the Smnids in Khursn. As a result, large numbers in the districts
of Tliqn, Maymana, Hart, Gharjistn and Ghr, under the influence of this amir who later became
a d'i himself, also converted to Ism`lsm. Ghiyth's chief deputy was the learned theologian Ab
Htim al-Raz, a native of Ryy, who in time became the fifth d'i of the Jibl.
3
Al- dawa al-Hadiya
As a result of the efforts of `Abd Allh, later designated in the Ftimid sources as al-Akbar (the
Elder), and his successors, a unified and dynamic Ism`l movement had by the early 280s/890s
completely replaced the earlier Kfan-based splinter groups. This movement was centrally and
secretly directed from Salamiyya. The Ism`l now referred to their religio-political campaign and
movement as a da'wa al-hdiya (the rightly guiding mission), or simply as the da'wa (the mission),
in addition to using expressions such as the da'wat al- haqq (the summons to the truth). The Ism`ls
were then united around the doctrine of the Mahdiship of Muhammad b. Ism`l whose imminent
return was expected. Centred on the advent of the Mahdi, the restorer of true Islam who would
establish the rule of justice in the world, the Ism`l movement of the second half of the 3
rd
/9
th
century had much messianic appeal for different under-privileged groups. Indeed, Ism`lsm now
appeared as a movement of social protest against the oppressive rule of the `Abbsids and their social
order. The early Ism`l movement achieved particular success among the Imm Sh`s of Iraq and
Persia who were left without an imam and in a state of disarray on the death of their eleventh imam,
al-Hasan al-Askar, in 260/873-874. At the same time, the fragmentation of the 'Abbsid state and
the various peripheral challenges posed to the authority of the 'Abbsid caliph by number of new
dynasties, such as the Saffrids of Sistan, had made it possible for the Ism`ls and others to launch
their own insurrectional activities.
Abd Allh al-Mahd claims Imamate
The Ism`l movement was rent by a major schism in 286/899. In that year, the then central leader of
the movement, the future founder of the Ftimid state Abd Allh al-Mahd, claimed the imamate
openly for himself and his ancestors, the same individuals who had actually led the Ism`l
movement after Muhammad b. Ism`l. Abd Allh al-Mahd had now in effect introduced continuity
in the Ism`l imamate. He also explained that the same leaders had always regarded themselves as
the true imams, but as a form of taqiyya or dissimulation they had not divulged their true status in
order to safeguard themselves against 'Abbsid persecution. In other words, the propagation of the
Mahdiship of Muhammad b. Ism`l had been, we are told, no more than a decoy adopted by the
central leaders of early Ism`lsm, who evidently also used various pseudonyms and posed as the
hujjas or chief representatives of the hidden Mahdi.
4
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The reform of Abd Allh al- Mahd split the unified Ism`l movement of the time into two rival
factions in 286/899. The loyal Ism`ls, later known as Ftimid Ism`ls, accepted the reform and
maintained continuity in the imamate. This loyalist camp included the bulk of the Ism`ls of Yemen,
as well as those of North Africa and Egypt. On the other hand, a dissident camp rejected Abd Allh
al-Mahds declarations, and retained their original belief in the Mahdiship of Muhammad b. Ism`l.
Henceforth, the term Qarmat came to be applied specifically to the dissident Ism`ls, who did not
acknowledge Abd Allh al-Mahd and his predecessors, as well as his successors in the Ftimid
dynasty, as their imams. Centred in Bahrayn, the dissident Qarmat faction initially also comprised the
communities of Iraq and most of those situated in the Jibl, Khursn and Transoxania.
5
The Fimid Period
The foundation of the Ftimid caliphate in 297/909 in North Africa marked the crowning success of
the early Ism`ls. The religio-political da'wa of the Ism`lyya had finally led to the establishment
of a state or dawla, which lasted for more than two centuries until 567/1171. The Ftimid victory,
indeed, represented the long-awaited fulfilment of a Sh` ideal which had been frustrated by
numerous defeats after the brief rule of Ali b. Abi Talib (d. 40/661), the first Sh` imam. In line with
their universal aspirations, the Ftimid caliph-imams did not discontinue their da'wa upon assuming
power. But it was not until the second half of the 5
th
/11
th
century that the Ftimid d'is working in the
central and eastern lands of Islam succeeded in winning a growing number of converts within the
dominions of the `'Abbsids, and their Byid and Seljuq overlords, as well as in territories ruled by
the Saffrids, Ghaznawids and other dynasties emerging in the eastern Iranian lands. These converts
acknowledged the Ftimid caliph as the rightful Sh` imam of the time. All the surviving Qarmat
communities, outside of Bahrayn, too, had by then either disintegrated or switched their allegiance to
the Ftimid Ism`l da'wa, whose central headquarters were located in the royal city of Cairo
founded by the Ftimids themselves.
Educated as theologians at special institutions of learning in Cairo the Ftimid d'is were at the same
time the scholars and authors of their community. They produced the classical texts of the Ism`l
literature on a multitude of exoteric (zhiri) and esoteric (btini) subjects, also developing the Ism`l
ta'wil or esoteric exegesis to it fullest extent. The d'is of the Ftimid period, especially those
operating secretly in the Iranian lands, also elaborated distinctive intellectual traditions, and made
important contributions to Islamic civilization.
Consolidating the Dawa
Abd Allh al- Mahd (d. 322/930) and his next two successors in the Ftimid dynasty were
preoccupied with establishing and consolidating the Ftimid state in North Africa. It was only with
the fourth caliph-imam al-Mu`izz, who conquered Egypt in 358/969 and transferred the seat of the
Ftimid state there, that the Ftimids could begin to concern themselves effectively with their da'wa
activities. At any rate, before leaving Salamiyya permanently in 289/902, al- Mahd had already
dispatched a certain Ab `Abd Allh al-Khdim to Khursn as the first chief d'i there. The d'i
al-Khdim established his secret headquarters at Nshpr sometime during 290-300/903-913. He
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propagated the da'wa on behalf of `Abd Allh al-Mahd, while Ghiyth had earlier introduced
Ism`lsm to Khursn on behalf of the hidden Mahdi Muhammad b. Ism`l. It was under such
confusing circumstances that both factions of Ism`lsm came to he represented in Khursn. Be that
as it may, al-Khdim was succeeded, around 307/919, by the d'i Ab Sa`d al-Sha`rn who
converted several notables of the province. The next chief d'i of Khursn was the already-noted
al-Husayn b. Ali al-Marwazi, who is a well-known amir in the annals of the Smnid dynasty.
6
In his
time, the provincial seat of the da'wa was transferred from Nshpr to Marw al-Rdh (present-day
Bl Murghb in northern Afghanistan).
The d'i al-Marwaz appointed as his successor Muhammad b. Ahmad al-Nasaf, a learned theologian
and philosopher who hailed from the vicinity of Nakhshab (Arabicized, Nasaf), a town in Central
Asia. The d'i al-Nasaf, who is generally credited with having introduced a form of Neoplatonic
philosophy into Ism`l thought, transferred the seat of the da'wa to Transoxania, where he had been
advised to go by his predecessor in order to convert the dignitaries of the Smnid court. After a brief
period in Bukhr, the Smnid capital (in present-day Uzbekistan), al-Nasaf retreated to his native
Nakhshab, from where he was more successful in penetrating the inner circles of the Smnid regime.
Subsequently, al-Nasaf settled down in Bukhr and, with the help of his influential converts at the
court, including Ash'ath, the private secretary, won over the young Smnid amir Nasr II b. Ahmad
(301-331 /914-943). Encouraged by his successes, al-Nasaf now began to preach openly in Bukhr,
while extending the da'wa also to Sstn (Arabicized, Sijistn) through one of his subordinate d'is.
The d'i al-Nasaf reaffirmed the Mahdiship of Muhammad b. Ism`l in his Kitb al-mahsl, which
also contained a new emanational cosmological doctrine based on Neoplatonic philosophy. It seems
that al-Nasafi's al-mahsl gained widespread acceptance within the various Qarmat circles and it
played a major part in unifying the Qarmats of the Iranian lands who, by contrast to the Qarmats of
Bahrayn, lacked central leadership.
Smnid Jihd against the Qarmita
The fortunes of the d'i al-Nasaf and the da'wa in Khursn and Transoxania were reversed in the
aftermath of the revolt of the Turkish soldiers who were in alliance with the Sunn `ulam of the
Smnid state. Under the amir Nasr II's son and successor, Nuh I b. Nasr (331-343/943-954),
al-Nasaf and his close associates were executed in Bukhr in 332/943, and their co-religionists were
severely persecuted. The Sunn ` ulam of the Smnid state had now in fact declared a jihd or holy
war against the Qarmat heretics. Despite these setbacks, however, the da'wa survived in Khursn
and Transoxania under the leadership of al-Nasaf's son Mas`d, nicknamed Dihqn, and then other
chief d'is, notably Ab Ya'qb al-Sijistn.
In the meantime, Ab Hatim al-Rz had assumed office during 300-310/912-923 as the fifth d'i of
Rayy. He extended the da`wa to dharbyjn and Daylam, which in medieval times referred to a
number of Caspian provinces including Daylamn, Gln, Tabaristn (Mzandarn) and Gurgn. Ab
Hatim was particularly successful in converting several local rulers, starting with Ahmad b. 'Al, the
governor of Rayy during 307-311/919-924. In the aftermath of the conquest of Rayy by the Sunn
Smnids, however, Ab Hatim went to Tabaristn where he sided with Asfr b. Shirawayh (d.
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319/931) against the local Zayd Imam al-D'i al-Saghr. Ab Hatim converted Asfr and soon
acquired many followers in Tabaristn and other regions of northern Persia which were then ruled by
this Daylam amir. Ab Hatim also converted Asfr's chief lieutenant Mardwj b. Ziyr (d. 323/930),
who later rebelled against his master and founded the Ziyrid dynasty of Tabaristn and Gurgn. The
famous disputations between the d'i Ab Htim and the physician-philosopher Ab Bakr
Muhammad b. Zakariyy` al-Rz reportedly took place in the presence of Mardwj.
