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| | abbas_i_of_safavid |
 | | Alphabetical index Abbas I of Safavid Shah Abbas I ( 1557 - 1629) was an influential Shah of Persia of the Safavid Dynasty. |  | | Missing image Shah_Abbas_I.jpg Picture Of Shah Abbas I of Safavid In the midst of general anarchy in Persia, he was proclaimed ruler of Khorasan in 1581, and... |  | | Sources The Persian Encyclopedia 's entries on andquot;Abbas I of Safavidandquot; and andquot;Mohammad of Safavidandquot; Iran Chamber See also The Three Brothers, or Travels of Sir Anthony... |
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http://abbas_i_of_safavid.networklive.org
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| | "A" Famous People |
 | | Abbas I (1571-1629) The fifth Safavid shah of Persia. |  | | Artaxerxes I (5th-c BC) King of Persia (464-425 BC), the second son of Xerxes I. Artaxerxes II (d.358 BC) King of Persia (404 BC-358 BC), the son and successor of Darius II. |  | | Ardashir I (c.211-41) King of Persia (224-41)... |
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http://www.jonathanselby.com/Afam.html
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| | shah_abbas_i |
 | | Shah Abbas I Shah Abbas I was the first of the Safavid Shahs to establish Persia as a homogeneous state, enforcing, often brutally, adherence to Shi'ism, and imposing Farsi as a unifying language... |  | | Shah Abbas I 1571-1629 Shah Abbas was king of the Safavid dynasty in Persia from 1588 until 1629. |  | | Shah Abbas I and a saki  Illuminated miniature by Muhammad Qasim |
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http://shah_abbas_i.networklive.org
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| | Sam Sloan's Family Tree - pafg116 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File |
 | | Shahzada Abbas MIRZA Shah Abbas The Great, Shahanshah of Persia [Parents] was born on 27 Jan 1571 in Herat. |  | | Shahzada Abbas MIRZA Shah Abbas II, Shahanshah of Persia was born on 20 Dec 1633. |  | | Shahzada Abbas MIRZA Shah Abbas II, Shahanshah of Persia [Parents] was born on 20 Dec 1633. |
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http://www.samsloan.com/pafg116.htm
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| | Sam Sloan's Family Tree - pafg116 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File |
 | | Shahzada Abbas MIRZA Shah Abbas II, Shahanshah of Persia was born on 20 Dec 1633. |  | | Shahzada Abbas MIRZA Shah Abbas II, Shahanshah of Persia [Parents] was born on 20 Dec 1633. |  | | Shahzada Safi MIRZA Shah Sulaiman I, Shahnshah of Persia was born in 1647. |
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http://www.samsloan.com/pafg116.htm
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| | Abbas Mirza |
 | | (August 26, 1789 de Abbas Mirza (en persa) - de octubre el 25, 1833), era príncipe de corona de Persia, conocido debido a sus guerras con Rusia y el imperio del otomano, y su muerte antes de su padre, el shah. |  | | Prefiriendo la amistad de Francia, Abbas Mirza continuó la guerra contra Rusia, pero se obligó a su nuevo aliado podría darle ayuda muy pequeña, y en octubre de 1813, Persia que hiciera las paces desventajoso, cediendo algún territorio en el Cáucaso (Georgia, Dagestan, y la mayoría actuales de la república de Azerbaijan). |  | | La enciclopedia persa, los artículos sobre Abbas Mirza, guerras de las guerrasde Persia-Rusia, del Persia-Otomano, tratado de Golestan, y tratado de Torkaman-Chay. |
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http://www.yotor.net/wiki/es/ab/Abbas%20Mirza.htm
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| | Untitled Normal Page |
 | | In Persia death of Shah Abbas; accession of grandson Safi. |  | | In Persia death of Shah Safi, accession of Shah Abbas II. |  | | In Persia death of Shah Safi, accession of Shah Hussain. |
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http://www.geocities.com/khaliddream2001/h12.html
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| | Bandar Abbas: Information From Answers.com |
 | | The city received its name after Abbas I (the Great, shah of Persia from 1588 to 1629) took it in 1615. |  | | Bandar Abbas or Bandar-e 'Abbas (بندر عباس) is a port city on the southern coast of Iran, on the Persian Gulf. |  | | Bandar Abbas began to lose importance in the late 1800s, especially after the opening of the Trans-Iranian RR terminal at the head of the Persian Gulf. |
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http://www.answers.com/main/ntquery;jsessionid=1runik9wvdyaj?method=4&dsid=2222&dekey=Bandar+Abbas&gwp=8&curtab=2222_1&sbid=lc03a
(398 words)
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| | Search Results for "Abbas" |
