User:HistoryofIran/Ata-Malik Juvayni

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Ata-Malik Juvayni
Depiction of Ata-Malik Juvayni writing, from a 1290 edition of the Tarikh-i Jahangushay. Located in the Bibliothèque nationale de France
Governor of Baghdad
In office
1259–1283
Preceded byGuo Kan
Succeeded bySharaf al-Din Harun Juvayni
Personal details
Born1226
Died5 March 1283
Mughan, Ilkhanate
Resting placeCharandab Cemetery, Tabriz
RelationsShams al-Din Juvayni (younger brother)
Sharaf al-Din Harun Juvayni (nephew)
ChildrenMansur
Unnamed daughter
Parent
  • Baha al-Din Muhammad Juvayni (father)
Military service
AllegianceMongol Empire, Ilkhanate
Writing career
LanguagePersian
Notable worksTarikh-i Jahangushay

Ata-Malik Juvayni (Persian: عطاملک جوینی) was a bureaucrat and historian from the Juvayni family who served under the Mongol Empire. He is known for composing the Tarikh-i Jahangushay ("History of the World Conqueror"), an important account on the history of Central Asia and the 13th-century Mongol invasion of Iran.

Background[edit]

Born in 1226, Ata-Malik belonged to the Persian Juvayni family, whose history of bureaucratic service goes back to the Seljuk era.[1]

Career under the Mongols[edit]

Early career[edit]

From 1243 and henceforth, Ata-Malik served under the Mongols, in the entourage of Arghun Aqa until 1256. Later Persian chroniclers noted that Ata-Malik had gained considerable respect in the Mongol court during this period, especially with the Mongol khagan (emperor) Möngke Khan (r. 1251–1259). In 1246/7 Ata-Malik and Arghun Aqa went to Mongolia together, and in 1249/50 Ata-Malik visited Mongolia again. In 1251/52, he made a third, longer visit to Mongolia, where he went to its capital Karakorum. It was there that he was convinced by friends to start writing the Tarikh-i Jahangushay to record the history of the the Mongol rulers and their conquests.[1]

After returning to Iran, Ata-Malik continued working as Arghun Aqa's secretary until the arrival of the royal Mongol prince Hulegu Khan in 1256, at which point Arghun Aqa dispatched him, along with his own son Kiray-Malik and secretary Amir Ahmad Bitekchi, to assist Hulegu in the administration of Iraq, Khorasan and Mazandaran. Ata-Malik grew in prominence under Hulegu, and he marched alongside him to besiege Baghdad in 1257. A year after Baghdad was taken, in 1259, Hulegu appointed Ata-Malik as the governor of the city.[1]

Governorship of Baghdad[edit]

During the reign of Hulagu's son and successor Abaqa Khan (r. 1265–1282), Ata-Malik remained the administrator of Baghdad, even though the Mongol general Amir Sunjaq was given the post of chief governor of the provinces of Baghdad and Fars. Ata-Malik worked hard to raise the standard of living for farmers and bring wealth to the land during the seventeen years of Abaqa's rule. Taxes were lowered, new villages were established, a caravanserai was created in Najaf, and new canals were created, the most well-known of which being the canal that connected Anbar on the Euphrates to Kufa and Najaf and cost him over 100,000 gold dinars of his personal wealth.[1]

Ata-Malik and Shams al-Din returned to prominence during the brief rule of Tekuder (r. 1282–1284). Reinstated as governor of Baghdad, Ata-Malik was also given the responsibility of overseeing the waqf earnings from Mecca and Medina. Ata-Malik died on 5 March 1283 in Mughan, and was buried in the Charandab Cemetery in Tabriz. Although his death was attributed to a fall from a horse, it was generally accepted that a few months prior, when Arghun had started to harass and arrest his people and reignite allegations of embezzlement, he had severely traumatized him. In the process of looking for proof, the body of a recently deceased friend, Najm al-Din Asfar, had been dumped carelessly on the road. It was thought that Ata-Malik's severe headaches from the distress created by this incident was the actual reason for his death.[1]

He was survived by at least one son, Mansur (died 1293) and a daughter who became the wife of the Sufi shaykh Sadr al-Din Ibrahim Hamuwayi, who played a key role in converting the later Ilkhanate ruler Ghazan to Islam.[1]

Work and legacy[edit]

The name of the important Persian chronicle Jahangosha-ye Naderi—which describes the events during the reign of Nader Shah (r. 1736–1747)—is a reference to the Tarikh-i Jahangushay.[2]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Lane 2009, p. 63–68.
  2. ^ Tucker 2008, pp. 382–383.

Sources[edit]

  • Lane, George (2009). "Jovayni, ʿAlāʾ-al-Din". In Yarshater, Ehsan (ed.). Encyclopædia Iranica, Volume XV/1: Joči–Judeopersian communities of Iran V. Qajar period (1786-1925). London and New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul. pp. 63–68. ISBN 978-1-934283-14-1.
  • Tucker, Ernest (2008). "Jahāngošā-ye Nāderi". In Yarshater, Ehsan (ed.). Encyclopædia Iranica, Volume XIV/4: Jade III–Jamalzadeh, Mohammad-Ali II. Work. London and New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul. pp. 382–383. ISBN 978-1-934283-04-2.
  • Zaryab, Abbas (2002). "Baghdad ii. From the Mongol Invasion to the Ottoman Occupation". Encyclopaedia Iranica.