COMPILATION OF 3 PART Rise of Safavid and Mughal Empire Series. MEGA EPISODE COMPILATION: Just so you know its one of the older series with a new thumbnail and put together as Im trying to do with all series when they finish. NOT NEW CONTENT :)
Thanks for watching. I love Persian/Iranian history so if you do as well I have a current series on the Sassanids as well as full length finishes series on Parthians and first Persian Empire :) Cheers Sean!
@@SeanKosari i hope to eventually cover all Iranian empires. I am really excited about Shapur II coming up next. He was so feared among Arab tribes they even had a nickname for him "He who pierces shoulders" :)
@@YoreHistory Greetings from Iran, at first I’m appreciative of all your efforts too. And The nick name of The Shapur II in arabic is Shapur ZolAktaāf. I’m sure you knew, just saying for anyone who is interested! Thank you Ciao!
Indeed...there was a heavy Persian influence not just in literature but in the spoken language of for example Urdu today and other regional languages as well as yes cuisine :)
Today, there is a term "Mughlai" cuisine in Indian culinary. And, those who cook these foods are called "Baburchi" or, "Khansama". Arabs, Turks and Mamluks were not so lucky to marki their food habits into panindian tradition, but Mughals left a lasting legacy. It all started with a foodie and poet young warrior, who was equally ferocious and brutal in invasion of India and resisting rebellions in his Indian domain.
Shah İsmail was undefeated warrior, no one could beat him one on one. He won 18 fights out of 19. Only one lose was against Ottoman empire, cuz they had guns, but even on that fight on Chaldran 1514, he fought with the strongest warrior of Ottoman empire Turali Bek Malkochoglu, and killed him. He also was an amazing poet. Rest in peace our Shah. We love You!
Fantastic vid as always! I'm a big fan of History no matter the time period. Visigothic Iberia is the most overlooked in our history, love from Portugal
A great historic composition. Thanks and well done! Just one correction/explanation: Chaldiran is in North West Iran! Iran and Iranians have been always the consequential drive in western Asia since the dawn of civilization. Thanks!
Danke again for your great informative upload. We or most Germans do know everything about history especially the 1800 > 1900 century focused on our darkest times. So it is good to learn about the eastern past. Thumbs up and sub.
Page -34- So much was th^s the case with Baber and his kindred, that he had come to look upon himself as more of a Turk than a Moghul, and in his Memoirs mentions, more than once, his aversion and contempt for the Moghul race.^ The Dughlat had remained more distinctively Moghul, though among its members, also, much intermixture with Turki tribes appears to have taken place. Thus the Turki in which Baber wrote his Memoirs, must have been the natural language of Mirza Haidar also, who probably knew little or nothing of the Moghul tongue, and in his capacity of Musulman, would have despised it as something appertaining to infidels and barbarians. But however this may be, when he wrote in Persian, he was certainly using a foreign language, and it is for this reason, perhaps, that his style is wanting in the simplicity which (it is said) characterises that of Turki writers-a simplicity that Baber loved, and impressed upon his son, Humayun, as an accomplishment to be cultivated.^ History Of The Moghuls Of Central Asia; Tarikh-i-rashidi Of Mirza Muhammad Haidar, Dughlat By Ross, E. Denison
BTW, your maps of the Ottoman empire are a good deal off. You gave them a whole lot of territory that although they would later gain. It over states just how much of a force they were at the time
Yep, i made a few mistakes that I missed in editing. This was from an older series, one of my first. As a team of one I do miss things which is annoying believe me...I know where every mistake is still 3 years later lol.
@@YoreHistory No problem, I love the content, if I could I'd try to support you with more than just a like and sub. I feel like you cover under told stuff so any coverage at all is nice. Like its hard to find good quality videos on Ismail or Babur despite their importance.
I discovered your channel today, watched the 3-episode account of Babur and Ismail from about 2 years ago and subscribed. I think you're doing incredible work and I especially appreciate that you refer to Hindustan and not India as many of your youtube peers. This creates a false impression that India existed as a single entity in any political form which of course it didn't except very briefly at the peak of the Mauriya period (and even then it missed the south) and finally, at its greatest extent, only around 1943 near the end of the British Raj. However I had to pause a few minutes into this video because it seemed familiar. Reading your pinned comment I see that it indeed is the same. You must have your reasons but I'd rather hoped you would continue telling the intertwined narrative of Ismail and Babur' dynasties. For example it's not long before Babur's son Humayun all but loses his empire and has to seek refuge in the Persian court. He gets it and his son Akbar goes on to be the greatest of the Mughal rulers yet, from Humayun onwards the Mughals always felt culturally inferior to the Safavids and tried to emulate them in every way. You can see I'm fascinated by this period. I hope you will give us more!
Yes this was just me taking the previous 3 episodes and putting them together into 1 episode which typically does much better via TH-cam's algorithm. I do have much more planned for the region and those empires but as a team of one I don't move as fast as other channels. I really need to finish the Sassanid series first and then ill do more in that region and elsewhere :)
@@YoreHistory I probably can't even imagine the amount of work it takes to make a single video. Hopefully you'll be able to rope in some AI to help with the visuals but regardless, thank you so much for what you do.
