Mohammad Taher Vahid Qazvini

{{Short description|Iranian Safavid grand vizier from 1691 to 1699}}

{{Infobox officeholder

| name = Mohammad Taher Vahid Qazvini

| image = Islamic Manuscript-Poems by Mohammad Taher Vahid Qazvini- شعری از محمدطاهر قزوینی- میرزا طاهر وحید.jpg

| caption = Folio of a poem by Mohammad Taher Vahid Qazvini

| office1 = Grand vizier of Safavid Iran

| monarch1 = Shah Suleiman ({{reign|1666|1694}})
Soltan Hoseyn ({{reign|1694|1722}})

| primeminister1=

| term_start1 = March 1691

| term_end1 = May 1699

| predecessor1 = Shaykh Ali Khan Zanganeh

| successor1 = Mohammad Mo'men Khan Shamlu

| birth_date = {{circa|1621}}

| birth_place = Qazvin, Safavid Iran

| death_date = 1700 (aged {{circa|70}})

| death_place = Safavid Iran

| nationality =

| restingplace =

| father = Mirza Mohammad

| blank2 = Notable work

| data2 = Abbas-nama

| spouse =

| children =

| occupation = Bureaucrat, poet, historian

| profession =

| religion =

| signature =

}}

Mirza Mohammad Taher Vahid Qazvini ({{langx|fa|محمد‌طاهر وحید قزوینی}}; died 1700), was an Iranian bureaucrat, poet, and historian, who served as the grand vizier of two Safavid monarchs, Shah Suleiman ({{reign|1666|1694}}) and the latter's son Soltan Hoseyn ({{reign|1694|1722}}) from 1691 to 1699.

He is also notable for writing the Abbas-nama, the principal Iranian source regarding the events during the reign of Shah Abbas II ({{reign|1642|1666}}).{{sfn|Moreen|2010}}

Background

A native of Qazvin,{{sfn|Newman|2008|p=95}} Taher Vahid was born around 1621.{{efn|According to the Iranologist Rudi Matthee, Taher Vahid was "about seventy" when he was appointed grand vizier in 1691.{{sfn|Matthee|2011|p=73}}}} He was of Persian Sayyid ancestry,{{sfn|Newman|2008|p=105}} and belonged to a family that was notable for occupying the office of vaqa'i-nevis (court registrar).{{sfn|Matthee|2011|p=73}} His father Mirza Mohammad had occupied the office under Shah Abbas I ({{reign|1588|1629}}),{{sfn|Matthee|2011|p=285 (note 117)}} and Taher Vahid would also later occupy it.{{sfn|Matthee|2011|p=73}}

Career

Taher Vahid served as a chronicler during the reign of Shah Abbas II ({{reign|1642|1666}}),{{sfn|Losensky|2021|p=465}} composing the Abbas-nama, the principal Iranian source regarding the events during the reign of Shah Abbas II.{{sfn|Moreen|2010}}

In March 1691, Shah Suleiman ({{reign|1666|1694}}) appointed Taher Vahid as his vizier, following a one year and a half vacancy of the office. The previous grand vizier had been Shaykh Ali Khan Zanganeh.{{sfn|Matthee|2011|p=73}} After Taher Vahid's appointment, Shah Suleiman asked his opinion on the most pressing matters of the country, which Taher Vahid replied to by mentioning four serious problems that needed attention: the pay of the army of Iran, fiscal reform, unoccupied offices, and the renewal of trade. Shah Suleiman responded by increasing Taher Vahid's administrative authority to an unmatched level.{{sfn|Matthee|2011|p=73}}

Taher Vahid continued to serve as vizier under Shah Suleiman's son and successor, Soltan Hoseyn ({{reign|1694|1722}}).{{sfn|Matthee|2011|p=74}} Taher Vahid, as well to a lesser degree the court steward (nazer) Najafqoli Khan, were the main counselors of Soltan Hoseyn during his early reign.{{sfn|Matthee|2015}} In May 1699, Soltan Hoseyn dismissed Taher Vahid, supposedly due to the latter's old age. He replaced him with the eshik-aqasi-bashi Mohammad Mo'men Khan Shamlu, who, however, was also advanced in age.{{sfn|Matthee|2011|p=204}}

