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IRAN HISTORY
Historical
Introduction
History is a
book which one has to start from the middle, particularly
that of the ancient civilizations such as China, India,
and Iran. Though the history of Iran is long and complex,
its shape is determined by the rise and fall of successive
dynasties with intervals of chaos and confusion -until its
latest stage, victory of the Islamic Revolution and rising
of an Islamic Republic in the modern world.
Man has lived on the Iranian plateau for at least 15,000
years. The earliest inhabitants were nomadic hunters who
gradually turned to agriculture and developed permanent
settlements. Sialk, not far south of modern Tehran, is the
site of one of the world's earliest known settlements.
Here, some of the first stages of what we call
civilization developed, and significant progress was made
in architecture and graphic design. Early Sialk ware, with
its geometric and abstract motifs, has in fact curiously
"modern" look.
Wild wheat and barley were first cultivated in Iran, and
introduced as early as the 4th millennium BC into Egypt,
and from there into Europe. Several animals were
domesticated and major progress was made in the use of
metals, particularly copper.
The greatest civilization in Iran during the prehistoric
period was that of Elam, the alluvial plain of south-west
Iran, today known as Khuzestan province. Susa, the Elamite
capital, is the site of literally dozens of successive
archaeological periods, culminating in the golden age of
the 13th century BC when Elam dominated all of western
Iran, as well as the Tigris valley and most of the Persian
Gulf region.
In the past, and until the second half of the 20th
century, when it came to telling the story of their
country's origin. most
Iranians
used to take the side of myths, Of mix myths with actual
history. This was a true reflection of the influence of
great literary works such as Shahnameh on the
people. More than a dozen of royal dynasties ruled Iran
each for a period of longer than 2,000 years on average,
according to national legends. Details of these dynasties
are given in the Avesta, the sacred scripture of
the Zoroastrian faith, which according to Islamic sources
was written on 12,000 pieces of cow skin. Apart from
the Avesta and Shahnameh names of legendary
kings and dynasties are given in Vedas and
Mahabharata, as well.
Early Persians
The Medes
The Achaemenians
The Parthians
The Sassanians
Arab Conquest and Islam
The Seljuks
The Mongols
The Timurids
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The Safavids
The Afshars
The Zands
The Qajars
The Pahlavis
Islamic Revolution
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