Autorenbild.

Über den Autor

Michael Axworthy teaches at the Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies at the University of Exeter (UK). The author of The Sword of Persia and Revolutionary Iran, Axworthy publishes widely in the field of Iranian history.

Beinhaltet die Namen: Michale Axworthy, Axworthy Michael

Werke von Michael Axworthy

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Axworthy introduced the book by calling it "an introduction to the history of Iran for a general readership, assuming little or no prior knowledge." That is basically true...but if that is where you are coming from, you are most likely going to find some sections slower going than others.

The first one-third is a very good overview of ancient central Asian history through Cyrus the Great; the middle third was overwhelming for its wealth of unknown names and specialised terms that demanded one's full attention or repeated readings; the final third was surprisingly fascinating and a painless read given its coverage of the last 50 years of Iran's history--a period I can recall events from (for example: watching a helicopter airlift the Ayatollah Khomeini's casket to safety from the surging mobs on TV). Compartmentalising these sections is the only way I really could come to grips with this book, plucked from a library shelf because of a desire to fill in my knowledge of this much-maligned but historically rich country.

I heartily recommend this history to anyone especially interested in Iran's rich literary past for it includes a very good introduction to Persian poetry and aesthetics. Its coverage of early history is also very good--concise and easy to read. But from 1000-1920, I confess I couldn't keep my focus and didn't re-connect until the final 100 or so pages, which caught me by surprise and completely held my attention...and introduced me to some authors I had not heard of, whose works I am now reading online (such as the banned Sadeq Hedayat. See http://www.angelfire.com/rnb/bashiri/BlindOwl/blindowl2013.pdf).
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
pbjwelch | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 25, 2017 |
A very readable history book is “Empire of the Mind: A History of Iran” (2008), by Michael Axworthy, a British scholar with profound knowledge about the country. He covers the time from before the Archaemenids, via several other dynasties to the Arab invasion and the establishment of Islam in Iran, and up to recent history, including the Revolution and the rise of Khomeini and some of the present day issues, up to the rule of Ahmadinejad in 2005. A comprehensive overview, worth reading to understand where the Iran of today comes from.… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
theonearmedcrab | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Nov 15, 2016 |
In Revolutionary Iran, Michael Axworthy makes a wonderful observation: “Iranian history can be seen as a microcosm of human history as a whole: empires, revolutions, invasions, art, architecture, warriors, conquerors, great thinkers, great writers and poets, holy men and lawgivers, charismatic leaders and the blackest villains.” I whole-heartedly agree with this statement. Iran (and the Middle East) has been a focal point for civilization in all its good and bad forms for the last ten millennia. With the Iranian revolution of 1979, however, we see the nation of Iran enter into a new era, one where the traditions and battles of the past come head-to-head with the beliefs of its people and the pressures of a global society. Axworthy’s modern history of Iran is a thick, educated, and brilliant look into this often-misunderstood country.

Axworthy allows his readers their misconceptions, though. His aim is not to belittle the reader but to re-inform. He concentrates on Iran’s pivotal moments during the last 35 years—the Islamic traditions that inform its past, the 1979 Revolution, the ensuing war, Reconstruction under the Ayatollah, the Reform Era under Khatami, and the current administration headed up by Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. His history is tight but filled with rich detail about the shifts in the political, religious, and social landscape of the country. If you’re looking for an excellent history of modern Iran, then go no further. Be warned, though, this is not a book you should read straight through. It’s best to read small bits, reflect, look at the today’s Iran, and then go back for more. It may be too soon to tell where the nation of Iran is headed, but at least we can see where it came from. This may be one of those rare books that change the way you look at a country.
… (mehr)
2 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
NielsenGW | Aug 2, 2013 |
Eternal Persia

In just under 300 pages Mr. Axworthy paints a well-paced overview of 3000 years of continuous Iranian civilisation. His Iran is a country with hot desserts, cool mountains and subtropical forests where half the population is made up of ethnic minorities. It is a land where nomads had the upper hand over farmers until the 20th century. Mr. Axworthy sees Iran as a land where many inhabitants can recite lengthy passages from their favourite poems, that insistently dwell on such joys like wine, beauty, flowers and sexual love, as much as a land of forbidding, censorious and dogmatic Shi'a Muslim clerics (whose religion he often compares to Catholicism). Persian culture survived and thrived under various invasions in various areas. Therefore, Mr. Axworthy considers Iran "an empire of the mind". The book is a traditional, chronological history. I would not have minded even more attention to cultural factors and synthesis, rather than who ruled when.

The Indo-Europeans migrated into the land of Iran in the years before 1,000 BC. By 700 BC the Medes had established a state independent from the Assyrians, ruling the Persians as vassals. Just before that time the religious reformer Zoroaster preached the opposition between the god of truth and light and the god of lies, darkness, and evil. This dualism became a persistent them in Iranian thought. The religion also developed concepts like the single creator-god, divine judgement and angels and the moral world.