Hey Epyx, hope you're doing well. How's the family? Are you still out east? Can't believe your last VR show was 4 years ago!! You are missed in the VR world but you are doing some amazing work with this channel! How much time do you spend writing for these videos?
Hey JR. Yes its been a long time. Currently just have no space for VR in our condo but honestly am enjoying this and not being on camera :) Even though it was fun to cheers beers with you guys :) Thanks for the kind words. This is an older video compilation but the one before it shows more of how my compositing/editing style has improved. Family is doing well and no we moved back to warm Vancouver...Halifax while nice was just too damn cold. I don't do well with snow. lol. HOw are things on your end?
Vitor Pereira Native Iranians have he best history of all time second only to Native Chineses. Mongol history is very strong but Iranian is still better.
@@joerogue231 They did, after all, speak mutually intelligible forms of Turkic; and this was the beginning of what would turn into almost a millennium of Turkish rule, as witness the Arabic proverb cited by the North African analytic historian Ibn Khaldun of the fourteenth century: dawlah 'ind al-turk, din 'ind al-'arab wa adab 'ind al-furs Power (rests) with the Turk, religion with the Arab, and culture with the Persian.
I don’t see the difference. Both have survived the same things: invasions ,foreign rule, new religions and new identities . They are seen differently when romans are classed separately yet Aryans, Achaemenids, Medes, Sassanians, Safavids, Scythians, Kurds, Bactrians, Pashtuns, Tajiks, Baloch, Parthians, Sogdians, Sarmatians, Alans, Ossetians are all lumped together as Iranian. But the descendants of Romans ,Byzantines and a bunch of Western Europeans are still alive and well too.
@@_robustus_ Roman identity no longer exist. Iranian are still here. Roman empire became a joke after the rise of Islam. After Islam Native Iranians still produced Empires like Rustamnid, Tahirid, Samanid, Saffarid, Buyid, Ghaznavid, Ghurid, Safavid, Sur, Hotak, Afsharid, Durrani, Zand, Qajar, Pahlavi, IRI, etc...
@@Nomadicenjoyer31 Turkic never ruled for a millennium you're just extremely stupid or biased if you think that those Iranian dynasties were Turkic. Tahirid, Samanid, Saffarid, Buyid, Ghaznavid, Ghurid, Safavid, Afsharid, Zand, Qajar and Pahlavi are all either Iranic or native Iranian. Ghanavid, Afsharid and Qajar were native Iranian of Turkic origin.
The Safavid Empire is the largest and most durable Iranian empire after the Sassanids, who ruled Iran for about 250 years. And in the end, with the attack of the Hotaks, the internal weakness fell apart, but after them, another military genius saved Iran again and made even more conquests than Shah Abbas. But unfortunately, his government fell apart after his death. His name is Nadershah. Be sure to make a video about him
@@Kafkaz_Khwarezm_Turkic all was iran. westerns calls it persia because of the greek called iran persia. all those dynesties and rulers belong to mighty iran.
Ismail is also known for his poetry using the pen name Khaṭāʾī (Arabic: خطائي, lit. 'the wrongful').[69] He wrote in the Azerbaijani language, a Turkic language mutually intelligible with Turkish,[70] and in the Persian language. He is considered an important figure in the literary history of Azerbaijani language and has left approximately 1400 verses in this language, which he chose to use for political reasons.[70] Approximately 50 verses of his Persian poetry have also survived. According to Encyclopædia Iranica, "Ismail was a skillful poet who used prevalent themes and images in lyric and didactic-religious poetry with ease and some degree of originality". Most of the poems are concerned with love-particularly of the mystical Sufi kind-though there are also poems propagating Shi'i doctrine and Safavi politics. His other serious works include the Nasihatnāme in Azerbaijani language,[12][73] a book of advice, and the unfinished Dahnāme in Azerbaijani language,[12][73] a book which extols the virtues of love.
@@Kafkaz_Khwarezm_Turkic Don't Be Mad Jafer Before than 1925 there Was "Memalke Mahrose e Iran" 🇮🇷 Sublime states of Iran 🇮🇷 But before than 1918 there was no Azerbaijan 😂😂
@@OshinAttari Until 1925, there was no Iran, there was Qajar. During the Qajar period, we lived as 2 nations and 1 state. After Nadir Shah died, Nasiruddin Shah came. These periods can be considered the history of Qajar Iran. Safavid Azerbaijan🇦🇿, Afshar Turkmenistan🇹🇲, Qajar 2 nations can be counted as Azeri and Persian Iran and Azerbaijani state🇮🇷👊🇦🇿. Because before the establishment of Iran, the Persians rebelled against the Qajar dynasty and the Pahlavi state was established. Later, the Azeri uprising took place and the South Azerbaijan state was established in the North. Although we were a single state at that time, this friendship ended during the Persian rebellion.
