Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-x24gv Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-05-24T21:45:19.332Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Between Aloofness and Fascination: Safavid Views of the West

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2022

Rudi Matthee*
Affiliation:
Department of History, University of Delaware

Extract

Identity implies the other. As there is no self-definition without a view of the Other, the process whereby the “Self” discovers the “Other” is crucial to the formation of a self-image, for individuals as much as for groups of people claiming a collective identity. Historically, this process has never been more acute and intense than with the explosion of intercultural contact between Europe and the rest of the world following the so-called Age of Discovery. Nothing matches the radical novelty and drama of the first encounter between Europeans and the inhabitants of the New World. Though different inasmuch as it built on previous, intermittent contact and thus lacked the shock element of the utterly outlandish and bizarre, Europe's interaction with most of the major peoples of Asia in early modern times was hardly less transformative in the long run. Unprecedented in frequency and intensity, European-Asian contact as of the sixteenth century began to undermine the exotic notions and fabulous images that had formed and developed since Antiquity and that, over time, had been allowed to harden into convention.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Association For Iranian Studies, Inc 1998

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

Author's note: I would like to thank those who made critical comments and suggestions during presentations of an earlier version of this paper at the Iran Seminar at Columbia University and at the Center of Near Eastern Studies, Yale University. I am grateful to Nikki Keddie, Charles Melville, and Hossein Modarressi for their comments and suggestions, and to Rasul Jacfariyan, Michelle Marrese, and Mansur Sefatgol for bibliographical assistance.

References

1. See Todorov, Tzvetan The Conquest of America: The Question of the Other, trans. from the French (New York: Harper & Row, 1984), 4.Google Scholar

2. See, in chronological order, Walser, S. Schuster Das Safawidische Persien im Spiegel europäischer Reiseberichte, 1502-1722 (Baden-Baden: Grimm Verlag, 1970)Google Scholar; Chaybany, Jeanne Les voyages en Perse et la pensée française au XVIIIe siècle (Paris: P. Geuthner, 1971)Google Scholar; Stevens, Sir RogerEuropean Visitors to the Safavid Court,Iranian Studies, 1: Studies on Isfahan (1974): 421-57CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Gurney, D.Pietro della Valle: The Limits of Perception,Bulletin of the School of Asian and African Studies 49 (1986): 103-16.Google Scholar For Middle Eastern and Islamic views of the West, see Lewis, Bernard The Muslim Discovery of Europe (London: Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1982).Google Scholar Savory, RogerMuslim Perceptions of the West: Iran,” in Lewis, Bernard et al., eds., As Others See Us: Mutual Perceptions, East and West (New York: International Society for the Comparative Study of Civilizations, 1985)Google Scholar, examines the evolution of the Iranian view of the West. To my knowledge, the only booklength study that deals exclusively with the history of Iranian perceptions of the West is cAbd al-Hadi Haᵓiri Nakhustīn rūyārūᵓīhā-yi andīshahgarān-i Īrān bā dī rūyā-yi tamaddun-i būrzhvāzī-yi Gharb (Tehran: Amir Kabir, 1367/1988).Google Scholar

3. The best example is Lewis, Muslim Discovery.

4. See Jahn, Karl Die Frankengeschichte des Rašīd ad-Dīn (Vienna: Verlag der österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften, 1977).Google Scholar

5. For references to Westerners in the works of these poets, see cA. Ruh Bakhshan, “Dar bārih-i chigūnigī-yi āshnāᵓī-yi Īrānīyān bā Farang wa Farangīyān wa bāztāb-i ān dar ashcār-i Mawlawī wa Ḥāfiz,” Nāmah-i Pārsī 2, no. 3 (1376/1997): 158-77. See also Ghanoonparvar, M.R. In a Persian Mirror: Images of the West and Westerners in Iranian Fiction (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1993), 3-4Google Scholar, who notes that the image of the Westerner in classical Persian poetry is generally a negative one.

6. For this, see Mohebbi, Parviz Techniques et ressources en Iran du 7e au 19e siècle (Tehran: Institut français de recherche en Iran, 1996), 191-93.Google Scholar

7. This point is made by Savory, “Muslim Perceptions,” 74.

8. For the idea that Iran's self definition began to be an extension of Europe's ability to shape images, see Cole, JuanInvisible Occidentalism: Eighteenth-Century Indo-Persian Construction of the West,Iranian Studies 25 (1992): 15.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

9. See Rasul Jacfariyan cIlal-i bar uftādan-i Ṣafavīyān. Mūkāfāt-nāmah (Tehran: Markaz-i chap va nashr-i sazman-i tablighat-i Islami, 1372/1993), 210-11.Google Scholar The latter characteristic is said to refer to the fact that Isfahan was long a bastion of militant Sunnism.

