:: Volume 12, Issue 44 (Autumn 2021) ::
- 2021, 12(44): 69-86 Back to browse issues page
Ambassadors and a narrative of the decline of power relations in the Safavid court in travelogues (From Shah Safi to Shah Sultan Hussein)
Mujtaba Zahabi , Fereydun Allahyari 1, Ali Akbar Kajbaf2
1- Professor, Department of History, University of Isfahan (Corresponding Author). , f.allahyari@ltr.ui.ac.ir
2- Professor, Department of History, University of Isfahan.
Abstract:   (6182 Views)
Traffic of ambassadors increased dramatically during the second period of the Safavid rule. Regardless of what was going on in the treaties and agreements between them and the Safavid court, their reports in the travelogues confirm a change in the power relations that can be called declining developments. Such an issue appears somewhere beyond the court's attempt to show the court glamorously and emphasize authority in the face of ambassadors' observations. The narration of the court of the Safavid kings and the way they interact with the ambassadors, as can be seen in the travelogues, is an unconscious emphasis on the fact that a period of decline can be seen in the center of the Safavid power. This research, in a descriptive-analytical way, based on the travelogues of the second period of Safavid rule, will focus on the coming periods of European ambassadors to the court of the Safavid kings, in which a hidden narrative of the beginning of the decline of the  Safavid rule can be followed.
Keywords: The Safavids, Travelogues, Authority, Ambassadors, Decline.
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Received: 2019/12/7 | Accepted: 2020/04/19 | Published: 2021/11/10


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Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Rights and permissions
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Volume 12, Issue 44 (Autumn 2021) Back to browse issues page