7
Ab Htim, like al-Nasaf, evidently belonged to the dissident Qarmat branch and did not recognize
the imamate of his contemporary Abd Allh al- Mahd. Indeed, he corresponded with Ab Thir al-
Jannb, the leader of the Qarmat state of Bahrayn, and like the latter was expecting the appearance
of the Mahdi in the year 316/928. Ab Htim may even have claimed to have been the lieutenant of
the hidden Mahdi. At any rate, as Ab Htim 's date for the emergence of the Mahdi proved wrong,
Mardwj turned against the d'i and his community. Subsequently, Ab Htim sought refuge with
Muflih, a local ruler, in dharbyjn, and died in that northwestern region of Persia in 322/934. On
Ab Htim 's death, the Qarmats (Ism`ls) of the Jibl were thrown into disarray and their
leadership eventually passed to `Abd al-Malik al-Kawkab who resided in Girdkh, near Dmghn,
the future Nizr Ism`l stronghold, and a certain Ishq residing in Rayy. The latter d'i may
perhaps be identified with Ab Ya`qb Ishq b. Ahmad al-Sijistn, the d'i al-Nasaf's disciple and
successor in Khursn.
Dawa Spreads to the Rdbr of Alamt
It was due to Ab Htim al-Rz's successes in Daylam that the da'wa also spread to the Rdbr of
Alamt or Daylamn, the traditional seat of the obscure Justnid dynasty. One of the earlier Justnid
rulers, Wahsdn b. Marzubn had built around the middle of the 3
rd
/9
th
century the fortress of
Alamt, which was to become the central headquarters of the Nizr Ism`l da'wa and state. The
Justnids traditionally supported the Sh`sm of the Zayd `Alid rulers of Tabaristn. Mahd b.
Khusraw Frz, known as Siyhchashm, who succeeded his father at Alamt soon after 307/919, was
the first Justnid to embrace Ism`lsm of the dissident Qarmat kind.
8
After being defeated by
Muhammad b. 1 Msfir, the founder of the powerful Musfirid dynasty of Daylam, Siyhchashm
sought refuge in 316/928 with his co-religionist Asfr b. Shirawayh. But he was soon murdered by
Asfr who aspired to add Rdbr to his own dominions. After Siyhchashm the Justnids came to be
eclipsed by the vigorous dynasty of the Musfirids or Sallrids, who ruled over parts of Daylam as
well as dharbyjn and Arrn.
In 330/941, the founder of the Musfirid dynasty, Muhammad b. Musfir who had held the castle of
Shamirn in Trum, was deposed by his sons Wahsdn and Marzubn. Both of these Musfirids
were converted by the d'is of Rayy, and numismatic evidence from the year 343/954-955 confirms
that they adhered to Qarmatsm and acknowledged the Mahdiship of Muhammad b. Ism`l rather
than the imamate of their contemporary Ftimid caliph-imam, al-Mu'izz.
9
Wahsdn b. Muhammad
(330-35/941-966) remained at Shamrn and governed Trum, while his more influential brother
Marzubn (330-346/941-957) soon conquered dharbyjn and Arrn, as well as Armenia and other
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parts of Transcaucasia as far as Darband, and began to rule over the expanding Musfirid dominions
from his own seat at Ardabl in northwestern Persia.
After the demise of the Sjids in 317/929, who governed on behalf of the Abbsids, dharbyjn had
become the scene of rivalries among various independent local rulers, including Muflih, a former
Sjid officer who gave refuge to Ab Hatim al-Rz and who may have been one of the d'is
converts. By 326/938, the Khrij Daysam b. Ibrhm al-Kurd had established his own control over
dharbyjn. In the aftermath of a rupture between Daysam and his vizier Ab'1-Qsim Al b. Ja'far,
the latter fled to Trum in 330/941 and entered the service of the Musfirids. Originally serving the
Sjids as a financial administrator, Ab'1-Qsim had also been active secretly as a Btin (Qarmat)
d'i in northwestern Persia. He was instrumental in encouraging his co-religionist Marzubn b.
Muhammad's conquest of dharbyjn, where he had earlier converted numerous Daylam notables
and army officers in the service of Daysam. It was also at Abu'1- Qsim 's instigation that the bulk of
Daysam's army, including many Qarmat converts, deserted him and switched their allegiance to
Marzubn. Soon, Marzubn appointed the d'i Abu'1-Qsim as his own vizier; and he was now
permitted to preach the da'wa openly with much success throughout the Musfirid dominions. The
well-informed Ibn Hawqal, who may himself have been a secret Ftimid d'i and who visited
dharbyjn around the year 344/955, reports on the existence of a large Btin (Qarmat) community
there.
10
Qarmatsm evidently survived under the later Musfirids, who were eventually obliged to
withdraw to Trum. After submitting to the Saljuqs, the Musfirid dynasty was finally overthrown by
the Nizrs of Alamt who incorporated Shamrn and other fortresses of Trum into their own
network of mountain strongholds in Rdbr.
Qarmaism in Khursn and Transoxania
In the meantime, Qarmatism had persisted in Khursn and Transoxania in the dominions of the later
Smnids. The sources have preserved some fragmentary information on the d'i-authors operating
secretly in the eastern Iranian lands after al-Nasaf and his son. There were the d'is Abu'1-Fadl
Zangurz and `Atiq, as well as Abu'l-Haytham Ahmad b. al-Hasan al Jurjn, an Ism`l philosopher
and poet from Gurgn, and his disciple Muhammad b. Surkh al-Nsbr. There was also Ab
Tammm, an obscure d'i from Khursn who belonged to al-Nasaf's dissident school. Paul Walker
in his recent studies has shown that Ab Tammm, in fact, produced what may well be the only
Ism`l heresiography on Muslim sects.
11
Above all, mention should be made of Ab Ya'qb Ishq b.
Ahmad al-Sijistn who led the da'wa in Khursn, and Sstn, his original base of operations.
12
He
may also have headed the da'wa in the Jibl, in succession to Ab Hatim al-Rz, as well as in Iraq.
13
A contemporary of the Ftimid caliph-imam al-Mu'izz, the d'i al-Sijistn was executed as a heretic
by the order of the Saffrid amir of Sstn, Khalaf b. Ahmad (352-393/963-1003),
14
not long after 361
/971, the date of completion of one of his last books.
Al- Sijistn
A learned theologian and philosopher, the d'i al-Sijistn was also a prolific writer; and it is mainly
on the basis of his numerous extant works that modern scholars have now begun to study an
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important tradition of philosophical theology developed by the d'is of the Iranian lands, particularly
in Khursn, during the 4
th
/10
th
century.
15
This tradition of learning, which in fact represented a
distinctive "Iranian school" of philosophical Ism`lsm, was evidently initiated by al-Nasaf. The d'i
al-Nasaf, and his successors, wrote for the ruling elite and the educated strata of Muslim society in
Khursn, and this may explain why they attempted to express their theology in terms of the then
most modern and intellectually fashionable philosophical terminologies and themes, without however
compromising the Sh` essence of their religious message. Drawing on a type of Neoplatonism then
current among the educated circles of Khursn, these d'is of the Iranian lands elaborated complex
metaphysical systems of thought, amalgamating in an original manner their Sh` theology with a
Hellenized system of emanational Neoplatonic philosophy. A Neoplatonic cosmology, with the
universal intellect ('aql) and soul (nafs) as the first and the second originated beings created by the
command of an unknowable God, was an important part of their systems; and this new cosmological
doctrine gradually superseded the earlier mythological cosmogony of the pre-Ftimid Ism`ls. Al-
Sijistn was perhaps the foremost Sh` Neoplatonist of his time, and his writings are extremely
valuable not only for understanding philosophical Ism`lsm but also for discovering how
Neoplatonic themes came to be originally adopted by Muslim thinkers.
It is interesting to note that the leading Iranian d'is of the early Ftimid times wrote on a multitude
of theological issues; they also disagreed among themselves and engaged in a long-drawn disputation
over certain aspects of their doctrines. Ab Htim al-Rz, who himself adopted Neoplatonism, wrote
his Kitb al-islh (Book of the Correction) to correct certain ideas found in al-Nasaf's Kitb
al-mahsl (Book of the Yield), while al-Sijistn wrote his Kitb al-nusra (Book of the Defence) to
defend al-Nasaf against Ab Htim's criticisms. Subsequently, Hamd al-Dn al-Kirmn, another
learned d'i belonging to the same "Iranian school" of philosophical Ism`lsm, acted as an arbiter in
this disputation in his Kitb al-riyd (Book of the Meadows).
16
The Ftimid caliph-imam al-Mu'izz (341-365/953-975), as noted, was the first member of his dynasty
who found it possible to concern himself with the affairs of the Ftimid Ism`l da'wa outside the
Ftimid dominions, where Qarmat communities had continued to flourish with their own d'is
undermining the success of the Ftimid d'is. In this connection, and in order to win the support of
the eastern Qarmats, al-Mu'izz also attempted a limited doctrinal rapprochement with the Qarmats,
including a partial endorsement of the Neoplatonic cosmological doctrine propounded by the Iranian
d'is. As a result of these efforts, al-Sijistn was won over to the side of the Ftimid da'wa, which
henceforth began to preserve his books. At the same time, the dissident communities under the lead-
ership or influence of al-Sijistn also switched their allegiance to the Ftimid al-Mu'izz, recognizing
him as the rightful imam of the time. These developments marked a turning point in the stagnating
fortunes of the Ftimid da'wa throughout Khursn, Sstn, Makrn and other eastern parts of the
Iranian world.
Isml State of Sind 347/958
Al-Mu'izz won an important victory also in Sind, where through the conversion of a local ruler an
Ism`l state was established around the year 347/98. The rulers of this state, centred at Multn, rec-
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ognized the suzerainty of the Ftimid caliph and recited the khutba in his name rather than for the
`'Abbsid caliph. Large numbers of Hindus converted to Ism`lsm in this state which was effectively
uprooted in 396/ 1005, when Sultan Mahmd of Ghazna invaded Multn and made its Ism`l ruler a
tributary. Soon afterwards, Sultan Mahmd began to massacre the Ism`ls of Multn and other parts
of his domains, also frustrating renewed Ism`l attempts to re-establish their local rule in Sind.