10. Mahmud b. Hidayat Allah Afushtahᵓ-i Natanzi Naqāwat al-āār fī ẕikr al-akhyār, ed. Ishraqi, Ihsan (2d ed., Tehran: Shirkat-i intisharat-i cilmi wa farhangi, 1373/1994), 484, 541Google Scholar; Munshi, Iskandar Beg History of Shah Abbas the Great (Tārīkh-i cālam-ārā-yi cAbbāsī), ed. and trans. Savory, Roger 2 vols. pag. as one (Boulder, Colo.: Westview Press, 1978), 668, 1171Google Scholar; Munshi, Iskandar Beg and Walih Isfahani, Muhammad Yusuf Ẕayl-i tarikh-i cālam-ārā-yi cAbbāsī, ed. Khwansari, Suhayli (Tehran: Kitabfurushi-yi Islamiyah, 1317/1938), 15Google Scholar; Muhammad Macsum b. Khwajigi Isfahani Khulāṣat al-siyar. Tārīkh-i rūzgār-i Shāh Ṣafī Ṣafavī (Tehran: Intisharat-i cilmi, 1368/1989), 50Google Scholar; Tahir Nasrabadi, Mirza Muhammad Taẕkirah-i Naṣrābādī, ed. Dastgirdi, Wahid (3d. ed., Tehran: Kitabfurushi Furughi, 1361/1982), 79.Google Scholar

11. Muhammad Ibrahim b. Zayn al-cAbidin Nasiri Dastūr-i Shahriyārān, ed. Nasiri Muqaddam, Muhammad Nadir (Tehran: Bahman, 1373/1994), 192.Google Scholar

12. Chardin, Jean Voyages de Mr Jean Chardin en Perse, aux Indes et autres lieux d'Orient, 10 vols. and atlas, (Paris: Le Normant, 1810-11), 9:206.Google Scholar

13. Iskandar Beg, Tārīkh-i cālam-ārā-yi cAbbāsī, ed. and trans. Savory, 1181; and Nasrabadi, Taẕkirah-i Naṣrābādī, 32.

14. Ibid., 39.

15. Kaempfer, Engelbert Am Hofe des persischen Grosskönigs, 1684-1685 (Tübingen: Horst Erdmann Verlag, 1971), 88.Google Scholar See also Muhammad Yusuf Walih Qazvini, “Khuld-i barīn,” British Museum, MS Or. 4132, fol. 77 and 83, where the Kurds are called “bad-nihād,” evil-natured.

16. Nasiri, Dastūr-i shahriyārān, 145, 179.

17. Ibid., 216.

18. Bedik, Petrus Chehil sutun sue explicatio utriusque celeberrimi, ac pretiosissimi theatri quadraginta columnarum in Perside orientis, cum adjecta fusiori narratione de religione, moribus (Vienna: Leopoldi Voigt, 1678), 387.Google Scholar

19. Muhammad cAli Hazin The Life of Sheikh Muhammad Ali Hazin, trans, and ed. Belfour, F.C. (London: J. Murray, 1830), 99Google Scholar (p. 90 of the Persian text).

20. Afushtahᵓi Natanzi, Naqāwat al-āār, 563, 382, 381.

21. See Andersen, Jürgen and Iversen, Volquard Orientalische Reise-Beschreibungen, ed. Lohmeier, Dieter (Schleswig: Johan Holtwein, 1669; facs. ed., Tübingen: Max Niemeyer Verlag, 1980), 152.Google Scholar

22. Chardin, Voyages, 9:38-9.Google Scholar

23. See Tahir, Mirza MuhammadWahidQazvini, cAbbāsnāmah, ed. Dihqan, I. (Arak: Davudi, 1329/1951), 95Google Scholar; and Bedik, Cehil sutun, 387.

24. Ibid.

25. Husayn Mustawfi, Mirza MuhammadĀmār-i mālī wa niẓāmī-yi Īrān dar 1128 ya tafṣīl-i casākir-i fayrūzī-yi maᵓair-i Shah Sultan Husayn Ṣafavī,” ed. Danishpazhuh, Muhammad Taqi Farhang-i Iran-zamin 20 (1353/1975): 409.Google Scholar

26. Avril, Philippe Voyage en divers états d'Europe et d'Asie (Paris: C. Barbin, 1692), 61.Google Scholar

27. Thevenot, Jean de Voyages de Mr. de Thevenot en Europe, Asie et Afrique, 3 vols. in 5 tomes (3d ed., Amsterdam: M.C. le Céne, 1727)Google Scholar, vol. 3, Suite du Voyage de Mr. de Thevenot au Levant, 373.