 | | Abbas I, (Abbas the Great), 1557-1629, shah of Persia (1587-1628), of the Safavid dynasty. |  | | Abbas II, (Abbas Hilmi), 1874-1944, last khedive of Egypt (1892-1914); son and successor of Tewfik Pasha. |  | | Shah Abbas II took an active role in government matters. |
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http://bartleby.com/cgi-bin/texis/webinator/sitesearch?FILTER=&query=Abbas
(398 words)
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| | Search Results for "Abbas" |
 | | Abbas I, (Abbas the Great), 1557-1629, shah of Persia (1587-1628), of the Safavid dynasty. |  | | Abbas II, (Abbas Hilmi), 1874-1944, last khedive of Egypt (1892-1914); son and successor of Tewfik Pasha. |  | | Shah Abbas II took an active role in government matters. |
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http://www.bartleby.com/cgi-bin/texis/webinator/sitesearch?FILTER=&query=Abbas
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| | Iran - Columbia Encyclopedia® article about Iran |
 | | sect of Islam as the state religion; it reached its height during the reign (1587–1629) of Shah Abbas I Abbas I (Abbas the Great) (äbäs`, ăbäs`, ăb`əs), 1557–1629, shah of Persia (1587–1628), of the Safavid dynasty. |  | | Amir Abbas Hoveida Hoveida, Amir Abbas (ämēr` äb-bäs` hōvā`dä), 1919–79, Iranian political leader, prime minister of Iran (1965–77). |  | | Shah Abbas also established trade relations with Great Britain and reorganized the army. |
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http://columbia.thefreedictionary.com/Iran
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| | Search Results for "Abbas" |
 | | Abbas I, (Abbas the Great), 1557-1629, shah of Persia (1587-1628), of the Safavid dynasty. |  | | Abbas II, (Abbas Hilmi), 1874-1944, last khedive of Egypt (1892-1914); son and successor of Tewfik Pasha. |  | | ...Hoveida, Amir Abbas, (amer´ ab-bas´ hova´da) (KEY), 1919-79, Iranian political leader, prime minister of Iran (1965-77). |
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http://bartleby.com/cgi-bin/texis/webinator/sitesearch?FILTER=&query=Abbas
(269 words)
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| | Search Encyclopedia.com |
 | | Abbas I Abbas I (Abbas the Great), 1557-1629, shah of Persia (1587-1628), of the Safavid dynasty. |  | | Abbas II Abbas II (Abbas Hilmi), 1874-1944, last khedive of Egypt (1892-1914); son and successor of Tewfik Pasha. |  | | Hoveida, Amir Abbas Hoveida, Amir Abbasämēr´ äb-bäs´ hōvā´dä, 1919-79, Iranian political leader, prime minister of Iran (1965-77). |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/searchpool.asp?target=Abbas+I
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| | Bagration 9 |
 | | Anuka, +1697; 1m: Isfahan 1660 Abbas Shah II of Persia (*Isfahan 17.1.1633, +Husravabad 26.10.1666); 2m: 1668 (div 1695) Shah-Verdi-khan of Luristan |  | | Tinatin (Lela); 1m: 1607 (div 1614) Abbas Shah I of Persia (*Herat 27.1.1571, +Ashraf 21.1.1629); 2m: 1623 Paiqar-Khan, governor of Kacheti |  | | Fakhr-i-Jahan-begum; m.VI/VII.1597 Abbas Shah I of Persia (*Herat 27.1.1571, +Ashraf 21.1.1629) |
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http://genealogy.euweb.cz/georgia/bagrat9.html
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| | Hormozgan - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | The name of Bandar Abbas comes directly from the name of Shah Abbas I. The British, meanwhile were competing for influence in the region with Dutch colonialists who finally invaded Qeshm island and dispatched warships to Bandar Abbas during the final years of Shah Abbas' reign. |  | | Marco Polo visited the port of Bandar Abbas in 1272 and 1293, and reported widespread trading in Persian jewelry, the ivory and silk of IndoChina, and pearls from Bahrain in the Bazaars in the port of Hormuz. |  | | Although Hormozgan is known to have had settlements during the Achaemenid era and when Nearchus passed through this region, recorded history of the main port of Hormozgan( "Bandar-e-Hormoz") begins with Ardashir I of Persia of the Sassanid empire. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hormozgan
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| | Persia |
 | | Abbas III (1732-1736) Shah of Persia 1732-36, the son of Tahmasp II. |  | | Abbas II (1632-1667) Shah of Persia 1642-67, the son of Safi I and the great-grandson of Abbas I. He received various embassies from Europe and recaptured Kandahar 1648, which had been lost by his predecessor to the Mogul emperors. |  | | Natural son of Artaxerxes I of Persia; murdered his half-brother Xerxes II; after reign of few months, was killed by another brother, Darius II. |
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http://website.lineone.net/~johnbidmead/persia.htm
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| | 17th Century (1600-1699) C.E. |