17
However, Ism`lsm survived clandestinely the Ghaznawid persecutions in northern India, where the
Ism`ls later received the protection of the Smras, an Ism`l dynasty which ruled independently in
Sind from Thatta for almost three centuries. Despite the efforts of al-Mu'izz and the Ftimid da'wa,
Qarmatism persisted for a while longer in certain parts of the Iranian lands, notably Daylam,
dharbyjn, and western Persia, as well as in Iraq. Above all, al-Mu'izz failed to win the support of
the Qarmats of Bahrayn, who were to pose a serious obstacle to the extension of Ftimid rule to the
central and eastern lands of Islam, beyond Syria and Palestine.
The Ftimid da'wa was systematically intensified in the Iranian lands under al-Mu'izz's next two
successors in the Ftimid dynasty, al-Azz (365-386/975-996) and al-Hkim (386-411 /996-1021). By
this time, the Ftimids had realized the difficulty of extending their rule over the eastern regions of
the Muslim world, and in fact a stalemate had by then developed between them and the Byids, who
were still the real masters of the 'Abbsid state. Nevertheless, the Ftimids did not abandon their
universal aspirations, aiming to be acknowledged as imams by all Muslims. It was in the pursuit of
this objective that the Ftimids retained and, indeed, intensified their da'wa activities in the Iranian
lands, especially under al-Hkim who also concerned himself with the organization of the da'wa as
well as the training of the d'is. The Ftimid d'is, including many from Persia and other eastern
lands, now received elaborate instructions at the "House of Knowledge" (Dr al-`Ilm), founded by
al-Hkim in a section of the Ftimid palace in 395/1005, and other institutions of learning in Cairo.
Among the lesser known Iranian d'is of this period mention may be made of Ahmad b. Ibrhm
al-Nsbr who wrote the only known Ism`l treatise of the genre of adab al-d'i on the ideal d'i
and his attributes.
18
Al-Kirmn
By far the most eminent Ism`l theologian and d'i of this period was Hmid al-Dn Ahmad b. `Abd
Allh al-Kirmn, who was also the most accomplished Ism`l philosopher of the entire Ftimid
period. As his nisba indicates, al-Kirmn was probably born in the Persian province of Kirmn. He
later maintained his contacts with the Ism`l community of Kirmn, addressing at least one of his
treatises to a subordinate d'i in Jruft in that province. In time, al-Kirmn became the chief d'i in
Iraq, in addition to heading the da'wa in central and western parts of Persia, known as the Irq-i
Ajam; hence his honorific title of hujjat al-`Irqayn, the hujja or chief d'i of both Iraqs. As the
most learned theologian of the time, al-Kirmn was called to Cairo in 405/1014 to refute on behalf of
the Ftimid da'wa the extremist doctrines propounded by the founders of the Druze movement and
religion. Later, he returned to Iraq where he composed his principal work, the Rhat al-'aql (Quietude
of the Intellect), in 411/1020 and where he died soon afterwards. It was mainly due to al-Kirmn's
efforts that several influential local amirs of Iraq were won over to the side of the Ftimids, preparing
the ground for later successes of the Ftimid da'wa in the East.
19
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A prolific writer, al-Kirmn produced some forty treatises.
20
He expounded the Ism`l Sh`
doctrine of the imamate in several of his works. He also defended the Ftimids against the polemical
attacks of the Zayds of Persia and other adversaries. As a philosopher, al-Kirmn was fully
acquainted with Aristotelian and Neoplatonic philosophies as well as the metaphysical systems of the
Muslim philosophers (falsifa), notably al-Frb and his own contemporary Ibn Sn (Avicenna),
whose father and brother had converted to Ism`lsm in their native Transoxania. It was in
al-Kirmn's metaphysical system that philosophical Ism`lsm attained its summit, reflecting a
distinctive synthesis of Sh` theology, Hellenistic traditions and gnostic doctrines. In his system, fully
elaborated in the Rhat al-`aql, al-Kirmn also propounded what may be regarded as the third stage
in the development of Ism`l cosmology in medieval times.
21
In his cosmogonic doctrine,
al-Kirmn replaced the Neoplatonic dyad of the intellect and soul in the spiritual world, which had
been adopted by his predecessors in the Iranian school of philosophical Ism`lsm, by a series of ten
separate intellects in partial adoption of al-Frb's Aristotelian cosmic system.
Seljuqs replace Byids 447/1055
The Ftimid da'wa continued to be propagated successfully in the eastern lands, even after the
ardently Sunn Seljuqs had replaced the Sh` Byids in 447/1055 as the effective rulers of the
`Abbsid state. Indeed, by the early decades of the reign of the Ftimid caliph-imam al-Mustansir
(427-487/1036-1094), Ftimid Ism`lsm had been established in many parts of the Iranian world,
where Qarmat communities had almost completely ceased to exist. The Ftimid d'is were now
particularly active in Iraq and various parts of Persia, notably Frs, Isfahn, Rayy, and other areas of
the Jibl. In Khursn and Transoxania, too, the da'wa had become more successful after the
downfall of the Smnids in 395/1005, when the Turkish Qarakhnids and Ghaznawids divided the
former Smnid dominions between themselves. This is attested by the fact that in 436/1044 Bughr
Khan, the ruler of the eastern Qarakhnid kingdom established over the lands of the middle Syr Dary
valley, ordered the massacre of a large number of Ism`ls who had been converted by the Ftimid
d'is operating in his territories. The Ftimid da'wa had been active also in the western territories of
the Qarakhnids, in Bukhr, Samarqand, Farghna and elsewhere in Transoxania. There, Ahmad b.
Khidr, the local Qarakhnid ruler, was executed in Samarqand in 488/1095 (or earlier in 482/1089) on
the accusation of having converted to Ism`lsm.
22
Successes of al-Shrz
The most prominent Ftimid d'i of al-Mustansir's time was al-Mu'ayyad fi'1-Din al-Shrz. He was
born around 390/1000 in Shrz, in the province of Frs, into a Daylam Ism`l family. His father
had acquired some influence in the Byid circles of Frs where he eventually seems to have headed
the da'wa. Al-Muayyad succeeded his father, and in 429/1037 entered the service of the Byid Ab
Kljr Marzubn (415-440/1024-1048), who ruled over Frs and Khzistan from his capital at
Shrz. The subsequent decades until 451/1059 in al-Muayyads career are well-documented in his
autobiography.
23
At any rate, he soon converted Ab Kljr himself and many of his courtiers as well
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as a large number of the Daylam troops in, the service of the Byids. Al-Mu'ayyad's success in Frs
brought about hostile reactions spurred on by the caliph at Baghdad, obliging the d'i to emigrate
permanently from Shrz in 435/1043. He arrived in Cairo in 439/1047, and soon began to play an
active part in the affairs of the Ftimid state and da'wa. Later, al-Muayyad played a key role as an
intermediary between the Ftimids and Arsln al-Bassr, the Turkish military commander who
briefly led the Ftimid cause in Iraq against the Seljuqs. Al-Muayyad delivered the crucial material
and financial support of the Ftimids to al- Bassr who, in 450/1058, succeeded to seize Baghdad,
where he had the khutba read for one full year in the name of al-Mustansir while the 'Abbsid caliph
remained a captive in his own capital. In the same eventful year 450/1058, al-Muayyad was
appointed as the chief d'i (d'i al-dut), the administrative head of the Ftimid da'wa organization
in Cairo, a post he held with the exception of one brief period until shortly before his death in
470/1078. Al-Muayyads principal work, the Majlis al Muayyadiyya, eight volumes containing a
hundred sessions (majlis) each and representing the apogee of Ism`l thought, is based on the
lectures he had delivered at the sessions of wisdom (majlis al-hikma) for the instruction of d'is
and other Ism`ls.
24
Nir-i Khusraw
Another prominent Iranian d'i of al-Mustansirs time was Nsir-i Khusraw. A learned theologian, a
traveler, and a renowned poet of the Persian language, Nsir-i Khusraw was also the last major
proponent of philosophical Ism`lsm in the Iranian lands. Nsir was born in 394/1004 near Balkh,
which at the time was a part of the district of Marw in Khursn. In his youth, Nsir held
administrative posts at Marw (now in Turkmenistan) under the Ghaznawids and their Seljuq
successors. At the age of forty-two, however, Nsir experienced a spiritual upheaval which may have
been connected to his conversion to Ism`lsm. Soon afterwards in 437/1045, he resigned from his
post and set off on a long journey for the apparent reason of making pilgrimage to Mecca. But this
seven-year journey, described vividly in his Safar-nma (Travelogue), took Nsir to the Ftimid
capital where he arrived in 439/1047, the same year in which the d'i al-Muayyad had arrived there.
Nsir stayed in Cairo for three years and received intensive training as a d'i. During this period, he
saw al-Mustansir and also established close relations with al-Muayyad, who was to remain his
mentor at the central headquarters of the Ftimid da'wa and to whom he later dedicated several of
his poems. In 444/1052 Nsir-i Khusraw returned to Balkh (near todays Mazr-i Sharf in northern
Afghanistan), and began his career as a Ftimid d'i, or according to himself as the hujja or chief
d'i of Khursn.
25
At any rate, he established his secret headquarters at Balkh, from where he
extended the da'wa to Nshpr and other districts of Khursn as well as to Tabaristn
(Mzandarn) in northern Persia. By 452/1060, however, the hostility of the Sunn `ulam who
denounced Nsir as a heretic (mulhid) and an irreligious person (Persian, bad-din) and destroyed his
house
26
had obliged the d'i to flee to the valley of Yumgn, in the region of Badakhshn in the
Pamirs. There, he sought refuge with his friend Abu'l-Ma'l ' Al b. al-Asad, an autonomous
Ism`l amir of Badakhshn. This obscure Yumgn period in Nsir's life lasted until his death,
sometime after 465/1072.