28. See Membré, Michele Mission to the Lord Sophy of Persia (1539-1542), trans. Morton, A.H. (London: School of Oriental and African Studies, 1993), 41, 52Google Scholar; and Walsh, J.R.The Historiography of Ottoman-Safavid Relations in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries,” in Lewis, Bernard and Holt, P.M. eds., Historians of the Middle East (London: Oxford University Press, 1962), 197-211.Google Scholar

29. Qazvini, cAbbāsnāmah, 201.

30. See Qazvini, “Khuld-i barīn,” fol. 83v.; and Chardin, Voyages, 3:185Google Scholar.

31. See Dickson, MartinShah Tahmasb and the Uzbeks (The Duel for Khurasan with cUbayd Khan: 930-946/1524-1540)” (Ph.D. dissertation, Princeton University, 1958), 43, 185-86.Google Scholar Andersen, describing the arrival of an Uzbeg delegation to Isfahan in early 1648, noted how the Uzbeg envoy intended to dismount out of respect for the Safavid monarch once he viewed Shah cAbbas II, and how the latter prevented him from doing so. See Andersen/Iversen, Orientalische Reise-Beschreibungen, 152.

32. For this, see McChesney, R.D. ‘“Barrier of Heterodoxy’?: Rethinking the Ties between Iran and Central Asia in the Seventeenth Century,” in Melville, Charles ed., Safavid Persia: The History and Politics of an Islamic Society (London: I.B. Tauris, 1996), 231-68.Google Scholar

33. Wahid Qazvini, “Khuld-i barīn,” fol. 41; Jacfariyan, ed., cIlal-i bar uftādan-i Ṣafavīyān, 292-93; and Dupré, Adrien Voyage en Perse fait dans les années 1807, 1808, 1809, 2 vols. (Paris: J.G. Dentu, 1819), 1:365.Google Scholar

34. For this, see Matthee, RudiIran's Ottoman Diplomacy during the Reign of Shāh Sulaymān I (1077-1105/1666-94),” in Eslami, Kambiz ed., Iran and Iranian Studies: Essays in Honor of Iraj Afshar (Princeton: Zagros Press, 1998), 148-77.Google Scholar

35. Crypto-Sunni grand viziers serving under decidedly Shici Shahs include Qazi Jahan (907-33/1504-26 and 940-56-7/1535-50) and, possibly, Shaykh cAli Khan (1079-1100/1669-89). Fath cAli Khan Daghistani (1127-33/1715-21) was openly Sunni. None of this, of course, is unique to Iran or the Safavids. “Outsiders” occupied high positions in many Islamic states, and Christian viziers are known to have served the Fatimids and Mamluks.

36. Munshi, Iskandar Beg Tārīkh-i cālam ārā-yi cAbbāsī, 2 vols. pag. as one (Tehran: Amir Kabir, 1350/1971), 981-82.Google Scholar

37. See Iskandar Beg Munshi and Muhammad Yusuf Walih Isfahani, Ẕayl-i tārīkh-i cAbbāsī, 200-203.

38. Jenkinson, Anthony et al., Early Voyages and Travels to Russia and Persia, eds. Morgan, E. Delmar and Coote, C.H. 2 vols. (London: Hakluyt Society, 1886), 1:145-47.Google Scholar

39. For Tahmasp's fastidiousness, which became particularly pronounced in the second half of his reign, see Shah Tahmasp b. Ismacil b. Haydari al-Safavi Taẕkirah-i Shāh Tahmāsp, ed. Sifri, Amr Allah (2d ed., Tehran: Intisharat-i sharq, 1363/1984), 29-30Google Scholar; Rumlu, Hasan Beg Aḥsan al-tawārīkh, ed. cAbbas Husayn Navaᵓi (Tehran: Intisharat-i Babak, 1357/1978), 323Google Scholar; and Walih Isfahani, Muhammad Yusuf Khuld-i barīn (Iran dar rūzgār-i Ṣafavīyān), ed. Mir Hashim Muhaddi (Tehran: Intisharat-i adabi wa tarikhi-yi mawqufat-i Duktur Mahmud Afshar Yazdi, 1372/1993), 395.Google Scholar

40. Anon. [Chick, H.G. ed.], A Chronicle of the Carmelites in Persia and the Papal Mission of the XVIIth and XVIIIth Centuries, 2 vols. (London: Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1939), 1:157.Google Scholar

41. See ibid., 1:123. The Spanish ambassador Don Garcia de Silva y Figueroa, when meeting Shah cAbbas in 1618, first bent his knee and kissed the ruler's hand, after which the Shah raised him, embraced him and welcomed him. See ibid., 238; and de Silva y Figueroa, Don Garcia Comentarios de D. Garcia de Silva y Figueroa de la embajada que del parte del Rey de España Don Felipe III hizo al Rey Xa Abas de Persia, 2 vols. (Madrid: La Sociedad de bibliófilos españoles, 1903-5), 2:85.Google Scholar

