Encyclopædia Iranica
Table of Contents
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KAʿBA-YE ZARDOŠT
Gerd Gropp
“Kaʿba of Zoroaster,” an ancient building at Naqš-e Rostam near Persepolis.
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KABĀB
Etrat Elahi
popular dish which traditionally consists of meat cut in cubes, or ground and shaped into balls; these are threaded onto a skewer and broiled over a brazier of charcoal embers.
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KABIR-KUH
Majdodin Keyvani
one of the long ranges of the Zagros mountains, lying between Iran’s two western provinces of Loristan and Ilām.
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KABISA
Simone Cristoforetti
Arabic term used in calendrical context; “intercalary,” “embolismal.” It is applied to several readjustments that occurred in the Iranian solar calendar.
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KĀBOL MAGAZINE
Wali Ahmadi
a monthly magazine with the full title Kābol:ʿElmi, adabi, ejtemāʿi, tariḵi. The periodical was founded by the Kabul Literary Society (Anjoman-e Adabi-e Kābol), 1931-40.
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KĀBOLI
Rawan Farhadi and J. R. Perry
the colloquial Persian spoken in the capital of Afghanistan, Kabul, and its environs. It has been a common and prestigious vernacular for several centuries, since Kabul was long ruled by dynasts of Iran (the Safavids) or India (the Mughals) for whom Persian was the language of culture and administration.
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KĀBOLI, ʿAbdallāh Ḵᵛāja
Maria Szuppe
(also known as Kāboli Naqšbandi and Heravi), historiographer and poet of the late 16th and early 17th centuries.
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KABUL
Multiple Authors
(Kābol), capital of Afghanistan, also the name of its province and a river.
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KABUL i. GEOGRAPHY OF THE PROVINCE
Andreas Wilde
Kabul is part of a system of high level basins, the elevation of which varies from 1,500 to 3,600 meters, extends—geographically speaking—beyond the administrative borders of the present-day province.
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KABUL ii. HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY
Xavier de Planhol
Before the period of war and unrest in Afghanistan that started in 1978, almost all the functions concerned with governing the country and directing its international relations were concentrated in Kabul. This primacy among Afghan cities is due to an exceptionally favorable geographical site.
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KABUL iii. HISTORY FROM THE 16TH CENTURY TO THE ACCESSION OF MOḤAMMAD ẒĀHER SHAH
May Schinasi
Kabul was a small town until the 16th century, when Ẓahir-al-Din Bābor (1483-1530), the first of the Great Mughals, made it his capital.
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KABUL iv. URBAN POLITICS SINCE ẒĀHER SHAH
Daniel E. Esser
The first master plan marked an important attempt to reorganize the spatial structure of the city. A first revision was authorized in 1971.
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KABUL v. MONUMENTS OF KABUL CITY
Jonathan Lee
This article focuses on the major monuments in and around the Old City of Kabul and the most significant Dorrāni dynastic monuments and mausolea.
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KABUL LITERARY SOCIETY
Wali Ahmadi
(Anjoman-e adabi-e Kābol), the first official academic and cultural association of Afghanistan, 1930-40.
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KABUL MUSEUM
Carla Grissmann
popular name of the National Museum of Afghanistan. A modest collection of artifacts and manuscripts already existed in the time of King Ḥabib-Allāh (r. 1901–19). In 1931 the collection was finally installed in a building in rural Darulaman (Dār-al-amān), eight kilometers south of Kabul City.
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KABUL RIVER
Andreas Wilde
in eastern Afghanistan. It forms one of Afghanistan’s four major river systems and is the only Afghan river that flows, as tributary of the Indus, into the sea.
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KĀČI
Etrat Elahi and Majdodin Keyvani
a traditional Persian dish generally made of rice flour, cooking oil, sugar diluted in water, and turmeric or saffron with a sprinkling of golāb (rosewater) to give it a pleasant scent.
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KADAGISTĀN
Nicholas Sims-Williams
an eastern province of the Sasanian empire. The clearest evidence for the existence of such a province is provided by a bulla bearing the impression of a seal.
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ḴĀDEM MIṮĀQ
Amir Hossein Pourjavady
(1907-1958), musician, teacher, conductor, and composer.