Shah Ismail is such a great shah. His poems in my native tongue of Azerbaijani turkish 🇦🇿 are so easy to understand, because written in such a simple language. One of my favorite: Şahın baxçasında mən qərib bülbül Əfkarım artmaqda halım pək müşkül Qoparmadım əsla qoxuladım bir gül Kafir oldumsa imana gəldim Ikilik pərdəsi yoxdur özümdə Birlikdir muradım özüm sözümdə Gecə-gündüz daim haqq niyazında Qibləgahım Şah-ı Mərdana gəldim
As an Azerbaijani Turk myself, I am really grateful to you for making this video on Safavid Empire. Though there were some small details where corrections might've been made, but overall, good job👍
@@YoreHistory Those sad pan-Turkic kids think that everything is Turkic LMAO ! 🤣😂 I heard that they claim Scythian, Xiongnu, European Hun, Alchon Hun, Hephthalite, Nezak Hun, Kidarites, Xionites, Northern Wei, Former Qin, Sui, Tang, Golden Horde, Ilkhanate, Chagathai, Timurid, Safavid, Mughals, Uzbek, Kazak, etc... As Turkic 🤣😂. Ghaznavid, Mamluck-Khalji dynasties of Delhi, Afsharid and Qajar are all native Iranian of Turkic origin but still native Iranian. Really only the Great Seljuk, Kwarezmian and Aq Qoyunlu are foreign Turkic invaders or occupiers of Iran.
Ich habe ein Buch über der Safavid gelesen. Sie hätten so viel besser machen gekönnt. Die erste Königen konnten regieren. Nach dem Tod von Abbas, fielen die Safavid wärhend 1 Jahrhundert.
@@joerogue231 Mughal is the Persian word for Mongol, but the Timurids considered themselves Turks. They were known as Mughals in the Indian subcontinent because there the term had come to designate the Turkish-speaking military elite of central Asia. STREUSAND, D.O.U.G.L.A.S.E. (2019) Islamic gunpowder empires: Ottomans, Safavids, and Mughals. ROUTLEDGE. p.202
@@Nomadicenjoyer31 Mughals were of Mongol origin. Just because they were Turkicized doesn't make them Turkic. Every Timurid was Persianized in fact 5 out of 7 of the greatest Timurid emperors were half-Persian ( Timur Beg, Shah Rukh Mirza, Abu Sa'id Mirza, Akbar the Great and Aurangzeb Alamgir ), the flag of the Mughals was Iranian ( Lion and Sun ) still that doesn't make then Iranian because history work by paternal line and by nationality. The Mughals were Mongols.
Hello, after the Ottoman Empire eliminated the Byzantine Empire, the Byzantine capital Constantinople disappeared into history and became known as Istanbul. Istanbul has been the name of this city since 1453. I'm curious why historical channels, especially on TH-cam, insist on still using the name Constantinople?
They should only refer to it as Constantinople when discussing it before AD1453. I do know that historically contemporary politicians in many places in the late 15th and early 16th century still referred to it by its old name.
@@YoreHistory The Mongol Timurid dynasty intermarried with Persian numerous time. Timur himself said that his mother is Persian. Shah Rukh Mirza mother was a Tajik woman. Babur's grandfather Abu Sa'id Mirza mother was Persian. Akbar mother was Persian. Aurangzeb mother was Persian. People should call the Timurid-Gurkani dynasty as a Persian-Mongol dynasty not Turco-Mongol. Every Timurid emperors from Timur all the way to the last Mughals emperor all spoke Persian. Meanwhile the Chagathai Turkic language only persisted till Umayun. Timur war against the Ottoman was the first instance of Persian vs Ottoman wars.
@@joerogue231 Ibn Khaldun recounted that Timur himself described to him his mother's descent from the legendary Persian hero Manuchehr but Ibn Arabshah suggested that she was a descendant of Genghis Khan
@@ramtin5152 Yes but there's also another source that point on that Timur mother was Persian, i think it was a later biographer of Timur. Another theory is that Timur was tall because he has Persian DNA.
if shah ismail considered him self a turk why would he name 3 of his 4 sons a persian name:Owing to his fondness of Iranian national legends, Ismail named three of his four sons after mythological shahs and heroes of the Shahnameh; his oldest son was named Tahmasp, after the last shah of the Pishdadian dynasty; his third son Sam after the champion of the Pishdadian shah Manuchehr and ancestor of the celebrated warrior-hero Rostam; his youngest son Bahram after the Sasanian shah Bahram V (r. 420-438), famous for his romantic life and hunting feats. Ismail's expertise in Persian poetic tales such as the Shahnameh, helped him to represent himself as the heir to the Iranian model of kingship. and why he considerd himself shah od iran not turkeminstan or azerbaijan ?