42. de Thevenot, Jean The Travels of Monsieur de Thevenot into the Levant, 3 vols. (London: H. Clark, 1686), 2:106.Google Scholar

43. Thomas Herbert, traveling through the town of Marvdasht, north of Shiraz, in the 1620s, noted how its inhabitants took great care to purify all places that he and his company had touched and entered by spreading dust and ashes on them. See Herbert, Thomas Travels in Persia 1627-1629, ed. Foster, Sir William (New York: Robert M. McBride & Company, 1929), 110.Google Scholar

44. Chardin, Voyages, 6:319-20.Google Scholar

45. See Chronicle of the Carmelites, 1:446-47Google Scholar, letter Fr. Angelus, O.C.D., 1 Sept. 1672; and Algemeen Rijksarchief (ARA), The Hague, VOC 1779, 10 Dec. 1708, fol. 313, and, for a mid-seventeenth-century Persian treatise on the proper behavior of non-Muslims, including dress codes and bans on outings during periods of rain, Muhammad Taqi Majlisi, “Aḥkām-i ahl-i ẕimmah,” ed. Hasan Matlabi, Sayyid Abu'l Mīrā-i Islāmī-yi Iran , 8 vols. (Tehran: Kitabkhanah-i hazrat-i Ayat Allah al-cUzma Marcashi Najafi, 1373-7/1994-8), 3: 709-16.Google Scholar As was typical of such decrees, they were never thoroughly enforced and would never last long. They were, however, issued until the late nineteenth century, at least against the local Jewish population. See Littman, DavidJews under Muslim Rule: The Case of Persia,Wiener Library Bulletin, new ser. 32 (1979): 7Google Scholar, for an example of such a decree issued in Hamadan in 1892.

46. For this, see Haᵓiri, Nakhustīn rūyārūᵓīhā, 480-89; and idem, Reflections on the Shici Responses to Missionary Thought and Activities in the Ṣafavīd Period,” in Calmard, Jean ed., Etudes Ṣafavides (Paris: Institut français de recherche en Iran, 1993), 151-64.Google Scholar

47. Sanson, N. L'estat présent du royaume de Perse (Paris: La veuve de Jacques Langlois, et Jacques Langlois, 1694), 254-55.Google Scholar

48. Chronicle of the Carmelites, 1:447Google Scholar; Kaempfer, Am Hofe, 273; Bachoud, PèreLettre écrite de Chamakié, le 25 Septembre 1721, au Père Fleuriau,” in Lettres édiflantes et curieuses écrites des missions étrangères, 8 vols. (New ed., Toulouse: Noel-Etienne Sens and Auguste Gaude, 1810), 3:108.Google Scholar Engelbert Kaempfer, Am Hofe, 273, relates a telling anecdote in this regard in his description of a collective reception of foreign envoys in 1685. The moment he highlights is the one when the Belgian Carmelite Father Elias stepped forward to receive the answer to a letter that his superior had dispatched to Iran three years earlier. When he approached the throne of Shah Sulayman, his bald head, i.e. his tonsure, caused the crowd present at the reception to burst out in laughter. The reason for this was that royal letters were ordinarily attached to someone's hair, which proved impossible in this case. Kaempfer concludes the anecdote by opining that official correspondence coming from Western rulers ought not to be transmitted by envoys who in Iran were regarded as poor beggars (faqīr).

49. Membré, Mission, 31.

50. Chronicle of the Carmelites, 1:249-54.Google Scholar

51. ARA, VOC 1150, Daghregister Qazvin, 2 Sept. 1643, fol. 200.

52. Zimmel, BrunoVorgeschichte, und Gründung der Jesuitenmission in Isfahan (1642-1657),Zeitschrift für Missionwissenschaft und Religionwissenschaft 53 (1969): 21-22.Google Scholar

53. Richard, Francis Raphaël du Mans missionnaire en Perse au XVIIe s., 2 vols. (Paris: L'Harmattan, 1995), 1:31.Google Scholar

54. Ibid., 33.

55. Kaempfer, Am Hofe, 180-81.

56. Richard, Raphaël du Mans, 1:32-33.Google Scholar

57. See Rasul Jacfariyan Dīn wa siyāsat dar dawrah-i Ṣafavī (Qum: Intisharat-i Ansariyan, 1370/1991), 299-334Google Scholar, which provides a bibliography of these polemical works. Recently published examples of such works are Ahmad ibn Zayn al-cAbidin cAlawi, Miṣqal-i ṣafā dar naqd-i kalām-i Masīhīyat, ed. Isfahani, Hamid Najdi (Qum: Amin, 1373/1994)Google Scholar; and idem, “Lamacāt-i malakūtiyah,” in Rasul Jacfariyan, ed., Mīrā-i Islāmī-yi Iran 3: 729-50.

