Rostam Khan (sepahsalar under Safi)
Rostam Khan (
Abbas I and Safi. In 1643, he was accused of treason and executed under king Abbas II. He features in the contemporary Persian and Georgian chronicles and is also a subject of the 17th-century Persian biography written by a certain Bijan for Rostam Khan's grandson, his namesake and a high-ranking officer in Iran.[1][2]
Career
Rostam Khan was a son of the Georgian nobleman
war against the Ottomans in 1631.[6]
Involvement in Georgia and last years
At the head of an Iranian army, Rostam Khan helped a fellow Muslim Georgian in the Safavid service and a younger brother of his father's suzerain Bagrat Khan,
throne of Kartli, which Khosrow Mirza officially acceded to under the name of Rostam on 18 February 1633. However, Rostam Khan Saakadze's excesses in dealing with the Georgian opposition, especially his devastating raid into the Tsitsishvili family estates, occasioned the split between the two. The contemporary Georgian accounts attribute Rostam Khan's relentlessness to his painful childhood memories associated with the persecution of his family.[7]
Recalled from Kartli by the Iranian government, Rostam Khan Saakadze was commander in
Qandahar from the Mughal Empire. The new king's vizier Saru Taqi considered him a personal rival and secured a decree to put him to death for having refused to obey an order from the capital. Rostam was executed in Mashhad, while his brother, the divan-begi Aliqoli, was dismissed from his post.[8]
Nevertheless, even after Rostam Khan's downfall, his offspring continued to hold prominent positions in the Safavid Empire. His son Safiqoli (d. 1679) served as a governor and divanbegi,[9] whereas his other son Bijan, namesake to Rostam Khan's father, served as governor (beglarbeg) of the Azerbaijan province.[10][11]
References
- ^ Storey 1927-39, p. 319
- ^ Rota 1998, pp. 159–176.
- ^ Maeda 2003, pp. 257–258.
- ^ Storey 1927-39, p. 319
- ^ Floor 2001, pp. 18, 185.
- ^ Babaie et al. 2004, p. 46.
- ^ Maeda 2012, pp. 109–112.
- ^ Newman 2008, p. 81.
- ^ Maeda 2003, pp. 257–258, 272.
- ^ Maeda 2003, p. 272.
- ^ Matthee 2012, p. 68.
Sources
- Babaie, Sussan; Babayan, Kathryn; Baghdiantz-McCabe, Ina; Farhad, Massumeh (2004). Slaves of the Shah: New Elites of Safavid Iran. I.B. Tauris. ISBN 978-0857716866.
- Floor, Willem (2001). Safavid Government Institutions. Costa Mesa, California: Mazda Publishers. ISBN 978-1568591353.
- Floor, Willem M. (2008). Titles and Emoluments in Safavid Iran: A Third Manual of Safavid Administration, by Mirza Naqi Nasiri. Washington, DC: Mage Publishers. pp. 156, 309. ISBN 978-1933823232.
- Maeda, Hirotake (2003). "On the Ethno-Social Background of Four Gholām Families from Georgia in Safavid Iran". Studia Iranica (32): 1–278.
- Maeda, Hirotake (2012). "Slave Elites Who Returned Home: Georgian Vali-king Rostom and the Safavid Household Empire" (PDF). Memoirs of the Research Department of the Toyo Bunko. 69.[permanent dead link]
- Matthee, Rudi (2012). Persia in Crisis: Safavid Decline and the Fall of Isfahan. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 978-1845117450.
- Newman, Andrew J. (2008). Safavid Iran: Rebirth of a Persian Empire. I.B.Tauris. p. 186. ISBN 978-0857716613.
- Rota, Giorgio (1998). "Three Little-Known Persian Sources of the Seventeenth Century". Iranian Studies. 31 (2): 159–176. JSTOR 4311143.
- Storey, C.A. (1927–39). "Persian Literature: A Bio-bibliographical Survey". 1, pt. I.
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