 | | In Persia death of Shah Abbas; accession of grandson Safi. |  | | In Persia death of Shah Safi, accession of Shah Abbas II. |  | | In Persia death of Shah Safi, accession of Shah Hussain. |
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http://www.usc.edu/dept/MSA/history/chronology/century17.html
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| | The Human Venture: The Globe Encompassed, A World History to 1500, Vol II Chapter 27 -- Instructor's Manual |
 | | Outline the changes in Safavid Persia between Shah Ismail's seizure of power and Shah Abbas I, the greatest of the Safavids. |  | | Concepts: The teacher should focus the students' attention on the following: Islam as a transregional culture, divisions and invasions of Islam after 1000, the Ottoman conquests, structure of Ottoman government, the Shiite heresy in Persia, achievements of Shah Abbas, phases of Akbar's development, Islamic society, Persian culture and its influence, Muslim art, Muslim architecture. |  | | Ismail was to Babur as Shah Abbas was to |
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http://cwx.prenhall.com/bookbind/pubbooks/esler2/chapter27/custom2/deluxe-content.html
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| | Persia |
 | | Abbas II (1632-1667) Shah of Persia 1642-67, the son of Safi I and the great-grandson of Abbas I. He received various embassies from Europe and recaptured Kandahar 1648, which had been lost by his predecessor to the Mogul emperors. |  | | Abbas III (1732-1736) Shah of Persia 1732-36, the son of Tahmasp II. |  | | Intrigues and insurrections against Khosrau began to arise in Persia, and the Byzantine emperor Heraclius took advantage of this domestic weakness to defeat the Persian monarch in a campaign from 623 to 628. |
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http://website.lineone.net/~johnbidmead/persia.htm
(3696 words)
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| | Persia |
 | | Abbas II (1632-1667) Shah of Persia 1642-67, the son of Safi I and the great-grandson of Abbas I. He received various embassies from Europe and recaptured Kandahar 1648, which had been lost by his predecessor to the Mogul emperors. |  | | Abbas III (1732-1736) Shah of Persia 1732-36, the son of Tahmasp II. |  | | Intrigues and insurrections against Khosrau began to arise in Persia, and the Byzantine emperor Heraclius took advantage of this domestic weakness to defeat the Persian monarch in a campaign from 623 to 628. |
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http://website.lineone.net/~johnbidmead/persia.htm
(3696 words)
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| | Persia |
 | | Abbas II (1632-1667) Shah of Persia 1642-67, the son of Safi I and the great-grandson of Abbas I. He received various embassies from Europe and recaptured Kandahar 1648, which had been lost by his predecessor to the Mogul emperors. |  | | Abbas III (1732-1736) Shah of Persia 1732-36, the son of Tahmasp II. |  | | Intrigues and insurrections against Khosrau began to arise in Persia, and the Byzantine emperor Heraclius took advantage of this domestic weakness to defeat the Persian monarch in a campaign from 623 to 628. |
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http://website.lineone.net/~johnbidmead/persia.htm
(3696 words)
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| | Persia |
 | | Abbas II (1632-1667) Shah of Persia 1642-67, the son of Safi I and the great-grandson of Abbas I. He received various embassies from Europe and recaptured Kandahar 1648, which had been lost by his predecessor to the Mogul emperors. |  | | Abbas III (1732-1736) Shah of Persia 1732-36, the son of Tahmasp II. |  | | Intrigues and insurrections against Khosrau began to arise in Persia, and the Byzantine emperor Heraclius took advantage of this domestic weakness to defeat the Persian monarch in a campaign from 623 to 628. |
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http://website.lineone.net/~johnbidmead/persia.htm
(3696 words)
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| | Sam Sloan's Family Tree - pafg116 - Generated by Personal Ancestral File |
 | | Shahzada Abbas MIRZA Shah Abbas II, Shahanshah of Persia was born on 20 Dec 1633. |  | | Shahzada Safi MIRZA Shah Sulaiman I, Shahnshah of Persia was born in 1647. |  | | Shahzada Sultan Husain MIRZA Shah Sultan Husain, Shahanshah of Persia was born in 1668. |
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http://www.samsloan.com/pafg116.htm
(463 words)
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| | Abbas I |
 | | ABBAS I (1571-1629), shah of Persia from 1587 to 1629, is known as Abbas the Great. |  | | Faced with such odds, Abbas was forced to make peace with the Turks on unfavourable terms in 1599, but he was then able to subdue the rebels in his own country and to crush the Uzbeks and drive them out of Persia. |  | | Abbas' reign was distinguished by military successes and administrative efficiency, also by the magnificence of his court and by his zeal as a builder. |