58. Richard, Raphaël du Mans, 1:34Google Scholar.

59. Bedik, Chehil sutun, 387.

60. Nasrabadi, Taẕkirah-i Naṣrābādī, 206.

61. Ibid., 97.

62. Diba, Leyla S.The Painter Riza cAbbāsī,” in idem, ed. with Ekhtiar, Maryam Royal Persian Paintings: The Qajar Epoch 1785-1925 (Brooklyn, N.Y.: Brooklyn Museum of Art, and London: I.B. Tauris, 1998), 108.Google Scholar Other examples are found in Sims, Eleanor G.Five Seventeenth-Century Persian Oil Paintings,” in Persian and Mughal Art (London: P&D Colnagi, 1976), 223-48Google Scholar; and Canby, Sheila R. The Rebellious Reformer: The Drawings and Paintings of Riza-yi cAbbāsī of Isfahan (London: Azimuth Editions, 1996), 172, 175 (cat. nos 127, 128).Google Scholar

63. See Sheila Canby, “Farangi Saz: The Impact of Europe on Ṣafavīd Painting,” Halt Silk and Stone: The Art of Asia (1996): 46-59.

63. Tavernier, Jean-Baptiste Les six voyages de J.B. Tavernier en Turquie, en Perse et aux Indes, 2 vols. (Utrecht: Guillaume van de Water, 1712), 1:554.Google Scholar

64. See Chronicle of Carmelites, 1:165Google Scholar. Even after the restitution of Hormuz to Safavid control in 1622, Iranian officials seem to have disliked the Portuguese for their imperious behavior. It is interesting to compare this to the Chinese image of the Portuguese in the seventeenth century. In Ming China, the Portuguese had the reputation of being violent and unruly, and were seen as cannibals, kidnappers, slave traders, smugglers and marauders. See Fok, K.C.Early Ming Images of the Portuguese,” in Ptak, Roderik ed., Aspects in History and Economic History, Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (Stuttgart: Franz Steiner Verlag, 1987), 143-55Google Scholar; repr. in Disney, Anthony ed., Historiography of Europeans in Africa and Asia, 1450-1800 (Brookfield, Vt.: Variorum, 1995), 113-25.Google Scholar

65. See Jahn, KarlItaly in Ilkhanid Historiography,Atti del convegno internazionale sul tema: La Persia nel Medioevo (Rome: Accademia nazionale dei Lincei, 1971), 445.Google Scholar

66. The Abbé Carré in 1673 claimed that the French were no longer well thought of in Iran because they had, for some time, failed to pay homage to the shah by not sending envoys to Isfahan. The same author also recounts how in 1673 the French envoys managed to be received by Shah Sulayman before their English colleagues because their presents were of much greater value. See Carré, Abbé The Travels of the Abbé Carré in India and the Near East 1672 to 1674, trans, and ed. Fawcett, Lady Fawcett, Sir Charles and Burn, Sir Richard 2 vols. pag. as one (London: Hakluyt Society, 1947), 88, 810.Google Scholar

67. See Alexandrowicz, C.H. An Introduction to the History of the Law of Nations in the East Indies (16th, 17th and 18th Centuries) (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1967), 26-28.Google Scholar

68. de la Croix, Petis Extrait du journal de Sieur Petis, fils, in Langlès, M. ed., Relation de Doury Efendy, ambassadeur de la porte othomane auprès du roi de Perse (Paris: Ferra, 1810), 126.Google Scholar

69. Chardin, Voyages, 2:177-78, 10:113.Google Scholar The Russian reputation for filthiness and uncouthness is already found in early Arabic geographical literature. See al-Azmeh, AzizBarbarians in Arab Eyes,Past and Present 134 (1992): 7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

70. de Thevenot, Suite du voyage, 3:366-67.Google Scholar

71. Chardin, Voyages, 3:177-78Google Scholar; 10:113; and Tavernier, Les six voyages, 1:535-36.Google Scholar

72. Chronicle of the Carmelites, 1:489Google Scholar. See also Bushev, P.P. Posol'stvo Artemii Volynskogo v Iran v 1715-1718 (Moscow: Nauk, 1978), 8Google Scholar, and Lockhart, Laurence The Fall of the Safavi Dynasty and the Afghan Occupation of Persia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1958), 61-62.Google Scholar