Extension of the Dawa to adakhshan by Nir
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Like other Ftimid dais of the Iranian lands and elsewhere, Nsir-i Khusraw maintained his contacts
with the da`wa headquarters in Cairo, receiving books and his general instructions from there. Even
in the remote Yumgn, Nsir had ready access to earlier Ism`l literature; and he was particularly
influenced by al-Sijistn, many of whose ideas are paraphrased in Nsir's writings. It was probably
during this period of exile, if not earlier, that Nir extended the da'wa throughout Badakhshn (divided
in modern times by the Oxus or m Dary between Afghanistan and Tajikistan). At any event, the
Ism`ls of Badakhshn, and their offshoot community in the Hindukush region (now situated in
Hunza and other northern areas of Pakistan) regard Nsir as the founder of their communities, and
they still revere him under the name of Pr or Shh Sayyid Nsir. It was also in Yumgn that Nsir
produced the bulk of his poetry and philosophico-theological works, including the Zd al-musfirin
written in 453/1061 and the Jmi' al-hikmatayn, his last known work completed in 462/1070 at the
request of his Ism`l protector in Badakhshn.
27
The Ism`ls of Badakhshn have continued to pre-
serve Nsir-i Khusraw's genuine and spurious works, all written in the Persian language. Nsir-i
Khusraw's mausoleum is still in existence on a hillock near the village of Jarm in the vicinity of
Faydbd, the capital of Afghan Badakhshn.
By the early 460s/1070s, the Ism`ls of Persia in the Seljuq dominions had come to own the
authority of a single chief d'i, `Abd al-Malik b. Attsh, who had his secret headquarters at Isfahn,
the main Seljuq capital. A learned d'i, Ibn `Attsh seems to have been the first d'i to have centrally
organized the da'wa and the various Ism`l communities of the Seljuq territories in Persia, from
Kirmn to dharbyjn. He may have been responsible for the da'wa activities in Iraq as well; but his
central supervision does not seem to have been extended to northern Khursn, Badakhshn and
adjacent regions in Central Asia. Ibn `Attsh, who received his own instructions from Cairo, was also
responsible for launching the career of Hasan-i Sabbh, his successor and the future founder of the
independent Nizr Ism`l da'wa and state centred at Alamt.
Split between Nizrs and Mustalis 487/1094
Al-Mustansir died after a long reign in 487/1094. The dispute over his succession split the then
unified Ism`l da'wa and community into the rival Nizr and Musta'li branches. By that time,
Hasan-i Sabbh was already following an independent revolutionary policy as the leader of the
Persian Ism`ls; and he did not hesitate to support the cause of Nizr, al-Mustansir's original
heir-designate who had been deprived of his succession rights through the machinations of the
all-powerful Ftimid vizier al-Afdal. The vizier had swiftly installed Nizr's younger brother to the
Ftimid caliphate with the title of al-Musta'li. However, Hasan recognized Nizr as al-Mustansir's
successor to the Ism`l imamate and severed his relations with the Ftimid da'wa headquarters in
Cairo, which had transferred their own allegiance to al-Musta'l, recognizing him and, later, some of
his descendants as their imams after al-Mustansir. Henceforth, the Ism`ls of the Iranian lands, who
recognized the imamate of Nizr and his progeny and became known as the Nizryya, developed in-
dependently of the Ism`ls of Egypt and the communities in Yemen and Gujart dependent on the
Ftimid regime; the latter communities comprised the Musta'liyya branch of Ism`lsm.
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The Alamt Period
During the Alamt period of their history (488-654/1090-1256), the Ism`ls of Persia came
to possess a state of their own, with a subsidiary in Syria. This state, with its central
headquarters at the mountain fortress of Alamt, was founded in the midst of the Seljuq
sultanate by Hasan-i Sabbh, and it lasted for some 166 years until it collapsed under the
onslaught of the Mongol hordes in 654/1256. The Persian Ism`ls themselves produced
official chronicles recording the events of their state, starting with the Sargudhasht-i
Sayyidn (Biography of our Master), which covered the life and career of Hasan-i Sabbh as
the first lord of Alamt.
28
These chronicles, as well as the bulk of the meagre religious
literature produced by the Nizr Ism`ls of the Alamt period, have not survived. However,
the Nizr chronicles were seen and utilized by three Persian historians of the lkhnid
period, namely, Juwayn (d. 681/1283), Rashd al-Dn Fadl Allh (d. 718/1318) and Abu'l-
Qsim Kshn (d. ca. 738/1337), who are our primary sources on the history of the Persian
Ism`ls during the period.
29
The mission of asan-i Sabbh
Hasan-i Sabbh was born in the mid-440s/1050s into a Twelver Sh` Family in Qumm, a traditionally
Sh` town in central Persia. Subsequently, the Sabbah family moved to the nearby town of Rayy
another important centre of Sh` learning and an area of Ism`l activity. Soon after the age of
seventeen, Hasan was introduced to Ism`l doctrines and was converted through the efforts of some
local d'is. In 464/1072, the newly initiated Hasan was brought to the attention of Ibn `Attsh, who
was then staying in Rayy. Ibn `Attsh recognized Hasan's talents and appointed him to a post in the
da'wa, also instructing him to go to Cairo to further his Ism`l education. Hasan finally arrived in
Ftimid Egypt in 471/1078, and spent some three years in Cairo and Alexandria. In Egypt, Hasan
seems to have come into conflict with Badr al-Jaml (d. 487/1094), the all-powerful Ftimid Vizier
and "commander of the armies", who had shortly earlier also succeeded al-Mu'ayyad al-Shrz as the
d'i al-du't. At any rate, Hasan seems to have been banished under obscure circumstances from
Egypt: he returned to the Persian da'wa headquarters at Isfahn in 473/1081. He seems to have
learned important lessons in Ftimid Egypt. Beset by numerous difficulties, the Ftimid regime was
by then well embarked on its rapid decline. Hasan was now fully aware of the inability of the Ftimid
state to support the Persian Ism`ls, taking this reality into account in his own subsequent
revolutionary strategy.
In Persia, Hasan travelled for nine years in the service of the da'wa to different localities, in Kirmn,
Khzistn, Qmis, as well as the Caspian provinces in Daylam. It was during this period that Hasan
formulated his revolutionary strategy against the Seljuqs, also evaluating Seljuq military strength in
different parts of Persia. By 480/1087, he seems to have chosen the inaccessible mountain fortress of
Alamt, in the region of Rdbr in Daylam, as a suitable site to establish his headquarters. Hasan,
who was later appointed d'i of Daylam, now began to reinvigorate the da'wa activities throughout
Rdbr. Hasan 's activities were soon brought to the attention of Nizm al-Mulk (d. 485/1092), who
remained vizier for thirty years under the Great Seljuq Sultans Alp Arsln and Malik Shh. However,
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Nizm al-Mulk failed to capture Hasan, who in due time arrived in Rdbr. In 483/1090, with his
supporters infiltrating Alamt and its surroundings, Hasan seized that impregnable fortress in the
Alborz mountains according to a clever plan, signalling the open revolt of the Persian Ism`ls
against the Seljuqs. The seizure of Alamt also marked the foundation of what was to become the
Nizr Ism`l state in Persia. It is certain that Cairo had played no part in the organization or
direction of this revolt, which was planned and carried out by Hasan on his own initiative.
Reaffirmation of Persian identity
Hasan-i Sabbh seems to have had a complex set of religio-political motives for his revolt against the
Seljuq Turks. As an Ism`l, he could not have tolerated the anti- Sh` policies of the Seljuqs, who as
the new champions of Sunn "orthodoxy" had sworn to uproot Ftimid Sh` rule from the Muslim
world. Less conspicuously, Hasan's revolt was also an expression of Persian "national" sentiments,
which accounts for its early popular appeal and success in Persia. By the opening decades of' the
5
th
/11
th
century, a number of Turkish, dynasties had established their rule over the Iranian lands,
starting with the Ghaznawids and the Qarakhnids. A new alien age, with the Turks replacing the
Arabs, in the Islamic history of the Iranian world was definitely initiated by the coming of the Seljuqs,
who threatened the revival of Persian culture and national sentiments. This renaissance of a
specifically Irano-Islamic culture had been based on the sentiments of the Islamicized Persians who
had continued to be consciously aware of their Persian identity and cultural heritage during the
centuries of Arab domination. This process, pioneered by the Saffrids and maintained under the
Smnids and the Byids, had become quite irreversible by the time of the Turkish domination of the
region.
30
At any rate, the Turkish Seljuqs were aliens in Persia and their rule was intensely detested by
the Persians of different social classes. The anti-Turkish sentiments of the Persians were further
aggravated due to the depredation caused in towns and villages by the Turks and their unruly soldiery,
who were continuously attracted in new waves to Persia from the steppes of Central Asia by the suc-
cesses of the Seljuqs. Hasan himself is reported to have expressed his resentment of the Turks and
their rule over Persia.
31
It was, indeed, to the ultimate goal of uprooting Seljuq rule in Persia that
Hasan dedicated himself and organized the Persian Ism`ls into a revolutionary force. In this
connection, it is also significant to note that Hasan, as an expression of his Persian awareness and in
spite of his uncompromising Islamic piety, substituted Persian for Arabic as the religious language of
the Ism`ls of Persia. This was the first time that a major Muslim community had adapted Persian as
its religious language; it also explains why the Ism`l literature of all the Persian-speaking (Nizr)
Ism`l communities of the Alamt period and subsequent times was produced entirely in the Persian
language.
Extension of Alamt influence
After firmly establishing himself at Alamt, Hasan-i Sabbh extended his influence throughout
Rdbr and adjacent areas in Daylam, by winning converts and gaining possession of more
strongholds which he fortified systematically for withstanding long sieges. There is evidence
suggesting that Hasan also attracted at least some of the remnants of the Khurramiyya in dharbyjn
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and elsewhere who, as an expression of their own Persian sentiments, referred to themselves as
Prsiyan.
