The Safavid Empire: Persia's Return to Greatness — Fexingo History

The Safavid Harem and the Politics of the Imperial Household

8 min · 15 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio The Safavid Harem and the Politics of the Imperial Household

Descripción

In this episode of the Safavid Empire series, Lucas and Luna explore the Safavid harem — not as a place of orientalist fantasy, but as a centre of political power, intrigue, and dynastic survival. They discuss how Shah Tahmasp's mother, Mahd-e Olya, effectively ran the empire during his early reign, and how later shahs like Shah Abbas I and Shah Safi used the harem as a tool for controlling succession and neutralising Qizilbash rivals. The conversation covers the role of the harem-e homayun in producing heirs, managing diplomatic marriages, and influencing policy through figures like Saru Taqi. Lucas explains how the harem's internal hierarchy — from the queen mother and chief wives to slave concubines and eunuchs — mirrored the broader Safavid state. The episode also touches on the controversial practice of blinding and imprisoning princes within the harem to prevent rebellion, and how this 'harem system' ultimately contributed to the empire's decline by producing weak, isolated shahs like Soltan Hossein. Specific examples include the rise of Mahd-e Olya, the harem's role in the succession of Shah Safi, and the contrast between the activist harem politics of the 16th century and the cloistered dynastic management of the 17th. #Safavid #Harem #MahdeOlya #ShahTahmasp #ShahAbbasI #ShahSafi #SaruTaqi #Qizilbash #Gholam #HaremPolitics #SafavidHarem #ImperialHousehold #SafavidDynasty #TwelverShiism #PersianHistory #EarlyModern #MiddleEast #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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168 episodios

Portada del episodio Safavid Silk: The Empire Woven in Thread

Safavid Silk: The Empire Woven in Thread

In this episode of the Safavid Empire series, Lucas and Luna explore the empire's vast silk industry — the economic engine that funded Isfahan's grand architecture, underwrote diplomatic gifts, and connected Persia to markets from Venice to Mughal India. They trace the journey of raw silk from the mulberry groves of Gilan and Mazandaran to the bazaars of Aleppo and the looms of the Armenian merchants of New Julfa. Along the way, they examine how Shah Abbas I leveraged silk as a tool of statecraft, the role of the Armenian trade network, the fiscal policies that controlled production, and the eventual decline when European maritime powers bypassed overland routes. Specific names and places include: Shah Abbas I, New Julfa, the Dutch Vereenigde Oostindische Compagnie, the English East India Company, the town of Rasht, the port of Bandar Abbas, and the silk route through Aleppo. The episode also touches on the social impact of silk cultivation on rural communities and the environmental toll of the industry. #Safavid #Silk #ShahAbbasI #NewJulfa #Armenians #PersianEconomy #SilkRoad #Gilan #Mazandaran #BandarAbbas #Aleppo #DutchEastIndiaCompany #EnglishEastIndiaCompany #Rasht #Trade #History #FexingoHistory #PersianEmpire Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

19 de jul de 20267 min
Portada del episodio Safavid Armenia and New Julfa: The Deportation That Built an Empire

Safavid Armenia and New Julfa: The Deportation That Built an Empire

In 1604, Shah Abbas I ordered the forced relocation of hundreds of thousands of Armenians from the Araxes Valley to Isfahan. It was a brutal scorched-earth tactic against the Ottomans—but it also created one of the most dynamic merchant communities in early modern history: New Julfa. This episode follows the deportation, the settlement, and the rise of Armenian silk merchants who bankrolled the Safavid state and built a global trade network from Venice to India. Lucas and Luna discuss the role of the gholam system, the silk monopoly, and how a displaced people became the empire's economic backbone. Based on contemporary accounts by travellers like Jean Chardin and the Armenian chronicler Araqel of Tabriz, this is the story of a tragedy that became a triumph—at a cost. #SafavidEmpire #ShahAbbasI #NewJulfa #ArmenianDeportation #SilkTrade #Isfahan #AraxesValley #Gholam #JeanChardin #AraqelOfTabriz #OttomanSafavidWars #1604 #ForcedRelocation #MerchantNetworks #ArmenianHistory #EarlyModernTrade #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
Portada del episodio The Fall of Isfahan: How the Safavid Capital Was Lost