You after reading:☠️ Me after sending 🤣 Send me some pieces of western historian books that mentioned safavid as iranian dynasty ChatGPT Certainly! Here are some excerpts from Western historians' books that mention the Safavid Dynasty as an Iranian dynasty: F. Richards, "The Mughal Empire" (The New Cambridge History of India, Vol. 1, Part 5): "The Safavid dynasty, which established Shi'ism as the state religion of Iran, was one of the most significant ruling dynasties in Iranian history." Roger Savory, "Iran under the Safavids": "The Safavid period marks one of the most important eras in the history of Iran, when the country was unified and a strong central government was established." Andrew J. Newman, "Safavid Iran: Rebirth of a Persian Empire": "The Safavid dynasty brought about the rebirth of an independent Iranian state, following centuries of foreign domination and internal disintegration." Stephen P. Blake, "Time in Early Modern Islam: Calendar, Ceremony, and Chronology in the Safavid, Mughal and Ottoman Empires": "The Safavid Empire is a critical chapter in the history of Iran, as it was during this period that the modern borders of Iran were more or less established, and a sense of Iranian identity was solidified Roger Savory, "Iran under the Safavids": "The Safavid Empire was the first native Iranian dynasty since the fall of the Sassanian Empire, which ruled Iran and parts of the surrounding regions from 1501 to 1722." Andrew J. Newman, "Safavid Iran: Rebirth of a Persian Empire": "The Safavid dynasty marked the emergence of a unified Iranian state and the establishment of the Iranian Empire with its capital in Isfahan." Stephen P. Blake, "Time in Early Modern Islam: Calendar, Ceremony, and Chronology in the Safavid, Mughal and Ottoman Empires": "The Safavid Empire, often regarded as the renaissance of Iranian identity, played a pivotal role in the political and cultural reconstitution of Iran." Rudi Matthee, "Persia in Crisis: Safavid Decline and the Fall of Isfahan": "The Safavid period represents the consolidation of the Iranian Empire, shaping the borders and national identity that persist to this day." David Morgan, "Medieval Persia 1040-1797": "The Safavid dynasty established the Iranian Empire as a formidable political entity, reinforcing the Iranian national identity and territorial integrity." These excerpts affirm the recognition of the Safavid dynasty as an Iranian empire, highlighting its significance in the country's history and its role in shaping the modern Iranian state.
@@YoreHistory why would parsigay speak turkic in palace? Why would parsigay empire's main army made of qizilbashs🇦🇿? Since when "qorchu,beglerbegi,gazi" become parsigay word?since when parsigays invites turks to state jobs?why would 90% of them made of turks while state is "parsigay" How many money you got for making this propaganda video?or who you are originally?
COMPILATION OF 3 PART Rise of Safavid and Mughal Empire Series. MEGA EPISODE COMPILATION:
Just so you know its one of the older series with a new thumbnail and put together as Im trying to do with all series when they finish. NOT NEW CONTENT :)
still takes time! I love your channel!
You should do Alexander the Great and Carthage and then bring some huns
can i edit this with music and send it to you?
Since when safavid become parsigay? In 1550 persigays banned from palace
Can you also do Mali Empire and Songhai Empire
As a Persian I really appreciate this video.... very informative and well put together
Thanks for watching. I love Persian/Iranian history so if you do as well I have a current series on the Sassanids as well as full length finishes series on Parthians and first Persian Empire :) Cheers Sean!
@@YoreHistory yes I’ve been binge watching a lot of those videos 😁 thanks again for all the efforts 🙏
@@SeanKosari i hope to eventually cover all Iranian empires. I am really excited about Shapur II coming up next. He was so feared among Arab tribes they even had a nickname for him "He who pierces shoulders" :)
@@YoreHistory Greetings from Iran, at first I’m appreciative of all your efforts too.
And The nick name of The Shapur II in arabic is Shapur ZolAktaāf. I’m sure you knew, just saying for anyone who is interested!
Thank you Ciao!
@@P-Otool Thanks for the comment and watching! Greetings from a Dutchman in Canada :)
I heard that Northern Indian food has a lot of similarities with Persian food, and that Babur played a role in that because he was a foodie.
Indeed...there was a heavy Persian influence not just in literature but in the spoken language of for example Urdu today and other regional languages as well as yes cuisine :)
Today, there is a term "Mughlai" cuisine in Indian culinary. And, those who cook these foods are called "Baburchi" or, "Khansama". Arabs, Turks and Mamluks were not so lucky to marki their food habits into panindian tradition, but Mughals left a lasting legacy. It all started with a foodie and poet young warrior, who was equally ferocious and brutal in invasion of India and resisting rebellions in his Indian domain.
i hear he loved to eat melons
Shah İsmail was undefeated warrior, no one could beat him one on one. He won 18 fights out of 19. Only one lose was against Ottoman empire, cuz they had guns, but even on that fight on Chaldran 1514, he fought with the strongest warrior of Ottoman empire Turali Bek Malkochoglu, and killed him. He also was an amazing poet. Rest in peace our Shah. We love You!
why? cuz he thought of himself as a mahdi?
he was a cannibal too!
And he did all that when he was 20
If only he listened to his generals and waited until nightfall to attack the Ottomans
He massacred so many Sunnis in Iran. May this alcoholic shah be cursed.
Fantastic vid as always! I'm a big fan of History no matter the time period. Visigothic Iberia is the most overlooked in our history, love from Portugal
Thanks for your hard work YH!
Thanks for giving info
Love from Pakistan
Thank you for this video much love and appreciation from Iran
Great video keep up the good work!
wow at the flood of content! thanks for all your hard work!
It's a compilation of older series but more new coming by weekend!
Amazing work. Thank you.
A great historic composition. Thanks and well done! Just one correction/explanation: Chaldiran is in North West Iran! Iran and Iranians have been always the consequential drive in western Asia since the dawn of civilization. Thanks!
