@ARTICLE{Abbasi, author = {Gharib, Ghasem and Abbasi, Javad and Rajaei, Jalal and }, title = {جریان‌های شعوبی غیرایرانی در سده‌های نخستین اسلامی}, volume = {11}, number = {42}, abstract ={Although the Iranian Shiite movement was a broad motion and had various dimensions, the Shu‘ubi movement in the Islamic world was not limited to Iranians. By focusing on the “Arabs” in political, social and economic affairs, the nationalist Umayyad government created the discontent of other ethnic groups living in Islamic lands. The policies of the Umayyads continued in the minds and writings of the anti-Shu‘ubi movements of the Abbasid era and reflected the reaction of the Muslim elites and non-Arab masses to this discriminatory thinking in various forms. This study seeks to find different currents of the Shu‘ubi movement among non-Arab Muslim nations, with the exception of Iranians, in the early Islamic centuries. The results of the study show that the largest and most important ethnic elite groups in the Islamic world, based on the cultural power and history of their civilization, propound their persistence and honors against the anti- Shu‘ubi contempt. The Nabataeans, the Copts, the Andalusians, the Abyssinians-Sudanese, and the Turks were the five major ethnic groups that demonstrated resistance to the superiority of Arab. Although only a handful of written heritage have left from the elites of these nations, relying on reports from historical, literary, and religious sources, it can be understood that the elites of these groups try to express their honors and theorized their reasons for superiority over Arabs. }, URL = {http://chistorys.ir/article-1-1253-en.html}, eprint = {http://chistorys.ir/article-1-1253-en.pdf}, journal = {Cultural History Studies}, doi = {10.29252/chs.11.42.113}, year = {2020} }