Qizilbash
Qizilbash
ETHNONYMS: none
The Qizilbash have been defined to a large extent by historical circumstances. The Qizilbash were formed out of several Turkish Shia groups that were living in northwest Persia (Azerbaijan) in the fifteenth century. These groups were oppressed by the Osmanli Turks in the early years of the Ottoman Empire. Shaykh Heydar, a charismatic Sunni religious leader, attracted a large following of Shia from Azerbaijan. He called his most loyal Turkic followers "Qizilbash" and created a special hat for them to wear. The Heydar hat was red, and "Qizilbash" came to mean "red hats," "red heads," or "red beards."
Shaykh Heydar was killed in 1488 in a battle between his Qizilbash and other Turks. Civil war in Azerbaijan ensued. In 1501 Heydar's son, Esmā'īl, founded the Safavid dynasty and conquered most of what is Iran today. Shah Esmā'īl spread Ithna Ashari Shiism throughout Persia, the religion that is still dominant in Iran today.
The Qizilbash became known as skilled warriors. They could put 70,000 armed horsemen in the field at one time. Some became mercenaries, but most of them supported the Safavid shahs who were fighting against the Sunni Ottoman and Sunni Uzbek Turks.
The Qizilbash, though not always aligned with the shahs in power, seemed always to have a central role in the power struggles that were constantly in play over the centuries. Their formidable military organization was utilized by various shahs and played a prominent role in the expansion of empires, particularly the Durrani Empire (1747-1793), which extended through Afghanistan and into India. When not at war, the Qizilbash served as personal bodyguards of the shahs and as household troops. Such forces were used to quell rebellions within the empire.
In the course of expansion, groups of Qizilbash (and others) were left at various places to protect communication and supply routes, to maintain law and order, and to collect tribute from conquered peoples.
The Qizilbash became better situated (if not more numerous) in what is now Afghanistan and Pakistan than they had been in Iran. In Afghanistan, the Qizilbash gradually accepted Dari (Afghan Farsi or Persian) as their primary language. Because they remained Shia and maintained a strong influence in the Afghan court, the predominant Sunni population resented their presence, and the Qizilbash felt the discrimination. Nevertheless, the Qizilbash became an entrenched part of the Afghan population, particularly in urban areas, where they became administrators, clerks, traders, and artisans.
By the end of the nineteenth century, the Qizilbash influence in the Afghan court had diminished. The Qizilbash supported, or were thought to be supporters of, the Hazarajat, who fought unsuccessfully against the ruling emir. For these reasons, and others, the emir tried forcibly to convert the Qizilbash to Sunni Islam. Those who refused were forced to wear red turbans. Because of the threat of persecution, many Qizilbash claimed to be Sunni, but secretly remained Shia.
This adoption of a dual religious identity, known as taqiyya, still occurs today. Obtaining accurate population figures for the Shia Qizilbash in Afghanistan and Pakistan is virtually impossible because they claim to be Sunni, Tajik, Farsiwan, or Pashtun, or they identify themselves according to their place of origin in India. Population estimates for Afghanistan range from 30,000 to 200,000, but some suggest the figure is closer to one million. The story is similar in Pakistan. Few influential Qizilbash live in Iran, their original home.
The Qizilbash are no longer considered a warrior class, but they are still thought to be within the upper strata of power and among the intelligentsia. They also tend to be predominantly urban professionals—doctors, teachers, engineers, and lawyers. Because of physical dispersal and taqiyya, they are no longer a cohesive group; nevertheless, they have maintained their strong ethnic pride.
Bibliography
Dupree, Louis (1979). "Further Notes on Taqiyya: Afghanistan." Journal of American Oriental Society 99(4): 680-682.
Dupree, Louis (1980). Afghanistan. Princeton, N.J.: Princeton University Press.
Dupree, Louis ( 1984). "Qizilbash." In Muslim Peoples: A World Ethnographic Survey, edited by Richard V. Weekes, 637-642. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press.
Tapper, Richard (1979). Pasture and Politics. London: Academic Press.
Watkins, Mary Bradley (1963). Afghanistan: Land in Transition. Princeton, N.J.: Van Nostrand.
