domenica 19 luglio 2026

L’immagine onirica (Poesia di Roberto Minichini)


L’immagine onirica

Della grande bocca che loda se stessa

E riempie il cosmo di verità distorte

Ricorre come un monito esoterico

Gli angeli custodi dei mistici oranti

Non permettono che le anime pure

Siano ingannate da spiriti profani

Discernimento, rara virtù

Più preziosa delle legioni di pettegoli perdenti

 

( Roberto Minichini, luglio 2026 )

 

 

 

Shi‘i Mysticism in Iran: The Dhahabiyya - Roberto Minichini


Religious life under successive Persian dynasties produced many forms of inward discipline, sacred learning, and devotion to Prophet Muḥammad and his family. Among them, several initiatic lineages sought to unite Sufi practice with loyalty toward all Twelve Imams. Safavid and Qajar centuries saw spiritual authority develop through networks connecting learned devotion, shrine culture, initiatic transmission, and disciplined remembrance of God. Among several lineages, one community described its succession as a “golden chain,” a phrase expressing purity of transmission and fidelity to Twelve-Imam guidance. Its history reveals how Persian Sufis could preserve ritual discipline, metaphysical speculation, Qurʾanic interpretation, and devotion to Imam ʿAlī while negotiating pressure from jurists, rulers, rival confraternities, and changing urban societies. The Dhahabiyya occupies a distinctive place within the religious history of Iran because it joined the institutional structure of a Sufi order to an explicitly Twelver understanding of sacred authority. Twelver Shi‘ism teaches that legitimate guidance after Prophet Muḥammad (c. 570–632) passed through a succession of twelve Imams from his family, beginning with Imam ʿAlī (c. 600–661). The twelfth, Imam al-Mahdī, is believed to have entered the Lesser Occultation in 874 and the Greater Occultation in 941. He therefore remains alive but hidden from ordinary human perception, while the community continues to await his return. This doctrine created a fundamental question for every Shi‘i form of Sufism: what authority may a living spiritual master exercise when the true Imam of the age is absent from public view yet remains the supreme guide of creation? The Dhahabiyya answered by presenting the Sufi master as a subordinate representative of imamically transmitted knowledge. He was never supposed to replace the Hidden Imam, claim independent revelation, or become the source of a new religious law. His task was to guide disciples through ethical purification, remembrance of God, contemplation, prayer, and the interior understanding of Qurʾan and hadith. The remote origins of the order lie within the Kubrawiyya, a major Central Asian and Persian Sufi tradition associated with Najm al-Dīn Kubrā (1145–1221), who established an influential school at Khwarazm before his death during the Mongol conquest. Kubrawi teaching combined strict spiritual discipline with an elaborate psychology of visionary experience. Colours, lights, inner forms, dreams, and altered states of perception were interpreted as signs of the soul’s progress, although responsible guidance remained necessary because imagination could also produce illusion and self-deception. During the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, Kubrawi networks extended across Khurasan, Transoxiana, Kashmir, and western Persian lands. Within this milieu, Khwāja Isḥāq Khuttalānī (d. 1423) became an important master whose circle later divided over questions of succession and spiritual legitimacy. One of his disciples, Sayyid Muḥammad Nūrbakhsh (1392–1464), claimed exceptional religious authority and gave his name to the Nūrbakhshiyya. Another disciple, Sayyid ʿAbd Allāh Barzishābādī (d. c. 1467), became central to the lineage later identified as the Dhahabiyya. The separation was neither a simple administrative disagreement nor a purely personal quarrel. It concerned the nature of spiritual leadership, the limits of charismatic claims, and the relationship between Sufi authority and devotion to the Imams. Later Dhahabi genealogies portrayed Barzishābādī as the bearer of a sounder and more restrained transmission. Precise reconstruction remains difficult because later initiatic narratives were shaped by doctrinal controversy, institutional rivalry, and the desire to demonstrate an unbroken succession. Such genealogies should therefore be read as statements of religious identity as well as records of master-disciple relationships. The name Dhahabiyya derives from the Arabic word dhahab, meaning gold. Members of the order associated it with the purity of their spiritual succession, commonly described as the “golden chain.” Several explanations circulated. Some writers maintained that the chain was golden because every legitimate link had been purified from doubtful claims. Others understood the name as a reference to the exceptional value of knowledge transmitted through trustworthy masters. A further interpretation connected the order’s identity with the specifically Shi‘i idea of a sacred chain descending through Prophet Muḥammad, Imam ʿAlī, and the later Imams. These explanations belong partly to sacred historiography rather than verifiable institutional history, but they clarify the image that the community wished to cultivate. Gold symbolized incorruptibility, tested authenticity, and a form of authority whose worth did not depend upon political office. The expression also evokes the famous “Hadith of the Golden Chain,” associated with Imam al-Riḍā (765–818), the eighth Imam, during his journey through Nishapur in 816. According to the widely transmitted account, Imam al-Riḍā recited a statement concerning the profession of divine unity through a chain of authorities extending through his forefathers to Prophet Muḥammad and ultimately to God. Dhahabi writers did not simply identify their institutional genealogy with this hadith, yet the shared symbolism was religiously powerful. Both placed valid knowledge within a chain of trustworthy transmission rooted in the household of Prophet Muḥammad. The rise of the Safavid dynasty transformed the conditions under which such lineages operated. Shah Ismāʿīl I (1487–1524) conquered Tabriz in 1501 and proclaimed Twelver Shi‘ism as the official religion of his realm. The Safavids had themselves emerged from a militant Sufi order centred at Ardabil, but once they became rulers they gradually reduced the independent power of confraternities and promoted a more regulated clerical establishment. Scholars were invited from Arabic-speaking centres such as Jabal ʿĀmil, Bahrain, Najaf, and al-Ḥilla to develop courts, schools, legal institutions, and systems of religious taxation based upon Twelver jurisprudence. During the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, autonomous Sufi masters could appear politically dangerous because they commanded personal loyalty, maintained transregional networks, and sometimes used titles suggesting universal spiritual authority. The state’s own Sufi origins did not produce permanent tolerance toward other orders. Competition, surveillance, patronage, and repression existed side by side. The Dhahabiyya survived through limited public visibility, careful presentation of its Shi‘i orthodoxy, and strong connections with urban religious culture. It became particularly associated with Fars and Shiraz, although its chains also retained links with Khurasan and the sacred geography of Mashhad, Najaf, and Karbala. Shiraz offered a favourable environment for such a tradition. The city possessed an ancient literary prestige, a dense culture of shrines, respected families of learning, and a strong memory of Persian Sufi poetry. Its religious life could accommodate philosophers, jurists, poets, devotional scholars, dervishes, and custodians of sacred sites, although relations among these groups were frequently difficult. Dhahabi teaching developed within this urban world rather than outside society. Masters advised disciples who might be merchants, landowners, craftsmen, scholars, officials, or members of notable families. Initiation did not necessarily require abandonment of ordinary occupations. Moral conduct, lawful income, prayer, fasting, charity, and loyalty to the Imams formed the framework within which specialised spiritual exercises could be practised. This characteristic distinguished the order from romantic images of wandering dervishes rejecting every social obligation. Dhahabi discipline generally emphasised guided inward work under a recognised master, supported by conformity to the religious law. The decline of Safavid power created both danger and opportunity. Isfahan fell to Afghan forces in 1722, bringing political fragmentation, famine, warfare, and the collapse of long-established systems of patronage. Nāder Shah (1688–1747) restored territorial power during the 1730s but attempted to reduce some of the institutional privileges associated with Safavid Shi‘ism. After his assassination in 1747, regional struggles continued until Karīm Khān Zand (c. 1705–1779) established his authority and made Shiraz