Danke again for your great informative upload. We or most Germans do know everything about history especially the 1800 > 1900 century focused on our darkest times. So it is good to learn about the eastern past. Thumbs up and sub.
Page -34-
So much was th^s the case with Baber and his kindred, that he had come to look upon himself as more of a Turk than a Moghul, and in his Memoirs mentions, more than once, his aversion and contempt for the Moghul race.^ The Dughlat had remained more distinctively Moghul, though among its members, also, much intermixture with Turki tribes appears to have taken place. Thus the Turki in which Baber wrote his Memoirs, must have been the natural language of Mirza Haidar also, who probably knew little or nothing of the Moghul tongue, and in his capacity of Musulman, would have despised it as something appertaining to infidels and barbarians. But however this may be, when he wrote in Persian, he was certainly using a foreign language, and it is for this reason, perhaps, that his style is wanting in the simplicity which (it is said) characterises that of Turki writers-a simplicity that Baber loved, and impressed upon his son, Humayun, as an accomplishment to be cultivated.^
History Of The Moghuls Of Central Asia; Tarikh-i-rashidi Of Mirza Muhammad Haidar, Dughlat By Ross, E. Denison
Watching this again is even more joyful than the first time
BTW, your maps of the Ottoman empire are a good deal off. You gave them a whole lot of territory that although they would later gain. It over states just how much of a force they were at the time
Yep, i made a few mistakes that I missed in editing. This was from an older series, one of my first. As a team of one I do miss things which is annoying believe me...I know where every mistake is still 3 years later lol.
@@YoreHistory No problem, I love the content, if I could I'd try to support you with more than just a like and sub. I feel like you cover under told stuff so any coverage at all is nice. Like its hard to find good quality videos on Ismail or Babur despite their importance.
I discovered your channel today, watched the 3-episode account of Babur and Ismail from about 2 years ago and subscribed. I think you're doing incredible work and I especially appreciate that you refer to Hindustan and not India as many of your youtube peers. This creates a false impression that India existed as a single entity in any political form which of course it didn't except very briefly at the peak of the Mauriya period (and even then it missed the south) and finally, at its greatest extent, only around 1943 near the end of the British Raj.
However I had to pause a few minutes into this video because it seemed familiar. Reading your pinned comment I see that it indeed is the same.
You must have your reasons but I'd rather hoped you would continue telling the intertwined narrative of Ismail and Babur' dynasties. For example it's not long before Babur's son Humayun all but loses his empire and has to seek refuge in the Persian court. He gets it and his son Akbar goes on to be the greatest of the Mughal rulers yet, from Humayun onwards the Mughals always felt culturally inferior to the Safavids and tried to emulate them in every way.
You can see I'm fascinated by this period. I hope you will give us more!
Yes this was just me taking the previous 3 episodes and putting them together into 1 episode which typically does much better via TH-cam's algorithm. I do have much more planned for the region and those empires but as a team of one I don't move as fast as other channels. I really need to finish the Sassanid series first and then ill do more in that region and elsewhere :)
@@YoreHistory I probably can't even imagine the amount of work it takes to make a single video. Hopefully you'll be able to rope in some AI to help with the visuals but regardless, thank you so much for what you do.
@@RasheedKhan-he6xx Yes latest videos all have huge helpings from AI and better workflows but yes its still about 60 to 100 hours per video :) Cheers!
Hey Epyx, hope you're doing well. How's the family? Are you still out east? Can't believe your last VR show was 4 years ago!! You are missed in the VR world but you are doing some amazing work with this channel! How much time do you spend writing for these videos?
Hey JR. Yes its been a long time. Currently just have no space for VR in our condo but honestly am enjoying this and not being on camera :) Even though it was fun to cheers beers with you guys :) Thanks for the kind words. This is an older video compilation but the one before it shows more of how my compositing/editing style has improved. Family is doing well and no we moved back to warm Vancouver...Halifax while nice was just too damn cold. I don't do well with snow. lol. HOw are things on your end?
Hello!! It's been a while 😊
It has, glad to be back though. Cheers Hamed.
The rich history of Iranians makes them titans of history! They outlasted the Romans.
Vitor Pereira
Native Iranians have he best history of all time second only to Native Chineses.
Mongol history is very strong but Iranian is still better.
@@joerogue231 They did, after all, speak mutually intelligible forms of Turkic; and this was the beginning of what would turn into almost a millennium of Turkish rule, as witness the Arabic proverb cited by the North African analytic historian Ibn Khaldun of the fourteenth century:
dawlah 'ind al-turk, din 'ind al-'arab wa adab 'ind al-furs
Power (rests) with the Turk, religion with the Arab, and culture with the Persian.
I don’t see the difference. Both have survived the same things: invasions ,foreign rule, new religions and new identities . They are seen differently when romans are classed separately yet Aryans, Achaemenids, Medes, Sassanians, Safavids, Scythians, Kurds, Bactrians, Pashtuns, Tajiks, Baloch, Parthians, Sogdians, Sarmatians, Alans, Ossetians are all lumped together as Iranian. But the descendants of Romans ,Byzantines and a bunch of Western Europeans are still alive and well too.
@@_robustus_ Roman identity no longer exist.
Iranian are still here.
Roman empire became a joke after the rise of Islam.
