Further reading: Kirk J. Beattie, Egypt during the
Sadat Years (New York: Palgrave, 2000); Raymond A.
Hinnebusch, Egyptian Politics under Sadat: The Post-
Populist Development of an Authoritarian-Modernizing
State (Boulder, Colo.: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 1988);
Anwar El Sadat, In Search of Identity: An Autobiography
(New York: Harper and Row, 1978).
Saddam Hussein
See h
Usayn
, s
addam
.
Safavid dynasty
The Safavid dynasty ruled i
ran
from 1501 to
1722, and it was the first to institute Shii Islam as
the official state religion. Although the founder of
the Safavid dynasty was likely Safi ad-Din Ishaq
(b. ca. 1252), head of a mysterious paramilitary
Sufi order in Gilan called the Safawiyya, it was not
until one of Safi ad-Din’s heirs, a 15-year-old boy
named Ismail (d. 1524), defeated the rival tribes
in i
ran
and declared himself shah in 1501 that the
Safavid dynasty was born.
Shah Ismail was a charismatic figure who
proclaimed t
Welve
-i
mam
s
hiism
the official state
religion and declared a brutal
Jihad
against Sunni
Islam both within his lands and in the neighboring
Ottoman Empire. The young king was unmoved
by arguments against the legitimacy of a Shii state
in the absence of the Hidden Imam, simply declar-
ing himself to be the long-awaited m
ahdi
. Safavid
extremism ended under Ismail’s successors, but the
ideological and religious nature of the state he had
founded continued throughout the Safavid era, so
that s
hiism
is to this day the state religion of Iran.
The Safavid state flourished for two centuries
after Ismail’s death, reaching its zenith at the
end of the 16th century under the reign of Shah
Abbas I (r. 1587–1629). Abbas not only created
a strong bureaucratic state backed by a power-
ful military force, but he also turned his capital,
Isfahan, into one of the most prosperous and re-
splendent cities in the Middle East. Indeed, many
of Islam’s greatest and most lasting contributions
to architecture, the arts, and the sciences were de-
veloped in Isfahan under Safavid patronage.
By the beginning of the 18th century, however,
a number of internal and external factors resulted
in a massive decline in the state’s economy. Upris-
ings throughout Iran ultimately led to the destruc-
tion of the Safavid dynasty in 1722, but it was not
until 1773 and the ascension of Nadir Shah as the
first ruler of the Afsharid dynasty that the Safavid
state ceased to exist.
See also q
aJar
dynasty
; s
UFism
; U
sUli
s
chool
.
Reza Aslan
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