Cite this article
Pick a style below, and copy the text for your bibliography.
|
le Carre steps out of shadows
Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 12/24/2000; ; 700+ words
; le Carre steps out of shadows By MARTA SALIJ Knight...2000 -- The Constant Gardener. By John le Carre. Scribner. 492 pages. $28. How could...so black and white? And how do we make John le Carre, spy writer nonpareil, go back into...
|
|
John Le Carre, The Spy Spinner After the Thaw;With `Russia House,' the Author Warms Up to Espionage in a Different Climate
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 5/25/1989; ; 700+ words
; ...began to melt, outside and inside. John le Carre' had been chiseling the fine dark...would thaw in my own lifetime," le Carre' says. He is gazing out the window...the monolith was breaking up." Le Carre' is thinking back to the spring...
|
|
`Murder' is colorless John le Carre
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 10/12/1991; ; 700+ words
; John le Carre has complained that Alec Guinness took...viewers' and readers' minds, the image of le Carre's chief protagonist, who was pudgy...It must have been tempting, then, for le Carre as screenwriter to remake Smiley in his...
|
|
Le Carre takes on New Yorker's Tina Brown
Newspaper article from: The Boston Globe; 10/15/1992; ; 700+ words
; ...Brown, British espionage writer John le Carre attacks the editor's "partisan...insults and large-scale defenses. "Le Carre has somehow gone very choleric...Murdoch-owned Fox network? Should John le Carre acknowledge that his publisher...
|
|
The War According to John le Carre
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 1/23/2003; ; 700+ words
; John le Carre, the author of some brilliant spy novels...choice -- "the Bay of Pigs." Maybe le Carre means the Cuban missile crisis. It's...down from 62 percent in December. Since le Carre's article was published Jan. 15, he...
|
|
`The Constant Gardener,' by John le Carre; Scribner.(Knight Ridder Newspapers)
Newspaper article from: Knight Ridder/Tribune News Service; 12/13/2000; ; 700+ words
; ...black and white? And how do we make John le Carre, spy writer nonpareil, go back...must be some shadows still. Even if le Carre has been without his best villain...doing what it takes to survive. Le Carre has built a peerless career drawing...
|
|
Le Carre's fearless excursion into the war on terror.(Law and Literature)(Jonathan Yardley on John le Carre's 'A Most Wanted Man')
Magazine article from: LawNow; 3/1/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...in the Washington Post, lambasts John le Carre's new novel, A Most Wanted Man...Yardley is put off by a letter le Carre sent with the advance copies of his...The irritated reviewer condemns le Carre for engaging in a preemptive strike...
|
|
Le Carre's thrilling books.(Opinion and Editorial)
Newspaper article from: Manila Bulletin; 11/19/2008; 700+ words
; ...scene with his James Bond series, John le Carre' was already a widely acclaimed...of Smiley were really those of John le Carre's himself. You see, the celebrated...Filipino audience. Last October 27, John le Carre was interviewed by BBC News monitored...
|
|
Learning at the feet of the master of treachery; THE IoS PROFILE: John le Carre At the age of 71 the creator of George Smiley has embarked on one last mission: to lay to rest the ghost of his feckless, wife-beating father
Newspaper article from: The Independent - London; 2/17/2002; ; 700+ words
; John le Carre is apt to remember Graham Greene's dictum...think that all writers feel alienated," Le Carre says. "Most of us go back to an alienated...the extraordinary forces that shaped Le Carre's literary personality are there in the...
|
|
Early le Carre: A treat for his fans
Newspaper article from: Chicago Sun-Times; 11/28/2004; ; 700+ words
; CALL FOR THE DEAD By John le Carre Walker. $18. A MURDER OF QUALITY By John le Carre Walker. $18. JOHN LE CARRE'S The Spy Who Came In From the Cold was America...
|
|
John Le Carre
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
John Le Carre The British author John Le Carre (born David Cornwell, 1931) was regarded by many as the...themes which qualify him for consideration as a serious writer. John Le Carre was born David Cornwell on October 19, 1931, in Poole, Dorset...
|
|
Rupert Davies
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
...Windsor whose wife helps to trick Sir John Falstaff, in a television production...in from the Cold, an adaptation of John Le Carre's best seller about a disenchanted...Alec Guinness in the TV production of Le Carre's Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Spy...
|
|
Gibbs, Matyelok
Book article from: Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television
...To Kill a Priest (also known as Le complot and Popieluszko ), Columbia...Nell, A Perfect Spy (also known as John Le Carre's "A Perfect Spy" ), BBC, 1987...Briones, "Hidden Agenda," Judge John Deed, BBC, 2001. Mrs. Brandon...
|
|
Firth, Julian
Book article from: Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television
...Movies: Davis, Scum, 1977. John Oldbury, Shake Hands Forever, 1988...Boyd, A Perfect Spy (also known as John Le Carre's A Perfect Spy ), BBC, 1987...Daredevils of the Desert, 1992. Father John Fisher, Shadowlands, Savoy, 1993...
|
|
Cornwell, Charlotte 1949–
Book article from: Contemporary Theatre, Film and Television
...half sister of David Cornwell (a writer; also known as John Le Carre); children: (with Kenneth Cranham, an actor) Nancy...Paramount, 1997. Narrator, Ghosts of Mars (also known as John Carpenter's Ghosts of Mars ), Screen Gems, 2001. Aunt...
|