his capital. Within this unstable setting, Qutb al-Dīn Muḥammad Nayrīzī (d. 1760) became one of the most important Dhahabi masters. Associated with southern Iran and remembered as a learned spiritual guide, he helped consolidate the order’s presence around Shiraz. His historical importance lies in the integration of initiatic practice with explicitly Shi‘i theology. Under his influence, the master’s authority was explained through the doctrine of walāya, a term that can mean sacred friendship with God, spiritual guardianship, and divinely granted authority. Within Twelver teaching, walāya belongs supremely to Prophet Muḥammad and the Imams. A Sufi guide could participate in its reflected light through fidelity, spiritual inheritance, and service, yet could never possess it independently. This distinction shaped the Dhahabiyya’s doctrine of the spiritual pole, or quṭb. Many Sufi traditions describe the quṭb as the hidden centre around whom the spiritual order of the world is maintained. Such language posed an obvious problem for Twelver believers, because the Hidden Imam already occupies the supreme position of divine guidance during the period of Occultation. Dhahabi authors resolved the issue by identifying the true pole of the age with Imam al-Mahdī. A living master functioned beneath him as a guide for a limited circle of disciples. His legitimacy depended upon succession, knowledge, moral discipline, and spiritual recognition. This arrangement preserved a place for personal direction without establishing a rival to the Imam. It also differentiated the order from movements whose leaders claimed messianic rank, prophetic inspiration, or unrestricted authority. Daily practice centred upon dhikr, the repeated remembrance of God through sacred formulas, Qurʾanic phrases, divine names, and invocations. Such repetition was understood as a method for overcoming distraction and making awareness of God more constant. The disciple also practised murāqaba, vigilant contemplation of the heart, and tawajjuh, concentrated spiritual attention directed under the guidance of the master. These methods were never meant to produce spectacle for its own sake. Visions, dreams, lights, and inner perceptions could occur, but their value depended upon their ethical and religious consequences. An experience leading to pride, contempt for religious duties, or exaggerated personal claims was treated as dangerous. A genuine state should deepen humility, justice, patience, remembrance, and attachment to the household of Prophet Muḥammad. The master’s principal role was therefore diagnostic. He evaluated spiritual experiences, prescribed exercises, corrected self-deception, and prevented disciples from confusing emotional intensity with knowledge. Dhahabi teaching also employed the distinction between the outward and inward dimensions of revelation. The outward dimension included legal obligations, ritual forms, historical narratives, and the literal sense of scripture. The inward dimension concerned the deeper realities disclosed through spiritual purification and the guidance of the Imams. This method of interpretation, often called taʾwīl, did not necessarily reject the literal meaning. It sought the originating spiritual reality toward which a verse, image, or sacred account pointed. Stories of light, creation, prophecy, resurrection, and divine encounter were read at several levels. The Qurʾan remained the revealed word of God, while the Imams possessed authoritative knowledge of its deepest meanings. Sufi insight was valid only when placed within this hierarchy. The order’s metaphysical language shared features with the broader Persian philosophical tradition. The thought of Shihāb al-Dīn al-Suhrawardī (1154–1191), whose illuminationist philosophy described reality through degrees of light, provided concepts that could be integrated into Shi‘i spirituality. Mullā Ṣadrā (c. 1571–1640), who spent important periods of his life in Shiraz and Qom, developed a philosophy of being, the soul, resurrection, and spiritual transformation that deeply influenced later Iranian religious thought. Dhahabi authors could draw upon such philosophical vocabularies while grounding them in Qurʾanic revelation and sayings attributed to the Imams. Human beings were understood as capable of transformation through knowledge and disciplined action. The heart was treated as an organ of spiritual perception, while the soul’s journey involved gradual liberation from domination by appetite, vanity, anger, and social ambition. Knowledge of God demanded a corresponding change in character. Intellectual discussion without ethical purification remained incomplete, while uncontrolled spiritual enthusiasm lacked a reliable criterion. Under the Qajar dynasty, established by Āqā Muḥammad Khān Qājār (1742–1797) during the late eighteenth century, Sufi orders expanded visibly across many parts of the country. The Niʿmatullāhiyya became especially prominent after masters returned from India and attracted followers in major cities. Its public presence, charismatic leadership, and occasional conflicts with clerics made it the best-known Iranian Sufi order of the period. The Dhahabiyya followed a quieter course. It remained more concentrated around Shiraz and maintained a comparatively restricted initiatic culture. Its masters often presented themselves as guardians of a specifically Shi‘i spiritual inheritance rather than representatives of a universal confraternal movement detached from confessional boundaries. This did not eliminate opposition. Some jurists considered every organised Sufi lineage suspect, arguing that obedience to a master, special rituals, lodges, garments, titles, and secret instructions had no sufficient basis in the religious law. Dhahabi defenders replied that authentic spiritual training served the law, deepened devotion to the Imams, and preserved forms of ethical discipline already present within Islamic tradition. Relations with clerical authority therefore varied according to place, period, and personality. Simple opposition between jurists and Sufis fails to explain the historical reality. Some clerics rejected the order categorically; others accepted limited forms of spiritual training; several Sufi masters possessed substantial learning in jurisprudence, hadith, philosophy, or Qurʾanic commentary. Families could also combine clerical and initiatic affiliations across generations. Conflict usually became acute when a master attracted a large following, appeared to claim immunity from legal criticism, or challenged established control over religious donations and public prestige. Dhahabi caution developed partly from this environment. Restricted initiation, strong emphasis on lineage, and careful doctrinal language protected the community from charges of antinomianism, meaning rejection of religious law. Pilgrimage remained central to its religious imagination. Mashhad, where Imam al-Riḍā is buried, connected Persian sacred geography with the history of the Imams. Najaf, the burial place of Imam ʿAlī, and Karbala, where Imam al-Ḥusayn (626–680) was killed in 680, stood beyond the political borders of Persia but remained essential centres of learning, mourning, pilgrimage, and spiritual authority. Journeying to these shrines created contact among scholars, merchants, pilgrims, ascetics, and Sufi initiates from different regions. The tomb was understood as more than a memorial to an absent figure. For believers, the Imam remained spiritually present and capable of receiving greetings, interceding before God, and transforming the pilgrim’s inner condition. Dhahabi devotion developed within this culture of sacred presence. Love for the Imams was expressed through visitation, poetry, recitation, mourning, charity, and disciplined imitation of their virtues. The community’s survival from late medieval Kubrawi networks through Safavid consolidation and Qajar religious pluralism demonstrates the flexibility of Persian Sufi institutions. Its members retained an initiatic hierarchy while acknowledging the unique status of the Hidden Imam. They used philosophical concepts without reducing revelation to abstract individual speculation and they cultivated inward interpretation while maintaining ritual obligations and sacred law. Their “golden chain” functioned as a claim that authentic guidance required continuity, testing, and responsibility. Such a claim could never be established by genealogy alone; each master was expected to embody knowledge, self-control, service, and loyalty to the Imams. The Dhahabiyya therefore represents an important form of Iranian religious history in which Sufi practice, Twelver devotion, philosophy, shrine culture, and urban society remained closely connected. Its relative obscurity beside the Niʿmatullāhiyya should not be mistaken for insignificance. Through its teachings on walāya, spiritual succession, and the authority of the Hidden Imam, it preserved one of the most coherent attempts to explain how an organised Sufi path could exist within the theological world of Twelver Shi‘ism.

