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

Safavid Public Works: The Caravanserais That Tied an Empire Together

7 min · 10 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio Safavid Public Works: The Caravanserais That Tied an Empire Together

Descripción

Shah Abbas I transformed Safavid Persia not just through military conquests and trade reforms, but through a vast network of caravanserais — roadside inns that connected Isfahan to the Silk Road, the Persian Gulf, and pilgrimage routes to Najaf and Karbala. This conversation explores the engineering, funding, and social impact of these structures, drawing on the accounts of European travelers like Jean Chardin and Tavernier. We look at how the shah's endowments (waqf) supported caravanserais, bridges, and bazaars as an integrated system; how the rahdar (road guards) kept routes safe; and how the design of a typical Safavid caravanserai — with its iwan, courtyard, stables, and rooftop quarters — shaped the experience of merchants, pilgrims, and diplomats. The episode also touches on the lesser-known caravanserais of the Armenian merchants of New Julfa and the role of the momtaz (superintendent) in maintaining these rest stops. By the end, you'll understand why Safavid Persia's road infrastructure was as crucial to its power as its gunpowder armies. #Safavid #ShahAbbasI #Caravanserai #SilkRoad #Waqf #JeanChardin #Tavernier #NewJulfa #ArmenianMerchants #SafavidArchitecture #RoadInfrastructure #SafavidTrade #MiddleEastHistory #PersianHistory #PilgrimageRoutes #Rahdar #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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158 episodios

Portada del episodio Safavid Architecture: How Isfahan Became Half the World

Safavid Architecture: How Isfahan Became Half the World

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the architectural revolution of the Safavid Empire, focusing on the transformation of Isfahan under Shah Abbas I. They discuss the Naqsh-e Jahan Square, the Sheikh Lotfollah Mosque with its famous peacock-tail dome, the Ali Qapu Palace with its music room, and the Si-o-se-pol bridge. The conversation covers how Armenian architects from New Julfa brought new techniques, how the bazaar integrated with the royal square, and how the Chahar Bagh avenue became a model for urban planning. They also touch on the symbolic use of light and geometry in Safavid mosque design and the role of the waqf system in funding these monumental projects. The episode concludes with a reflection on how these structures aimed to project imperial power and legitimacy. #Safavid #Isfahan #ShahAbbasI #Naqsh-e-Jahan #SheikhLotfollah #AliQapu #Si-o-se-pol #ChaharBagh #NewJulfa #ArmenianArchitects #Waqf #IslamicArchitecture #UrbanPlanning #SafavidArchitecture #HalfTheWorld #PersianArchitecture #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14 de jul de 20268 min
Portada del episodio The Safavid Postal System: How the Chapar Kept an Empire Connected

The Safavid Postal System: How the Chapar Kept an Empire Connected

Long before the Pony Express, the Safavid Empire maintained a lightning-fast postal network called the chapar that could move urgent news from Isfahan to Tabriz in under a week. In this episode, Lucas and Luna trace the routes, the relay stations, and the hardy horses that carried state dispatches, espionage reports, and even the occasional merchant's letter across Persia's rugged terrain. They look at how Shah Abbas I expanded the system, why caravanserais doubled as postal depots, and what European travelers like Jean Chardin and Adam Olearius observed about the efficiency and occasional corruption of the chapar. The conversation also explores the limits of the system—who could use it, how messages were authenticated, and what happened when a courier fell to bandits or bad weather. From the dusty roads of Herat to the mountain passes of the Zagros, this episode reveals the hidden infrastructure that made the Safavid state run, and why the chapar system is a forgotten marvel of early modern communication. #SafavidEmpire #Chapar #PostalSystem #ShahAbbasI #Isfahan #Tabriz #Herat #JeanChardin #AdamOlearius #Caravanserai #EarlyModern #Persia #Communication #History #FexingoHistory #MiddleEast #Courier #Infrastructure Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Portada del episodio Shah Abbas II's Religious Reforms and the Decline of Safavid Tolerance