32
Seljuq- Isml clashes begin 484/1091
Soon, Alamt came to be raided by the forces of the nearest Seljuq amir, marking the initiation of an
endless series of Seljuq-Ism`l military encounters in Persia. In 484/1091, Hasan sent the d'i
Husayn-i Qin to his native Quhistn to mobilize support there. This capable d'i met with
immediate success in Quhistn, a barren region in southeastern Khursn, where the Ism`ls soon
rose in open revolt against the Seljuqs and seized numerous castles as well as several major towns,
including Tn, Tabas, Q'in and Zzan. As a result, Quhistn became the second major territory, after
Rdbr, for the activities of the Persian Ism`ls.
By 485/1092, Hasan had founded an independent territorial state for the Persian Ism`ls. Having
become aware of the growing power of the Ism`ls, Sultan Malik Shh had meanwhile sent major
Seljuq expeditions against the Ism`ls of both Rdbr and Quhistan. However, on Malik Shh's
death in 485/1092, the Seljuq forces dispersed, and the sultanate was thrown into civil war for more
than a decade until 498/1105, when Muhammad Tapar emerged victorious as the undisputed sultan
while his brother Sanjar remained at Balkh as his viceroy in the East. During this period of strife in
the Seljuq camp, Hasan-i Sabbh readily consolidated and extended his power to other parts of Persia,
including especially the medieval province of Qumis where the Ism`ls seized Girdkh and a
number of other strongholds near Dmghn. The Ism`ls also captured several fortresses in Arrajn,
in the border region between the provinces of Khzistn and Frs. The Ism`l leader in Arrajn was
the d'i Ab Hamza, who like Hasan, had spent some time in Egypt to further his Ism`l education.
In Daylam itself the Ism`ls had repelled intermittent Seljuq offensives;
33
they had also acquired
more strongholds in northern Persia, including the key fortress of Lamasar (or Lanbasar) to the west
of Alamt. Kiy Buzurg-Ummd, who had seized Lamasar by assault, stayed there as commander four
more than twenty years until he was called to Alamt to succeed Hasan-i Sabbh. In addition, the
Ism`ls were now spreading their activities to numerous towns throughout Persia, also directing their
attention closer to the seat of Seljuq power, Isfahn. In this area, the Ism`ls, under the leadership of
Ibn `Attsh's son Ahmad, attained a major political success by seizing in 494/1100 the fortress of
Shhdiz, which guarded the main routes to the Seljuq capital. It is reported that the d'i 'Ahmad
succeeded in converting some 30,000 persons in the Isfahn area, where he also collected taxes in the
districts around Shhdiz. There is no evidence suggesting that the activities of Hasan and his
immediate successors at Alamt extended to Badakhshn and elsewhere in Transoxania. The remote
and small Ism`l communities of these regions in Central Asia seem to have developed
independently of Alamt until sometime in the 7
th
/13
th
century. By the early years of the 6
th
/12
th
century, Hasan-i Sabbh had also extended his activities into Syria by dispatching a number of
Persian d'is there. However, almost half a century of efforts were required before the Ism`ls could
finally acquire a network of strongholds in Syria. Other than Hasan himself, the leading Persian
Ism`l personalities of the early Alamt period, such as Buzurg-Ummd, Husayn-i Q`in and Ra's
Muzaffar, the governor of Girdkh, were all capable commanders and military strategists suited to the
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task at hand, rather than learned theologians and philosophers like the earlier Iranian d'is of the
Ftimid times.
Anti-Seljuq strategy of asan-i Sabbh
Soon, the anti-Seljuq revolt of the Persian Ism`ls acquired its distinctive pattern and methods of
struggle, which were appropriate to the times. Hasan-i Sabbh had recognized the decentralized nature
of Seljuq rule as well as their vastly superior military power. As a result, he designed an appropriate
vastly superior aiming to subdue the Seljuqs locality by locality through acquiring a multiplicity of
impregnable strongholds. He also resorted to the technique of assassinating prominent adversaries for
attaining military and political objectives. In subsequent times, this policy became identified in a
highly exaggerated manner with the Nizr Ism`ls to the extent that almost any assassination of any
significance in the central and eastern Islamic lands during the Alamt period was attributed to the
daggers of the Ism`l fidis, the young self-sacrificing devotees who carried out the actual sectarian
missions. And in time, a number of myths came to be fabricated and disseminated regarding the
recruitment and training of these fidis.
34
From early on, the assassinations led to the massacres of
Ism`ls, and the massacres in turn provoked further assassinations of their instigators.
Consequences of the Nizr-Mustali split
In the meantime, the Nizr-.Musta`li schism of 487/1094 had split the Ism`ls into two rival
factions. By that time, Hasan-i Sabbh had emerged as the undisputed leader of the Persian Ism`ls,
and perhaps of the Ism`ls of the entire Seljuq realm. He had already been following an independent
revolutionary policy for several years, and now he supported Nizr's cause and broke off his relations
with Cairo. Hasan had now in effect founded the independent Nizr da'wa. In this decision, he was
supported by the entire Ism`l community of Persia, while the Ism`ls of Central Asia seem to have
remained uninformed about this schism for quite some time. Nizr, who had led an abortive revolt in
Egypt, was captured and executed by the Ftimid regime in 488/1095. Nizr did have male progeny
and some of them revolted against the later Ftimids. But Hasan-i Sabbh did not divulge the name of
Nizr's successor to the imamate. Numismatic evidence shows that Nizr's own name had continued
to be mentioned on the coins minted at Alamt for some seventy years after his death until the Nizr
Ism`l imams emerged at Alamt and took charge of the affairs of their community and State.
35
In
the absence of a manifest imam, Hasan continued to be obeyed as the supreme leader of the Nizr
Ism`l movement. Soon after 487/1094, Hasan was also acknowledged as the hujja or chief
representative of the inaccessible imam, in the same manner that the central leaders of the early
Ism`l movement had been recognized as the hujjas of the hidden imam.
It was under such circumstances that the outsiders from early on had acquired the impression that the
movement of the (Nizr) Ism`ls of Persia represented a "new preaching" (al-da'wa al jadida), by
contrast to the "old preaching" (al-da'wa al-qadima) of the Ftimid Ism`ls. Be that as it may, the
"new preaching", expressed in the Persian language, was essentially the reformulation of an old Sh`
doctrine of long standing among the Ism`ls, viz., the doctrine of ta'lim or authoritative teaching by
the imam. Hasan restated this doctrine rigorously in a treatise which has not survived, but it has been
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preserved fragmentarily by our Persian historians as well as the contemporary theologian al-
Shahrastn (d. 548/1153) who may have been an Ism`l himself.
36
The doctrine of ta'lim,
emphasizing the autonomous guiding authority of each imam in his time, provided the foundation of
the Nizr teachings of the Alamt period and subsequent times. The intellectual challenge posed by
the doctrine of ta'lim, which also refuted the legitimacy of `Abbsid rule, called forth the official
reaction of the Sunn establishment, led by al-Ghazl who attacked the Ism`ls in several polemical
works.
Nizr setback then consolidation
Alarmed by the Nizr successes, Sultan Barkiyruq in western Persia and Sanjar in Khursn agreed
in 494/1101 to deal more effectively, in their respective territories, with the Nizr Ism`ls who were
then posing a general threat to the Seljuqs. Despite new Seljuq offensives and massacres, however,
the Nizrs managed to retain all their strongholds. But the Nizr fortunes began to be reversed with
the accession of Muhammad Tapar (498-511/1105-1118) to the sultanate, which marked the
termination of dynastic disputes and factional rivalries among the Seljuqs. During his reign, the
Persian Nizrs lost most of their fortresses in the Zagros mountains; with the loss of Shhdiz in
500/1107, the Nizrs also lost their influence in the Isfahn region. Despite their superior military
power and a prolonged war of attrition, the Seljuqs did not succeed in seizing Alamt, where Hasan-i
Sabbh had continued to stay; and, the Persian Ism`ls by and large retained their regional positions
in Rdbr, Qumis, and Quhistn. Nevertheless, by the time of Hasan's death in 518/1124, the armed
revolt of the Persian Ism`ls against the Seljuqs had lost its effectiveness, much in the same way that
Muhammad Tapar's offensive against them had failed to realize its objectives. The Seljuq-Ism`l
relations had now entered a new phase of "stalemate".
Kiy Buzurg-Ummd (518-532/1124-1138), the second lord of Alamt, maintained the policies of his
predecessor and further strengthened the Nizr state, despite renewed Seljuq offensives against
Rdbr and Quhistn. Meanwhile, the Nizr da`wa was revived in southern Syria through the efforts
of Bahrm (d. 522/1128) and other Persian d'i sent from Alamt, and by 527/1132, they began to
acquire their permanent strongholds in central Syria. The scattered territories of the Nizr state now
stretched from Syria to eastern Persia, and possibly parts of adjacent areas in Afghanistan, and yet this
state maintained a remarkable cohesion and sense of unity amidst extremely hostile surroundings and
despite suffering uninterrupted persecution. Indeed, the stability of this state and the unwavering
obedience of the Nizrs towards their leaders never ceased to amaze the Seljuqs and other Nizr
adversaries, including the European Crusaders. Comprised of mountain dwellers, villagers, and
inhabitants of small towns, the Persian Nizrs also maintained a sophisticated outlook and
encouraged learning. They established impressive libraries at Alamt and their other major
strongholds in Persia, as well as Syria. In later Alamt times, numerous Muslim scholars availed
themselves of the Nizr libraries and patronage of learning.
Buzurg-Ummd was succeeded by his son Muhammad (532-557/1138-1162). In his time, the Persian
Nizrs extended their activities to Georgia (Gurjistn). They also made a major effort through their
d'is to penetrate a new region, Ghur, to the east of Quhistan, in present-day central Afghanistan. The
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Nizr Ism`l da'wa seems to have been established in that region around 550/1155 at the request of
the Ghrid ruler `Al` al-Dn Husayn Jahnsz. In Daylam, the Nizrs had continued to confront the
enmity of the Zayds as well as other local dynasties such as the Bwandids of Tabaristn and Gln.
