Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-xbtfd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-04T18:36:23.546Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

20 - RELIGIOUS FORCES IN TWENTIETH-CENTURY IRAN

from PART 4 - RELIGIOUS AND CULTURAL LIFE, 1721–1979

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 March 2008

P. Avery
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
G. R. G. Hambly
Affiliation:
University of Texas, Dallas
C. Melville
Affiliation:
University of Cambridge
Get access

Summary

It would, no doubt, be the result of selective hindsight to regard the first eight decades of the 20th century as the ineluctable prelude to the Islamic Revolution of 1978–9. The cultural and political orientation of Iranian society was placed repeatedly in question as the Pahlavī family sought to transform the monarchy into a modern, authoritarian state, and secularist, leftist and nationalist forces emerged on the political scene. For several decades, moreover, most of the leading ‘ulamā made no effort to exert a decisive influence outside the relatively narrow confines of the religious institution. Nonetheless, the tenacity of religion as a major force throughout the modern history of Iran is remarkable and unmistakable, and we may legitimately discern in a whole series of Islamic personages, institutions and movements the antecedents that made possible – although by no means inevitable – the great transformations ushered in by the revolution of 1978–9.

The preponderant rôle played by ‘ulamā in the Constitutional Revolution of 1905–11, especially in its earlier phases, is well known. The alliance concluded in November 1905 by two leading mujtahids of Tehran, Sayyid ‘Abd-Allāh Bihbahānī and Sayyid Muhammad Tabātabā'ī, to bring about the overthrow of ‘Ain al-Daula, prime minister of the day, is often considered the starting point of the revolution. The revolution had been preceded, moreover, by almost a century of sporadic conflict between leading ‘ulamā and successive Qājār rulers. Following on the tobacco boycott of 1891–2, ‘ulamā-led protests against loans taken from foreign powers and the consequent alienation of the Iranian economy became increasingly frequent in the opening years of the 20th century.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 1991