73. Bushev, Posol'stvo, 89-93. Dismounting before reaching the shah's quarters was a matter of respect, involving the perception that the ruler represented by the envoy was of lesser stature than the Safavid monarch. Just as riding a horse was traditionally the privilege of the elite in the Middle East, and thus a token of rank and prestige, so dismounting when approaching a person of superior authority was an old custom in the same area. See Sanders, Paula Ritual, Politics, and the City in Fatimid Cairo (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1994), 13-14, 22-23.Google Scholar Such protocol existed in non-Muslim countries as well, including Muscovite Russia. The refusal of Russian envoys to dismount may be explained by the fact that in Russia the distance that a foreign envoy was allowed to ride in Moscow and within the Kremlin before he was required to dismount was a sign of the prestige in which his ruler and realm were held. Russian officials had strict instructions to make sure that foreign envoys dismounted before they did. As foreigners did not always abide by this protocol, disputes often broke out over the issue. See Kleimola, Ann M.Good Breeding, Muscovite Style: cHorse Culture’ in Early Modern Rus,Forschungen zur osteuropäischen Geschichte 50 (1995): 221-22.Google Scholar Just as in Iran, foreign envoys to Moscow were supposed to take off their swords before being received in audience by the tsar. See Iuzefovich, L.A.Kak v posol'skikh obychaiakh vedetsia…” (Moscow: Mezhdunarodnye otnosheniia, 1988), 111.Google Scholar Given the long-standing Russian contempt for Middle Eastern people, Volynskii's breaching of Safavid custom may be interpreted as a deliberate refusal to acknowledge his master's inferior status relative to the Shah. Similar examples involving Safavid envoys abroad are Zaynal Beg, Shah cAbbas's envoy to the Mughal court in 1620, who offended Jahangir Shah and created a diplomatic row by refusing to greet the ruler according to Indian conventions during an audience; in Islam, Riazul Indo-Persian Relations: A Study of the Political and Diplomatic Relations between the Mughal Empire and Iran (Tehran: Iranian Culture Foundation, 1970), 80Google Scholar; and Muhammad Riza Beg, Iranian ambassador to France in 1715, who upset French protocol by insisting on appearing before Louis XIV on horseback; in Herbette, Maurice Une ambassade persane sous Louis XIV (Paris: Perrin, 1907), 109.Google Scholar

74. See Speelman, Cornelis Journaal der reis van den gezant der O.I. Compagnie Joan Cunaeus naar Perzië in 1651-1652, ed. Hotz, A. (Amsterdam: Johannes Miüller, 1908), 295Google Scholar; Tavernier, Les six voyages, 1:548-53Google Scholar; Bushev, Posol'stvo, 194; von Palombini, Barbara Bündniswerben abendländischer Mächte um Persien 1453-1600 (Wiesbaden: Franz Steiner Verlag, 1968), 80-81Google Scholar; and Matthee, “Iran's Ottoman Policy.” Chardin, claiming that Persian books contained little or no useful information about Europe and that, were it not for the information they received from ambassadors and various European merchants, the Iranians would not know at all what was happening in Europe, leaves out the Armenian informants, probably the richest source of current information for the Safavid political elite. See Chardin, Voyages, 4:124Google Scholar.

75. Chardin, Voyages, 3:429-30.Google Scholar

76. For this, see Matthee, “Iran's Ottoman Policy.”

77. Shah Tahmasp asked Edwards about King Philip of Spain and the war against the Turks at Malta. See Edwards, Early Voyages, 2:415ff.Google Scholar Shah cAbbas II questioned Tavernier about the current state of Europe (aside from discussing the differences between European and Iranian notions of female beauty). See Tavernier, Les six voyages, 1:546-49.Google Scholar Shah cAbbas II similarly showed great curiosity about kings of Europe, and especially the French monarch, in discussions with six French goldsmiths. See Manucci, Nicolao Storia do Mogor or Mugul India 1653-1708, trans. Irvine, William 4 vols. (London: J. Murray, 1907-9), 1:41.Google Scholar Shah Sultan Husayn's grand vizier, Fath cAli Khan Daghistani, in 1717 asked Volynskii about Peter the Great's recent visit to Holland. See Bushev, Posol'stvo, 128.