Proclamation of the Qiyma 559/1164
The fourth lord of Alamt, Hasan II 'al dhikrihil-salm (557-561/1162-1166), proclaimed the
qiyma or the Great Resurrection, the long-awaited Last Day, in 559/1164 at special ceremonies held
at Alamt and Quhistn. Relying heavily on Ism`l tawil or esoteric exegesis however, the qiyma
was interpreted spiritually to mean the manifestation of unveiled truth in the person of the Nizr
Ism`l imam. Accordingly, for the Nizrs, who alone were capable of understanding the spiritual
reality of the immutable religious truths (haqiq), hidden in the btin of the positive laws, Paradise
had now been actualized in this world. As a corollary, the outside world, comprised of non-Ism`ls,
was relegated to the realm of spiritual non-existence. The declaration of the qiyma was tantamount
to the Nizr declaration of independence from the "other". The Nizrs of the qiyma times did in
fact practically ignore the outside world, refraining from any major campaign against their
adversaries. As the person who had declared the qiyma. Hasan II was also acknowledged by the
Nizr community as the qim and the rightful imam from the progeny of Nizar b. al-Mustansir
Hasan II's son and successor, Nr al-Dn Muhammad II (561-607/1166-1210), devoted his own long
reign to a systematic elaboration of the doctrine of the qiyma.
37
This period also coincided with the
career of Rshid al-Dn Sinn, the original "Old Man of the Mountain" of the Crusaders. Sinn had
spent his youth at Alamt, where he had furthered his Ism`l education before being sent by Hasan
II to Syria soon after 557/1162. He led the Syrian Nizrs for thirty years to the peak of their power
and glory, until his death in 589/1193.
Decline of the Seljuqs
Meanwhile, the Great Seljuq sultanate had been disintegrating in Persia and elsewhere after Sanjar's
death in 552/1157. The Seljuqs were replaced by a number of Turkish dynasties in different regions.
At the same time, a new power based on Khwrazm, the region on the lower Oxus, had emerged in
the East. The hereditary rule of this region had passed earlier into the hands of a Turkish dynasty
acting as vassals of the Seljuqs and carrying the region's traditional regnal title of Khwrazm Shh.
After Sanjar, the Khwrazm Shhs began to assert their independence and expanded their territories
into Khursn and other Iranian lands. Subsequently, the Khwrazm Shhs expanded their empire
westward across Persia, clearing away the remnants of Seljuq rule. As the successors of the Seljuqs,
the Khwrazm Shhs developed their own hostile relations with the Nizrs of Rdbr and elsewhere
in Persia. In Quhistn, the Nizrs had continued to have military encounters with the Ghrids and the
Maliks in the neighbouring Sstn or Nmrz.
38
It was in the aftermath of the decline of the Seljuqs
that the ''Abbsid caliph al-Nsir (575-622/1180-1225) found the long-awaited opportunity to revive
the power and prestige of his dynasty. During this period, the new ruler of Alamt, Jall al-Dn
Hasan, III (607-618/1210-1221), attempted a daring rapprochement with the Sunn establishment,
ordering his followers to observe the shari'a in its Sunn form. Later, this policy was explained as
having represented a form of taqiyya or dissimulation to safeguard the survival of the community and
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improve its relations with the rest of the Muslim society. At any rate, by contrast to the qiyma times,
the Nizr Ism`l imam had now boldly accommodated his community to the outside world. The
new Nizr policy proved very successful; Jall al-Dn Hasan was acknowledged by the caliph
al-Nsir and other leading Sunn rulers as an amir in the Muslim world, and his rights to the Nizr
territories were officially recognized. Jall al-Dn Hasan also participated in the caliph al-Nsir's
intricate alliances. As a result of these developments, the Ghrid attacks against the Nizrs of
Quhistn ceased, while the Nizrs of Syria received timely help from the Ayybids in their conflicts
with the Crusaders; and many Sunns, including scholars, who were then fleeing from the first
Mongol invasions of Khursn, began to find refuge in the Nizr towns and strongholds of Quhistn.
Later in the 7
th
/13
th
century, the Nizr da'wa began to be actively propagated in Badakhshn where
the Ism`ls had survived in small Pamiri communities. At the same time, Nizr d'is, later also
called pirs, were dispatched from Alamt to spread the da'wa in Multn and other areas of Sind.
Chingiz Khan and the impact of the Mongol invasions
The final decades of the Nizr state in Persia, under `Al` al-Dn Muhammad III (618-653/
1221-125), coincided with a most turbulent period in the history of the Iranian, and indeed Islamic,
lands. By 617/1220, Chingiz Khan, ruler of the new Mongol empire, had captured Bukhr and
Samarqand. In the following year, he crossed the Oxus and seized Balkh. Then, the Mongols
conquered Khursn, destroying Marw and Nshpr. It was in the early years of A1` al-Dn
Muhammad 's reign that an increasing number of Muslims, both Sunn and Sh`, found refuge among
the Nizrs of Quhistn who were still enjoying their stability and prosperity. The enviable
contemporary conditions of the Quhistani Nizrs are described vividly by Minhj-i Sirj Jzjn, the
Ghrid historian and ambassador who visited Quhistn several times during 621-623/ 1224-1226 and
met with the muhtasham or chief of the Ism`ls there.
39
The most prominent of the outside scholars who now availed themselves of the Nizrs' patronage of
learning was the Sh` philosopher, theologian and scientist Nasr al-Dn al-Tusi, (597-672/
1201-1274). It was around 624/1227 that al-Tusi entered the service of Nasr al-Dn `Abd al-Rahm b.
Abi Mansr (d. 655/1257), the learned muhtasham of the Nizrs of Quhistn. Al-Ts developed a
close friendship with Nasr al-Dn, to whom he dedicated his great work on ethics, the Akhlq-i
Nsiri. The period of his Ism`l connection, lasting some thirty years until 654/1256, was
particularly productive for al-Ts, who also embraced Ism`lsm.
40
During this period, spent first in
the Nizr strongholds of Quhistn and later at Alamt and Maymndiz fortresses in Rdbr, al-Ts
also wrote a number of Ism`l works, including the Rawdat al-taslim (Meadow of Submission) which
is the most comprehensive extant treatise on the Nizr Ism`l teachings of the Alamt period after
the declaration of the qiyma.
41
With the demise of Jall al-Dn Mingbirti (617-628/1220-1231), the last of the Khwrazm Shhs
who had also been engaged in war and diplomacy with Alamt, the Nizrs of Persia came to be
confronted directly by the Mongols. The efforts of the Imam `Al` al-Dn Muhammad to forge an
alliance with the kings of France and England, in collaboration with the 'Abbsid caliph, against the
Mongols proved futile; and all the Nizr attempts to reach a peaceful accord with the Mongols
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themselves proved equally ineffective. At any event, when the Great Khan Mngke
(649-657/1251-1259) decided to complete the Mongol conquest of western Asia, he assigned first
priority to the destruction of the Nizr state in Persia, entrusting the mission to his brother Hleg.
The Fall of Alamt 654/1256
The Mongol hordes had already started to exert constant pressures on the Nizrs of Quhistn and
Qmis when `Al` al-Dn Muhammad was succeeded by his youthful son, Rukn al-Dn Khurshh, in
Shawwl 653/December 1256; he would be the last lord of Alamt. A few months later, in the spring
of 654/1256, the main Mongol expedition led by Hleg himself entered Persia through Khursn. In
the final year of the Nizr state, Khurshh and Hleg exchanged countless embassies and negotiated
endlessly in vain.
42
Vacillating between resistance and surrender, Khurshh seems to have hoped to
save at least the major Nizr strongholds of Persia from Mongol destruction, while Hleg demanded
nothing less than total Nizr submission. Finally, Khurshh surrendered on 29 Shawwl 654/19
November 1256, after the main Mongol armies had converged on Maymndiz, where the imam was
then staying, and engaged the Nizrs in fierce fighting. This marked the end of the Alamt period in
the Ism`l history of the Iranian lands. Alamt itself was surrendered to the Mongols a month later,
while Lamasar held out for another year, and Girdkh, as the last Nizr outpost in Persia, resisted its
Mongol besiegers until 669/1270. Early in the following year, 655/1257, Mngke sanctioned a
general massacre of the Nizrs of Persia. Rukn al-Dn Khurshh's own tragic end came in the spring
of 655/1257 when he was murdered by his Mongol guards somewhere in central Mongolia, whither
he had gone in vain to see the Great Khan.
The Early Post- Alamt Centuries
The collapse of the Nizr state in 654/1256 marked the initiation of a new phase in the medieval
history of the Iranian Ism`ls, who had now permanently lost their political prominence. Henceforth,
the Ism`ls of the Iranian lands, all belonging to the Nizr branch survived as minority religious
communities in Persia, Afghanistan and Central Asia. The first two centuries in the post- Alamt
history of these communities remain rather obscure. Only the major developments of this period have
been recently clarified by modern scholarship on the basis of numerous regional histories and other
primary sources as well as the oral traditions and the meagre writings of the Nizrs themselves.
43
In Persia, the Nizrs were left in an utterly confused and devastated state in the aftermath of the
Mongol catastrophe. Large numbers were put to the Mongol swords in Rdbr and Quhistn; and in
both regions the surviving groups were displaced from their traditional abodes, the mountain
strongholds and their surrounding villages and a few towns. Many of the Nizrs who had survived
the Mongol massacres migrated to adjacent regions in Afghanistan and Badakhshn as well as Sind,
while numerous groups, isolated in remote places or towns, soon began to disintegrate or gradually
assimilated themselves into the religiously dominant communities of their surroundings. The Nizrs
were now also deprived of any form of central leadership, provided earlier from Alamt. It was under
such circumstances that the highly disorganized and scattered Nizr communities were once again
obliged to observe taqiyya very strictly. For about two centuries after the fall of Alamt, the Nizr
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communities of Persia, Afghanistan and Badakhshan, and elsewhere in Syria and India, developed on
a local basis and independently of one another under the local leadership of their own d'is.