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abrahamian, E.The Guerilla Movement in Iran, 1963–1977”, MERIP Reports, no. 86 (March-April 1980).Google Scholar
Ādamīyat, Firīdūn. Īdīūlūzhī-yi Nahzat-i Mashrūtīyat-Īrān, Tehran, 1356/1977.
Afrāsiyābī, Bahrām. Tālaqānī va Tārīkh, Tehran, 1360/1981.
Ahmad, Jalal Al-i. Occidentosis: A Plague from the West, trans. Campbell, R., Berkeley, 1984.
Akhavi, Shahrough. Religion and Politics in Contemporary Iran, Albany, New York, 1980.
Akhavi, Shahrough. “‘Ali Shari‘atīs Gesellschaftstheorie”, in Grevssing, K., ed., Religion und Politik im Iran.
al-l⊡fahānī, Muhammad Mahdī al-Mūsawī. Ahsan al-W adī‘ a fi Tarājim Mashāhīr Mujtahidī al-Shī a, Najaf, 1388/1968.
Algar, Hamid. “Abu'l-Hasan E⊡fahānī”, Encyclopaedia Iranica I.
Algar, Hamid. “Anjoman 11. Religious”, Encyclopaedia Iranica 11.
Algar, Hamid. “Bāfqī, Mohammad-Taqī, Ayatollāh”, Encyclopaedia Iranica III.
Algar, Hamid. “Borqa‘Ī, Ayatollāh ‘Alī Akbar”, Encyclopaedia Iranica IV.
Algar, Hamid. “Borūjerdī, Hājj Āqā Hosayn Tabātabā'ī, Ayatollāh”, Encyclopaedia Iranica IV.
Algar, Hamid. “Imam Khomeini, 1902–1962: The Prerevolutionary Years”, in Islam, Politics and Social Movements, eds. Lapidus, Ira and Burke, Edmund, Berkeley 1988.Google Scholar
Algar, Hamid. “The Oppositional Role of the Ulama in Twentieth Century Iran”, in Scholars, Saints and Sufis, ed. Keddie, N.R., Berkeley and Los Angeles, 1972.Google Scholar
Algar, Hamid. “Social Justice in the Ideology and Legislation of the Islamic Revolution of Iran”, in Social Legislation in the Contemporary Middle East, ed. Michalak, L., Berkeley, 1986.Google Scholar
Arjomand, Said. “The Ulama's Traditionalist Opposition to Parliamentarianism”, Middle Eastern Studies XVII (1981).Google Scholar
Āzarī, ‘Alī. Qiyām-i Shaikh Muhammad Khiyābānī, 4th ed., Tehran, 1354/1975.
Bādāmchiyān, Asad-Allāh, and ‘Alī Binā'ī, . Hai’ athā-yi Mu’ talifa-yi Islāmī, Tehran, 1362/1983.
Bahsī dar bāra-yi Marja‘īyat va Rūhānīyat, 2nd ed., Tehran, n.d.
Bakhshāyishī, Aqīqī. Yek-⊡ad Sāl Mubāraza-yiRūhānīyat-i Shī‘a, 3 vols. Qum, 1361/1982.
Barnard, C.N. and Kazemaini, K. The Zour Khaneh – Traditional Persian Gymnasium, Tehran, 1970.
Batatu, Hanna. The Old Social Classes and the Revolutionary Movements of Iraq, Princeton, 1982.
Cottam, Richard. Nationalism in Iran, Pittsburgh, 1964.
Daulatābādī, Yahyā. Tārīkh-i Mu‘ā⊡ir yā Hayāt-i Yahyā, Tehran, 1331/1952.
Davānī, ‘Alī. Nahzat-i Rūhānīyūn-i Īrān, II vols. Tehran, n.d.
Doroshenko, E.A. Shiitskoe Dukhovenstvo v Sovremennom Irane, Moscow, 1975.
Esters, Günter and Langkau, Jochem. Iran in der Krise-Weichenstellungen für die Zukunft, Bonn, 1980.
Fakhrā‘ī, Ibrāhīm. Mīrzā Kūchik Khān Sardār-i Jangal, Tehran, 1343/1965.
Fischer, Michael M.J. Iran: From Religious Dispute to Revolution, Cambridge, Mass., 1980.
Greussing, Kurt, ed. Religion und Politik im Iran, Frankfurt, 1981.