 

( Roberto Minichini )

sabato 18 luglio 2026

The Making of Modern Iranian Culture - Roberto Minichini


Between 1940 and 1960, a society shaken by occupation, political conflict, rapid urban growth, and expanding education began to redefine its intellectual and artistic life. New institutions, media, and audiences altered how literature, music, painting, cinema, and public debate reached people across cities and provincial centres. These developments did not begin from an empty landscape. Since the Constitutional Revolution of 1905–1911, newspapers, political societies, secular schools, translations, and new literary forms had already challenged older patterns of authority. During the reign of Reza Shah Pahlavi (1878–1944), from 1925 to 1941, state centralisation accelerated the creation of ministries, schools, museums, universities, roads, and bureaucratic professions. It also imposed censorship, restricted political organisation, weakened independent associations, and attempted to regulate clothing, education, language, and public behaviour. Cultural change therefore entered the 1940s with a double inheritance: a stronger national infrastructure and a public sphere whose independence had been severely limited. A decisive rupture came with the Anglo-Soviet invasion of August 1941. British and Soviet forces occupied the country because of its strategic position and its importance as a supply route to the Soviet Union during the Second World War. Reza Shah abdicated on 16 September 1941, and his son Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi (1919–1980) inherited a throne whose authority was initially far weaker than that of his father. Foreign armies, inflation, food shortages, political rivalry, and regional unrest marked the decade, yet the reduction of censorship created an unusually active intellectual environment. Newspapers and political publications multiplied. The Tudeh Party, founded in 1941, organised writers, teachers, students, workers, and members of the urban middle classes around socialist ideas, anti-fascism, labour rights, and opposition to foreign domination. Nationalists, constitutionalists, religious activists, monarchists, and liberal professionals developed their own circles and publications. Tehran became the main centre of these disputes, although Tabriz, Isfahan, Shiraz, Mashhad, Rasht, and other cities also sustained important local activity. The written word acquired a political urgency rarely seen during the previous decade. Articles on education, poverty, women, language, landownership, oil, imperialism, and national identity circulated among readers who increasingly regarded literature and journalism as instruments of public intervention. Such openness remained unstable. The Soviet presence in northern provinces, the autonomous government established in Azerbaijan in 1945, and the Kurdish Republic of Mahabad in 1946 exposed conflicts between centralisation, regional identities, linguistic rights, and foreign power. Both regional governments disappeared after Soviet withdrawal and the return of central forces in late 1946. That same year, the First Congress of Iranian Writers brought together poets, novelists, translators, and critics in Tehran. Its debates revealed a generation trying to determine whether literary value should be judged through social commitment, formal innovation, national tradition, or individual vision. Classical Persian poetry still possessed immense prestige, and the works of Ferdowsi, Saadi, Hafez, Rumi, and other canonical authors remained central to education and cultivated conversation. Yet reverence for inherited forms no longer prevented experimentation. Intellectuals were reading Russian realism, French fiction, European philosophy, Marxist theory, and Anglo-American literature in translation. Translation became one of the principal engines of change because it introduced new genres, narrative techniques, political concepts, and models of criticism. Magazines such as “Sokhan,” founded in 1943 by Parviz Natel-Khanlari (1914–1991), created a serious forum for philology, literary history, contemporary writing, and translations. They helped form a readership able to move between classical scholarship and recent international debates. Prose fiction became an especially effective means of examining a society undergoing rapid change. Sadeq Hedayat (1903–1951), whose “The Blind Owl” had first appeared in Bombay in 1937 and circulated more freely at home after 1941, transformed the possibilities of Persian narrative through psychological disturbance, irony, folklore, historical memory, and the experience of alienation. In “Haji Aqa,” published in 1945, he attacked hypocrisy, opportunism, and the alliance between wealth, piety, and political calculation. Bozorg Alavi (1904–1997) connected fiction with imprisonment, clandestine politics, and the emotional consequences of repression; his novel “Her Eyes,” published in 1952, placed artistic memory, political commitment, and personal secrecy within a tightly controlled narrative. Sadeq Chubak (1916–1998), in “The Puppet Show” of 1945, introduced a severe social realism attentive to poverty, cruelty, sexuality, and people excluded from respectable representation. Simin Daneshvar (1921–2012) published “Quenched Fire” in 1948, establishing a female literary voice within a field still largely governed by male institutions. Jalal Al-e Ahmad (1923–1969), beginning with “The Exchange of Visits” in 1945, observed family authority, religious custom, provincial life, political disillusionment, and the frustrations of educated city dwellers. These writers differed greatly in style and ideology, yet their work shared an interest in individuals caught within changing social structures. The merchant, civil servant, schoolteacher, provincial migrant, impoverished labourer, dissatisfied wife, political prisoner, and isolated intellectual entered fiction with unprecedented force. Poetry experienced an equally deep transformation. Nima Yushij (1897–1960) had begun challenging conventional metre and rhyme during the 1920s, but his influence became much wider in the 1940s and 1950s. His poetry reorganised the line around movement, cadence, perception, and dramatic situation. Rural landscapes, northern villages, night, winter, birds, forests, and distant voices became part of a language capable of expressing political anxiety and private uncertainty. Younger poets developed his innovations in sharply individual directions. Mehdi Akhavan-Sales (1929–1990) combined Nimaic structure with archaic Persian vocabulary and historical memory. His collection “Winter,” published in 1956, gave poetic form to the desolation that followed the political defeat of 1953. Ahmad Shamlou (1925–2000) moved towards freer rhythms, colloquial force, political imagery, and a style shaped by both Persian traditions and international poetry; “Fresh Air,” published in 1957, became an important statement of this new sensibility. Forugh Farrokhzad (1934–1967) entered literary life with “The Captive” in 1955, followed by “The Wall” in 1956 and “Rebellion” in 1958. Her early poems placed female experience, marriage, erotic feeling, loneliness, and revolt within a public literary language that many readers found disturbing. Her importance cannot be reduced to scandal. She changed who could speak in Persian poetry and what kinds of private experience could claim artistic seriousness. Women’s participation in public life had broader historical foundations. Reza Shah’s compulsory unveiling policy, imposed in 1936, had forced many women to abandon the veil in public and had also caused others, especially in religious and traditional families, to withdraw from streets, schools, and institutions. After his abdication in 1941, compulsory enforcement weakened, and forms of dress became more varied. Female education continued to expand, although access remained strongly affected by class, region, and family attitudes. Women appeared with greater visibility as teachers, university students, writers, journalists, singers, and performers. Their public presence did not produce immediate legal equality, and women would not receive national voting rights until 1963. Nevertheless, the 1940s and 1950s altered the social position of educated urban women. Daneshvar’s fiction, Farrokhzad’s