Ḫāṭirāt-i sargurd-i hawāʾī Parwīz Iktišāfī: az masʾūlīn-i šāḫa-i hawāʾī-i sāzmān-i afsarī-i Ḥizb-i Tūda-i Īrān ; (1323 - 1333 wa 22 sāl-i muhāǧarat dar Šūrawī)
In: Maǧmūʿa-i tārīḫ-i šifāhī-i čap-i Īrān 2
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In: Maǧmūʿa-i tārīḫ-i šifāhī-i čap-i Īrān 2
In: Tārīḫ-i imrūz 22
In: Intišārāt-i Muʾassasa-i Muṭālaʿāt wa Taḥqīqāt-i Iǧtimāʿī 22
In: انتشارات مؤسسۀ مطالعات و تحقیقات اجتماعی 22
In: Daftar-i Muṭālaʿāt wa Taḥqīqāt-i Zanān 22
In: Beihefte zum Tübinger Atlas des Vorderen Orients
In: Reihe B, Geisteswissenschaften 22
In: Intišārāt-i Ǧihād-i Dānišgāhī Mašhad 240
In: ʿUlūm-i insānī 22
In: Markaz-i Asnād-i Inqilāb-i Islāmī 467
In: Ǧāmiʿašināsī-i siyāsī 22
In: Markaz-i Pažūhiš wa Asnād-i Riyāsat-i Ǧumhūrī 22
In: Ḫāna-i kitāb 364
In: Intišārāt-i Dānišgāh-i Tihrān 1161
In: Ganǧīna-i niwištahā-i ḥuqūqī wa idārī 22
In: Iranian studies series
?One Word ? Yak Kaleme? is one of the first treatises in the Middle East to demonstrate that Islam is compatible with modern western forms of government, and specifically that sharia principles can be incorporated in a codified law comparable to that found in Europe. Unlike many fellow Oriental travellers, the author observed that European dominance is not derived from a few technological advances, but primarily from the organization of society. In ?One Word?, the author argues that the principles underlying constitutional government can be found in Islamic sources. ?One Word? is a significant text during the Iranian Constitutional Revolution of 1906, but its message is relevant today
In: Miras Maktoob, ISBN: 9789004365452
In: Persian E-Books Miras Maktoob
For over a hundred years, between 1507 and 1622, the island of Hormuz in the Persian Gulf was in the hands of the Portuguese. It was only under Shāh ʿAbbās I that the Safavids were able to recapture Hormuz and the neighbouring island of Qishm, under the leadership of general Imām Qulī Khān and with the unexpected help of some forces of the British East India Company that happened to be in the area at the time. The two epic poems from the 11th/17th century published in this volume, one by an otherwise unknown 'Qadrī' and the other by an anonymous author, deal with the recapture of Qishm and Hormuz under Imām Qulī Khān. While not of high literary quality, the poems show some interesting local and historical features, especially the longer one on Hormuz whose author had a great admiration of Imām Qulī Khān, whom he appears to have known personally
In: Mīrāṯ-i Maktūb 237
In: Zabān wa adabiyāt-i Fārsī 56
In: مىراث مکتوب ؛ 56
In: زبان و ادبىات فارسى ؛ 237.
In: Persian E-Books Miras Maktoob, ISBN: 9789004365452
In: Persian E-Books Miras Maktoob
The author of this epic poem, Ḥakīm Zajjājī (alive in 676/1277), was a glassmaker who also had a talent for poetry. At some point, for reasons that remain unexplained, his life took a turn for the worse. He lost all his friends, and his wife became estranged from him. It is in this period of emotional distress that he decided to break with his previous life and move to the Charandāb district of Tabriz. This district was home to the famous house of Juwaynī, whose members held high administrative offices under the Saljūqs, the Khwārazmshāhs and Īl Khānids. Zajjājī hoped to attract the attention of this family with his masnavi, in order for them to get him out of his miserable situation. For twenty years he worked on this versified history of Islam from its earliest times until his own day. Edition of part one, part two having been published seven years earlier by the same scholar