Hairi, Abdul-Hadi. “Ākūnd Korāsānī”, Encyclopaedia Iranica I.
Hairi, Abdul-Hadi. “Khwānsārī, Sayyid Muhammad Takī”, Encyclopaedia of Islam, 2nd ed., IV.
Hairi, Abdul-Hadi. “The Responses of Libyans and Iranians to Imperialism as Reflected in Two Documents”, Zeitschrift der deutschen morgenländischen Gesellschaft CXXX (1980).Google Scholar
Hairi, Abdul-Hadi. “Shaykh Fazl Allāh Nūrī's Refutation of the Idea of Constitutionalism”, Middle Eastern Studies XIII:3 (October, 1977).Google Scholar
Hairi, Abdul-Hadi. “Ākūnd Korāsānī”, Shi‘ism and Constitutionalism in Iran, Leiden, 1977.
Hairi, Abdul-Hadi. “Why did the ‘Ulamā Participate in the Persian Constitutional Revolution of 1905–1909?”, Die Welt des Islams XVII (1976–7).Google Scholar
Hakīmī, Muhammad Rizā. Tafsīr-i Āftāb, Tehran, 1358/1979.
Hamadānīi, Nād‘alī. Mudarris: Sī Sāl Shahādat, Tehran, 1360/1981.
Anon. Hamāsa-āfarīnān-i Qum va Tabrīz, 3 vols, n.p., n.d.
Haqqjū, ‘Alī. Tahlīlī bar Sāzmān-i Mujāhidīn-i Khalq-i Iran. Tehran, 1357/1978.
Kafā'ī, ‘Alī Muhammad. Margī dar Nūr: Zindagānī-yi Ākhūnd Khurāsānī, Tehran, 1359/1980.
Kamālī, ‘Alī. Inqilāb, Tehran, 1358–1979.
Kāshānī, Āyatullāh Abu'l-Qāsim. Majmū’ a-ī az Maktūbāt, Sukhanrānīhā, Payāmbā va Fatāvī, ed. Dihnuvī, M., 5 vols. Tehran, 1360/1981.
Kasravī, Ahmad. Tārīkh-i Hizhdah Sāla-yi Āzarbāījān, 3rd edition, Tehran 1340/1961.
Kasravī, Ahmad. Tārīkh-i Mashrūta-yi Īrān, 5th edition, Tehran, 1340/1961.
Keddie, Nikki R.Iranian Politics 1900–1905: Background to Revolution-II”, Middle East Studies V No.2 (1969).Google Scholar
Keddie, Nikki R. Roots of Revolution, New Haven and London, 1981.
Keddie, Nikki R. ed. Religion and Politics in Iran, New Haven and London, 1983.
Keddie, Nikki R.Iranian Politics 1900–1905: Background to Revolution”, Middle Eastern Studies V (1969).Google Scholar
Khalkhālī, ‘Alī Rabbānī. Shubadā-yi Rūhānīyat-i Shī‘a dar Yek-⊡ad Sāl-i Akbīr, Qum, 1402/1981–2.
Khumainī [Khomeini], , Imām, Āyatulāh. Hukūmat-i Islāmī ya Vilāyat-i Faqīh, 3rd ed., Najaf, 1391/1971.
Khumainī [Khomeini], , Imām, Āyatulāh. Islam and Revolution, trans. Algar, Hamid, London, 1985.
Khumainī [Khomeini], , Imām, Āyatulāh. Sahlfa-yi Nūr (collected speeches and declarations), 15 vols. Tehran, 1361/1982.
Khūshnīyat, Sayyid Husain. Sayyid Mujtaba Navvāb Safavī: Andīshabā, Mubārazāt va Shahādat-i Ū, Tehran, 1360/1981.
Khwāja-Nūrīi, Ibrāhīm. Bāzīgarān-i ‘A⊡r-i Talā'ī: Mudarris, new edition, Tehran, 1359/1980.
Kirmānī, Nāzim al-Islām. Tārīkh-i Bīdārī-yi Īrānīān, Tehran, 1332/1953.
Lambton, A.K.S.The Persian ‘Ulama and Constitutional Reform”, in Le Shī‘isme Imamite, ed. Fahd, Taufic, Paris, 1970.Google Scholar
Lambton, A.K.S.A Reconsideration of the Position of the Marja‘ al-Taqlīd and the Religious Institution”, Studia Islamica XX (1964).Google Scholar
Mahrad, Ahmad. Iran unter der Herrschaft Reza Schabs, Frankfurt and New York, 1977.
Makkī, Husain. Mudarris: Qahramān-i Āzādī, 2 vols. Tehran, 1358/1979.