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ḴĀDEM-E BESṬĀMI
Kioumars Ghereghlou
, Moḥammad Ṭāher b. Ḥasan, local historian, calligrapher, and poet of the reign of Shah ʿAbbās I.
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KADIMI
Ramiyar P. Karanjia
a Zoroastrian sect (Ar. qadim “old, ancient”). The movement emerged in 18th-century India.
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KADḴODĀ
Willem Floor and EIr.
principal meaning “headman,” from Middle Persian kadag-xwadāy, lit. “head of a household."
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KADPHISES, KUJULA
Osmund Bopearachchi
(1st cent. CE), first Kuṣān king, founder of the Kuṣāna dynasty in Central Asia and India, as indicated by the legend written in Gāndhāri and Kharoṣṭhī.
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KAEMPFER, ENGELBERT
Detlef Haberland
German physician and traveler to Russia, the Orient, and the Far East (1651-1716).
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KAĒTA
William W. Malandra
an Avestan word whose approximate meaning is ‘soothsayer.’
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KAFIR KALA
Boris Litvinsky
(Kāfer Qalʿa), ancient settlement and one of the largest archeological monuments of the Vakhsh river valley, on the western outskirts of Kolkhozabad, Tajikistan. The city (šahrestān) together with the citadel form a square, each side 360 m long, oriented approximately to the cardinal points.
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ḴAFRI, ŠAMS-AL-DIN
George Saliba
, Moḥammad b. Aḥmad-e Kāši, one of the most competent of all the mathematical astronomers and planetary theorists of medieval Islam (d. 956/1550).
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KAFTARI WARE
C. A. Petrie
distinctive ceramic vessels dated to the late 3rd and early 2nd millennia BCE, primarily found in Fārs.
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ḴĀGINA
Etrat Elahi
a traditional Persian dish; most of the recipes are very similar to those for making a plain omelet.
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KAHAK
Farhad Daftary
Markazi Province, a village located about 35 km northeast of Anjedān and northwest of Maḥallāt in central Iran, with ruins of a fairly large caravanserai.
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KAIFENG
Donald D. Leslie
medieval capital of the Northern Song dynasty (960-1127) and home of a Judeo-Persian community.
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KAJAKAY DAM
Siddieq Noorzoy
dam built on the Helmand River as a part of the multi-faceted projects aimed at the development of the Helmand Valley.
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KĀK
Etrat Elahi and Eir.
a general term applied to several kinds of flat bread or small, often thin, dry cakes variously shaped and made.
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KĀKĀʾI
Philip G. Kreyenbroek
a term used both for a tribal federation and for a religious group in Iraqi Kurdistan.
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KĀKAGI
Arley Loewen
the customs and characteristics of a kāka—a vagabond or vigilante characterized by the ideals of chivalry, courage, generosity, and loyalty.
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KĀKĀVAND
Pierre Oberling
a Lor tribe of the Delfān group, settled in the Piškuh region of Luristan (Lorestān), as well as west of Qazvin and in the Ṭārom region.
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ḴĀKI ḴORĀSĀNI, EMĀMQOLI
S. J. Badakhchani
Ismaʿili poet and preacher of 17th-century Persia (d. after 1646). He was born in Dizbād, a village in the hills half way between Mashhad and Nišāpur.
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ḴĀKSĀR
Zahra Taheri
a strictly popular order of Persian dervishes, favored by artisans and shopkeepers. The name “Ḵāksār” (lit. ‘dust-like’) was probably chosen to figuratively denote a lowly, humble, and modest person.
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KĀKUYIDS
C. Edmund Bosworth
[KAKWAYHIDS], a dynasty of Deylamite origin that ruled in western Persia, Jebāl, and Kurdistan about 1008-51 as independent princes.
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ḴALAF B. AḤMAD
C. E. Bosworth
b. Moḥammad, Abu Aḥmad (d. 1009), Amir in Sistān of the “second line” of Saffarids, who ruled between 963 and 1003.
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KALĀNTAR
Willem Floor
“chief, leader,” from the late 15th century onwards, particularly the local official (mayor) in charge of the administration of a town.
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KALĀRESTĀQ
Multiple Authors
(or Kalār-rostāq), and Kalārdašt, historical district in western Māzandarān. i. The District and Sub-District. ii. The Dialect.