Meanwhile, a group of Nizr dignitaries had managed to hide Rukn al-Dn Khurshh's minor son
Shams al-Dn Muhammad, who had succeeded to the Nizr imamate. He was evidently taken to
dharbyjn where he spent the rest of his life disguising himself as an embroiderer. These facts are
attested by certain allusions in the unpublished versified Safar-nma of Sa`d al-Dn b. Shams al-Dn
Nizr Quhistn (d. 720/1320). A native of Brjand in Quhistn, and the first post- Alamt Nizr
poet, Nizr Quhistn served for a while at the court of the Kart rulers of Harat. Nizr Quhistn
travelled widely, and he seems to have seen the Imam Shams al-Din Muhammad around 678/ 1280 in
dharbyjn, possibly at Tabrz. Practically nothing is known about the imams who succeeded Shams
al-Dn Muhammad in Persia until the second half of the 9
th
/15
th
century.
Split between Muammad -Shh and Qsim-Shh branches
Shams al-Dn Muhammad, the twenty-eighth-Nizr imam, died around 710/1310. An obscure
dispute over his succession split the line of the Nizr imams and their following into what became
known as the Muhammad-Shhi and Qsim-Shhi branches. The Muhammad-Shhi line of Nizr
imams, who initially had numerous followers in Daylam and Badakhshn, was discontinued soon
after 1201/1786. On the other hand, the Qsim-Shhi line has persisted to our times, and since the
early decades of the 13
th
/19
th
century, the imams of this line have become better known under their
hereditary title of Aga Khan. At any rate, this schism provided another serious blow to the already
devastated Nizr da'wa of the early post-Alamt period.
Meanwhile, the Nizrs had managed to regroup in Daylam, where they remained active throughout
the lkhnid and Tmrid periods. At the time, Daylam was ruled by different local dynasties, and the
political fragmentation of the region permitted the Nizrs there to make periodic attempts to regain
Alamt and Lamasar, which had not been completely demolished by the Mongols. They also suc-
ceeded in winning several local rulers of northern Persia to their side. For instance, some of the
Kushayj amirs, including Kiy Sayf al-Dn, who by 770/1368 controlled much of Daylam, adhered
to Nizr Ism`lsm.
44
A certain Nizr leader known as Khudwand Muhammad, who may perhaps
be identified with the Muhammad-Shhi Nizr Imam Muhammad b. Mu`min Shh (d. 807/1404),
had also appeared in Daylam, where he played an active part in local conflicts and alliances.
Khudwand Muhammad established himself at Alamt for a while, but was eventually obliged to
seek refuge with Tmr who exiled him to Sultniyya.
45
Later, the Ban Iskandar who ruled over parts
of Mzandarn supported the Nizr cause in Daylam.
46
The Nizrs retained some importance in
northern Persia until the end of the 10
th
/ 16
th
century, when the Caspian provinces were annexed to
the Safawid dominions. It is interesting to note that the Safawids themselves used Alamt as a royal
prison for the rebellious members of their own household before the fortress was permanently
abandoned.
Nizrs of Quhistan and Badakhshan
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The Nizrs of Quhistn never really recovered from the Mongol onslaught, which left all of
Khursn with its great cities in ruins. Subsequently, they survived in scattered villages around some
of their former towns in Khursn, without acquiring any political prominence. The Nizrs of
Badakhshn, who were particularly devoted to Nsir-i Khusraw, had essentially remained outside of
the confines of the Nizr state. But, as noted, the Nizr da'wa had been propagated actively there
during the later Alamt period. According to the local tradition of the Nizrs of Badakhshn, the
Nizr da'wa was introduced to Shughnn by two d'is sent from Alamt. These d'is, Sayyid Shh
Malang and Sayyid Shh Khmsh, founded dynasties of mirs and pirs who ruled on a hereditary
basis over Shughnn, Rshn and adjacent districts of Badakhshn in the upper Oxus region.
47
Subsequently, Badakhshn was fortunate to escape the Mongol debacle. The region was eventually
annexed to the Tmrid empire in the middle of the 9
th
/15
th
century. Early in the 10
th
/16
th
century,
Badakhshn was briefly conquered by the zbegs, whose hegemony was persistently resisted by
different local rulers. It was under such chaotic conditions that Shh Rdi al-Dn, a Muhammad-Shhi
Nizr imam, came from his original base of operations in Quhistn and Sstn to Badakhshn, where
he established his own rule with the help of the local Nizrs. Shh Rdi a1-Dn was, however, killed
in battle in 915/1509, and, subsequently, Mrz Khan, a local Tmrid amir severely persecuted the
Nizrs of Badakhshn.
The Anjudn Revival
Meanwhile, the Nizr imams of the Qsim-Shhi line had emerged at Anjudn, a large village in
central Persia near Qumm and Mahallt, initiating the Anjudn revival in the post-Alamt history of
the Nizr Ism`ls.
48
Imam Mustansir bi'11h, who died in 885/1480, is the first imam of his line to
have definitely established himself at Anjudn, where a Nizr community already existed. By that
time, Nizr Ism`lsm had become infused in Persia with Sufi teachings and terminology, while Sufi
pirs themselves had begun to use ideas which had been more widely attributed to the Ism`ls. As a
part of this coalescence between Nizr Ism`lsm and Sufism in Persia, the Nizrs had also adopted
certain external features of the Sufi orders (taiiqas), referring to their imams and themselves as pirs
(or murshids) and murids. This disguise was partly adopted for the purposes of taqiyya to ensure the
safety of the Nizrs in predominantly Sunn surroundings. However, the esoteric nature of the
teachings of both communities, too, had made its own important contribution to bringing about this
coalescence which left permanent imprints on the Nizr, community. This also explains why the
Nizrs of the Iranian lands, especially in Badakhshn, have continued to regard some of the great
mystic poets of Persia, such as Fard al-Dn `Attr and Jall al-Dn Rm, as their co-religionists.
Later in Safawid times, the Persian Nizrs also adopted the guise of Twelver Sh`sm, then the
official religion of the Safawid realm, as another taqiyya practice.
Anjudn served as the residence of the Qsim-Shhi Nizr imams and the headquarters of their
da'wa for some two centuries, coinciding with the period of Safawid rule over Persia. The tombs of
the Imam Mustansir bi'llh, who carried the Sufi name of Shh Qalandar, and several of his
successors are still preserved in Anjudn.
49
The Anjudn period ushered a revival in the da'wa
activities of the Nizrs of the Iranian lands. This revival also resulted in the assertion of Anjudn's
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control over the various Nizr communities which had hitherto developed on a local basis. The
ground for the Anjudn revival had already been prepared by the spread of Sh` tendencies in Persia
mainly through the activities of a number of Sufi orders; and this process eventually culminated in the
adoption of Twelver Sh`sm as the religion of Safawid Persia in 907/1501. The Safawiyya
themselves represented one of the most militant Sufi orders through which Sh` tendencies and `Alid
loyalism had permeated Persia.
Reorganization of the Dawa of Qsim-Shhi s
During the Anjudn period, the Qsim-Shhi Nizr da'wa was reorganized and reinvigorated under
the direct leadership of the imams at Anjudn, not only to win new converts but also to gain the
allegiance of those Iranian Nizrs, especially in Badakhshn, who had hitherto supported the
Muhammad-Shhi line of imams. By asserting their own leadership, the imams also succeeded in
undermining the position of the hereditary dynasties of d'is, mirs, or pirs, which had emerged in
different Iranian Ism`l communities. The imams now began to appoint their own trusted
representatives to administer the affairs of these communities, especially in Khursn, Afghanistan
and Badakhshn. These agents visited Anjudn on a regular basis, to report on the affairs of their
community and to deliver the much needed religious dues they had collected.
By the second half of the 11
th
/17
th
century, the Anjudn revival had led to significant achievements.
Rapidly expanding and reorganized Nizr communities had now emerged throughout the Iranian
world, in central Persia, Kirmn, Khursn, Afghanistan, and Badakhshn. The Nizr da'wa directed
from Anjudan had been particularly successful also in Sind, Gujart and other regions of the Indian
subcontinent. At the same time, the bulk of the Muhammad-Shhi Nizrs had switched their
allegiance to the imams residing at Anjudn. The literary activities of the Iranian Nizrs, too, were
revived during the Anjudn period, starting with the writings of Ab Ishq Quhistn, and
Khayrkhwh-i Hart who died after 960/1553.
50
The Nizrs of the Iranian lands, especially in
Badakhshn, also preserved a substantial portion of the literary heritage of their community, produced
in the Persian language during the Alamt and post-Alamt centuries.
The Ism`ls of the Iranian lands were not destined to regain the prominence they had acquired
during the Alamt period of their history, a religio-political prominence that was abruptly ended by
the all-conquering Mongols. Nevertheless, by the end of the Middle Ages the Anjudn revival had
already started to compensate at least partially for the Mongol debacle, permitting the Nizr Ism`ls
to survive in Iran, Afghanistan and Central Asia, as well as in many other regions of the world, as
peaceful and prosperous religious communities.
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1
See Nawbakht. Kitb firaq al-Shi'a, 57-58. (60-61) al-Qumm, Kitb al-maqlt 80-81. 83, and Daftary, "The Earliest
Ism`ls", 214-245
2
Al-Daylam, Bayn, 21.
3
The most detailed account of the initiation of' the Ism`l da'wa in the Jibl, Khursn, and Transoxania is contained in
Nizm al-Mulk, Siyar. ed. Darke, 282-295, 297-305: English trans., Darke, 208-218, 220-226. See also Stern. "The Early
Ism`l Missionaries", 56-90, reprinted in Stern, Studies in Early Ism'ilism, 189-233.
4
On Abd Allh al-Mahds reform and its consequences, see Madelung, "Das Imamat", 43-65, 69 ff., and Daftary A Major
Schism", 123-139.