Shah Abbas II's Religious Reforms and the Decline of Safavid Tolerance

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the reign of Shah Abbas II (1642–1666), a period often seen as the last golden age of the Safavid Empire. After his father Shah Safi's brutal reign, Abbas II restored stability and patronized the arts, but his religious policies marked a sharp turn away from the relative tolerance of earlier Safavid shahs. Under the influence of the Shi‘a cleric Muhammad Baqir Majlisi — who had already begun rising under Abbas II but would become dominant under later shahs — the state intensified the persecution of Sufis, Zoroastrians, Jews, and Christians. Lucas explains how Abbas II reversed his grandfather Shah Abbas I's policy of religious pluralism, ordering the destruction of Sunni mosques and forcing conversions. He also discusses the forced conversion of Zoroastrians in Isfahan's neighborhood of Gabrābād and the expulsion of Armenian merchants from New Julfa, undermining the silk trade. The episode delves into the theological rivalry between Twelver Shi‘ism and Sufi mysticism, the role of the Safavid state in enforcing orthodoxy, and how this religious crackdown sowed the seeds of the empire's eventual collapse by alienating key constituencies. Drawing on accounts from European travelers like Jean Chardin and the chronicle Khulāṣat al-Tawārīkh, Lucas shows how Abbas II's reign was a paradox: culturally brilliant but spiritually rigid. #ShahAbbasII #SafavidEmpire #MuhammadBaqirMajlisi #TwelverShiism #ReligiousPersecution #ZoroastrianForcedConversion #NewJulfa #JeanChardin #KhulāsatalTawārīkh #Isfahan #SufiPersecution #Gabrābād #ShahAbbasI #SilkTrade #SafavidDecline #History #FexingoHistory #MiddleEastHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
Portada del episodio Safavid Medicine: The Hospital That Healed an Empire

Safavid Medicine: The Hospital That Healed an Empire

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the little-known world of Safavid medicine, focusing on the grand hospital of Isfahan, the Dar al-Shifa, built under Shah Abbas I. They discuss Persian humoral theory, the role of hakims, the famous physician Hakim Muhammad Qasim, and the hospital's endowment from the royal waqf. The conversation touches on the hospital's architecture, its division into men and women's wings, and the integration of Twelver Shiism into medical ethics. They also compare Safavid medical practices to Ottoman and Mughal contemporaries, and consider how European travellers like Jean Chardin and Engelbert Kaempfer documented Persian medicine. The episode highlights the Dar al-Shifa's training of physicians and its influence on later Iranian medical education, without rehashing earlier episodes on military, trade, or artistic topics. #Safavid #Isfahan #DaralShifa #ShahAbbasI #Hakim #PersianMedicine #HumoralTheory #TwelverShiism #Waqf #JeanChardin #EngelbertKaempfer #HistoryOfMedicine #IranianHistory #FexingoHistory #SafavidEmpire #Hospital #MedicalEducation #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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Portada del episodio Safavid Wine Poetry: Taverns and the Divine in Isfahan

Safavid Wine Poetry: Taverns and the Divine in Isfahan

In 17th-century Isfahan, wine flowed freely in Safavid taverns despite official Islamic prohibitions. This episode explores the paradox of wine in Twelver Shi‘i Persia through the lens of Persian poetry—especially the works of Hafez and the Safavid poet Vahshi Bafqi. Lucas and Luna discuss how Safavid shahs like Tahmasp and Abbas I navigated piety versus pleasure, the role of Christian Armenian vintners from New Julfa, and the famed 'Shah's tavern' at Naqsh-e Jahan. They also trace the concept of the mystical 'tavern' (kharabat) in Sufi poetry, where wine symbolized divine intoxication. The episode touches on the 1656 prohibition by Shah Abbas II and the enduring tension between religious orthodoxy and poetic license in Safavid culture. Detailed references to the writings of the French traveler Jean Chardin and the Safavid chronicle Tarikh-e Alamara-ye Abbasi ground the discussion in primary sources. #SafavidWine #PersianPoetry #Isfahan #VahshiBafqi #Hafez #Naqsh-eJahan #NewJulfa #JeanChardin #Tarikh-eAlamara-yeAbbasi #ShahTahmasp #ShahAbbasI #ShahAbbasII #TwelverShiism #Sufi #Kharabat #SafavidEmpire #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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