After Islam Native Iranians still produced Empires like Rustamnid, Tahirid, Samanid, Saffarid, Buyid, Ghaznavid, Ghurid, Safavid, Sur, Hotak, Afsharid, Durrani, Zand, Qajar, Pahlavi, IRI, etc...
@@Nomadicenjoyer31 Turkic never ruled for a millennium you're just extremely stupid or biased if you think that those Iranian dynasties were Turkic.
Tahirid, Samanid, Saffarid, Buyid, Ghaznavid, Ghurid, Safavid, Afsharid, Zand, Qajar and Pahlavi are all either Iranic or native Iranian.
Ghanavid, Afsharid and Qajar were native Iranian of Turkic origin.
The Safavid Empire is the largest and most durable Iranian empire after the Sassanids, who ruled Iran for about 250 years. And in the end, with the attack of the Hotaks, the internal weakness fell apart, but after them, another military genius saved Iran again and made even more conquests than Shah Abbas. But unfortunately, his government fell apart after his death. His name is Nadershah. Be sure to make a video about him
The Qajar state became the country of Persians during the reign of Nasir al-Din Shah, not Nadir Shah.
@@Kafkaz_Khwarezm_Turkic all was iran. westerns calls it persia because of the greek called iran persia. all those dynesties and rulers belong to mighty iran.
At what cost? At the cost of the Delhi Sultanate for one. At the cost of Sunnism, the truthful Islam for the other.
Ismail is also known for his poetry using the pen name Khaṭāʾī (Arabic: خطائي, lit. 'the wrongful').[69] He wrote in the Azerbaijani language, a Turkic language mutually intelligible with Turkish,[70] and in the Persian language. He is considered an important figure in the literary history of Azerbaijani language and has left approximately 1400 verses in this language, which he chose to use for political reasons.[70] Approximately 50 verses of his Persian poetry have also survived. According to Encyclopædia Iranica, "Ismail was a skillful poet who used prevalent themes and images in lyric and didactic-religious poetry with ease and some degree of originality".
Most of the poems are concerned with love-particularly of the mystical Sufi kind-though there are also poems propagating Shi'i doctrine and Safavi politics. His other serious works include the Nasihatnāme in Azerbaijani language,[12][73] a book of advice, and the unfinished Dahnāme in Azerbaijani language,[12][73] a book which extols the virtues of love.
Ismail shah of iran🤝🫡
A true warrior poet, as if ripped straight from legend. Mazda we need more men like him in this day and age
@@behiran2252no😂
@@Exonyxx turkstan shahi?!!!!🤔🤔😂
@@behiran2252 azerbaijan shah
Sir full mughal history
THE BEST
I'm from azerbaijan luckily we didn't fight with our brothers the video is perfect op❤🎉
Fake Soviet Azerbaijan Founded in 1918
@@OshinAttari don't cry pls
@@OshinAttari 1979 İran(Pehlevi 1925)
@@Kafkaz_Khwarezm_Turkic
Don't Be Mad Jafer
Before than 1925 there Was "Memalke Mahrose e Iran" 🇮🇷
Sublime states of Iran 🇮🇷
But before than 1918 there was no Azerbaijan 😂😂
@@OshinAttari Until 1925, there was no Iran, there was Qajar. During the Qajar period, we lived as 2 nations and 1 state. After Nadir Shah died, Nasiruddin Shah came. These periods can be considered the history of Qajar Iran. Safavid Azerbaijan🇦🇿, Afshar Turkmenistan🇹🇲, Qajar 2 nations can be counted as Azeri and Persian Iran and Azerbaijani state🇮🇷👊🇦🇿. Because before the establishment of Iran, the Persians rebelled against the Qajar dynasty and the Pahlavi state was established. Later, the Azeri uprising took place and the South Azerbaijan state was established in the North. Although we were a single state at that time, this friendship ended during the Persian rebellion.
Shah Ismail is such a great shah. His poems in my native tongue of Azerbaijani turkish 🇦🇿 are so easy to understand, because written in such a simple language. One of my favorite:
Şahın baxçasında mən qərib bülbül
Əfkarım artmaqda halım pək müşkül
Qoparmadım əsla qoxuladım bir gül
Kafir oldumsa imana gəldim
Ikilik pərdəsi yoxdur özümdə
Birlikdir muradım özüm sözümdə
Gecə-gündüz daim haqq niyazında
Qibləgahım Şah-ı Mərdana gəldim
Ottoman king had persian poets is that make them Iranians??
You logics kill me😂😂😂😂😂
😂😂😂😂😏🇦🇿🏳️🌈🤫🤙
@@kyvansalari3641🇮🇷🏳️🌈🏳️🌈🏳️🌈 safavid🇦🇿 afsharid🇦🇿 qajar🇦🇿 shah ismail🇦🇿 nadir shah🇹🇲
@@Amir-el8yxSafavid🇦🇿 Shah İsmail🇦🇿 cry🤣
@@Exonyxx ashak
Safavids are Iranian Kurds who killed thousands of turks 😂😂😂
Your stat age is 30 years old🤫🤫🤫🤫
As an Azerbaijani Turk myself, I am really grateful to you for making this video on Safavid Empire. Though there were some small details where corrections might've been made, but overall, good job👍
Shah Ismail was a proud Persian.
