November 24, 2024
Hasan Allahyari

Hasan Allahyari

Academic Rank: Associate professor
Address: ...
Degree: Ph.D in history
Phone: 07733445214
Faculty: Faculty of Humanities

Research

Title
Studying the Position of the Scientific and Cultural Elites in the Northern regions of Persian Gulf in Iran during the Safavid era
Type Thesis
Keywords
خليج فارس، نواحي شمالي، نخبگان علمي و فرهنگي، مهاجرت به هند
Researchers jamile yousefi (Student) , Hasan Allahyari (Primary advisor) , Hamid Asadpour (Advisor)

Abstract

Although historical Fars has been one of the most important cultural and civilizational areas of Iran in different eras, the northern parts of the Persian Gulf during the Safavid era as a large part of this region have been less scientifically and culturally considered by scholars. To be more precise, the scientific and cultural complex of this area has been neglected in the shadow of the city of Shiraz during this and other periods. Accordingly, the dominant aspect of this research has been to discover and explain the scientific and cultural status of the elite in the northern parts of the Persian Gulf. More precisely, this research seeks to study the scientific and cultural status of these areas and to investigate the geographical radius of their influence while exploring the social base of the elite in question. The results of this research, which are descriptive-analytical and rely on library resources, show that although the dominant scientific and cultural elites of the northern Persian Gulf were native or resident of Shiraz, however, the coastal and coastal areas were also They have a large number of elites in the areas under study. Yet the role of ports and islands is lighter than elsewhere. On the other hand, surveys show that the majority of these elites were from the general public and those who belong to the profession rather than to the particular high-profile political spectrum of their time. The latest results of this study also indicate that the land of India in the vicinity of the Persian Gulf more than any other region of Iran has been the destination of a wide range of scientific and cultural elites in the northern parts of the Persian Gulf