The Persian king Cyrus conquered the Median Empire in 549 BC and subsequently much of the rest of the Middle East. Cyrus rule was tolerant of his new subjects and cultures were mixing. Although the rule of the Achaemenid was sophisticated, the culture was largely non-literate. This dynasty fell to Alexander the Great. The Seleucid kings that ruled upon Alexander's death ruled in Persian rather than in Greek style and Greek influence was ultimately superficial. Zoroastrians considered Alexander "accursed". The Parthians would soon conquer much of the Iranian world, including areas currently in Afghanistan. Silk trading became a business and diplomatic ties were developed with the Han emperor Wu Ti. "The recognition, acceptance, and tolerance of the complexity of cultures and influences over which they ruled" were again key elements of Iranian government. The Romans tried to attack the Parthians various times, but were no match for the fast moving horse men (although the Romans would conquer Mesopotamia). At the same time the Parthians expanded in the Punjab. The Parthians would fall to the Farsi Sassanid regime around 230, which became more Persian in outlook. They successfully fought the Romans and captured two emperors. They ruled over large parts of Central Asia, Afghanistan and northern India. India and China were increasingly reached by ship and bazaars grew up in the cities. This is also the time the qanat (underground irrigation canals) were dug. Interest in Greek learning was re-established and Manichaeism was founded in this age. Mani "does seem to have done a remarkably good job of infecting a range of belief systems with the most damaging and depressing ideas about impurity, the corruption of material existence, and the sinfulness of sexual pleasure". He may have had some influence on Islam, but certainly on Augustine of Hippo and thus on Western Christianity. Augustine had himself been a Manichaean. When Armenia and Rome became Christian, Christians became suspected spies and Zoroastrianism more intolerant. Around 400 Nestorianism, a Persian form of Christianity would develop. Kings were supposed to rule by divine grace, upholding justice. Khosraw became one of the dynasties greatest kings, encouraging the translation of texts from the Greek, Syriac and Indian languages.

Continuity from pre-Islamic Iran to the Islamic period is difficult to assess, but can be found in the survival of the Persian language and the Shahnameh with poems and descriptions of pre-Islamic Iran. Weakened by wars with the Byzantine Empire, Arab masters quickly conquered over Iranian lands after 637. The Arabs mainly replaced ruling elites. After some time Zoroastrianism was treated like Judaism and Christianity (i.e. they had to pay jizya). Islamisation was a slow process. While elites converted quite quickly, common Iranians remained non-Muslim for several centuries. For them taxes may have become lower, and Islam was less hierarchic. Iran would be ruled by foreign monarchs for nearly a millennium. Persian influence rose at the Umayyad and later Abbasid courts. The synthesis guaranteed the survival of a strong element of pre-Islamic culture (p.80). Persian architects were busy in the capital cities. The caliphate brought economic improvements and revitalised the Silk Road. The idea for the Beyt al-Hikma was taken from Sassanid royal libraries, and contained translations from Gondeshapur. Hadith scholars were often Persians and Persians established the grammar of the Arabic language. To this day the Persian of the mullahs tends to be the most Arabised. Provincial courts managed to find increasing levels of independence. Poetry flourished. Persian poetry's grand theme is love in all its forms (p.85). It may be present through metaphors, notably through "another great poetic theme", wine. Its verse forms are often Arabic in origin. Sufism was central in the diffusion of Islam outside the towns and cities. The centre of Sufist activity was in Persia, particularly in Khorasan. Many Sufi poets scorned the self-important egotism of the ulema. The Seljuk rulers were themselves attacked by the Mongols, who massacred millions. In the 13th century wide expanses of Iran reverted to nomad pastoralism, albeit nomads who were also ruthless mounted warriors. For the third time the Persian class of scholars and administrators would conquer the conquerors. Greek poetry was still rooted in Sufism with Neo-Platonic influences. Around this time Persians and Turks invaded India and founded the sultanate of Delhi. Sufi missionaries were set to work. Around 1300, when Persian miniature painting was under Chinese influence, Timur invaded Persia, raising pillars of human heads as he marched through the country. Valuable survivors were taken back to Samarkand. In his wake the dessert encroached on abandoned farmlands and irrigation works. Iran's vulnerability flowed from its central geographical position, which also gave it great economic and cultural advantages.

