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{{Infobox former country | conventional_long_name=Ilkhanate |native_name=ایلخانان |common_name=Ilkhanate |status=Empire | continent=Asia |region=Middle East |status = Part of the Mongol Empire |country=Mongol Empire, Persia | year_start=1256 |year_end=1335 | p1=Mongol Empire |flag_p1= | p2=Khwarazmian dynasty|Khwarazmians |flag_p2=Khwarezmian Empire 1190 - 1220 (AD).PNG | p3=Abbasid Caliphate |flag_p3= | s1=Muzaffarids of Iran|Muzaffarids |flag_s1=MuzaffaridDynastyofIranMapHistoryofIran.png | s2=Kartids |flag_s2=Kartid-Kurtdynasty1244-1389.png | s3=Eretnids |flag_s3= | s4=Chobanids |flag_s4= | s5=Injuids |flag_s5=InjuidsMapHistoryofIran.png | s6=Sarbadars |flag_s6= | s7=Jalayirids |flag_s7= | s8=Mamluk Sultanate (Cairo)|Mamluks |flag_s8= | image_flag= |flag_type= | image_map=Ilkhanate in 1256–1353.PNG |image_map_caption=The Ilkhanate at its greatest extent.

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The Ilkhanate, also spelled Il-khanate (Persian: ایلخانان, Ilkhanan; Mongolian: Хүлэгийн улс, Hulagu-yn Ulus; was a Persianate breakaway Mongol khanate of the Mongol Empire, ruled by the Mongol House of Hulagu. It was established in the 13th century and was based primarily in Persia and neighboring territories, such as present-day Azerbaijan and the central and eastern parts of present-day Turkey. The Ilkhanate was founded by Hulagu Khan, grandson of Genghis Khan, based on Genghis' campaigns in the Khwarazmian Empire in 1219–24. At its greatest extent, the state expanded into territories that today comprise most of Iran, Iraq, Turkmenistan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Turkey, western Afghanistan, and southwestern Pakistan. The Ilkhanate initially showed typical Mongol tolerance for various religions, especially adopting Buddhism and Christianity. Later Ilkhanate rulers, beginning with Ghazan in 1295, embraced Islam.

Definition

According to the historian Rashid-al-Din Hamadani, Kublai granted Hulagu (Hulegu) the title of Ilkhan after he defeated Ariq Böke. The term il-Khan means "subordinate khan" and refers to the initial deference to Möngke Khan and his successor Great Khans. The title "Ilkhan", borne by the descendants of Hulagu and later other Borjigin princes in Persia, does not materialize in the sources until after 1260.[2]

Early Mongol rule in Persia

Decree issued by Sadr al-Din Zanjani in the name of Kublai Khan, (written in Chinese: "...尚書印" = "Seal of the Secretary General ...").

When Muhammad II of Khwarezm executed the merchants dispatched by the Mongols, Genghis Khan declared war on Khwārazm-Shāh dynasty in 1219. The Mongols overran the whole empire, occupying all major cities and population centers between 1219 to 1221. Persian Iraq was ravaged by the Mongol detachment under Jebe and Subedei, and they left the area in ruin. Transoxiana also came under Mongol control after the invasion. The undivided area west of the Transoxiana was the inheritance of Genghis Khan's Borjigin family.[3] Thus, the families of the latter's four sons appointed their officials under the Great Khan's governors, Chin-Temür, Nussal, and Korguz, in that region.

Muhammad's son Jalal ad-Din Mingburnu returned to Iran in c. 1224 after his exile in India. The rival Turkic states that were all that remained of his father's empire quickly declared their allegiance to him. He repulsed the first Mongol attempt to take Central Persia. However, Jalal ad-Din was overwhelmed and crushed by Chormaqan's army sent by the Great Khan Ögedei in 1231. During the Mongol expedition, Azerbaijan and the southern Persian dynasties in Fars and Kerman voluntarily submitted to the Mongols and agreed to pay tribute.[4] To the west, Hamadan and the rest of Persia was secured by Chormaqan. The Mongols turned their attention to Armenia and Georgia in 1234 or 1236. They completed the conquest of the Kingdom of Georgia in 1238; however, the Mongol Empire began to attack the western parts of Greater Armenia, which was under the Seljuks in the next year.