poetry, women’s magazines, female radio performers, and actresses in commercial cinema showed that national life could no longer be represented solely through male voices. These changes provoked admiration, curiosity, moral criticism, and anxiety because they touched marriage, domestic authority, sexuality, employment, and relations between generations. Universities provided a durable institutional setting for such developments. The University of Tehran, founded in 1934, became the leading centre for law, medicine, literature, science, archaeology, and political discussion. Its College of Fine Arts opened in 1940 under the direction of André Godard (1881–1965), a French architect and archaeologist whose work in the country had already connected historical preservation with contemporary architectural training. Students encountered European academic methods, recent painting, sculpture, architecture, and the visual inheritance of Persian miniature, calligraphy, tilework, manuscript illumination, and popular religious art. This encounter did not produce a single national style. It created disputes over imitation, authenticity, technique, and the social function of art. Jalil Ziapour (1920–1999), associated with the magazine “Khorus-e Jangi,” founded in 1949, defended experimentation influenced by Cubism while drawing attention to tribal motifs and local decorative traditions. The Apadana Gallery, also opened in 1949, offered painters and critics a space outside official exhibition structures. By the time the first Tehran Biennial was held in 1958, painting had become part of a wider argument about national identity. Artists were asking how a contemporary visual language could emerge from a society possessing a powerful historical heritage and undergoing accelerated urban transformation. Music reached a far larger audience through broadcasting. Radio Tehran began regular transmissions on 24 April 1940. News, speeches, religious programmes, poetry recitation, European orchestral music, and Persian classical performance entered homes, cafés, government offices, and public spaces. The radio changed the status of musicians because performers who had once depended on courts, aristocratic households, private gatherings, or limited concerts could now acquire national recognition. Ruhollah Khaleqi (1906–1965) played a major role in arranging and institutionalising Persian music for orchestral and radio performance. In 1944, he composed “Ey Iran,” with words by Hossein Gol-e-Golab (1895–1985); the song, associated with resistance to foreign occupation and national dignity, became one of the most enduring patriotic works of the period. The singer Gholam-Hossein Banan (1911–1986) brought a refined vocal style to radio audiences, while instrumentalists and composers developed new arrangements around the modal system of Persian classical music. In 1956, Davud Pirnia (1900–1971) established the radio series “Golha.” These programmes combined carefully selected classical poems, literary commentary, vocal performance, and instrumental music. “Golha” gave radio entertainment a high literary standard and made verses by Hafez, Saadi, Rumi, and more recent poets part of daily listening. Broadcasting thus joined old poetic authority to contemporary technology and helped create a shared national repertoire. Popular entertainment expanded alongside elite artistic institutions. Domestic film production, largely interrupted between 1937 and 1948, revived as studios, cinemas, dubbing companies, technicians, and commercial distributors developed in Tehran. Esmail Koushan (1917–1981) helped establish a studio-based industry through Mitra Film and later Pars Film. Producers relied on melodrama, comedy, crime stories, historical adventure, music, and dance because these forms attracted broad urban audiences. Critics eventually used the label “Filmfarsi” for productions they considered formulaic, technically weak, and dependent on Egyptian, Indian, Turkish, or American models. Commercial cinema still possesses considerable historical importance. It displayed new clothing, automobiles, restaurants, nightclubs, neighbourhoods, courtship, crime, family conflict, and social mobility to viewers confronting unfamiliar patterns of urban life. Samuel Khachikian (1923–2001) introduced a more controlled use of suspense, lighting, crime narrative, and visual atmosphere during the 1950s, showing that popular genres could support technical ambition. Television began commercial broadcasting in Tehran in 1958, adding imported programmes, advertising, variety shows, and domestic productions to an already changing media environment. The political crisis surrounding oil placed every field of intellectual activity under pressure. Parliament nationalised the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company in March 1951, and Mohammad Mossadegh (1882–1967) became prime minister the following month. His government became the focus of hopes for constitutional government, economic independence, and resistance to British power. It also faced royal opposition, foreign pressure, economic sanctions, internal division, and conflict with several political and religious groups. On 19 August 1953, a coup supported by British and American intelligence removed Mossadegh and strengthened the authority of Mohammad Reza Shah. The consequences for public life were profound. Political parties were suppressed, leftist networks were broken, publications were closed, and numerous activists, writers, and students were imprisoned or forced into exile. The establishment of the security organisation SAVAK in 1957 gave surveillance and censorship a more permanent institutional form. Artistic production continued, yet language became more indirect. Historical analogy, winter landscapes, ruined gardens, imprisonment, silence, failed journeys, and private estrangement often carried meanings that could not be stated openly. Political defeat altered literary tone without eliminating debate. Religious scholarship and religious association also formed part of this changing environment. Ayatollah Hossein Borujerdi (1875–1961), who became the leading Twelver Shi‘i authority in Qom during the mid-1940s, strengthened the seminary’s finances, educational organisation, publishing activity, and national network. Mosques, mourning ceremonies, charitable associations, sermons, and religious publications continued to shape everyday life far beyond the circles reached by galleries or literary magazines. Urban religious families responded to state secularisation, communist organisation, foreign influence, and new social customs in different ways. Some defended established forms of authority, while others supported education, scientific learning, constitutional legality, and limited reform. This sphere should not be treated as separate from the intellectual history of the period. Debates over justice, foreign domination, moral conduct, education, and national independence moved between secular and religious settings, sometimes producing alliances and at other times open conflict. By 1960, a recognisable national system of publishing, broadcasting, higher education, visual art, commercial entertainment, and literary criticism had emerged. Its reach remained unequal. Tehran possessed resources unavailable to many provincial towns, and villages with low literacy rates could participate more easily through radio than through books, galleries, or universities. Persian functioned as the principal language of education and national publication, while Azerbaijani, Kurdish, Arabic, Armenian, Assyrian, and other linguistic communities faced different degrees of restriction and opportunity. Court patronage still mattered, classical learning remained prestigious, religious institutions retained deep social authority, and family networks continued to determine many individual possibilities. At the same time, writers, artists, students, performers, translators, and readers had created institutions and expectations that could no longer be contained within older elite circles. The celebrated achievements of later decades grew from this difficult twenty-year period, when occupation, censorship, political hope, repression, technological change, and artistic experiment reshaped the country’s understanding of itself.

