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Iran's Early Encounter with Three Medieval European Inventions (875–1153 AH/1470–1740 CE)
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2022
Abstract
The production of the mechanical clock, the printing press, and firearms in Western Europe during the Middle Ages is considered the precursor to many subsequent technological advances. This paper briefly reviews the introduction of these inventions to Iran, and the pace of their adoption in that country. Firearms were more readily accepted, but clocks and printing took a longer time to become prevalent. This paper will also examine some of the possible explanations for the contrast between the rapid spread of clocks and printing in Western Europe and the lack of their widespread adoption in Iran. This phenomenon cannot simply be attributed to scientific and technological backwardness, nor can it have been due merely to geographic or cultural differences. This underscores the significance of the overall social and economic conditions, which are in turn explored.
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- Information
- Iranian Studies , Volume 41 , Issue 4: Sciences, Crafts, and the Production of Knowledge: Iran and Eastern Islamic Lands (ca. 184–1153 AH/800–1740 CE) , September 2008 , pp. 549 - 558
- Copyright
- Copyright © Association For Iranian Studies, Inc 2008
References
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34 During the presentation of an earlier version of this paper, Professor Richard Bulliet pointed to the particular impact of offset printing in the nineteenth century on the spread of printing, not only in Iran, but also in many other counties in the region. During the nineteenth century, the proliferating print shops in Iran, especially the privately owned ones, relied on offset printing. It should be noted, however, that on the one hand, several Persian and Arabic books were produced in Western Europe during the sixteenth century and beyond (for instance see Tarbiat, “Tārīkh-e Ta‘sīs-e Maba‘a,” 371). On the other hand, although offset printing did help the spread of printing in that country, all of the early print shops which were set up during the first few decades of the nineteenth century pre-dated offset printing and were essentially prompted by the new government drive to adopt Western technology.
35 Della Valle, Safarnāmah-ye Pietro Della Valle, 348.