In 1236 Ögedei was commanded to raise up Khorassan, and he proceeded to populate Herat. The Mongol military governors mostly made camp in the Mughan plain in what is now Azerbaijan. Realizing the danger posed by the Mongols, the rulers of Mosul and Cilician Armenia submitted to the Great Khan. Chormaqan divided the Transcaucasia region into three districts based on the Mongols' military hierarchy.[5] In Georgia, the population was temporarily divided into eight tumens.[6] By 1237 the Mongol Empire had subjugated most of Persia, excluding Abbasid Iraq and Ismaili strongholds, and all of Afghanistan and Kashmir.[7] After the battle of Köse Dağ in 1243, the Mongols under Baiju occupied Anatolia, while the Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm and the Empire of Trebizond became vassals of the Mongols.[8]

Güyük Khan abolished decrees issued by the Mongol princes that had ordered the raising of revenue from districts in Persia as well as offering tax exemptions to others in c. 1244.[9] In accordance with the complaint of governor Arghun the Elder (Arghun agha), Möngke Khan prohibited ortog-merchants and nobles to abuse relay stations, the yam (route), and civilians in 1251.[10] He ordered a new census and decreed that each man in the Mongol-ruled Middle East must pay in proportion to his property. Persia was divided between four districts under Arghun. Möngke Khan granted the Kartids authority over Herat, Jam, Bushanj, Ghor, Khaysar, Firuz-Kuh, Gharjistan, Farah, Sistan, Kabul, Tirah, and Afghanistan.[11]

First Ilkhan

The actual founder of the Ilkhanate dynasty was Hulagu Khan, grandson of Genghis Khan and brother of both Möngke Khan and Kublai Khan. Möngke dispatched him to establish a firm Toluid control over the Middle East, and ordered him return to Mongolia when his task was accomplished.[12] Taking over from Baiju in 1255 or 1256, he had been charged with subduing the Muslim kingdoms to the west "as far as the borders of Egypt." This occupation led the Turkmens to move west into Anatolia to escape from the Mongolian tribes. He established his dynasty over the southwestern part of the Mongol Empire that stretched from Transoxiana to Syria. He destroyed the Ismaili Nizari Hashshashins and the Abbasid Caliphate in 1256 and 1258 respectively. After that he advanced as far as Gaza, briefly conquering Ayyubid Syria.

Möngke's death forced Hulagu to return from the Persian heartland for the preparation of Khuriltai (selection of a new leader). He left a small force behind to continue the Mongol advance, but it was halted in Palestine in 1260 by a major defeat at the battle of Ain Jalut at the hands of the Mamluks of Egypt. Due to geo-political and religious issues and deaths of three Jochid princes in Hulagu's service, Berke declared open war on Hulagu in 1262 and possibly called his troops back in Iran. According to Mamluk historians, Hulagu might have massacred Berke's troops and refused to share his war booty with Berke.

Hulagu Khan, Genghis Khan's grandson and founder of the Ilkhanate.

Hulagu's descendants ruled Persia for the next eighty years, tolerating multiple religions including Shamanism, Buddhism, and Christianity, ultimately adopting Islam as a state religion in 1295. However, despite this conversion, the Ilkhans remained opposed to the Mamluks (who had defeated both Mongol invaders and Crusaders). The Ilkhans launched several invasions of Syria, but were never able to gain and keep significant ground against the Mamluks, eventually being forced to give up their plans to conquer Syria, along with their stranglehold over their vassals the Sultanate of Rum and the Armenian kingdom in Cilicia. This was in large part due to civil war in the Mongol Empire, and the hostility of the khanates to the north and east. The Chagatai Khanate in Moghulistan and the Golden Horde threatened the Ilkhanate in the Caucasus and Transoxiana, preventing expansion westward. Even under Hulagu's reign, the Ilkhanate was engaged in open warfare in the Caucasus with the Mongols in the Russian steppes. On the other hand, the China-based Yuan Dynasty was an ally of the Ikhanate and also held nominal suzerainty over the latter for many decades.[13][14]

Hulagu with his Christian queen Doquz Khatun

Hulagu took with him many Chinese scholars, astronomers, and the famous Persian astronomer Nasir al-Din al-Tusi learned about the mode of the Chinese calculating tables from the scholars brought to Persia by the Mongols.[15] The observatory was built on a hill of Maragheh.

