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

Shah Sulayman and the Safavid Silk Road: How Persian Carpets Wove an Empire

9 min · 31 de may de 2026
Portada del episodio Shah Sulayman and the Safavid Silk Road: How Persian Carpets Wove an Empire

Descripción

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Safavid silk and carpet trade that flourished under Shah Sulayman and his predecessors. Discover how Armenian merchants from New Julfa dominated global commerce, weaving intricate silk carpets that became status symbols from Isfahan to Versailles. We trace the journey of raw silk from the Caspian coast to the looms of Kashan and Isfahan, and follow finished carpets along the Silk Road to Ottoman Istanbul, Mughal India, and European courts. Learn about the role of royal workshops (kitabkhana) in standardizing designs, the economic policies that made Persia a silk superpower, and the unintended consequences of Safavid protectionism. Along the way, we meet the Dutch and English East India Companies competing for Persian silk, and the Armenian merchants who outmaneuvered them. This episode reveals how a luxury commodity shaped diplomacy, funded Shah Abbas's reforms, and left a lasting legacy in museums and palaces worldwide. #SafavidEmpire #PersianCarpets #SilkRoad #ShahSulayman #NewJulfa #ArmenianMerchants #ShahAbbas #Isfahan #Kashan #EastIndiaCompany #VOC #OttomanEmpire #MughalIndia #Kitabkhana #LuxuryTrade #History #FexingoHistory #Persia Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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137 episodios

episode The Silk Road of Faith: Safavid Pilgrim Caravans to Najaf and Karbala artwork

The Silk Road of Faith: Safavid Pilgrim Caravans to Najaf and Karbala

In this episode of The Safavid Empire: Persia's Return to Greatness, Lucas and Luna explore the vast network of pilgrim caravans that connected Safavid Persia to the holy cities of Najaf and Karbala in Ottoman Iraq. Drawing on the account of the French traveler Jean-Baptiste Tavernier, who accompanied a 1660s caravan, they discuss the logistics, dangers, and politics of the journey — from the departure point in Isfahan's Naqsh-e Jahan Square to the ritual at the Imam Ali Shrine. Lucas explains how Shah Abbas I used pilgrimage as a tool of statecraft, promoting Twelver Shiism while extracting revenue from the caravans through tolls and taxes. He also reveals the tense negotiations with Ottoman authorities over access to the shrines, including the 1639 Treaty of Zuhab. The conversation touches on the role of the rahdar (road guards), the network of caravanserais built by the Safavids, and the spiritual significance of the 'atabat (thresholds) for Persian pilgrims. Luna asks about the dangers faced by pilgrims, leading to a discussion of banditry, Ottoman-Safavid rivalry, and the resilience of these faith-driven journeys. The episode ends with a reflection on how pilgrimage cemented Shi'i identity across the empire. #SafavidEmpire #ShahAbbasI #Najaf #Karbala #Pilgrimage #TwelverShiism #JeanBaptisteTavernier #Caravanserai #Rahdar #TreatyOfZuhab #Atabat #AliIbnAbiTalib #ImamHusayn #OttomanEmpire #SilkRoad #PersianHistory #MiddleEast #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

3 de jul de 20269 min
episode Shah Tahmasp and the Ottoman Peace of Amasya 1555 artwork

Shah Tahmasp and the Ottoman Peace of Amasya 1555

In 1555, two exhausted empires met at Amasya to sign a treaty that would define the Safavid-Ottoman border for nearly a century. This episode dives into the negotiations, the key figures—Shah Tahmasp I and Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent—and the treaty's surprising legacy. We explore how Tahmasp, often overshadowed by his father Ismail and grandson Abbas, used diplomacy and religious compromise to secure Persia's western frontier, allowing the Safavid state to consolidate internally. The Treaty of Amasya wasn't just a pause in hostilities; it recognized Safavid control over Iraq and its Shi'i shrines, a major concession from the Sunni Ottomans. But it also forced Tahmasp to curb Qizilbash raids and accept a border that would later explode under Abbas. We also touch on the treaty's cultural impact: the exchange of artists and scholars, the flow of Tabriz silk, and the quiet decades that let Isfahan's renaissance take root. A turning point in Safavid history, told through the lens of two rulers who chose peace over glory. #Safavid #Ottoman #TreatyOfAmasya #ShahTahmasp #SuleimanTheMagnificent #Qizilbash #TwelverShiism #PersianHistory #MiddleEast #16thCentury #Diplomacy #PeaceTreaty #Isfahan #Tabriz #Iraq #Shiism #FexingoHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