There was no Azerbaijan 😅
@@MA-lb8dq Cry more)
@@MA-lb8dq since when Qizilbashs called themselve parsigay? 🏳️🌈🇮🇷🍑 1979
Gaybayjani all world say safavjd persian and kid turk say gaybayjani😂😂🐒🏳️🌈🇦🇿🏳️⚧️@@Otukenbelongstoturks
@@kabodrakos nnt turk koskesh
Iranian empires ❤️🇮🇷❤️
1979 🏳️🌈🇮🇷🍑
@@Otukenbelongstoturks
3200 BC🇮🇷🦁☀️👉👌🇦🇿🏳️🌈💩
@@Otukenbelongstoturks average turk :
I would like to see more about the Mongols. That would probably be popular to.
Have you seen my Mongol Invasion of Japan?
@@YoreHistory Those sad pan-Turkic kids think that everything is Turkic LMAO ! 🤣😂
I heard that they claim Scythian, Xiongnu, European Hun, Alchon Hun, Hephthalite, Nezak Hun, Kidarites, Xionites, Northern Wei, Former Qin, Sui, Tang, Golden Horde, Ilkhanate, Chagathai, Timurid, Safavid, Mughals, Uzbek, Kazak, etc... As Turkic 🤣😂.
Ghaznavid, Mamluck-Khalji dynasties of Delhi, Afsharid and Qajar are all native Iranian of Turkic origin but still native Iranian.
Really only the Great Seljuk, Kwarezmian and Aq Qoyunlu are foreign Turkic invaders or occupiers of Iran.
@@YoreHistory Yes it was awsome, thats the reason i want more:)
@NoName I will have to make more then lol. Perhaps my next random topic video just need to finish Viking episode first. Cheers.
@@YoreHistory Cool. I am Scandinavian so i will def watch your viking video to
Ich habe ein Buch über der Safavid gelesen. Sie hätten so viel besser machen gekönnt. Die erste Königen konnten regieren. Nach dem Tod von Abbas, fielen die Safavid wärhend 1 Jahrhundert.
I think it would be really reallyyyy cool if you could do some kinda Native American something.
Definitely on my famous "List of topics" :)
@@YoreHistory I've watched every single video jsyk some like 5 times 😅🤣 I frikkin love your stuff and I appreciate all the hard work
@@YoreHistory Hella excited for the native stuff I'll be patiently waiting
@@ethanhall8185 That is so awesome, REALLY appreciate the support. Cheers Ethan! More to come!
sources ?
All sources in description. This was a 3 part series of older videos which have all the books and reference material listed. Cheers!
@@ThePishty1I will have to dig then when i get a moment as it was 4 years ago :) I usually put sources in the description.
Juda yakshi 😊
❤️🤍💚
isnt chaining carts together a technique from Hussite wars
What great fcuking storytelling.
Thank you brother👍🫡👏👏👏
Safavid Empire😍🇦🇿🇮🇷
They were good allies as well, Ismail even sent his Qizilbash troops to support Babur’s empire
Ismail the Kurd made Babur the Mongol his vassal.
@@joerogue231
Mughal is the Persian word for Mongol, but the Timurids considered themselves Turks. They were known as Mughals in the Indian subcontinent because there the term had come to designate the Turkish-speaking military elite of central Asia.
STREUSAND, D.O.U.G.L.A.S.E. (2019) Islamic gunpowder empires: Ottomans, Safavids, and Mughals. ROUTLEDGE. p.202
@@Nomadicenjoyer31 Mughals were of Mongol origin.
Just because they were Turkicized doesn't make them Turkic.
Every Timurid was Persianized in fact 5 out of 7 of the greatest Timurid emperors were half-Persian ( Timur Beg, Shah Rukh Mirza, Abu Sa'id Mirza, Akbar the Great and Aurangzeb Alamgir ), the flag of the Mughals was Iranian ( Lion and Sun ) still that doesn't make then Iranian because history work by paternal line and by nationality.
The Mughals were Mongols.
@@Nomadicenjoyer31
Turkmens themselves were mixed with iranians back in central Asia
@@Nomadicenjoyer31 babur was mongol and he was proud of being descendant of timur and ghangiz Khan
🇮🇷🇮🇷💪
as a mughal we appreciate the video 🐎🏹
Hello, after the Ottoman Empire eliminated the Byzantine Empire, the Byzantine capital Constantinople disappeared into history and became known as Istanbul. Istanbul has been the name of this city since 1453. I'm curious why historical channels, especially on TH-cam, insist on still using the name Constantinople?
They should only refer to it as Constantinople when discussing it before AD1453. I do know that historically contemporary politicians in many places in the late 15th and early 16th century still referred to it by its old name.
Bro..constantinopole and istanbul 1they are names😂it is only small and white turkish accents👍constan=ostan,and pol=bol.ok??🤝
Safavid🇮🇷🇮🇷🇮🇷🦁🦁
Great video! But wasent Babur Mongol? That guys dosent look very Mongol to me lol
NoName
Babur was mixed with Mongol, Persian and Turkic blood.