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KALĀRESTĀQ i. The District and Sub-District
Habib Borjian
This predominantly mountainous district extends along the Caspian coast from the Namakābrud (Namakāvarud) river on the west to the Čālus river on the east.
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KALĀRESTĀQ ii. The Dialect
Habib Borjian
The Caspian vernaculars spoken in Kalārestāq, together with those of Tonekābon district, may not be properly classified as either Māzandarāni or Gilaki but serve as a transition between these two language groups.
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KALĀT-E NĀDERI
Xavier de Planhol
an elevated, isolated plateau in the mountains of Khorasan, some 150 km north of Mašhad, edged with steep cliffs that transform it into an almost inaccessible natural fortress.
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KALBĀSI
Hamid Algar
Ḥāj Moḥammad Ebrāhim (b. Isfahan, 1766; d. Isfahan, 1845), prominent Oṣuli jurist, influential in the affairs of Isfahan during the reigns of Fatḥ-ʿAli Shah and Moḥammad Shah.
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ḴĀLEDI, Mehdi
E. Naḵjavāni
Persian violinist and songwriter (1919-1990). As a violinist, Ḵāledi was known for his command of traditional Persian music and its innovative interpretation. As a composer, he was admired for the range of his rhythmically varied and elegiac songs.
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KALEMĀT-E MAKNUNA
Moojan Momen
(The Hidden Words), a collection of aphorisms (71 in Arabic and 82 in Persian) by Bahāʾ-Allāh on spiritual and moral themes, dating from 1274/1857-58 and considered one of his most important writings.
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ḴĀLEQI, RUḤ-ALLĀH
Hormoz Farhat
(1906-1965), Persian music educator, composer, and music scholar.
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KALHOR
Pierre Oberling
a Kurdish tribe in the southernmost part of Persian Kurdistan. The last of the great Kalhor chiefs was Dāwud Khan, who ruled the tribe in the early 1900s.
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KALHOR, Mirzā Mohammad-Reżā
Maryam Ekhtiar
(1829-1892), one of the most prominent 19th-century Persian calligraphers, often compared to such great masters of nastaʿliq as Mir ʿAli Heravi and Mir ʿEmād Sayfi Qazvini.
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ḴALIFA SOLṬĀN
Rudi Matthee
(1592/93-1654), grand vizier under Shah ʿAbbās I (r. 1588-1629) and then again under Shah ʿAbbās II (r. 1642-66).
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ḴALIL SOLṬĀN b. MIRĀNŠĀH b. TIMUR
Beatrice Forbes Manz
Timurid ruler (1405-09). He became active in the military on the Indian campaign in 1398-99 and played a prominent part in the seven-year campaign of 1399-1404.
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ḴALIL, MOḤAMMAD EBRĀHIM
Wali Ahmadi
Afghan scribe, calligrapher, poet and historian. Ḵalil studied privately with his parents and excelled in the art of calligraphy, especially the nastaʿliq and šekasta styles.
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ḴALIL-ALLĀH ŠAH
Nasrollah Pourjavady
(or Sayyed) BORHĀN-AL-DIN (b. 1373-74, d. 1455-56), the only son of the Sufi master, Šāh Neʿmat-Allāh Wali of Kermān.
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KALILA wa DEMNA
Multiple Authors
collection of didactic animal fables, with the jackals Kalila and Demna as two of the principal characters. The story cycle originated in India between 500 BCE and 100 BC, and circulated widely in the Near East.
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KALILA wa DEMNA i. Redactions and circulation
Dagmar Riedel
In Persian literature Kalila wa Demna has been known in different versions since the 6th century CE. The complex relations between the extant New Persian versions, and a lost Middle Persian translation have been studied since 1859 when the German Indologist Theodor Benfey, published a translation of extant Sanskrit versions of the Pañcatantra.
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KALILA WA DEMNA iii. ILLUSTRATIONS
Bernard O’Kane
a collection of didactic animal fables, with the jackals Kalila and Demna as two of the principal characters.
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ḴALILI, ʿABBĀS
Hasan Mirabedini
political activist, journalist, translator, poet, and novelist (b. Najaf, 1895; d. Tehran, 1971).