5
On the early history of' these Qarmat communities, and their relations with the Ftimids, see Madelung, "The Fatimids and
the Qarmat s of Bahrayn ", 21-73; Madelung, Karmat". El
2
, vol. 4, 660-665, and Daftary, "Carmatians", 823-831.
6
Gardz, Zayn al-akhbr, 148-149; Tarikh-i Sistn, ed. Bahr, 290-294, 300-302; ed. Sdiq, 158-160, 165-166; English
trans., The Trikh-e Sistn, tr. M. Gold, 233-237., 243-244; Mirkhwnd, Rawdat al-saf, vol. 4, 40-42, and Barthold,
Turkestan, 241-245.
7
Al-Kirmn, al-Aqwl, 2-3.
8
On the Justnids, who are variously treated by a few medieval chroniclers of the Caspian provinces, including lbn
Isfandiyr, Awliy' Allh mul and Zahr al-Dn Mar`ash, see Madelung, Ab Ishq al-Sb", especially 52-57 reprinted
in his Religious and Ethnic Movements, article VII, and Bosworth, the New Islamic Dynasties, 145-146.
9
See Stern, "Early Ism`l Missionaries", 70-74. On the Musafirids, see the following works by Minorsky: Studies in
Caucasian History, 159-166; History of Sharvn and Darband, 27, 60-62, 71, 76, 85, l l2, and "Musfirids". El
2
, vol. 7,
655-657. See also Madelung, "The Minor Dynasties", 224-225, 231 ff., and Bosworth, New Islamic Dynasties, 148-149.
10
Ibn Hawqal. Srat al-ard, 348-349, 354. See also Miskawayh, Tajrib, ed. and trans. Amrdroz and Margoliouth, Arabic
text, vol. 2, 31-37, 62-67, 115, 135-136, 148-154, 166-167, 177-180, 219-220, English translation, vol. 5. 33-41, 67-74, 118,
140-142, 156-164, 178-180, 192-195, 233.
11
See Walker, Ab Tammm", 343-352, and his An Isamili Version", 161-177. See also Bosworth, The History of the
Saffarids, 292-293
12
For the most comprehensive modern studies of al-Sijistan's thought and intellectual contributions, see Walker, Early
Philosophical Shiism, and his Ab Yaqb al-Sijistni.
13
Ibn al-Nadm, Kitb al-fihrist, 240-241; English trans. 472.
14
See Bosworth, Saffarids, 301, 337.
15
For al-Sijistn's writings, see Poonawala, Biobibliography, 82-89, and Walker, al-Sijistni. 104-118. Only one of
al-Sijistani's books, the Kitb al-yanbi', containing the major components and themes of his metaphysical system, has been
translated into English; see Walker, Wellsprings, 37-111; for the Arabic text and partial French translation of this work, see
Corbin, Trilogie ismaelienne. text 1-97, translation 5-127.
16
See Corbin, Cyclical Time, l51-193; Madelung, Aspects of Ism`l Theology". 53-65, reprinted in Madelung, Religious
Schools, article XVII, and Daftary, The Ism'ilis. 234-246.
17
See Stern, Ism`l i Propaganda", 298-307, reprinted in his Studies, 177-188: Hamdani, The Beginnings, 3 ff.; Bosworth,
The Ghaznavids, 52-53, 76, 199-200, 235, and Haim The Empire of the Mahdi, 385-392.
18
Al Nsbr's treatise entitled al-Risla al-mjaza al-kfiya fi db al-du't has not survived directly, but it has peen
preserved in full in later Ism`l sources; see Poonawala, Biobibliography, 91-92
19
See Daftary, The Ism'iliis, 186-197; Walker, "The Ismaili Da`wa ", 161-182, and Halm, The Fatimids and their
Traditions, 35 ff., 53-54, 71-78.
20
Poonawala, Biobibliography, 94-102 and van Ess, Bibliographische Notizen", 255-261.
21
For a comprehensive study of al-Kirmn's thought, as expounded mainly in his Rhat al-`aql, see De Smet, La Quietude
de l'Intellect.
Please see copyright restrictions on page 1
22
Al-Maqrz, Itti'z al-hunaf, vol. 2, 191-192; Ibn al-Athr, al-Kmil,vol. 9, 211, 358, and vol. 10. 112 ff., 165-166, and
Barthold, Turkestan, 251, 304-305, 316-318.
23
See al-Muayyad fi'1-Dn al-Shrz, Sirat al-Muayyad fil-Din. See also Idrs `Imd al-Dn b. al-Hasan, Uyn al-akhbr,
vol. 6, 329-359. For a modern study based on al-Mu'ayyads Sira, see Klemm, Die Mission des fatimidischen Agenten.
24
For a list of al-Muayyads writings, see Poonawala, Biobibliography, 103-109. See also Halm, The Oath of Allegiance
(`ahd), in Daftary, ed., Mediaeval Ismaili History, especially 99, 115.
25
See for instance, Nsir-i Khusraw, Zd al-musfirin, 397, and his Diwn, 8, 10, 17, 51, 56, 86, 92, 366, 416, 459, 490.
26
Nsir-i Khusraw, Zd al-musfirin, 3, 402, and his Diwn, l62, 234, 287, 436.
27
Nsir-i Khusraw, Kitb jmi' al-hikmatayn, 16-17; trench trans., Le Livre reunissant les deux Sagesses, 48. On Nsir-i
Khusraws life and writings, see Ivanow, Problems in Nasir-i Khusraws Biography; Corbin, Nsir-i Khusrau and Iranian
Ism`lism, 520-542; Bertles, Nasir-i Khosrov i ismailizm 148-264; Nsir-i Khusraw va Ism'iliyan, 149-256, and
Poonawala, Biobibliography, 111-125, 430-436.
28
F. Daftary, Persian Historiography, 91-97.
29
Juwayn, Ta'rikh-i jahn-gushy, vol. 3, 186-278: English trans., vol. 2, 666-725: Rashd al-Dn, Jmi' al-tawrikh,
97-195; Kshan, Zubat al-tawrikh, 133-233. For modern studies on the Persian Ism`ls and their state during the Alumut
period, see Hodgson, Order, 37-278, and his "The Ism`l State", 422-482; Lewis, The Assassins, 38-124; Daftary, The
Ism'ilis, 324-434, 669-699, and his "Hasan-i Sabbh and the Origins of the Nizr Ismaili Movement", in his Mediaeval
Ismaili History, 181-204
30
Professor Bosworth has studied the Persian revival under Arab and Turkish rule in numerous studies; see, for instance, his
"The Development of Persian Culture", 33-34, reprinted in his The Medieval History, article XVIII; Interaction of Arabic
and Persian Literature and Culture", 59-73, reprinted in his Medieval Arabic Culture, article VIII, and his Saffarids, 168-180.
See also Stern, Ya'qb the Coppersmith", 535-353.
31
See Rashd al-Dn, 112, and the anonymous Nizr treatise from the Alamt period entitled Haft bb-i Bb Sayyidn, 30;
English trans., in Hudson. Order, 314.
32
See Rashd al-Dn. 149, 153: Kshn, 186-190, and Madelung, Religious Trends, 9-12. On the Khurramiyya, who were
active in different parts of the Iranian world throughout the 'Abbsid times, and manifested anti-Arab, anti-Turkish or even
anti-Islamic sentiments, see Madelung, "Khurramiya", El
2
, vol. 3. 63-65.
33
For a detailed analysis of these campaigns and the biased reports of the chroniclers favouring the Seljuqs, see Hillenbrand,
"The Power Struggle, 203-220.
34
For the origins and early development of these legends, which found their culmination in the tales recounted by Marco
Polo, see Daftary, The Assassin Legends, especially 88-127.
35
See, for instance, Miles, "Coins of the Assassins of Alamt ",155-162.
36
A1-Shahrastn, Kitb al-milal, 150-152; partial English trans., 167-170, English trans. also in Hodgson, Order, 325-328.
See also G. Monnot, "al-Shahrastn", El
2
, vol. 9, 214-216.
37
The doctrine of the qiyma, as elaborated under Muhammad II, is expounded in the Haft bb-i Bb Sayyidn, 4-42;
English trans., with commentary, in Hodgson, Order, 279-324. For the best modern exposition of this doctrine, see Hodgson,
Order. 162-170, while an interesting phenomenological account is contained in Jambet, La grande resurrection.
38
See Bosworth, "The Ismailis of Quhistn", in Daftary, ed., Mediaeval Isma'ili History, 221-229, and his Saffarids, 387-
410, 418 ff.
39
Jzjn, Tabaqt-i Nsiri, 182-183; English trans., vol. 2, 1197-1205, 1212-1214
40
On the controversy surrounding al-Tss religious affiliation, see Dabashi, The Philosopher/Vizier", 231-245, and also
Madelung, " Nsr ad-Dn Ts's Ethics, 85-101.
41
Al-Ts, Rawdat al-taslim; French trans., La Convocation d Alamt. For al-Ts's Ism`l writings, see Poonawala,
Biobibliography, 260-263.
42
See Boyle, "The Ism`ls and the Mongol Invasion", 7-22; Daftary, The Ism'ilis, 416-430 and his "Rukn al-Dn
Khurshh", El
2
, vol. 8. 598-599.
43
For the details and the relevant sources, see Daftary The Ism'ilis, 435-451.
44
See Marash, Tarikh-i Giln, 66-68.
Please see copyright restrictions on page 1
45
Mar'ash, Tarikh-i Giln, 52-66, 123-124.
46
See Gln, Tarikh-i Mzandarn, 88-89, 100, and Fman, Tarikh-i Giln, ed. Dorn, 127-129, 192-195; ed. Sutda, 164-
166, 241-244
47
Badakhsh, Tarikh-i Badakhshn, ed. Boldyrev, 227-253 and Semenov, Shughnanskikh Ismailitov, 523-561
48
Daftary, The Ism'ilis, 451-478
49
See Ivanow, "Tombs", 49-62, and Daftany, "Anjedn", Encyclopaedia Iranica, vol.2, 77.
50
See Poonawala, Biobibliography, 268-277.
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