 

( Roberto Minichini )

venerdì 17 luglio 2026

Berlin, Paris, and Tehran: Iranian Writers in the European World, 1900–1960 By Roberto Minichini


During the first decades of the twentieth century, literary change in Persia was inseparable from travel, political displacement, translation, and the expansion of print culture. The Constitutional Revolution of 1905–1911 had enlarged the public role of journalism and prose, while censorship, foreign intervention, and educational reform pushed many intellectuals beyond the country’s borders. From that movement emerged a transnational field in which books and periodicals could be conceived in one city, printed in another, and read thousands of kilometres away. A clarification of terminology is necessary. Persian speakers had called their country Iran for centuries, and Iranian was already a normal form of national self-description, although Western governments, publishers, newspapers, and travellers generally used Persia until Reza Shah requested that Iran be adopted in international communications from 20 March 1935. In this article, Iran is therefore used as the country’s historical self-designation and as the normal modern scholarly term, while Persia is retained when referring to habitual Western and diplomatic usage before 1935; Persian continues to designate the language, literature, and cultural tradition. The title “Iranian Writers” is consequently accurate for the entire period, including the years before the international change of usage. Berlin first acquired exceptional importance during the First World War, when Iranian nationalists living in Germany sought support against the extensive political influence exercised in Persia by Russia and Great Britain. Sayyed Hasan Taqizadeh, born in Tabriz in 1878, directed the Iranian Nationalist Committee of Berlin and edited the Persian-language journal “Kāveh”, published from 24 January 1916 until 30 March 1922. Its history must be described precisely, since its later cultural reputation can obscure its political origins. During the war, “Kāveh” received German government funding and openly supported Germany, which many Iranian constitutionalists regarded as a possible counterweight to the two powers occupying or dominating parts of their country. Its issues attacked Russian and British intervention, reported the activities of Iranian nationalists, and joined national independence to a revival of historical consciousness. After the conflict, the journal’s New Series, issued from 1920, concentrated increasingly on literature, history, science, education, linguistic reform, and the adoption of selected European institutions. The Berlin circle around Taqizadeh included Mohammad Qazvini, Mohammad-Ali Jamalzadeh, Hosayn Kazemzadeh Iranshahr, Ebrahim Pur-Davud, and several other scholars, journalists, and political activists. Their weekly and monthly meetings created a disciplined intellectual environment in which knowledge of classical Persian literature could be joined to European historical research, comparative philology, translation, and the modern periodical press. Berlin was therefore more than a refuge for political opponents of foreign domination. It became an external workshop for the reorganisation of Persian intellectual culture, although its members disagreed deeply about nationalism, secularisation, religion, socialism, and the degree to which European civilisation should be adopted. Mohammad-Ali Jamalzadeh, born in Isfahan around 1892, gave this environment its most consequential literary expression. Having left his homeland as a boy, he received part of his education in Beirut, Lausanne, and Dijon before becoming involved in Iranian nationalist activity during the war and joining the editorial work of “Kāveh”. His long residence abroad sharpened his awareness of linguistic divisions within Iranian society, where educated officials, clerics, returning students, merchants, and ordinary people often employed radically different registers of speech. In 1921 he published “Once Upon a Time”, whose six stories had been written between 1915 and 1920. The collection opened with “Persian Is Sweet”, set largely in a prison where a provincial man encounters a cleric speaking an elaborate Arabicised idiom and a Western-educated traveller filling his sentences with French expressions. The ordinary prisoner understands neither of them, and the comic encounter becomes an exact representation of cultural hierarchy, imported prestige, and the exclusion of the wider population from public language. Jamalzadeh’s prose drew on colloquial expressions, proverbs, social caricature, and the formal discipline of the modern short story. His purpose included literary innovation, social criticism, and the creation of a written language capable of reaching readers outside restricted scholarly circles. “Once Upon a Time” helped establish the foundations of modern Persian fiction, yet its importance did not arise from a mechanical transfer of European models. Jamalzadeh had absorbed foreign narrative techniques while preserving Persian idiom and constructing his stories around Iranian bureaucracy, provincial life, religious speech, class distinction, political violence, and encounters between travellers and their own society. Mohammad Qazvini, born in Tehran in 1877, supplied another element of this transformation. During his long periods in London, Berlin, and Paris, he worked with manuscripts and major European scholars, developing rigorous methods of textual comparison and historical verification that influenced Jamalzadeh and other members of the Berlin group. His scholarship demonstrated how European philology could be incorporated into the study of classical Persian civilisation without dissolving the authority of Persian and Arabic learning. After “Kāveh” ended, the journal “Iranshahr”, published in Berlin from June 1922 to February 1927, continued the discussion of education, women’s position, language, ancient history, philosophy, nationalism, and institutional reform; it circulated throughout Europe, Persia, Afghanistan, India, Egypt, and other regions, revealing how a Persian-language periodical produced abroad could participate directly in debates within the country. France exercised a different kind of attraction. Its universities, schools, publishers, museums, libraries, Orientalist institutions, and literary prestige had influenced Iranian elites since the nineteenth century, while French remained a major language of diplomacy and higher education. Sadeq Hedayat, born in Tehran in 1903, encountered French culture first at the Saint Louis School in the capital and then through a state scholarship that took him to Europe in 1925. He initially studied civil engineering in Ghent, moved to France, spent approximately a year and a half in Paris during 1928–1929, attended courses in Reims, and lived for a further period in Besançon. In April 1929 he received permission to pursue French literature within a teacher-training programme, although he completed no degree and returned home in the summer of 1930. These years contributed to his knowledge of contemporary fiction, psychoanalytic ideas, theatre, cinema, vegetarian thought, and modern treatments of death, memory, isolation, and unstable consciousness. Several early works were drafted during this period, including stories later collected in “Buried Alive”, published in Tehran in 1930. Hedayat’s foreign reading included French authors and figures such as Edgar Allan Poe and Franz Kafka, yet his mature writing remained closely connected to Iranian domestic life, popular beliefs, colloquial speech, government employment, provincial settings, religious customs, folklore, and pre-Islamic history. His prose became influential because it placed these materials within forms capable of representing mental disturbance and social cruelty with a severity rarely encountered in earlier fiction. In 1936 he travelled to Bombay, where he studied Middle Persian with the Parsi scholar Bahramgor Tahmuras Anklesaria and privately produced fifty handwritten, stencilled copies of “The Blind Owl” for circulation among friends outside Persia. The work had probably been drafted during his earlier European residence, although its first physical publication occurred in India, and Hedayat returned to his country in 1937. Its fragmented chronology, recurring images, doubled characters, violence, decay, and uncertain division between recollection and hallucination placed Persian prose within international modernism. The book’s language and imaginative substance remained connected to Iranian settings, visual traditions, social relations, and literary memory. During the 1940s Hedayat became a central figure among younger authors in Tehran, contributing through fiction, satire, translations, studies of folklore, and work on Middle Persian texts. He returned to Paris near the end of 1950 and died there by suicide on 9 April 1951. The French capital thus occupied two distinct periods in his life: the formative residence of a young scholarship student and the final residence of a writer whose relationship with his own society had become increasingly difficult. Bozorg Alavi, born in Tehran on 2 February 1904, embodied the German connection across a longer political period. His father, Sayyed Abu’l-Hasan Alavi, had supported constitutionalist activity and joined the Iranian Nationalist Committee in Germany. Bozorg arrived there with his family in 1923, studied education and psychology, developed a strong interest in German Romanticism and contemporary European literature, and graduated from the University of Munich in 1928. His contacts with Taqizadeh, Qazvini, Jamalzadeh, and Taqi Arani encouraged him to reconnect European intellectual experience with classical Persian literature and the political conditions of Iran. After returning home, he taught German and translated Friedrich Schiller, George Bernard Shaw, Stefan Zweig, and Theodor Nöldeke. He also entered the Tehran circle formed by Hedayat, Mojtaba Minovi, and Masud Farzad. His collection “The Suitcase”, published in Tehran in 1935, used changing narrators, psychological ambiguity, frustrated personal relations, and urban settings, showing how techniques acquired through German-language reading could be absorbed into Persian fiction. Alavi’s association with Taqi Arani and the intellectual group later known as the Fifty-Three led to his arrest in 1937. He remained imprisoned until Reza Shah’s abdication in September 1941, after which he published works dealing with incarceration, political organisation, interrogation, and the mechanisms of the authoritarian state. His novel “Her Eyes”, issued in Tehran in 1952, constructed its story around a portrait painted by Makan, an artist involved in underground opposition during the final years of Reza Shah’s reign. Through the testimony of Farangis, an aristocratic woman connected to the painter, the novel examined political commitment, personal attachment, secrecy, betrayal, social privilege, and the moral costs imposed by clandestine activity. Its framed narration and gradual disclosure gave political fiction a psychological and investigative structure. When the government of Prime Minister Mohammad Mossadegh was overthrown on 19 August 1953, Alavi was teaching at Humboldt University in East Berlin. He remained in the German Democratic Republic, while his writings were prohibited in Iran from 1953 until 1979. During the remainder of the decade he wrote in German about Iranian politics and society, assisted the translation and study of Persian literature, published “The Land of Roses and Nightingales” in Berlin in 1957, and saw “Her Eyes” appear in German translation in 1959. By 1960, East Berlin had become a centre from which an exiled Iranian author could teach his language, interpret his country for foreign readers, and continue participating in Persian literary culture from outside its political borders. The importance of these foreign centres should not diminish the decisive position of the capital inside the country. Tehran supplied the ministries, schools, prisons, banks, cafés, newspapers, publishing houses, private homes, and new social classes that filled modern Persian fiction. Works shaped or printed abroad acquired their full historical effect when they reached local readers and entered conflicts over language, religion, political authority, foreign influence, sexuality, class, and national identity. Reza Shah’s abdication in 1941 temporarily weakened censorship and allowed journals, political organisations, translation projects, and literary associations to multiply. In 1946 the First Iranian Writers Congress met in Tehran under the auspices of the Iran-Soviet Cultural Association, with Malek al-Sho‘ara Bahar presiding and Alavi playing an important organisational role. Its participants debated classical inheritance, modern poetry, realism, political commitment, and the social responsibilities of literature, revealing a field that had become institutionally visible and ideologically divided. The coup of 1953 closed much of this relative openness, strengthened censorship, forced some intellectuals abroad, and made foreign publication increasingly important for politically suspect authors. By 1960, the movement linking Berlin, Paris, and Tehran had established a permanent pattern in Iranian cultural history. Germany had provided political organisation, periodical publishing, translation, scholarship, socialist debate, and eventually a place of exile; France had supplied educational prestige, literary models, philological institutions, and a powerful image of cosmopolitan authorship; Tehran had provided the language, public, institutions, conflicts, and human material from which the literature itself was made. The modernity of Persian prose developed through this circulation, as techniques encountered abroad were recast within works concerned with the specific history of Iran. Distance gave certain authors a clearer view of social divisions and political violence, while publication and reception inside the country transformed private experiments into a lasting literary tradition.