Franco-Mongol alliance

Many attempts towards the formation of a Franco-Mongol alliance were made between the courts of Western Europe (West Europeans were collectively called Franks by Muslims and Asians in the Crusades era) and the Mongols (primarily the Ilkhanate) in the 13th and 14th centuries, starting from around the time of the Seventh Crusade. United in their opposition to the Muslims (mainly the Mamluks), the Ilkhanate and the Europeans were still never able to satisfactorily combine their forces against their common enemy.[16]

Conversion to Islam

Ilkhanate ruler Ghazan studying the Qur'an.

In the period after Hulagu, the Ilkhans increasingly adopted Tibetan Buddhism. Christian powers were encouraged by what appeared to be a favoring of Nestorian Christianity by the Ilkhanate's rulers, but this probably went no deeper than the traditional even-handedness of the Mongols towards competing religions.[17] Thus the Ilkhans were markedly out of step with the Muslim majority they ruled. Ghazan, shortly before he overthrew Baydu, converted to Islam, and his official favoring of Islam as a state religion coincided with a marked attempt to bring the regime closer to the non-Mongol majority of the regions they ruled. Christian and Jewish subjects lost their equal status with Muslims and again had to pay the poll tax. Buddhists had the starker choice of conversion or expulsion.[18]

An Ilkhanid horse archer in the 13th century.

In foreign relations, the conversion of the Ilkhanate to Islam had little to no effect on the regime's hostility towards the other Muslim states, and Ghazan continued to fight the Mamluks for control of Syria. But the Battle of Wadi al-Khazandar, the Mongols' only major victory over the Mamluks, ended his control over Syria, though this lasted only a few months. For the most part, Ghazan's policies continued under his brother Öljeitü despite suggestions that he might begin to favor the Shi'a brand of Islam after he came under the influence of Shi'a theologians Al-Hilli and Maitham Al Bahrani.[19] Öljeitü succeeded in conquering Gilan on the Caspian coast, and his magnificent tomb in Soltaniyeh remains the best known monument of Ilkhanid rule in Persia.

Disintegration

Southwest Asia, 1345. The Jalayirids, Chobanids, Muzaffarids, Injuids, Sarbadars, and Kartids took the place of the Ilkhanate as the major powers in Iran.

After Abu Sa'id's death in 1335, the Ilkhanate began to disintegrate rapidly, splitting into several rival successor states, most prominently the Jalayirids. Hasar's descendant Togha Temür, who was the last of the obscure Ilkhan pretenders, was assassinated by Sarbadars in 1353. Timur later carved a state from the Jalayirids, ostensibly to restore the old khanate. The historian Rashid-al-Din Hamadani wrote a universal history for the khans around 1315 providing much material on their history.

Legacy

The tomb of Öljeitü was the main inspiration of Timurid architecture in Samarqand and Western architecture in Venice.

The emergence of the Ilkhanate had an important historical impact in the Central Asian region. The establishment of the unified Mongol Empire had significantly eased trade and commerce across Asia. The communications between the Ilkhanate and the Yuan Dynasty headquartered in China encouraged this development.[20][21]

The Ilkhanate also helped to pave the way for the later Persian Safavid dynastic state, and ultimately the modern country of Iran. Hulagu's conquests had also opened Iran to Chinese influence from the east. This, combined with patronage from his successors, would develop Iran's distinctive excellence in architecture. Under the Ilkhans, Iranian historians also moved from writing in Arabic, to writing in their native Persian tongue.[22]

The rudiments of double-entry accounting were practiced in the Ilkhanate; merdiban was then adopted by the Ottoman Empire. These developments were independent from the accounting practices used in Europe.[23] This accounting system was adopted primarily as the result of socio-economic necessities created by the agricultural and fiscal reforms of Ghazan Khan in 1295-1304.

Ilkhans

House of Hulagu (1256–1335; Ilkhanate Mongol kings)

After the Ilkhanate, the regional states established during the disintegration of the Ilkhanate raised their own candidates as claimants.