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ḴALILI, ḴALIL-ALLĀH
Wali Ahmadi
renowned 20th-century Afghan poet in Dari (Persian), literary historian, scholar, and high-ranking official. Ḵalili is regarded as one of the last great vestiges of the traditional Persianate culture in Afghanistan, where erudition and classical training were particularly valued.
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KALIM KĀŠĀNI
Daniela Meneghini
(b. ca. 1581-85, d. 1651), Persian poet and one of the leading exponents of the “Indian style” (sabk-e hendi).
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KALIMI
Amnon Netzer
the word used to refer to the Jews of Iran in modern Persian usage. The word “kalimi” derives from the Arabic root KLM meaning to address, to speak, but the appellation in this context is derived directly from the specific epithet given to the prophet Moses as Kalim-Allāh.
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ḴALIQ LĀHURI
Stefano Pello
Indo-Persian poet of the 18th-century, probably a Sikh.
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ḴALḴĀLI, Sayyed ʿAbd-al-Raḥim
Hushang Ettehad and EIr
(d. 1942), well-known constitutionalist, journalist, government official, bookseller, and publisher, and the editor of the collected poems of Ḥafeẓ.
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ḴĀLKUBI
Willem Floor
(or ḵāl kubidan, kabud zadan “tattooing”), that is, making a permanent mark on the skin by inserting a pigment, is one of the oldest methods of body ornamentation. The earliest evidence of tattoos in the Iranian culture area is the almost completely tattooed body of a Scythian chief in Pazyryk Mound
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KALLA-PĀČA
Etrat Elahi
a traditional dish made of sheep’s head and trotters and cooked over low heat, usually overnight. The combination of one sheep’s head and four trotters is called a set of kalla-pāča.
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KALLAJUŠ
Etrat Elahi & EIr.
an old Iranian dish, also pronounced kālajuš, kālājuš, kaljuš in different parts of Iran. The compound term kāljuš is composed of kālmeaning unripe, connoting cooked rare, and juš (boiling).
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ḴĀLU
Pierre Oberling
a small Turkic tribe of Kermān province. According to the Iranian Army files (1957), this tribe once lived in the vicinity of Bardsir and Māšiz, southwest of Kermān.
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KALURAZ
TADAHIKO OHTSU
archeological site (lat 36°54′ N, long 49°28′ E) 1.1 km west of Rostam Ābād city, 11.7 km northeast of Rudbār in Gilan Province.
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KAMĀL ḴOJANDI
Paul Losensky
(ca. 1320-1401), Persian poet and Sufi also known as Shaikh Kamāl.
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KAMĀL PĀŠĀ-ZĀDA, ŠAMS-AL-DIN AḤMAD
T. Yazici
(1468-1534), prolific Ottoman scholar, author of several works in and on Persian. A native of Edirne, he studied under the local mufti, Mollā Loṭfi, and subsequently taught at the madrasas of Edirne, Uskup (Skoplje) and Istanbul.
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KAMĀL-AL-DIN EṢFAHĀNI
David Durand-Guédy
poet from Isfahan, noted for his mastery of the panegyric. His full name is given by Ebn al-Fowaṭi as Kamāl-al-Din Abu’l-Fażl Esmāʿil b. Abi Moḥammad ʿAbd-Allāh b. ʿAbd-al-Razzāq al-Eṣfahāni.
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KAMĀL-AL-DIN ḤOSAYN
Colin Paul Mitchell
ḤĀFEŻ-E HARAVI, a prominent Safavid calligrapher during the reign of Shah Tˈahmāsp I (r. 1524-76).
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KAMĀL-AL-MOLK, MOḤAMMAD ḠAFFĀRI
A. Ashraf with Layla Diba
(ca. 1859–1940), widely acclaimed Iranian painter of the European academic style during the late Qajar and early Pahlavi periods. He descended from a family that had produced a number of artists since the Afsharid period, including his paternal great-grandfather, Mirzā Abu’l-Ḥasan Mostawfi, a court painter during the reign of Nāder Shah Afshar (r. 1736-47) and Karim Khan Zand (r. 1750-79).
