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hamid asadpour; Farajolah Ahmadi; hossein Eskandari
Abstract
Abstract
Migrations have had political, social, economic, and cultural effects, either intentionally or unintentionally. As the effectiveness of the migration phenomenon, especially in the cultural aspect, is one of the important and significant issues. As an important waterway, the Persian Gulf has ...
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Abstract
Migrations have had political, social, economic, and cultural effects, either intentionally or unintentionally. As the effectiveness of the migration phenomenon, especially in the cultural aspect, is one of the important and significant issues. As an important waterway, the Persian Gulf has been a meeting place of various cultures not only politically and economically, but also culturally. One of these cases is the generally unwanted migration of people of African descent, especially from the eastern parts of this continent, to the shores and rear shores of the Persian Gulf centuries ago and especially in the last two centuries. In addition to being influenced by the residents of these areas, this group has also had a deep impact on the culture of these areas. One of the most important of these effects is the formation and spread of a phenomenon called zar, which is considered one of the subcultures in these areas. In the term, zar is a kind of confusion and distress of people, which they considered to be the result of the actions of evil spirits. The formation and wide spread of the Zar phenomenon has many reasons. The basic question of this research is that what are the causes of the spread and continuation of the zar phenomenon in the shores and backshores of the Persian Gulf? It seems that the lack of a safe haven and the lack of logical reasoning to solve the problems of the residents of the shores and backshores of the Persian Gulf on the one hand and living with many problems in the southern regions of Iran, the many trips of sailors from these areas to the African coasts and the settlement of African descendants on the coasts On the other hand, the Persian Gulf has caused the spread and development of a phenomenon called Zar. Also, this phenomenon has had harmony and similarity with some cultural structures of these areas. This research has been done by relying on library sources and field observations and with descriptive analytical method.
Yaser Mollazaei; Farajollah Ahmadi
Abstract
According to historical and geographical sources, Makran province in southern Iran has a large territory. This region was linked to Sistan in the north, Kerman in the west, the sea in the south, and the Indus River basin in the east. The expansion of the Makran region in the southeast of Iran, its connection ...
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According to historical and geographical sources, Makran province in southern Iran has a large territory. This region was linked to Sistan in the north, Kerman in the west, the sea in the south, and the Indus River basin in the east. The expansion of the Makran region in the southeast of Iran, its connection with the sea, as well as its border location with the eastern and southern neighbors of Iran, provided the basis for the creation and development of numerous cities and settlements in Makran. Communication was important and prestigious, the city of Kech was in the center of this stateAdapting the name of this city in many historical and geographical texts from the 7th century AH to the 12th century AH, especially in the sources of the Safavid era, a place named "Kech and Makran" was formed in the mental geography of historians and geographers. Based on this, how the continuation and transformation of this place name in historical and geographical sources has formed the issue of future research. The repeated reflection of the place name "Kech and Makran" in the historical and geographical sources of the 7th to 12th century AH, especially the sources of the Safavid era, raises the question of what geographical area the place name "Kech and Makran" is applied to and how its semantic load is in the historical sources and Geographical continuity and evolution? The following article is organized by the method of describing historical and geographical data and then analyzing them through matching and comparing the data available in historical texts, especially manuscripts, geographical texts, historical maps, travelogues, as well as some examples of interviews with local experts. The result of this article shows that the political and communication importance of the city of Kech in the early to middle Islamic centuries provided the context for the first time in the official reports of the historical and geographical sources of the 7th and 8th centuries A.H. to establish a link between its name and the name of Makran And the name "Kech and Makran" should be mentioned as another name of Makran state. Adapted from these official reports, the use of the place name "Kech and Makran" as another name of the Makran state was not only continued in the sources of the following centuries, but in the Safavid era, along with this continuity, there was also a change in it, based on which, This place was also known as another name of Kech city..
Farajolah Ahmadi; Viyan Ali Saleh
Abstract
From the establishment of Iraq in 1932 up to the Iraqi coup of 1958, the disputes between the two neighboring countries of Iran and Iraq did not extend beyond boundary disputes and lead to severe tensions and disputes between them due to the royal structure of their ruling system, their membership in ...
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From the establishment of Iraq in 1932 up to the Iraqi coup of 1958, the disputes between the two neighboring countries of Iran and Iraq did not extend beyond boundary disputes and lead to severe tensions and disputes between them due to the royal structure of their ruling system, their membership in the Baghdad Pact, and the dependence of both governments on the Western bloc. However, there was a period of tension, threats and regional competitions between them after the 1958 military coup in Iraq by Abd al-Karim Qasim and Iraq’s tendency to establish friendly relations with the Soviet Union (Eastern Bloc). This article investigates Iraq's relations with the Soviet Union and its impact on the foreign relations of Iran and Iraq from 1958 to 1979. The question dealt with in this study is: “How did Iraq's dependence on the Soviet Union impact the Iran-Iraq relations from 1958 to 1979?” It is argued that Iraq established friendly relations with the Eastern bloc in line with the Soviet policy after the coup of 1958 in order to gain a more prominent role in the Persian Gulf and enhance its military and political power in the region, which added to the conflicts and disputes between Iran and Iraq, as well as their arms races and interventions in each other’s internal affairs and support of the opposition groups in the two countries. Discussing the history of Iran-Iraq relations before the Iraqi coup of 1958, this article points to Iran’s post-coup concerns due to the change of Iraqi government and its tendency to the Eastern bloc. Delving into the Iraq-Soviet relations, this study examines the impacts of Iraq's dependence on the Soviet Union on Iran-Iraq relations manifested by their arms races and support for the opposition groups in the two countries.