This is how contemporary illustrations appear and as someone with a mixed family plausible :)
@@YoreHistory The Mongol Timurid dynasty intermarried with Persian numerous time.
Timur himself said that his mother is Persian.
Shah Rukh Mirza mother was a Tajik woman.
Babur's grandfather Abu Sa'id Mirza mother was Persian.
Akbar mother was Persian.
Aurangzeb mother was Persian.
People should call the Timurid-Gurkani dynasty as a Persian-Mongol dynasty not Turco-Mongol.
Every Timurid emperors from Timur all the way to the last Mughals emperor all spoke Persian.
Meanwhile the Chagathai Turkic language only persisted till Umayun.
Timur war against the Ottoman was the first instance of Persian vs Ottoman wars.
@@joerogue231 Ibn Khaldun recounted that Timur himself described to him his mother's descent from the legendary Persian hero Manuchehr but Ibn Arabshah suggested that she was a descendant of Genghis Khan
@@ramtin5152 Yes but there's also another source that point on that Timur mother was Persian, i think it was a later biographer of Timur.
Another theory is that Timur was tall because he has Persian DNA.
Parsigays when they read Shah Ismael's poets and learn about his origin : 😭😭😭🏳️🌈🇮🇷
if shah ismail considered him self a turk why would he name 3 of his 4 sons a persian name:Owing to his fondness of Iranian national legends, Ismail named three of his four sons after mythological shahs and heroes of the Shahnameh; his oldest son was named Tahmasp, after the last shah of the Pishdadian dynasty; his third son Sam after the champion of the Pishdadian shah Manuchehr and ancestor of the celebrated warrior-hero Rostam; his youngest son Bahram after the Sasanian shah Bahram V (r. 420-438), famous for his romantic life and hunting feats. Ismail's expertise in Persian poetic tales such as the Shahnameh, helped him to represent himself as the heir to the Iranian model of kingship.
and why he considerd himself shah od iran not turkeminstan or azerbaijan ?
You after reading:☠️
Me after sending 🤣
Send me some pieces of western historian books that mentioned safavid as iranian dynasty
ChatGPT
Certainly! Here are some excerpts from Western historians' books that mention the Safavid Dynasty as an Iranian dynasty:
F. Richards, "The Mughal Empire" (The New Cambridge History of India, Vol. 1, Part 5):
"The Safavid dynasty, which established Shi'ism as the state religion of Iran, was one of the most significant ruling dynasties in Iranian history."
Roger Savory, "Iran under the Safavids":
"The Safavid period marks one of the most important eras in the history of Iran, when the country was unified and a strong central government was established."
Andrew J. Newman, "Safavid Iran: Rebirth of a Persian Empire":
"The Safavid dynasty brought about the rebirth of an independent Iranian state, following centuries of foreign domination and internal disintegration."
Stephen P. Blake, "Time in Early Modern Islam: Calendar, Ceremony, and Chronology in the Safavid, Mughal and Ottoman Empires":
"The Safavid Empire is a critical chapter in the history of Iran, as it was during this period that the modern borders of Iran were more or less established, and a sense of Iranian identity was solidified
Roger Savory, "Iran under the Safavids":
"The Safavid Empire was the first native Iranian dynasty since the fall of the Sassanian Empire, which ruled Iran and parts of the surrounding regions from 1501 to 1722."
Andrew J. Newman, "Safavid Iran: Rebirth of a Persian Empire":
"The Safavid dynasty marked the emergence of a unified Iranian state and the establishment of the Iranian Empire with its capital in Isfahan."
Stephen P. Blake, "Time in Early Modern Islam: Calendar, Ceremony, and Chronology in the Safavid, Mughal and Ottoman Empires":
"The Safavid Empire, often regarded as the renaissance of Iranian identity, played a pivotal role in the political and cultural reconstitution of Iran."
Rudi Matthee, "Persia in Crisis: Safavid Decline and the Fall of Isfahan":
"The Safavid period represents the consolidation of the Iranian Empire, shaping the borders and national identity that persist to this day."
David Morgan, "Medieval Persia 1040-1797":
"The Safavid dynasty established the Iranian Empire as a formidable political entity, reinforcing the Iranian national identity and territorial integrity."
These excerpts affirm the recognition of the Safavid dynasty as an Iranian empire, highlighting its significance in the country's history and its role in shaping the modern Iranian state.
Nənəsi qebhe
@@radio_alfa2222
Mənim Nənəm Aryan qaraçısı olmuyubki 14Yaşında qəhbəlik edə,mənim nənəm TÜRK olub
@@Otukenbelongstoturks سنین ننوه سوخوم سنه ده. ایرانین سیکی سیزلری آدام الیبب
They were all Turks,there Empires were Turkish
No. Incorrect.
Yeah great Britain was also turkish
@@YoreHistory why would parsigay speak turkic in palace? Why would parsigay empire's main army made of qizilbashs🇦🇿? Since when "qorchu,beglerbegi,gazi" become parsigay word?since when parsigays invites turks to state jobs?why would 90% of them made of turks while state is "parsigay"
How many money you got for making this propaganda video?or who you are originally?
غلط
we turko mongols are great! 💪🏽🐺
Not really