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KAMĀLI BOḴĀRĀʾI
Nasrollah Pourjavady
, ʿAmid Kamāl-al-Din, a court poet, musician, and calligrapher at the court of Sultan Sanjar, the Saljuqid king (r. 1097-1118), during his rule in Khorasan.
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KAMĀNČA
Stephen Blum
(lit. “small bow”), the most common term throughout much of the Iranian world for a spike fiddle with a small, often spherical, resonating chamber.
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KĀMI AḤMED ÇELEBI
Osman G. Özgüdenlī
Ottoman scholar, judge, writer, and translator. He was born in Edirne (his birth date is unknown) and known as Mesnevi-hānzāde (Maṯnawi-ḵvānzāda).
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KĀMI MEHMED-I KARAMĀNI
Osman G. Özgüdenlī
Ottoman scholar, judge, poet, and translator. He was born in Karaman (Qaramān) in central Anatolia.
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ḴAMĪS DYNASTY
Cross-Reference
See ĀL-E ḴAMĪS.
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KĀMRĀN B. SHAH MAḤMUD
Christine Nöelle-Karimi
Sadōzāy ruler of Herat (r. 1826-42). His career coincided with the waning of Sadōzāy power and the rise of the Moḥammadzāy dynasty in the 1820s.
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KĀMRĀN MIRZĀ
Sunil Sharma
second son of the founder of the Mughal empire, Ẓahir-al-Din Moḥammad Bābor and of Golroḵ Begom, and half-brother of the emperor Homāyun.
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ḴAMSA OF NEẒĀMI
Domenico Parrello
the quintet of narrative poems for which Neẓāmi Ganjavi (1141-1209) is universally acclaimed.
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ḴAMSA TRIBE
Pierre Oberling
a tribal confederacy formed in the 19th century comprising five large tribes in Fārs province.
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ḴAMSA-ye AMIR ḴOSROW
Sunil Sharma
a quintet of poems in the mathnawi form written by Amir Ḵosrow between 1298 and 1302, as a response to Neẓāmi’s immensely popular Panj ganj (Five Treasures).
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ḴAMSA-ye JAMĀLI
Paola Orsatti
a suite of five mathnawis, composed in response to the Ḵamsa by Neẓāmi (1141-1209). This Ḵamsa exists in a unique manuscript in the India Office Library, London.
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KAMSARAKAN
C. Toumanoff
Armenian noble family that was an offshoot of the Kāren Pahlav, one of the seven great houses of Iran claiming Arsacid origin.
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Ḵān-e Ārezu, Serāj-al-din ʿAli
Prashant Keshavmurthy
(1688-1756), a Persian-language philologist, lexicographer, literary critic and poet from North India.
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ḴĀNĀ QOBĀDI
Philip G. Kreyenbroek and Parwin Mahmoudweyssi
(fl. ca.1700-1759 or 1778), Gurāni poet and one of the major members of the school of Gurāni poetry that is said to have been founded by Yusof Yaskā.
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ḴĀNA-YE EDRISIHĀ
SOHEILA SAREMI
A novel in two volumes, Ḵāna-ye Edrisihā is set in 1910s, and takes place in a house in Ashkhabad (ʿEšqābād), the capital city of the Republic of Turkmenistan.
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KANAF
Bahram Grami
(Hibiscus cannabinus L.), an annual herbaceous plant of the Malvaceae family, yielding a soft fiber from the stem bark. Its fiber is used primarily for making gunnysacks and burlap. The first gunny mill (guni bāfi) in Persia was established in 1933 in Rašt by the private sector.
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ḴĀNAQĀH
Gerhard Böwering and Matthew Melvin-Koushki
an Islamic institution and physical establishment, principally reserved for Sufi dervishes to meet, reside, study, and assemble and pray together as a group in the presence of a Sufi master (Arabic, šayḵ, Persian, pir), who is teacher, educator, and leader of the group.
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KANDAHAR
Multiple Authors
the second most important city in the country and the capital of Kandahar province. This entry is divided into seven parts: i. Historical geography to 1979. ii. Pre-Islamic monuments and remains. iii. Early Islamic period. iv. From the Mongol invasion through the Safavid era. v. In the 19th century. vi. 20th century, 1901-73. vii. From 1973 to the present.