78. Shah Safi (1629-2) requested an enameler, a diamond cutter, a watchmaker, a jeweler, a painter, an armor-maker, and a cannon-maker from the King of England. See J. Qaᵓim-maqami Yakṣad u panjāh sanad-i tārīkhī (Tehran: Chapkhanah-i artish-i Shahinshahi-yi Iran, 1348/1969), 34.Google Scholar A list included in a letter sent by Shah Sulayman to King Charles II in 1079/1668-69 similarly contains a request for an enameler, a watchmaker, a diamond cutter, a goldsmith, a gunsmith, a painter, and a cannon-maker. See Fekete, L. Einführung in die persische Paläographie. 101 persische Dokumente, ed. Hazai, G. (Budapest: Akadémiai Kiadó, 1977), 529-33.Google Scholar

79. Tavernier, Les six voyages, 1:547Google Scholar.

80. Petis de la Croix, Extrait du journal, 143.

81. Chardin, Voyages, 6:155-56.Google Scholar According to the Portuguese envoy de Gouvea, Shah cAbbas asked him to try to bring a European doctor with him upon his return to Iran. See de Gouvea, Antonio Relation des grandes guerres et victoires obtenues par le roy de Perse Cha Abbas contre les empereurs de Turquie Mahomet et Achmet son fils, trans. de Meneses, A. (Rouen: Nicolas Loyselet, 1646), 477.Google Scholar

82. della Valle, Pietro Viaggi di Pietro della Valle, il pellegrino, 2 vols. (Brighton: G. Gancia, 1845), 1:511Google Scholar; Chardin, Voyages, 3:430Google Scholar; and 5:123. Adrien Dupré, who visited Iran at the turn of the nineteenth century and wrote a detailed account of the country, echoes the same theme in his observation that Iranians were full of curiosity, loved novelties, showed their enthusiasm for science and art, and were generally eager to query foreigners about the customs and technical achievements of their countries. See Dupré, Voyage, 2:399Google Scholar.

83. Valle, Della Viaggi, 2:326-27.Google Scholar Della Valle and Mulla Zayn al-Din appear to have kept up a correspondence after Della Valle left Iran and, after reaching India, Della Valle may have sent his Iranian friend a treatise on new developments in Western astronomy. See Arjomand, KamranThe Emergence of Scientific Modernity in Iran: Controversies Surrounding Astrology and Modern Astronomy in the Mid-Nineteenth Century,Iranian Studies 30 (1997): 7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

84. Chardin, Voyages, 2:195Google Scholar.

85. Ibid., 345-46.

86. de Bourges, J. Relation du voyage de monsigneur l'évêque de Beryte, vicaire apostolique du royaume de la Cochinine, par la Turquie, la Perse, les Indes…jusqu'au royaume de Siam (Paris: Bichet, 1666), 80-81.Google Scholar These are the same uncles that are mentioned in Richard, Raphaël du Mans, 1:33Google Scholar.

87. de Thevenot, Suite du voyage, 3:309Google Scholar.

88. cAmili, Miṣqal-i ṣafā, 21.

90. Olearius, Vermehrte newe Beschreibung, 434.

90. See Layla Diba, “Clothing,” in Encyclopaedia lranica, and the pictures in Lewis, Muslim Discovery, 252-53.

91. Milstein, RachelThe Battle of Chaldiran: A Persian Oil Painting,Israel Museum Journal 8 (1989): 43.Google Scholar See also Canby, “Farangi Saz.“

92. Zygulski, A.Oriental and Levantine Firearms,” in Blair, C. Pollard's History of Firearms (New York: Macmillan, 1983), 444-45.Google Scholar

93. Winter, H.J.J.Persian Science in Safavid Times,Cambridge History of Iran (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1986), 6: 581.Google Scholar

94. For this, see Mohebbi, Techniques et ressources, 216.

95. Poullet, Sr. Nouvelles relations du Levant…avec une exacte description…du royaume de Perse, 2 vols. (Paris: L. Billaine, 1668), 2: 217.Google Scholar

96. du Mans, RaphaëlDe Persia 1684,” in Richard, Raphaël du Mans, 2:298-99.Google Scholar

97. Chardin, Voyages, 4:117-19.Google Scholar

98. Chardin, Voyages, 2:352Google Scholar. Mansour Sefatgol in a recent article has drawn attention to such inconsistencies in Chardin's portrayal of the familiarity of Iranians in Safavid times with the outside world, and in particular with Europe. It seems to me that, while it is true that Chardin contradicts himself on certain concrete issues, e.g. the existence of maps, this and other examples to the contrary do not invalidate his general proposition that Iranians were rather poorly informed about Europe. See Sefatgol, MansourĪrān-i casr-i Ṣafavī az nigāh-i Shārdin. Pizhūhashī guzarā dar bārah-i safarnāmah-i Shardin wa nigāhī bih tarjumah-i jadīd-i ān,Kitāb-i Māh 1:6-7 (1377/1998): 6-11 (9).Google Scholar

100. Olearius, Vermehrte newe Beschreibung, 434.

101. See the map of the world's “inhabited quarter” by Sadiq Isfahani of Jaunpur in India, whose origins were evidently Iranian, in Joseph E. Schwartzberg, “Geographical Mapping,” in J.B. Harley and David Woodward, eds., The History of Cartography, vol. 2, bk. 1, Cartography in the Traditional Islamic and South Asian Societies (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1992), 391.Google Scholar

102. Ottoman cartography in the seventeenth century was by far the most sophisticated, beginning with the famous Piri Reis. Having come under European influence, much of it served military purposes. Nothing comparable exists for the Safavid state. See Ahmet Karamustafa, “Military, Administrative and Scholarly Maps and Plans,” in Harley and Woodward, eds., Cartography in the Traditional Islamic and South Asian Societies, 209-27. For the evolution of Islamic cartography, see Gerald R. Tibbets, “Later Cartographic Developments,” in ibid., 137-55.