Taher Vahid died in 1700.{{sfn|Sharma|2021|p=319}}

Poetry

Taher Vahid was also a poet, composing 35,000 verses in various genres.{{sfn|Losensky|2021|p=451}} He also known to have sent poems to the Mughal Empire, although they have not been published yet. Based on Taher Vahid's writings, the modern historian Sunil Sharma comments that "it is evident that his role in the intellectual and literary life of seventeenth-century Persianate circles was not at all insignificant."{{sfn|Sharma|2017|p=189}} Hamid Dabashi lists Taher Vahid amongst some of the leading Iranian poets of the Indian style who had never visited India, along with Shafi'i Mashhadi, Asir-e Esfahani and Shaukat Bukhari.{{sfn|Dabashi|2012|p=208}} Taher Vahid is also known to have composed poetry in Azeri Turkish.{{sfn|Javadi|Burrill|1988|pp=251–255}}

Notes

{{notelist}}

References

{{reflist|2}}

Sources

  • {{cite book |last1=Dabashi |first1=Hamid |authorlink=Hamid Dabashi|title=The World of Persian Literary Humanism |year=2012 |publisher=Harvard University Press |isbn=978-0-674-06759-2 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=HQFNfOPAS04C}}
  • {{Encyclopaedia Iranica | volume=3 | fascicle=3 | title = Azerbaijan x. Azeri Turkish Literature | last= Javadi |first= H. | last2 = Burrill| first2 = K. | url = https://iranicaonline.org/articles/azerbaijan-x | pages = 251–255 }}
  • {{cite book |chapter=Not all of the poets went to India: literary culture in Iran under Safavid rule|first=Paul|last=Losensky|authorlink=Paul E. Losensky|title=The Safavid World|editor-first=Rudi |editor-last=Matthee |publisher=Routledge |pages = 447–468|year=2021}}
  • {{cite book | title = Persia in Crisis: Safavid Decline and the Fall of Isfahan | year = 2011 | publisher = I.B.Tauris | last = Matthee | first = Rudi |authorlink = Rudi Matthee| isbn = 978-0857731814 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=fFaw4od7nfUC }}
  • {{cite book|last1=Matthee|first1=Rudi|last2=Floor|first2=Willem|last3=Clawson|first3=Patrick|title=The Monetary History of Iran: From the Safavids to the Qajars|date=2013|publisher=I.B.Tauris|isbn=978-0857721723}}
  • {{cite encyclopedia | title =Solṭān Ḥosayn | last = Matthee| first = Rudi | url = https://iranicaonline.org/articles/soltan-hosayn | editor-last = | editor-first = | editor-link = | encyclopedia = Encyclopaedia Iranica | pages = | location = | publisher = | year = 2015 | isbn = }}
  • {{cite book | title = Safavid Iran: Rebirth of a Persian Empire | year = 2008 | publisher = I.B.Tauris | last = Newman | first = Andrew J. | authorlink = Andrew J. Newman | isbn = 978-0857716613 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=KPgBAwAAQBAJ}}
  • {{cite encyclopedia | title = ʿAbbās-nāma | first1 = Vera B. | last1 = Moreen | encyclopedia = Encyclopedia of Jews in the Islamic World | editor = Norman A. Stillman | editor-link = Norman Stillman | publisher = Brill Online | url = https://referenceworks.brillonline.com/entries/encyclopedia-of-jews-in-the-islamic-world/abbas-nama-SIM_0000060 | year = 2010}}
  • {{cite book | title = Mughal Arcadia: Persian Literature in an Indian Court | year = 2017 | publisher = Harvard University Press | last = Sharma | first = Sunil | isbn = 978-0674975859 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=qaA4DwAAQBAJ}}
  • {{cite book |chapter=Local and Transregional Places in the Works of Safavid Men of Letters |first=Sunil |last=Sharma |title=Safavid Persia in the Age of Empires: The Idea of Iran |volume=10 |editor-first=Charles |editor-last=Melville |publisher=I.B. Tauris |pages = 309–330 |year=2021 }}

{{s-start}}

{{s-gov}}

{{s-bef|before=Shaykh Ali Khan Zanganeh}}

{{s-ttl|title=Vizier of the Safavid Empire|years=March 1691 – May 1699}}

{{s-aft|after=Mohammad Mo'men Khan Shamlu}}

{{s-end}}

{{Grand Viziers of the Safavid Empire}}

{{authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Mohammad Taher Vahid Qazvini}}

Category:Grand viziers of the Safavid Empire

Category:17th-century Iranian politicians

Category:1620s births

Category:1700 deaths

Category:People from Qazvin

Category:17th-century Persian-language poets

Category:Azerbaijani-language poets

Category:17th-century people from Safavid Iran

Category:Safavid historians

Category:17th-century Iranian historians

Category:17th-century Iranian poets