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KANDAHAR i. Historical Geography to 1979
Xavier de Planhol
city in southern Afghanistan (lat 31°36′28″ N, long 65°42′19″ E), the second most important in the country and the capital of Kandahar province.
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KANDAHAR ii. Pre-Islamic Monuments and Remains
Gérard Fussman
The ancient city of Kandahar lay along the Qaytul ridge, west of the modern city and was emptied of its population by Nāder Shah in 1738.
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KANDAHAR iii. Early Islamic Period
Minoru Inaba
Kandahar and its surroundings have been an important junction connecting Iran and India since ancient times.
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KANDAHAR iv. From The Mongol Invasion Through the Safavid Era
Rudi Matthee and Hiroyuki Mashita
There are various reasons why, despite the manifest weaknesses of the Safavid army, Kandahar surrendered to the Safavids.
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KANDAHAR v. In the 19th Century
Shah Mahmoud Hanifi
city in southern Afghanistan (lat 31°36′28″ N, long 65°42′19″ E), the second most important in the country and the capital of Kandahar province.
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KANDAHAR vi. 20th Century, 1901-73
M. Jamil Hanifi
city in southern Afghanistan (lat 31°36′28″ N, long 65°42′19″ E). Kandahar expanded substantially during the second half of the 20th century by attracting rural labor and by developing new residential quarters (šahr-e naw) and public buildings.
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KANDAHAR vii. From 1973 to the Present
Antonio Giustozzi
Mohammad Daoud Khan took power in July 1973, his ban on party political activities hit Kandahar too.
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ḴANDAQ
Michael G. Morony
a Persian loanword in Arabic meaning a trench or a moat (lit. “dug”), possibly also a wall or an enclosure.
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KANGARLU
P. OBERLING
a Turkic tribe of Azerbaijan and the Qom-Verāmin region of central Persia.
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KANGAVAR
Wolfram Kleiss
town in eastern Kermanshah Province, on the modern road from Hamadan to Kermanshah, identical with a trace of the silk road. Isidorus of Charax (1st century CE) referred to it as Congobar and mentioned a temple of Anāhitā (Anaitis) there. The site has ruins of debated date and nature.
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KANGDEZ
Pavel Lurje
(lit. “Fortress of Kang,”), a mythical, paradise-like fortress in Iranian folklore. There are different and often contradictory descriptions of Kang, Kangdež and several similar place names in Pahlavi literature and the epics of the Islamic period.
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KANI, ḤĀJ MOLLĀ ʿALI
Hamid Algar
Shiʿi scholar whose power and prominence in the affairs of Tehran for more than four decades earned him the semi-official title of raʾis al-mojtahedin (“chief of the mojtaheds”), as well as accusations of inordinate greed.
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KANJAKI
Nicholas Sims-Williams
language mentioned in the 11th-century Turkish lexicon of Maḥmud al-Kāšḡari as being spoken in the villages near Kāšḡar.
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ḴĀNLARI, PARVIZ NĀTEL
Cross-reference
See KHANLARI, PARVIZ NATEL (pending).
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ḴĀNOM
C. Edmund Bosworth
a title for highborn women in the pre-modern Turkish and Persian worlds. In early Islamic Turkish, it was used for a khan’s wife or a princess, hence as a higher title than begüm.
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KĀNUN-E PARVAREŠ-E FEKRI-E KUDAKĀN VA NOWJAVĀNĀN
Fereydoun Moezi Moghadam
an institute with a wide range of cultural, artistic, and educational activities for children and adolescents, founded in December 1965.
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KĀNUN-E PARVAREŠ-E FEKRI-E KUDAKĀN VA NOWJAVĀNĀN i. Establishment of Kanun
Fereydoun Moezi Moghadam
Kanun’s goal was to produce and offer support and services for children in better settings than the grim and austere school classrooms.
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KĀNUN-E PARVAREŠ-E FEKRI-E KUDAKĀN VA NOWJAVĀNĀN ii. Libraries
Fereydoun Moezi Moghadam
A children’s library, conceived by the founders of Kanun as a pilot project for future libraries, was approved, and construction began in 1965.
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KĀNUN-E PARVAREŠ-E FEKRI-E KUDAKĀN VA NOWJAVĀNĀN ii. Libraries
Fereydoun Moezi Moghadam
an institute with a wide range of cultural, artistic, and educational activities for children and adolescents, founded under the patronage of Queen (Shahbanou) Farah Pahlavi in December 1965.
