Imperial Iran in the Eighteenth Century
Identity and State Formation under Nader
Mohammad Amir Hakimi Parsa author
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Publishing:30th Jun '26
£105.00
This title is due to be published on 30th June, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

The 18th-century ‘interregnum’ between the Safavid and Qajar dynasties remains woefully understudied in Iranian history, regarded as a turbulent and inconsequential gap between two major dynastic periods. This book, however, argues that this period saw the emergence of the idea of Iran as the foundation for collective identity and state formation. It traces the development of a sacralised territorial identity that fused an irredentist notion of Iran-realm (Iranzamin) with Shiʿism, culminating in an unprecedented political idea: that of an ‘Iranian state’ (dowlat-e Irān), supposedly formed by the unanimous consensus of the ‘Iranian people’ (ahl-e Irān). The book then covers how this state, under Nader Shah (Nāder-e Irān), subjugated non-Iranian realms to form a new universal Islamic empire. This is the first monograph to offer an integrated understanding of state formation in post-Safavid Iran (c.1720 – 1750), demonstrating how politico-cultural, military, administrative and ecclesiastic developments related to one another. Drawing on a wide range of neglected primary sources in Arabic, Turkish (both Ajami and Ottoman) and Kurdish (Hawrami), as well as Persian and European sources, the book sheds light on Iran in its last iteration as a great power.
Parsa cuts a clear path through the chaotic thicket of post-Safavid Iran. In his reading of the period, the ruthlessly pragmatic Nader Shah, having gained legitimacy as Iran’s God-sent savior, laid the foundations of a new national identity. Henceforth the interests of the state superseded the preservation of the dynasty. Imperial Iran in the Eighteenth Century is a major contribution to the debate about the formation of the Iranian state, associated with Iran-zamin and the idea of a monarchy yet unrelated to any individual dynasty. -- Rudolph Mathee, University of Delaware
ISBN: 9781399553339
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
384 pages