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http://webpages.charter.net/BrianOtte/encyclopedia_project/a/abbas_i.html
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| | Notes on Shah Abbas |
 | | Shah Abbas solidified the borders to near their present state today and moved the court to the defenseable city of Isphahan. |  | | Shah Abbas died in 1628 at the age of 70 in Mazanderan. |  | | Shah Abbas was a patron of both art and business and was famed for his fairness. |
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http://www.sw-asia.com/People/Bio984.htm
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| | McREL online standards and benchmark database |
 | | Understands political achievements of the Safavid and Mughal Empires (e.g., how Persia was unified by the Turkic Safavids, the political and cultural achievements of the Safavid Golden Age under Shah Abbas I, the Mughal conquest of India and how the Turkic warrior class united diverse peoples of the Indian continent) |  | | Understands the origins and development of the Safavid Empire (e.g., how Ismail created the Safavid Empire with the support of Qizilbash nomadic tribesmen; the evolution of Safavid social and political system from the nomadic-warrior years of Ismail to the golden age of Shah Abbas I) Knowledge/skill statements |  | | Understands factors that influenced the development and expansion of the Safavid Empire (e.g., key urban areas of the empire, and factors that contributed to the success of Safavid rule; how the city of Isfahan developed under the reign of Shah Abbas I) Knowledge/skill statements |
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http://www.mcrel.org/compendium/topicsDetail.asp?topicsID=222&subjectID=6
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| | Abbas, I Biography / Profile of Abbas, I Biographies |
 | | Abbas I (1571-1629), called "the Great," was a shah of Persia, the fifth king of the Safavid dynasty. |  | | The greatest shah of the Safavids, Abbas I had a precarious beginning. |  | | When his older brother, the crown prince, was killed, Abbas was rescued and taken to Khorasan, a northeastern province of Persia. |
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http://www.bookrags.com/biography/abbas-i
(384 words)
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| | Appendix 1: 100 Years of Opinions: 1900-2004 |
 | | The best examples of the art were produced in the years preceding the installation of Abbas as Shah of Persia, and consequently before the selection of Ispahan as his capital city. |  | | Progenitors of this ludicrous idea have put as one of their reasons the fact that Shah Abbas did not move his capital to Esfahan until the last decade of the sixteenth century-and stated that such outstanding examples could only have been made in the capital. |  | | That this [spiral-tendril] carpet was made in Persia is certain (see India page 105*) The relationship of the design to that of 'Polonaise' carpets made in Isfahan in the 17th century yet again supports the assumption that these carpets represent contemporary woolen carpets from the capital. |
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http://www.sfbars.org/mughal/append.html
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| | Persia |
 | | Abbas III (1732-1736) Shah of Persia 1732-36, the son of Tahmasp II. |  | | Abbas II (1632-1667) Shah of Persia 1642-67, the son of Safi I and the great-grandson of Abbas I. He received various embassies from Europe and recaptured Kandahar 1648, which had been lost by his predecessor to the Mogul emperors. |  | | Grandson of Yazdegerd I and son of Bahram V; zealous Zoroastrian; persecuted Christians and Jews; at war with Rome (442); also fought in the east against the Kushans and Kidarites; succeeded in turn by sons Hormizd III and FiruzYazdegerd II. |
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http://website.lineone.net/~johnbidmead/persia.htm
(3696 words)
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| | Persia |
 | | Abbas II (1632-1667) Shah of Persia 1642-67, the son of Safi I and the great-grandson of Abbas I. He received various embassies from Europe and recaptured Kandahar 1648, which had been lost by his predecessor to the Mogul emperors. |  | | Abbas III (1732-1736) Shah of Persia 1732-36, the son of Tahmasp II. |  | | Natural son of Artaxerxes I of Persia; murdered his half-brother Xerxes II; after reign of few months, was killed by another brother, Darius II. |
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http://website.lineone.net/~johnbidmead/persia.htm
(3696 words)
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