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KĀNUN-E PARVAREŠ-E FEKRI-E KUDAKĀN VA NOWJAVĀNĀN iii. Book Publishing
Fereydoun Moezi Moghadam
When Kanun began producing children’s books, there were no specialized children’s book publishers in Iran.
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KĀNUN-E PARVAREŠ-E FEKRI-E KUDAKĀN VA NOWJAVĀNĀN iv. International Film Festivals
Fereydoun Moezi Moghadam
Kanun organized its first international film festival for children (Noḵostin festivāl-e bayn-al-melali-e filmhā-ye kudakān o nowjavānān) in 1966, its first official year.
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KĀNUN-E PARVAREŠ-E FEKRI-E KUDAKĀN VA NOWJAVĀNĀN v. Film Production: 1970-77
Fereydoun Moezi Moghadam
Kanun productions were the first experience of film direction for a number of today’s best-known Iranian directors.
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KĀNUN-E PARVAREŠ-E FEKRI-E KUDAKĀN VA NOWJAVĀNĀN vi. Music and Sound Production
Fereydoun Moezi Moghadam
In 1967, Kanun produced only one storytelling phonograph record. Regular music and sound production did not begin until 1971.
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KĀNUN-E PARVAREŠ-E FEKRI-E KUDAKĀN VA NOWJAVĀNĀN vii. Visual Arts Training Center
Fereydoun Moezi Moghadam
In the beginning, each artistic training program was independent, and the subjects were not coordinated under an overall artistic training management.
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KĀNUN-E PARVAREŠ-E FEKRI-E KUDAKĀN VA NOWJAVĀNĀN viii. The Pioneers and Promoters
Fereydoun Moezi Moghadam
Of the initial contributors to Kanun’s production activities, many artists and writers submitted only one or two works.
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KĀNUN-E PARVAREŠ-E FEKRI-E KUDAKĀN VA NOWJAVĀNĀN ix. From 1979 to 2009: An Overview
Fereydoun Moezi Moghadam
Due to Iran’s rapid urbanization and in order to cope with the increasing demands for cultural centers, Kanun needed to develop and to expand its centers.
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KAPADIA, DINSHAH DORABJI
Burzine K. Waghmar
Parsi scholar and educator. He was promoted in 1919 as a commissioner of the Indian Educational Service and taught mathematics in Poona and Bombay.
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ḴĀQĀNI ŠERVĀNI
Anna Livia Beelaert
a major Persian poet and prose writer (b. Šervān, ca. 521/1127; d. Tabriz, between 582/1186-87 and 595/1199).
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ḴĀQĀNI ŠERVĀNI i. Life
Anna Livia Beelaert
(1127-1186/1199), major Persian poet and prose writer.
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ḴĀQĀNI ŠERVĀNI ii. Works
Anna Livia Beelaert
a major Persian poet and prose writer (b. Šervān, ca. 521/1127; d. Tabriz, between 582/1186-87 and 595/1199). Ḵāqāni’s fame rests on his qaṣidas, of which, in Żiāʾ-al-Din Sajjādi’s edition, there are one hundred and thirty-two.
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KĀR-NĀMA-YE BALḴ
J. T . P. de Bruijn
a short maṯnavi by Sanāʾi of Ghazna (d. 1131), containing panegyric as well as satirical verses addressed to, or describing, people from various layers of Ghaznavid society.
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KĀR-NĀMAG Ī ARDAŠĪR Ī PĀBAGĀN
C. G. CERETI
short prose work written in Middle Persian. It narrates the Sasanian king Ardašīr I’s life story—his rise to the throne, battle against the Parthian king Ardawān, and conquest of the empire.
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KARĀʾI
P. Oberling
a Turkic-speaking tribe of Azerbaijan, Khorasan, Kermān and Fārs.
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KARABALGASUN
Toshio Hayashi, Y. Yoshida
or Khar Balgas “Black ruined city” in Mongolian. This entry consists of two sections: i. The site ii. The inscription.