 

( Roberto Minichini, July 2026 )

Sahl ibn Bishr e la nascita dell’astrologia oraria medievale - Roberto Minichini


Tra la fine dell’VIII secolo e i primi decenni del IX, il sapere astrale praticato nei territori dell’impero abbaside acquisì una struttura tecnica più ordinata e adatta alla consultazione professionale. Nelle città poste fra la Mesopotamia, la Persia e la Siria, materiali greci, persiani e indiani vennero tradotti, confrontati e inseriti in manuali destinati agli studiosi, ai funzionari di corte e ai consiglieri dei governanti. Il consultante non chiedeva una descrizione generica del proprio carattere, ma presentava un problema concreto riguardante un viaggio, un matrimonio, un incarico, una malattia, un bene scomparso, un prigioniero, una guerra o il ritorno di una persona assente. In questo ambiente operò Sahl ibn Bishr, autore di lingua araba attivo nella prima metà del IX secolo, le cui date di nascita e morte non sono conosciute con certezza. Le fonti lo indicano spesso con l’appellativo al-Isrāʾīlī, che segnala la sua origine ebraica; la notizia di una sua eventuale conversione all’Islam rimane discussa. Visse in una società nella quale studiosi musulmani, ebrei, cristiani siriaci, persiani e rappresentanti di tradizioni culturali differenti partecipavano alla formazione delle scienze abbasidi. Fu legato agli ambienti politici di Ṭāhir ibn al-Ḥusayn, il comandante che contribuì alla vittoria del califfo al-Maʾmūn durante la guerra civile contro al-Amīn, conclusa nel 813, e di al-Ḥasan ibn Sahl, uno dei maggiori funzionari dell’amministrazione califfale. La sua attività si colloca dunque vicino ai centri decisionali di un impero nel quale il giudizio sul cielo poteva influire sulla scelta del momento adatto per una campagna militare, sulla valutazione della fedeltà di un governatore, sul destino di un prigioniero o sulla convenienza di iniziare un negoziato. La figura dell’interprete dei pianeti non apparteneva ancora al mondo marginale dell’occultismo moderno. Poteva essere un matematico, un compilatore di tavole, un conoscitore dei moti celesti e un consulente chiamato a formulare risposte davanti a decisioni dalle conseguenze politiche, economiche o personali molto gravi. Sahl ibn Bishr non inventò la tecnica delle interrogazioni. Alcuni suoi elementi erano già presenti nell’opera di Doroteo di Sidone, autore del I secolo, mentre nell’VIII secolo Māshāʾallāh aveva composto trattati dedicati a domande particolari, elezioni e giudizi mondani. Il contributo di Sahl consistette soprattutto nell’ordinare un insieme di regole provenienti da tradizioni precedenti e nel trasformarle in un procedimento relativamente coerente. Nei testi arabi queste consultazioni venivano chiamate masāʾil, cioè domande o questioni. La figura celeste veniva eretta per il momento nel quale l’interrogazione era ricevuta e compresa seriamente dall’interprete. Il principio fondamentale era che una situazione giunta a un determinato grado di maturazione potesse manifestare la propria struttura nel cielo del momento. Non si prendeva quindi un pianeta isolato, né ci si limitava al segno zodiacale del consultante. Occorreva stabilire l’Ascendente, individuare la casa competente, assegnare i pianeti che rappresentavano le persone e le cose coinvolte, osservare la Luna e ricostruire la sequenza degli aspetti. La prima casa e il suo signore indicavano generalmente chi poneva il quesito. La seconda riguardava denaro, beni mobili e risorse. La terza descriveva fratelli, messaggi e spostamenti brevi. La quarta era collegata alle abitazioni, alle terre, alle origini e alla conclusione degli affari. La quinta comprendeva figli, gravidanze e piaceri. La sesta riguardava malattie, servitori e animali da lavoro. La settima rappresentava il coniuge, il socio, il compratore, il venditore, il rivale o il nemico dichiarato. La decima indicava il sovrano, il superiore, l’incarico e la reputazione pubblica. Le altre case permettevano di giudicare eredità, viaggi lontani, amicizie, speranze, prigionia e avversari nascosti. Le case potevano inoltre essere derivate. Per conoscere il denaro del coniuge si osservava l’ottava, seconda casa a partire dalla settima; per studiare i figli di un fratello si partiva dalla terza e si contavano cinque settori da essa. Questa costruzione non era un gioco numerico. Serviva a definire con esattezza chi fosse rappresentato da ciascun pianeta e quale rapporto esistesse fra i soggetti della vicenda. Il centro del metodo era costituito dal movimento reale dei significatori. Un pianeta non veniva trattato soltanto come espressione di un temperamento o di una qualità morale. Rappresentava una persona, un oggetto, una funzione o una circostanza e doveva mostrare se possedeva la forza necessaria per agire. In una domanda matrimoniale, il signore della prima casa indicava il consultante e quello della settima l’altra persona. Se i due pianeti si avvicinavano a un aspetto, la relazione poteva procedere verso un incontro, un accordo o una formalizzazione. Se l’aspetto si era già perfezionato e i pianeti si stavano separando, il fatto principale poteva appartenere al passato. L’assenza di un contatto diretto non bastava però per dichiarare impossibile l’evento. Un pianeta più veloce poteva separarsi dal primo significatore e applicarsi al secondo, trasferendo la luce fra i due. Nella realtà questo pianeta poteva rappresentare un parente, un messaggero, un intermediario, un funzionario oppure una circostanza capace di mettere in comunicazione persone che non si sarebbero raggiunte autonomamente. La raccolta della luce si verificava invece quando due significatori applicavano a un terzo pianeta, generalmente più lento e in una condizione adatta a riceverli. Un’autorità, un giudice, un responsabile amministrativo o un mediatore potevano così raccogliere le intenzioni di entrambe le parti e produrre una soluzione. Queste configurazioni divennero elementi fondamentali della tradizione successiva. Accanto a esse venivano giudicate la proibizione, la frustrazione, la restituzione della luce e le diverse forme di impedimento. In una domanda su un incarico, il signore dell’Ascendente rappresenta il candidato e quello della decima la carica richiesta. Se i due si applicano, l’assegnazione può avvicinarsi. Se un altro pianeta raggiunge prima il signore della decima, qualcuno può ottenere il posto, bloccare la procedura oppure introdurre una condizione che impedisce il risultato. Se uno dei significatori diventa retrogrado prima del perfezionamento, il candidato può ritirarsi, il superiore può cambiare decisione o l’intero affare può tornare alla condizione precedente. La stessa logica vale per un viaggio. Il pianeta del viaggiatore deve mostrare la possibilità di allontanarsi, raggiungere la meta e, quando la domanda lo richiede, ritornare. Un significatore posto nell’ultimo grado di un segno indica spesso una situazione prossima a cambiare radicalmente. Sahl paragona questa condizione a quella di un uomo che ha già posto il piede fuori dalla porta. Egli si trova ancora formalmente nell’abitazione, ma la partenza è ormai imminente. In una consultazione concreta ciò può descrivere un funzionario vicino alla destituzione, un viaggiatore che sta per partire, una persona prossima a uscire da una relazione oppure un affare giunto alla fine della propria forma attuale. Particolare importanza aveva la distinzione fra inclinazione, capacità e risultato. Due pianeti possono mostrare favore reciproco attraverso la ricezione e tuttavia non formare alcun aspetto. In tal caso le persone possono stimarsi, cercarsi, avere bisogno l’una dell’altra o riconoscersi un valore, senza riuscire a produrre un incontro concreto. Un uomo può pensare favorevolmente a una donna e non compiere alcuna azione. Un sovrano può apprezzare un candidato senza concedergli l’incarico. Un compratore può desiderare un bene senza possedere il denaro necessario per acquistarlo. Può verificarsi anche la situazione opposta. Due significatori entrano in contatto, ma le ricezioni sono ostili. Il contratto viene firmato, l’incontro avviene o il matrimonio viene celebrato, mentre una delle parti agisce per convenienza, necessità, pressione familiare o aperta riluttanza. Per comprendere quale esito fosse realmente possibile, Sahl considerava la dignità essenziale dei pianeti, la loro posizione nelle case, la velocità, il moto diretto o retrogrado, la vicinanza al Sole, la ricezione e la qualità dell’aspetto. Un pianeta angolare dispone generalmente di una maggiore forza operativa. Un pianeta cadente può descrivere una persona debole, lontana dai luoghi decisionali, priva di mezzi o incapace di intervenire in tempo. Un significatore combusto può rappresentare qualcuno dominato da un’autorità superiore, nascosto, intimorito oppure impossibilitato a vedere chiaramente ciò che sta accadendo. La Luna mostrava lo svolgimento generale dell’affare. L’aspetto dal quale si separava poteva indicare il fatto appena accaduto; quello verso cui applicava mostrava la fase successiva. Una Luna priva di applicazioni significative prima di lasciare il segno poteva segnalare che, nelle condizioni presenti, la questione non avrebbe prodotto sviluppi sostanziali. Nessuna di queste testimonianze veniva però interpretata meccanicamente. Il giudizio dipendeva dalla combinazione dei fattori e dalla capacità dell’interprete di distinguere le indicazioni principali da quelle secondarie. I problemi affrontati nei trattati di Sahl mostrano quanto questa disciplina fosse immersa nella vita quotidiana del IX secolo. Si domandava se una persona assente fosse viva, se un prigioniero sarebbe stato liberato, se un matrimonio sarebbe stato concluso, se un servo fosse fuggito, se una merce sarebbe arrivata, se un sovrano avrebbe conservato il potere, se una gravidanza sarebbe giunta al termine o se un bene rubato sarebbe stato recuperato. Dietro la classificazione tecnica emerge una società caratterizzata da viaggi lunghi e pericolosi, comunicazioni incerte, lotte dinastiche, dipendenza dai funzionari, schiavitù, commercio a distanza, mortalità elevata e frequenti cambiamenti di fortuna. L’interprete doveva tradurre una domanda spesso confusa in una questione giudicabile. “Mi pensa?” non era sufficiente, perché poteva nascondere problemi diversi. La persona prenderà contatto? Vuole sposarsi? Mantiene un rapporto segreto? Prova favore ma non possiede la capacità di agire? Cerca soltanto un vantaggio? Ogni formulazione richiedeva case, significatori e criteri differenti. Il valore del metodo dipendeva quindi anche dall’esattezza della domanda. Ripetere continuamente la stessa interrogazione nella speranza di ottenere una risposta più gradita avrebbe distrutto il rapporto fra il momento e la situazione reale. L’interprete professionale doveva riconoscere quando un quesito era maturo, quando nasceva da una paura momentanea e quando il consultante stava cercando di costringere il cielo a confermare una conclusione già scelta. Le opere di Sahl passarono dal mondo arabo alla penisola iberica e furono tradotte in latino nel XII secolo. Il suo nome divenne Zael, Zahel o Zahel Benbriz. Il trattato sulle interrogazioni circolò con il titolo latino “De interrogationibus”, mentre altri scritti furono dedicati alle elezioni, ai tempi favorevoli e alle regole generali del giudizio. La diffusione manoscritta e le successive edizioni a stampa ne fecero una delle autorità conosciute dagli astrologi europei del Medioevo e del Rinascimento. Attraverso questa trasmissione, concetti come applicazione, separazione, ricezione, trasferimento della luce, raccolta, proibizione e frustrazione entrarono stabilmente nella pratica latina. Gli autori posteriori ampliarono le classificazioni e adattarono le tecniche alle proprie società, ma conservarono l’impostazione fondamentale: una questione precisa, presentata in un momento determinato, viene rappresentata da una figura nella quale persone, oggetti e sviluppi assumono una posizione riconoscibile. La nascita dell’astrologia oraria medievale non coincide dunque con l’invenzione improvvisa di una disciplina da parte di un solo autore. Fu il risultato di una lunga trasmissione che passò dal mondo ellenistico alla Persia sasanide, dagli studiosi di lingua araba all’Occidente latino. Sahl ibn Bishr occupa però un posto decisivo in questo processo, perché diede forma ordinata a tecniche precedenti, le applicò a problemi reali e contribuì a trasformarle in un metodo professionale destinato a durare per secoli. Le sue opere conservano una concezione severa del giudizio: il compito dell’astrologo non consiste nel rassicurare il consultante, attribuire significati edificanti a ogni sconfitta o promettere che ogni sentimento produrrà un risultato. Occorre stabilire chi possiede la forza di agire, quale evento si sta formando, che cosa può impedirlo e se la promessa mostrata dai significatori arriverà realmente al compimento. È questa concretezza, più della distanza storica e del linguaggio tecnico, a rendere ancora oggi importante lo studio di Sahl ibn Bishr.

 

Astrologo Roberto Minichini, luglio 2026

giovedì 16 luglio 2026

Mystical Iran Between the Qajar and Pahlavi Eras, 1900–1930 - Roberto Minichini


Across cities, villages, shrines, and mountain roads, religious life in the early twentieth century unfolded through practices that joined prayer, poetry, music, pilgrimage, hospitality, and personal allegiance to revered masters. Lodges and private houses received disciples who gathered for recitation, ethical instruction, communal meals, and the remembrance of God. This remembrance, known in Arabic as dhikr and in Persian as zekr, commonly involved the repetition of divine names, Qurʾanic passages, or devotional formulas under the direction of a spiritual guide. Within Iran, such practices belonged to a long Sufi inheritance that had developed inside a predominantly Twelver Shiʿi society. Twelver Shiʿism recognizes a succession of twelve Imams from the family of Prophet Muḥammad. The twelfth, Imam al Mahdī, is believed to have entered occultation in 874 and to remain alive by the will of God until his future return. The authority of the Imams, known as walāya, carried legal, religious, and inward dimensions. Sufi teachers frequently presented their own chains of initiation as extensions of this sacred guardianship, particularly through Imam ʿAlī, whom many lineages regarded as the original transmitter of the interior knowledge received from Prophet Muḥammad. Sufism in Iran did not constitute a single organization governed by a common leadership. It survived through distinct orders, local branches, hereditary families, itinerant dervishes, urban associations, and circles formed around individual teachers. A disciple usually entered the path through an act of initiation and accepted the guidance of a master whose authority had been transmitted through an established spiritual lineage. The master directed prayer, ethical discipline, remembrance, meditation, service, and the interpretation of religious experience. A khānaqāh served as a lodge where members could meet, study, worship, eat, and receive travellers. Some communities possessed substantial buildings and property, while others gathered in private homes or around the tomb of a deceased teacher. These institutions existed alongside the Shiʿi seminaries, where scholars known collectively as the ulema studied Qurʾanic interpretation, theology, jurisprudence, Arabic grammar, logic, and the traditions attributed to Prophet Muḥammad and the Imams. Religious scholars acquired authority through education, teaching, legal competence, and recognition from other scholars. Sufi masters relied upon initiation, discipleship, spiritual reputation, and the continuity of their lineages. Many figures were trained in both worlds. Others regarded the claims of rival authorities with deep suspicion. The Niʿmatullāhī tradition held a particularly important place during these decades. Founded in the late medieval period and established again in Iran during the eighteenth century, it had divided into several branches, each possessing its own succession of masters. One influential current developed around Ḥājj Mīrzā Ḥasan Iṣfahānī, known as Ṣafī ʿAlī Shāh (1835–1899). He settled in Tehran and attracted princes, officials, poets, merchants, and educated members of the capital’s society. His teaching combined Shiʿi devotion, Sufi initiation, Qurʾanic interpretation, moral instruction, and Persian poetry. After his death, leadership passed to ʿAlī Khān Qājār Ẓahīr al Dawla (1864–1924), a member of the royal family who had become his disciple. Ẓahīr al Dawla gave the community a broader public form through the Anjoman e Okhovvat, the Society of Brotherhood, established at the close of the nineteenth century and active throughout the constitutional period. The Society of Brotherhood became one of the most unusual cultural and religious associations of its time. Meetings included Sufi instruction, music, poetry, charitable activity, and commemorations connected with Imam ʿAlī. Musicians who later became major figures in Persian musical history performed in its gatherings, where artistic cultivation carried an ethical and devotional meaning. Members were expected to practice mutual assistance, humility, generosity, and personal discipline. The society attracted people from different social ranks and created a setting where court culture, reformist ideas, religious fellowship, and literary life could meet. Its activities acquired political significance during the Constitutional Revolution, which began in 1905 and led to the creation of the first national parliament in 1906. Many members sympathized with demands for law, representative government, and limits upon royal power. When Mohammad ʿAlī Shāh (1872–1925) ordered the bombardment of the parliament in June 1908, troops also attacked Ẓahīr al Dawla’s residence and the headquarters of the brotherhood. Books, manuscripts, musical instruments, works of art, and personal possessions were destroyed or dispersed. After constitutional forces regained Tehran in July 1909, the association resumed its gatherings and assisted families affected by the conflict. Its history shows how a Sufi circle could participate in cultural reform and public life while preserving the language of spiritual companionship. A different Niʿmatullāhī branch grew around the village of Baydukht near Gonabad in Khorasan. Its most important master at the beginning of the century was Sulṭān ʿAlī Shāh Gonābādī (1835–1909), a scholar and spiritual teacher whose influence extended far beyond his rural centre. He had studied jurisprudence, philosophy, theology, and the intellectual traditions associated with Muḥyī al Dīn Ibn ʿArabī (1165–1240) and Ṣadr al Dīn Shīrāzī, commonly known as Mullā Ṣadrā (1571–1640). His major Qurʾanic commentary, “Bayān al Saʿāda fī Maqāmāt al ʿIbāda,” interpreted revelation through Shiʿi teachings on the Imams and the Sufi understanding of spiritual development. He presented religious life as a disciplined movement toward knowledge of God, guided by obedience to Islamic law, devotion to the family of Prophet Muḥammad, purification of character, and companionship with an authorized master. Baydukht became a destination for disciples seeking initiation, counsel, instruction, and participation in communal rites. Travelling to the master formed part of the spiritual discipline. The journey removed the disciple from ordinary habits and placed personal concerns within a sacred relationship. Sulṭān ʿAlī Shāh’s authority also generated determined opposition. Critics among local religious figures rejected the legitimacy of Sufi initiation and feared the influence exercised by a master over a large body of followers. He was killed in 1909 under circumstances connected with these hostilities. His son Nūr ʿAlī Shāh II (1867–1918) succeeded him and maintained the community during years marked by political disorder and war. Leadership later passed to Ṣāliḥ ʿAlī Shāh (1881–1966), who preserved the Gonabadi lineage through the transition to the new monarchy. Its survival depended upon family continuity, learned writings, personal networks, pilgrimage to Baydukht, and the loyalty of disciples living across the country. Other communities followed less centralized forms of religious life. The Khāksārs preserved customs associated with wandering dervishes, sacred poverty, initiation, and the older traditions of spiritual chivalry. Their name evoked humility before God, since khāk means dust or earth. Khāksār dervishes could be recognized by particular garments, staffs, axes, begging bowls, rosaries, and ritual objects. Some travelled from town to town, visited shrines, received alms, and offered prayers or blessings. Admission into their circles involved ceremonial stages, new spiritual names, instruction in symbols, and obedience to senior members. Their public appearance made them familiar figures in marketplaces, pilgrimage centres, and religious festivals. Respect for their poverty and reputed holiness existed beside criticism of begging, unconventional behaviour, and practices viewed as incompatible with the standards defended by some scholars. The Khāksār world remained internally diverse, and the conduct of one group could not represent every branch carrying the name. The Dhahabiyya maintained an important presence, especially in Shiraz and other southern centres. Its masters cultivated a learned form of Shiʿi Sufism and preserved traditions of Qurʾanic interpretation, prayer, spiritual genealogy, and devotion to the Imams. Kurdish regions in western Iran contained Sunni Qādirī and Naqshbandī communities connected with religious networks extending into Ottoman Iraq. The Qādiriyya traced its spiritual inheritance to ʿAbd al Qādir al Jīlānī (1077–1166), while the Naqshbandiyya emphasized disciplined remembrance, companionship with a guide, and a strong chain of transmission. Kurdish sheikhs frequently acted as teachers, mediators, landholders, and leaders of extended families. Their lodges provided food, education, arbitration, and support during periods of insecurity. Local influence rested upon religious prestige, family alliances, economic resources, and a reputation for sanctity accumulated over generations. Pilgrimage connected Sufi practice with the broader sacred geography of Shiʿi Iran. The shrine of Imam ʿAlī al Riḍā in Mashhad attracted visitors from every province. Imam ʿAlī al Riḍā, the eighth Imam, died in 818 and was buried near the earlier grave of the Abbasid caliph Hārūn al Rashīd. The settlement that grew around his tomb became one of the principal centres of pilgrimage and religious learning in the Islamic world. Travellers also visited Qom, the burial place of Fāṭima al Maʿṣūma, the sister of Imam ʿAlī al Riḍā, as well as countless local shrines associated with descendants of the Imams, revered scholars, and Sufi masters. Visits to such places involved prayer, vows, charity, healing, mourning, and the renewal of family bonds. Markets, guest houses, schools, kitchens, and charitable foundations developed around the larger sanctuaries. Spiritual journeys therefore shaped economic and social life along with personal devotion. Poetry gave these communities a common language. Verses by Jalāl al Dīn Rūmī (1207–1273), Farīd al Dīn ʿAṭṭār (circa 1145–1221), and Ḥāfiẓ of Shiraz (circa 1315–1390) were recited in gatherings and used to express longing for God, the discipline of love, the dangers of pride, and the uncertainty of outward appearances. Their works were familiar far beyond formal Sufi orders. Educated households, musicians, storytellers, clerics, and ordinary believers drew upon the same poetic inheritance. A line of verse could accompany private prayer, public music, moral advice, or conversation. During the constitutional period, older mystical images also entered political writing. Tyranny could be described as captivity to the lower self, while justice could appear as the restoration of spiritual order. Such language allowed inherited religious ideas to enter new discussions concerning parliament, law, education, and national independence. The First World War placed these communities under severe pressure. Although the country declared neutrality in 1914, Russian, Ottoman, and British forces operated across its territory. Warfare, requisitions, disease, hunger, and disrupted travel weakened many institutions. Lodges and shrines continued to distribute food, receive travellers, and support local populations where resources permitted. The Russian Revolution of 1917, the withdrawal of imperial troops, British ambitions, tribal conflicts, and provincial uprisings created further instability. Sufi networks could offer continuity because their authority remained attached to families, sacred places, and relationships of discipleship. They also depended upon safe roads, agricultural income, donations, and the protection of local patrons, all of which suffered during prolonged disorder. Reza Shah (1878–1944) emerged from the Persian Cossack Brigade after the coup of February 1921. He became prime minister in 1923, ended the old dynasty in 1925, and was crowned the following year. His government built a larger army, strengthened the bureaucracy, expanded secular education, reorganized the courts, and imposed greater control over provinces, tribes, associations, and public religious activity. Sufi orders encountered these policies according to their social position and public visibility. Educated urban circles could adapt by emphasizing ethics, literature, and private gatherings. Hereditary lineages relied upon family organization and provincial support. Itinerant dervishes, whose clothing and public conduct stood outside the preferred image of a disciplined national society, faced increasing restrictions. The same state also reduced the institutional independence of the ulema, altered legal education, and transferred important functions from religious courts to government institutions. By 1930, the religious world inherited from the nineteenth century had undergone profound change. Several major masters had died, constitutional hopes had passed through revolution and repression, foreign armies had crossed the country, and a powerful monarchy had extended its reach into regions once governed through local negotiation. Sufi life nonetheless remained active in Tehran, Baydukht, Shiraz, Khorasan, Kurdistan, and many smaller centres. Its endurance rested upon prayer, initiation, poetry, pilgrimage, charity, family memory, and devotion to sacred teachers. The lodge, the shrine, the master’s house, and the gathering of disciples preserved forms of spiritual community that political transformation could regulate without fully extinguishing. Through them, an ancient language of inward knowledge entered the modern century and continued to shape the religious imagination of the country.

