Perhaps, appropriately, crime and criminality only enter the local histories
of Yazd, the ‘Tārīkh-i Yazd and the Tārīkh-i
Jadīd-i Yazd, by stealth.1 The interests and concerns of the authors of the local histories lay
elsewhere, in describing the topography of the city, its religious edifices
and shrines, noting its pious, learned and great inhabitants and recording
its history from earliest times; and indeed if the authors were writing
about a city endowed with the title Dār al-ʿIbādaʾ, the Abode of Piety, it
is unsurprising that crimes or criminal acts are largely absent from the
text and so, only one or two accounts of crime feature in the local
histories. However, the ordering of society and the maintenance of this
order constitute a central topic in medieval Persian writings, including the
histories.