102. The official was Mirza Rafic, the Shah's dawātdār. See Bushev, Posol'stvo, 135.

103. Archives des Missions Etrangères (AME), Paris, 351, Letter Gaudereau 3 April 1696, fol. 3. In early Qajar times familiarity with geography was still not a given among educated Iranians, as is illustrated in the question that the vizier Mirza Rizaquli posed to the Frenchman Romieu of whether the Sea of France was the same as the Sea of Constantinople. See Ch. de Voogd, Les français en Perse (1805-1809),Studia Iranica 10 (1981): 261.Google Scholar

104. Chardin, Voyages, 3:427-28.Google Scholar See also Stevens, “European Visitors,” 448.

105. See AME, Paris, vol. 350, Mercier, Isfahan, to Paris, 28 Nov. 1667, fols. 263-66.

106. Chardin, Voyages, 4:89Google Scholar, 192, 197.

107. Chardin, Voyages, 3:429-30.Google Scholar

108. Poullet, Nouvelles relations, 2:217-18.Google Scholar

109. Fryer, John A New Account of East India and Persia Being Nine Years’ Travels 1672-1681, ed. Crooke, William 3 vols. (London: Hakluyt Society, 1912), 1:323.Google Scholar

110. Bushev, Posol'stvo, 50.

111. Mustawfi, Muhammad Mufid Moḫtaṣar-e Mofīd des Moḥammad Mofīd Mostoufī, ed. Najmabadi, Seyfeddin 2 vols. (Wiesbaden: Ludwig Reichert Verlag, 1989), 1:12.Google Scholar

112. For Husayn cAli Beg, see Alonso, CarlosEmbajadores de Persia en las Cortes de Praga, Roma y Valladolid,Anthologica Annua 36 (1989): 144-70Google Scholar; for Musa Beg, see Vermeulen, U.L'ambassade persan de Musa Beg aux Provinces-Unies (1625-1628),Persica 7 (1975-78): 145-53;Google Scholar for Naqdi Beg, see Wright, Denis The Persians Amongst the English (London: I.B. Tauris, 1985), 1-8Google Scholar; for Muhammad Riza Beg, see Herbette, Une ambassade.

113. Herbette, Une ambassade, 201-2.

114. For this, see Haᵓiri, Nakhustīn rūyārūᵓīhā, 159-64, 176.

115. ARA, VOC 1520, Rapport van Leenen, 20 June 1692, fols. 213v-14.

116. See, for example, The Ship of Sulayman, ed. and trans. O'Kane, John (New York: Columbia University Press, 1972), 20.Google Scholar The similarity with contemporary China is striking. The elite of Ming China, too, assumed that foreigners would be attracted to their country to pay homage to its ruler, and, more plausibly than in the case of Iran, thought that foreigners needed Chinese products much more than China needed foreign commodities. The Chinese conception of the tribute system went even further, however, including a ban on all trade in Chinese ports by foreigners not connected with tribute embassies. See Wills, John E. Embassies and Illusions: Dutch and Portuguese Envoys to K'Ang-hsi, 1666-1687 (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1984), 15, 19.Google Scholar

117. See Roubakhshan, A.Farang et farangi chez Bīdel,Luqmān 12:1 (1995—96): 83-93.Google Scholar

118. This is not true for China, a country that the Irannians may have esteemed as a civilization on a par with their own. Sayyid cAli Akbar “Khataᵓi,” who was most likely a merchant from Transoxania, in the first decade of Safavid rule visited China and in 922/1516 finished writing the Khatāy-nāmah, his travelogue of the journey. See Khatāy-nāmah. Sharḥ-i mushāhadāt-i Sayyid cAli Akbar Khatā'ī dar sar-zamīn-i Chīnī, ed. Afshar, Iraj (Tehran: Markaz-i asnad-i farhangi-yi Asya, 1352/1973, 2d ed., 1372/1993).Google Scholar

119. For the negative images of blacks in classical Persian literature and culture, see Southgate, MinooThe Negative Images of Blacks in Some Medieval Iranian Writings,Irannian Studies 17 (1984): 3-36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar