:: Volume 5, Issue 19 (Cultural History Studies 2014) ::
CHS 2014, 5(19): 47-68 Back to browse issues page
Lineage Manipulating during Iran Medieval History Uncertainties and Doubts
Emamali Sha’bani *
University of Arak , shabani.2009@gmail.com
Abstract:   (9067 Views)
Lineage manipulating was one of basic policies of governments during the history of Iran – particularly during medieval centuries – which has been applied as a result of imbuing of the spirit of archaism to legitimization, pushing forward of political goals, to flee from humiliation and making balance in lineage. But despite the persistence of this issue in all these centuries and all attempts of the governments, the historical resources always faced those data by serious doubts or in the validation process those data encountered with doubts. This paper is trying to answer the basic question that what criticisms have been raised about the lineage of the governments in Iran medieval era. The result show that the terms of Iranian Historiography, historical contradictions or gaps, rulers and government theorists’ admitting, political implications of lineage manipulating policy and most importantly, the concept of lineage, in special periods of the governments’ life and finally emphasis of some political thinkers of those periods on the value of figure and not lineage as the criterion of excellence, approve this theory that the existing lineages of the governments in historical resources, in fact are manifestation and historical falsification and they are not coincide with historical facts and they were solely undertaken to advance the political interests.
Keywords: Lineage Manipulating, Lineage falsification, doubts, Iran Medieval History, Ruling Lineages.
Full-Text [PDF 199 kb] [English Abstract]   (1587 Downloads)    
review paper: Research | Subject: Special
Received: 2014/08/18 | Accepted: 2014/08/18 | Published: 2014/08/18


XML   Persian Abstract   Print



Rights and permissions
Creative Commons License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Volume 5, Issue 19 (Cultural History Studies 2014) Back to browse issues page