The Fall of Isfahan: How the Safavid Capital Was Lost

In 1722, the Safavid capital Isfahan fell to a small Afghan army after a brutal six-month siege. This episode explores the final years of the Safavid dynasty through the lens of that catastrophic event. Lucas and Luna trace the decay from Shah Soleyman's opium addiction to the ineffectual Shah Soltan Hosayn, the rise of Mahmud Hotak and the Ghilzai Afghans, the catastrophic Battle of Golnabad where the Safavid army was routed despite overwhelming numbers, the famine and desperation inside Isfahan, and the final surrender that ended over two centuries of Safavid rule. Along the way, they discuss the role of the Qizilbash, the gholam military reforms that backfired, the religious intolerance that alienated Sunni subjects, and the poignant account of the siege by the Armenian chronicler Abraham of Yerevan. It's a story of hubris, neglect, and the price of complacency. #Safavid #Isfahan #SiegeOfIsfahan #MahmudHotak #ShahSoltanHosayn #Golnabad #Qizilbash #Gholam #AbrahamOfYerevan #AfghanInvasion #HotakiDynasty #SafavidDecline #1722 #PersianHistory #MiddleEast #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer5 min
Portada del episodio Shah Soleyman's Opium and the Fall of the Safavids

Shah Soleyman's Opium and the Fall of the Safavids

Shah Soleyman, the Safavid ruler who preferred wine and opium to statecraft, presided over the empire's slow unraveling in the late 17th century. Lucas and Luna explore the shah's secluded court, the rising power of the harem and eunuchs, the growing influence of Shiite clerics like Muhammad Baqir Majlisi, and the economic stagnation that followed the end of the silk monopoly. They also examine Soleyman's infamous 'time capsule' decree, where he buried a list of doomed ministers, and how his neglect set the stage for the Afghan revolt that would topple Isfahan in 1722. This episode dives into the personal failures and systemic decay that turned a glittering empire into a hollow shell. #SafavidEmpire #ShahSoleyman #PersianHistory #Opium #HaremPolitics #MuhammadBaqirMajlisi #ShiiteClerics #Isfahan #Qizilbash #Gholam #SilkTrade #AfghanRevolt #MahmudHotak #17thCentury #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast #Decline Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17 de jul de 20268 min
Portada del episodio Safavid Naval War: The Portuguese and the Persian Gulf

Safavid Naval War: The Portuguese and the Persian Gulf

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Safavid Empire's little-known naval campaigns in the Persian Gulf. When Shah Abbas I sought to expel Portuguese forces from Hormuz in 1602, he lacked a navy entirely. The episode details how he allied with the English East India Company, whose four ships helped the Persians besiege and capture the fortress of Hormuz in 1622. Lucas explains the strategic importance of the island, the role of the English commander Edward Monox, and the aftermath: the Portuguese never returned, and Persia gained direct control over Gulf trade for the first time. The conversation also touches on the earlier Battle of Julfar (1581) and the subsequent Safavid-Ottoman rivalry at sea. By the end, listeners will understand why the capture of Hormuz was a turning point in Indian Ocean commerce. No prior naval history has been covered in the Safavid series — this is a fresh angle. The donation segment appears naturally around the 75% mark, tied to the theme of empires investing in infrastructure. #SafavidNaval #Hormuz #ShahAbbasI #PortugueseEmpire #EastIndiaCompany #PersianGulf #BattleOfHormuz1622 #EdwardMonox #IndianOceanTrade #Qizilbash #Gholam #SafavidEmpire #Oman #Julfar #History #FexingoHistory #MilitaryHistory #NavalWarfare Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

17 de jul de 20265 min