3 de jul de 20266 min
episode The Safavid Siege of Herat 1587: Abbas Takes the Crown artwork

The Safavid Siege of Herat 1587: Abbas Takes the Crown

In 1587, a teenage prince named Abbas rode from Herat to Qazvin to claim the Safavid throne. This episode digs into the siege that made him — and the Qizilbash infighting that nearly destroyed Persia before he got there. We follow the Takkal and Ustajlu factions, the scheming of Murshid Qoli Khan, and the blind Shah Mohammad Khodabanda's last stand. Lucas and Luna break down how Abbas I, still in his teens, navigated the treacherous politics of the Qizilbash to become the empire's greatest shah. If you've heard about Shah Abbas's later glories, this is the origin story: a boy caught between warring tribal lords, a siege that ended in a crown, and the first hints of the gholam revolution that would remake Persia. Based on Iskandar Beg Munshi's Tarikh-e Alamara-ye Abbasi, this episode goes inside the tent of a prince who learned early that trust is a luxury no ruler can afford. #SafavidEmpire #ShahAbbasI #SiegeOfHerat #Qizilbash #MurshidQoliKhan #ShahMohammadKhodabanda #Takkal #Ustajlu #IskandarBegMunshi #Tarikh-eAlamara-yeAbbasi #PersianHistory #Khorasan #AbdullahKhanUzbek #SafavidHistory #HistoryOfIran #FexingoHistory #MiddleEastHistory #History Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
episode Safavid Siege of Herat 1587: Abbas Takes the Crown artwork

Safavid Siege of Herat 1587: Abbas Takes the Crown

In 1587, a young prince named Abbas arrived at the gates of Herat, a city under siege by Uzbek forces. What happened next would set the stage for the greatest Safavid shah. This episode unpacks the three-month siege that tested Abbas’s resolve, the betrayal by his own Qizilbash commanders, and the political chaos that followed his father's abdication. We explore the murky circumstances of Shah Mohammad Khodabanda's fall, the role of the Takkalu and Ustajlu tribes, and how Abbas—barely sixteen—outmaneuvered both Uzbeks and rivals to claim the throne. Drawing on Iskandar Beg Munshi's Tarikh-e Alamara-ye Abbasi, we look at the siege's tactics, the assassination of Ali Qoli Khan Shamlu, and the fragile loyalty of the Qizilbash that would soon drive Abbas to create the gholam system. A story of survival, cunning, and the brutal politics of Safavid succession. #Safavid #Herat #AbbasI #Siege #Qizilbash #Uzbek #Shamlu #Takkalu #Ustajlu #ShahMohammadKhodabanda #IskandarBegMunshi #Tarikh-eAlamara-yeAbbasi #AliQoliKhan #Khorasan #16thCentury #MiddleEast #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer7 min
episode Safavid Women in Power: Mahd-e-Olya and the Harem Politics of Isfahan artwork

Safavid Women in Power: Mahd-e-Olya and the Harem Politics of Isfahan

Episode 133 of the Safavid Empire series shifts focus from the battlefield and throne room to the women's quarters of the Safavid court. Lucas and Luna explore the extraordinary political influence of Mahd-e-Olya, the powerful queen mother who effectively ruled Iran in the 1660s, only to be strangled by the Qizilbash. They trace the role of the haram-e homayun as a centre of factional intrigue, the practice of diplomatic marriage and regent mothers, and the control of succession through 'shah seven' and 'shah five' rituals. This episode sheds light on figures like Shah Soleyman's wife, who orchestrated a coup to install her son, and the anonymous slave-concubines who shaped dynasty survival. Drawing on accounts from Jean Chardin and Adam Olearius, the conversation reveals how women in Safavid Isfahan wielded soft and hard power, built patronage networks, and sometimes paid with their lives. A fresh angle on a dynasty often viewed through male rulers. #SafavidWomen #Mahd-e-Olya #HaremPolitics #Isfahan #Qizilbash #ShahSoleyman #JeanChardin #SafavidEmpire #PersianHistory #WomenInHistory #RegentMothers #17thCentury #MiddleEast #TwelverShiism #DiplomaticMarriage #History #FexingoHistory #Podcast Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

1 de jul de 20268 min