Makkī, Husain. Tārīkh-i Bīst-sāla-yi Īrān, Tehran, 1324/1945.
Mutahharī, Āyatullāh Murtazā. Fundamentals of Islamic Thought, trans. Campbell, R., Berkeley, 1985.
Mutahharī, Āyatullāh Murtazā. Ilal-i Girāyish ba Māddīgarī, 8th ed., Qum, 1357/1978.
Mutahharī, Āyatullāh Murtazā. “Mazāya va Khadamāt-i Marhūm Āyatullāh Burūjirdī”, in Bahsī dar bāra-yi Marja īyat va Rūhānīyat, 2nd edition, Tehran, n.d.
Nā'īnī, Mīrzā Muhammad Husain. Tanbīh al-Umma va Tanzib al-Milla, with notes and an introduction by Āyatullāh Mahmūd Tālaqānī, Tehran, 1334/1955.
Najafī-Qūchānī, Āqā. Siyāhat-i Sharq, ed. Shākirī, R. ‘A., 2nd ed., Tehran, 1362/1983.
Anon. Nigārishī kūtah bar Nihzat-i Millī-yi Īrān: Ravābit va Rīshahā-yi Ikhtilāf bain-i Mu⊡addiq va Kāshānī, 2nd edition, Tehran, 1358/1979.
Nūrī, Shaikh-i Shahīd [Shaikh Fazlullāh]. Rasā'il, I lāmiyahā, Maktūbāt va Rūznāmahā, ed. Turkumān, Muhammad, 2 vols. Tehran, 1362–3/1983–4.
Anon. Rahnamā-yi Haqā'iq, New ed., Tehran, n.d.
Ravāsānī, Shāpūr. Nahzat-i Mīrzā Kūchik Khān-i Jangalī, Tehran, 1363/1984.
Rāzī, Muhammad Sharīf. Asār al-Hujja. 2 vols. Qum, 1338/1959.
Rāzī, Muhammad Sharīf. Ganjīna-yi Dānishmandān, 7 vols. Tehran, 1352/1973.
Richard, Yann. Der verborgene Imam: die Geschichte des Schiismus in Iran, Berlin 1983.
Richard, Yann. “L'organisation des Fedâ'iyân-e Eslâm, mouvement intégriste musulman en Iran”, Radicalismes islamiques, ed. , Olivier Carré and Dumont, Paul, Paris, 1985, I.Google Scholar
Rūhānī, Sayyid Hamīd. Barrasī va Tablīlī az Nahzat-i Imām Khumainī, I, Najaf, n.d., II, Tehran, 1363/1985.
Anon. Shahīdī dīgar az rūhānīyat, Najaf, n.d.
Sharī‘atī, ‘Alī. Majmū‘ a-yi Āsār, Tehran, 1357/1979–(continuing).
Sharī‘atī, ‘Alī. On the Sociology of Islam, trans. Algar, Hamid, Berkeley, 1979.
Sharī‘atī, ‘Alī. Islāmshināsī, Tehran, n.d.
Sharī‘atī, ‘Alī. Qāsitīn, Māriqīn, Nākisīn, Tehran, n.d.
Tālaqānī, . Partuvī az Qur'ān, Tehran, 1357/1978.
Taleghani, [Tālaqānī] Ayatullah Sayyid Mahmud. Society and Economics in Islam, trans. Campbell, R., Berkeley, 1982.
Tihrānī, ĀqĀ Buzurg. Tabaqāt A‘lām al-Sbī‘a: Nuqabā’ al-Bashar fi'l-Qarn al-Rābi‘‘ “ashar, Najaf, 1378/1953.
Anon. Ūba tanbā'īyek ummatbūd (a collection of speeches by Āyatullāh Bihishtī with materials for his biography), Tehran, 1361/1982.
Vā izzāda-Khurāsānī, Muhammad. “Sairī dar Zindagī-yi ‘Ilmī va Inqilābī-yi Ustād-i Shahīd Murtazā Mutahhari”, in Surūsh, ‘Abd al-Karīm (ed.), Yādnāma-yi Ustād-i Shahīd Murtazā Mutabbarī, Tehran, 1360/1981.Google Scholar
Vāhid, Sīnā. Qiyām-i Gaubar Shād, Tehran, 1361/1982.
Wilson, Arnold Sir. Loyalties: Mesopotamia 1914–1917, London, 1930.
Yādnāma-yi Bīstumīn Sālgard-i Nahzat-i Āzādī-yi Īrān, 2nd ed., Tehran, 1362/1983.
Yavari-d'Hellencourt, , “Le radicalisme shi'ite de Ali Shari‘ati”, in Radicalismes islamiques, ed. Carré, Olivier and Dumont, Paul, Paris, 1985, I.Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×