 ( Roberto Minichini )

mercoledì 15 luglio 2026

The Buyids and the Shi‘i Transformation of Baghdad - Roberto Minichini


During the middle decades of the tenth century, Baghdad remained the ceremonial centre of the Abbasid Caliphate, although the political order created by the early Abbasids had already disintegrated. Provincial dynasties controlled much of the Islamic world, military commanders competed for the revenues of Iraq, and the caliphs had become increasingly dependent upon armed factions capable of dominating the capital. The arrival of the Buyids in 945 emerged from this prolonged crisis. Their conquest introduced a new ruling house into Baghdad and gave Shi‘i communities an unprecedented public presence within a city whose caliphate continued to represent Sunni legitimacy. The resulting order lasted for more than a century. It reshaped political authority, religious ceremony and urban conflict while preserving institutions inherited from the Abbasid past. The three founders of the Buyid dynasty, ʿAlī, Ḥasan and Aḥmad ibn Būya, came from Daylam, the mountainous region south of the Caspian Sea whose soldiers had become an important force in the politics of tenth-century Iran. Beginning as military adventurers, the brothers established themselves across Fars, Jibal and Iraq. ʿAlī received the title ʿImād al-Dawla, Ḥasan became Rukn al-Dawla, and Aḥmad, after entering Baghdad in December 945, was recognised as Muʿizz al-Dawla. The Abbasid caliph al-Mustakfī formally granted these titles, even as his own effective power disappeared. Within weeks he was deposed, blinded and replaced by al-Muṭīʿ, whose long caliphate from 946 to 974 continued under Buyid supervision. The arrangement revealed the political intelligence of the conquerors. Muʿizz al-Dawla possessed sufficient military power to abolish the Abbasid Caliphate, yet he preserved it. The caliph still provided titles, robes of honour and a language of universal sovereignty understood across much of the Muslim world. Abbasid legitimacy also remained valuable among the Sunni majority of Baghdad and among many provincial rulers. The Buyid amirs therefore governed beside the caliph, controlled the army and the treasury, appointed officials and determined the succession, while allowing the Abbasid institution to survive as a restricted source of ceremonial authority. Baghdad consequently became the seat of a Sunni caliph ruled by a Shi‘i military dynasty. The religious identity of the Buyids requires careful description. The Daylamite environment from which they emerged had been influenced by Zaydi missionaries, while later Buyid rulers supported institutions and scholars associated with Twelver Shi‘ism. Their policies were shaped by dynastic calculation, regional alliances and personal patronage as well as by confessional attachment. They never proclaimed a Twelver imamate under their own authority, and they continued to govern a population containing Sunnis, Shi‘is, Christians, Jews and several competing theological and legal communities. Their historical importance lies in the protection and public recognition that Shi‘i traditions acquired under their rule. Practices previously confined largely to particular families, circles of scholars and urban districts entered the official ceremonial life of the capital. The decisive moment came in 963, when Muʿizz al-Dawla ordered the public commemoration of ʿĀshūrāʾ and the celebration of Ghadīr Khumm in Baghdad. On the tenth day of Muḥarram, shops were closed and commercial life was interrupted. Public lamentation recalled the death of Imam al-Ḥusayn ibn ʿAlī at Karbala in 680. Processions, mourning garments and recitations carried the memory of the tragedy into streets and marketplaces. Eighteen days later, the festival of Ghadīr Khumm commemorated the declaration concerning Imam ʿAlī made by Prophet Muhammad during his return from the final pilgrimage. Buildings were decorated, fires were lit, and celebrations continued into the night. These observances established a specifically Shi‘i sequence within the civic calendar of the Abbasid capital. The political importance of these ceremonies extended beyond devotional practice. Public ritual defined possession of urban space. It displayed the protection of the ruling power and gave collective form to memories concerning the family of Prophet Muhammad. Karbala became visible within Baghdad through mourning, while Ghadīr Khumm affirmed the authority of Imam ʿAlī through celebration. The streets became sites where historical interpretation, communal loyalty and political power met. A procession revealed which groups could assemble, which events could be commemorated publicly and which account of the Islamic past possessed official recognition. Baghdad had long contained substantial Shi‘i communities, especially in the western district of al-Karkh. Under the Buyids, al-Karkh developed into one of the principal centres of Twelver religious life. Its markets, mosques, scholars and processions gave the district a distinct identity. Other quarters contained strong Sunni populations, including groups associated with the Hanbali tradition. Confessional affiliation became intertwined with neighbourhood solidarity, professional organisation, family networks and competition over local authority. Riots could begin with a sermon, an inscription, a procession or an accusation of disrespect toward a revered figure. They could then expand into attacks upon markets, houses and places of worship. The Buyid period therefore brought repeated communal violence. Sunni groups organised ceremonies answering Shi‘i commemorations, while preachers and agitators used contested memories of early Islamic history to mobilise crowds. The companions of Prophet Muhammad, the Umayyads, Imam ʿAlī, Imam al-Ḥusayn and the Battle of Karbala became subjects of public controversy with immediate consequences for urban order. Al-Karkh was attacked and burned on several occasions. Government officials sometimes defended Shi‘i processions, sometimes prohibited them, and sometimes attempted to suppress all public demonstrations when the threat of disorder became too serious. Buyid policy varied according to the ruler, the political situation and the balance of forces within the city. The religious transformation of Baghdad also occurred through scholarship. The tenth and early eleventh centuries witnessed the consolidation of Twelver theology, law and historical memory. Al-Shaykh al-Mufīd, who died in 1022, became one of the leading theologians of his age. His works on the Imamate, divine justice, jurisprudence and the lives of the Imams helped define Twelver doctrine during a period of intense debate with Sunni theologians, Muʿtazilites and other Shi‘i currents. His position in Baghdad reflected the growing confidence of the Twelver scholarly community, although his career also included periods of exile caused by political and communal disturbances. Two brothers from a distinguished family, al-Sharīf al-Raḍī and al-Sharīf al-Murtaḍā, occupied similarly important positions. Al-Sharīf al-Raḍī, who died in 1015, is traditionally credited with compiling “Nahj al-Balāgha,” the influential collection of sermons, letters and sayings attributed to Imam ʿAlī. Al-Sharīf al-Murtaḍā, who died in 1044, became a major authority in theology, law and Arabic literature. Their intellectual careers demonstrate how aristocratic lineage, scholarly learning and Buyid patronage could combine in the formation of a powerful Shi‘i elite. Baghdad became one of the principal centres in which Twelver scholars developed systematic answers to questions created by the occultation of Imam al-Mahdī, especially the authority of jurists and theologians during his absence. Buyid patronage also strengthened the sacred geography surrounding Baghdad. The tombs associated with the Imams acquired architectural and political prominence. Imam ʿAlī’s shrine at Najaf and Imam al-Ḥusayn’s shrine at Karbala received particular attention. Under ʿAḍud al-Dawla, who ruled Iraq from 978 until his death in 983, extensive construction and restoration were undertaken at several sacred sites. Pilgrimage routes connected the capital to Najaf, Karbala, Kufa and the other centres of Shi‘i memory. These shrines linked local devotion to the history of the Imams and gradually encouraged the growth of religious economies based upon visitors, donations, resident scholars and custodial families. At the same time, Buyid Baghdad remained a major centre of Sunni scholarship. The Abbasid caliphs continued to uphold Sunni claims, and Sunni jurists, traditionists and preachers retained extensive social influence. The Buyids employed officials from different religious backgrounds and rarely attempted to impose a complete confessional uniformity upon their territories. Their courts supported Arabic and Persian literature, medicine, philosophy, astronomy and administration. The Christian philosopher Yaḥyā ibn ʿAdī, the historian Miskawayh and numerous physicians, secretaries and translators worked within the broader intellectual environment sustained by Buyid rule. The city’s Shi‘i transformation developed inside a plural and frequently unstable society. Political fragmentation within the dynasty repeatedly weakened its control. Different branches of the Buyid family ruled Fars, Rayy and Iraq, and rival amirs fought over territory and succession. Turkish and Daylamite soldiers competed within the army, while financial crises reduced the government’s ability to maintain order. The reign of ʿAḍud al-Dawla briefly restored central authority and produced major public works, including hospitals, canals and the reconstruction of damaged institutions. After his death, internal conflict returned. By the middle of the eleventh century, the Iraqi Buyids had become vulnerable to the expanding Seljuk Turks. In December 1055, the Seljuk ruler Ṭughril Beg entered Baghdad at the invitation of the Abbasid caliph al-Qāʾim. The final Buyid amir, al-Malik al-Raḥīm, was arrested, and Buyid rule in Iraq came to an end. The Seljuks presented themselves as protectors of the Sunni caliphate and altered the political balance of the city. Their victory did not erase the institutions created or strengthened during the previous century. Twelver scholarship continued, pilgrimage centres expanded, and the memory of public mourning remained embedded within Shi‘i communal life. Al-Shaykh al-Ṭūsī, a student of al-Mufīd and al-Murtaḍā, eventually left Baghdad after disturbances in 1058 and settled in Najaf, where his presence contributed to the emergence of the city as a permanent centre of Twelver learning. The Buyid century changed Baghdad by making Shi‘i memory publicly visible and institutionally durable. The city still housed the Abbasid caliph, and its population remained religiously diverse. Its streets, neighbourhoods and ceremonial calendar now expressed rival interpretations of Islamic history with greater intensity. ʿĀshūrāʾ and Ghadīr Khumm gave collective form to attachment to the Imams. Scholars established enduring traditions of theology and law. Shrines connected the capital to a wider landscape of pilgrimage and sacred memory. Urban conflict revealed the dangers created when political patronage, neighbourhood identity and religious commemoration converged. This transformation shaped the later history of Twelver Shi‘ism far beyond the lifetime of the dynasty. The Buyids created no unified Shi‘i empire and offered no permanent solution to the question of political authority during the occultation. Their rule provided the conditions within which Twelver scholars, rituals and institutions could develop openly at the heart of the Abbasid world. Baghdad became a city where the legacy of the Imams entered public ceremony, scholarly organisation and the contested geography of everyday life. The order established in 945 disappeared in 1055, while many of its religious consequences endured for centuries.

 ( Roberto Minichini )