The killing of Hosein, the grandson of the prophet Mohammad, has nursed a sense of grievance, betrayal, and shame among his followers, the Shi'a. Shi'ism's emphasis on humility, sacrifice, and religious hierarchy sets it closer to Christianity than Sunni Islam. Sunni's emphasis on law and tradition is closer to Judaism. Shi'ism stands for earnest, pious austerity, and is as such often in conflict with political deals and pragmatic compromises. The Safavids establised Shi'ism as the leading religion after 1501. The Safavids persecuted Sufis and intellectual life was channelled into the madresehs. Abbas would be the house's great shah, building spectacular monuments (particularly in Isfahan) and upgrading the military. Alcohol seems to have played an important role in the weak performance of the later Safavid shahs, despite an "Islamic revolution" in 1694 that lasted a few months (p.147). In 1722, Afghans occupied Isfahan, triggering attacks by the Ottomans and the Russians. Nader Shah ousted the Safavids, restored Persia to prominence and adapted some anti-Sunni practices. He made it all the way to Delhi. He failed to modernise Iran in the manner of Peter the Great, however. The end of his reign threw the country into chaos. The 18th century also gave rise of the ayatollah as an "object of emulation" (p.173), giving a few religious scholars great potential power. Shi'ism obtained a hierarchical structure (unlike Sunni Islam), which it combined with a belief in the illegitimacy of secular authority and the righteousness of the oppressed. The early 1800's brought more interest of European powers (France, Britain) and loss of territories held for centuries against Russia. Militarily and economically, Fath Ali Shah's Persia was no match for the Europeans (p.182). The state bureaucracy was small and operated through proxies and alliances with limited opportunities for taxation. The army lacked scale against the Russians.

Cheap European products were accessing Persian markets now. The Baha'i emerged with a more modern version of the faith (interest on money, emancipation of women) and the pretence to supersede traditional Islam; they have been persecuted and killed in almost every decade. Some attempts at modernisation along western lines were made (p.191). Russia and Britain dominated Persia and were both content with stagnation (p.193). Export crop production (cotton, opium) led to severe famines. The shah employed Belgian advisors and foreigners received monopolies (tobacco, fisheries), and in 1901 William Knox d'Arcy started looking for oil. In 1905 bazaar merchants in Tehran demanded a representative assembly, which was granted the next year. The constitution followed the Belgian example, but inaugurated conflict and uncertainty (p.204). Modernisers stood against conservative mullahs and bazaar merchants, whereas Britain and Russia still meddled in the background. Oil was found in 1908 and was a new interest of the British Empire. The Anglo-Persian Oil Company was founded in 1914. After the Great War the local British military leader allowed the former Cossack sergeant Reza Khan to become minister. He promoted to prime minister and shah in 1925.

Reza Khan was an autocrat, aiming at a strong Iran that would be on equal footing with the great powers. Being shah was a means to an end. Kemal Ataturk was his model. 40% of expenses went to an inefficient army. Infrastructure, industry and education were other fields. Censorship was tight. He introduced education for girls and banned the veil. 1941 brought Anglo-Russian intervention. The shah abdicated for his son. In 1951 oil was nationalised, leading to a Western supported coup d'etat. It established to US as the regime's main backer. In 1963 Khomeini, a descendant of the Prophet but also considered a parvenu, started attacking corruption, neglect of the poor, the failure to uphold sovereignty against America and the sale of oil to Israel. It also was the start of an economic boom and urbanisation. Inflation, unemployment, wealth inequality and American arrogance/indifference and torture by the secret police created resentment. The ulema had been sourced out of many traditional and lucrative roles of authority in society, like judges and notaries. The shah even wanted to make them answerable to the state. Demonstrations, strikes and violence drove out the shah.

Khomeini, a follower Ibn Arabi's philosophy of the perfect man (when man through contemplation and self-reflection became a conduit of God), was received by 3 million people when he returned from Paris. Shi'ism lent cohesion to the revolution. Khomeini quickly took the lead and in March 1979 a referendum gave 97% support for an Islamic republic. More moderate ulema were silenced. His own actions and circumstances allowed Khomeini to maintain a level of "revolutionary fluidity". After his death the process to standardise Shi'ism in the state's mould continued. Khomeini's successor Khamenei had no reputation as a distinguished scholar. Despite problems and a disastrous war with Iraq, the Islamic republic had achieved important beneficial results for many ordinary Iranians, introducing piped water, health services, electricity and schools in remote districts. Primary education was extended to all and literacy rose dramatically. 66% of students are women. This despite an ever more self servicing regime and falling mosque attendance. Mr. Axworthy mentions several moments where the George W. Bush-regime had passed opportunities for reconciliation. Things have become more complex with Ahmadinejad. Still, the author advocates a more constructive approach, particularly from America.
… (mehr)
½
1 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
mercure | 3 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 9, 2012 |

Listen

Auszeichnungen

Dir gefällt vielleicht auch

Statistikseite

Werke
7
Mitglieder
671
Beliebtheit
#37,614
Bewertung
½ 3.7
Rezensionen
5
ISBNs
39
Sprachen
6
Favoriten
2

Diagramme & Grafiken