House of Ariq Böke

House of Hulagu (1336–1357)

House of Hasar

Claimants from eastern Persia (Khurasan):

  • Togha Temür (c. 1338–1353) (recognized by the Kartids 1338–1349; by the Jalayirids 1338–1339, 1340–1344; by the Sarbadars 1338–1341, 1344, 1353)
  • Luqman (1353–1388) (son of Togha Temür and the protege of Timur)

Family tree (House of Hulagu)

Ilkhan as a tribal title in 19th/20th century Iran

The title Ilkhan resurfaced among the Qashqai nomads of Southern Iran in the 19th century. Jan Mohammad Khan started using it from 1818/19 and this was continued by all the following Qashqai leaders. The last Ilkhan was Naser Khan who in 1954 was pushed into exile after his support of Mossadeq. When he returned during the Islamic Revolution in 1979 he could not regain his previous position and died in 1984 as the last Ilkhan of the Qashqai. [24]

See also

References

  • Atwood, Christopher P. (2004). The Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire. Facts on File, Inc. ISBN 0-8160-4671-9.
  • C.E. Bosworth, The New Islamic Dynasties, New York, 1996.
  • Kadoi, Yuka. (2009) Islamic Chinoiserie: The Art of Mongol Iran, Edinburgh Studies in Islamic Art, Edinburgh. ISBN 9780748635825.
  • R. Amitai-Preiss: Mongols and Mamluks: The Mamluk-Ilkhanid War 1260–1281. Cambridge, 1995.

Notes

  1. ^ a b Rahiminejad, Sadegh: IRAN: Tarikh (2006). Languages of the Persian [Section]
  2. ^ Peter Jackson The Mongols and the West, p.127
  3. ^ Jeremiah Curtin The Mongols: A history, p.184
  4. ^ Timothy May Chormaqan, p.47
  5. ^ Grigor of Akanc The history of the nation of archers, (tr. R.P.Blake) 303
  6. ^ Kalistriat Salia History of the Georgian Nation, p.210
  7. ^ Thomas T. Allsen Culture and Conquest in Mongol Eurasia, p.84
  8. ^ George Finlay The history of Greece from its conquest by the Crusaders to its conquest by the Ottomans, p.384
  9. ^ C. P. Atwood-Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire, see:Monqe Khan
  10. ^ M. Th. Houtsma E.J. Brill's first encyclopaedia of Islam, 1913-1936, Volume 1, p.729
  11. ^ Ehsan Yar-Shater Encyclopædia Iranica, p.209
  12. ^ P.Jackson Dissolution of the Mongol Empire, pp.222
  13. ^ Christopher P. Atwood Ibid
  14. ^ Michael Prawdin, Mongol Empire and its legacy, p.302
  15. ^ H. H. Howorth History of the Mongols, vol.IV, p.138
  16. ^ "Despite numerous envoys and the obvious logic of an alliance against mutual enemies, the papacy and the Crusaders never achieved the often-proposed alliance against Islam". Atwood, Encyclopedia of Mongolia and the Mongol Empire, p. 583, "Western Europe and the Mongol Empire"
  17. ^ David Morgan, Medieval Persia 1040–1797, p.64.
  18. ^ Medieval Persia 1040–1797, David Morgan p.72
  19. ^ Ali Al Oraibi, "Rationalism in the school of Bahrain: a historical perspective", in Shīʻite Heritage: Essays on Classical and Modern Traditions by Lynda Clarke, Global Academic Publishing 2001 p336
  20. ^ Gregory G.Guzman - Were the barbarians a negative or positive factor in ancient and medieval history?, The historian 50 (1988), 568-70
  21. ^ Thomas T.Allsen - Culture and conquest in Mongol Eurasia, 211
  22. ^ Francis Robinson, The Mughal Emperors and the Islamic Dynasties of India, Iran and Central Asia, Pages 19 and 36
  23. ^ Cigdem Solas, ACCOUNTING SYSTEM PRACTICED IN THE NEAR EAST DURING THE PERIOD 1220-1350, based ON THE BOOK RISALE-I FELEKIYYE, The Accounting Historians Journal, Vol. 21, No. 1 (June 1994), pp. 117-135
  24. ^ Pierre Oberling, Qashqai tribal confederacy I History, in Encyclopedia Iranica (2003)