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KARABALGASUN i. The Site
Toshio Hayashi
archeological site of a capital of the Uighur Khaghanate (second half of the 8th century to first half of the 9th century). Karabalgasun is located in the Orkhon valley, 320 km west of Ulan Bator (Ulaanbaatar), 30 km north of Karakorum.
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KARABALGASUN ii. The Inscription
Y. Yoshida
The trilingual inscription at Karabalgasun, in Old Turkic, Sogdian, and Chinese, of the eighth Uighur qaghan in Mongolia commemorates the qaghan’s (Old Turkic ḵaḡan, qaḡan) own military achievements and those of his predecessors.
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KARAFTO CAVES
Hubertus von Gall
an ensemble of artificially cut rock chambers dated to the 4th or 3rd century BCE, in Kordestān Province, 20 km west of Takab. The site is of considerable importance because of its Greek inscription, one of the very few examples preserved in situ in Persia.
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KARAJ i. Modern City
Bernard Hourcade
The area of Karaj has been inhabited since the Bronze Age at Tepe Khurvin, and the Iron Age at Kalāk on the left bank of the Karaj River.
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KARAJ ii. Population
Habibollah Zanjani
This sub-entry is divided into two sections: Karaj sub-province and Karaj city.
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KARAJ CITY
Multiple Authors
a town in Tehran province, located 36 km west of the city of Tehran on the western bank of the Karaj River (lat 35° 46ʹ N, long 50° 49ʹ E; elev., 1,360 m).
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KARAJ DAM
Cross-reference
See AMIR KABIR DAM (forthcoming online).
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KARAJ RIVER
Bernard Hourade
the second major permanent river of the central Iranian plateau after the Zāyandarud river.
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KARAKI
Rula Jurdi Abisaab
Nur-al-Din Abu’l-Ḥasan ʿAli b. Ḥosayn b. ʿAbd-al-ʿĀli, known as Moḥaqqeq al-Ṯāni or Moḥaqqeq ʿAli (1464-1533), a major Imamite jurist.
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KARĀMA
Erik S. Ohlander
“(saintly) marvel, wonder, or miracle” in Arabic (pl. karāmāt).
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KARAPAN
William Malandra
(or Karpan), designation of members of a class of daivic priests opposed to the religion of Zarathustra.
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KARBALA
Meir Litvak
a city in Iraq, situated about 90 km southwest of Baghdad. It is one of the four Shiʿite shrine cities (with Najaf, Kāẓemayn, and Sāmarrāʾ) in Iraq known in Shʿite Islam as ʿatabāt-e ʿaliāt or ʿatabāt-e moqaddasa.
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KÁRDAKES
Rüdiger Schmitt
the name of a Persian military unit mentioned several times by Greek and Roman authors, nearly always in relation to the Achaemenid period (cf. Huyse, p. 199, n. 6).
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KĀRGĀNRUD
Cross-Reference
the northernmost and largest of the five traditional Ṭāleš khanates (Ḵamsa-ye Ṭavāleš) in western Gilān.
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KĀRGOZĀR
Morteza Nouraei
a term used from the early 19th century until the abolishment of capitulation (kāpitulāsion) in 1927 to refer specifically to an agent of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, who was charged with regulating relations between Iranian subjects and foreigners.
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KARIM DEVONA
Keith Hitchins
pen-name of Abdul-Karim Qurbon, Tajik folk poet (1878-1918).
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KARIM KHAN ZAND
John R. Perry
(ca. 1705-1779), “The Wakil,” ruler of Persia (except Khorasan) from Shiraz during 1751-79. The Zand were a pastoral tribe of the Lak branch of the northern Lors, ranging between the inner Zagros and the Hamadān plains, centered on the villages of Pari and Kamāzān in the vicinity of Malāyer.
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KĀRIZ i. Terminology
Xavier de Planhol
underground irrigation canals, also called qanāt. The kārēz conducts water from the level of an aquifer to the open air by means of simple gravity in order to distribute it to lower areas.
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KĀRIZ ii. Technology
Xavier de Planhol
The technology of kārēz exploits a difference in grade between a tunnel and the groundwater table. The grade of the tunnel is less steep than the grade of the water table, so that the tunnel ends at an elevation distinctly higher than that of the water table. In Iran the average grade may be around 0.5 percent.
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KĀRIZ iii. Economic and Social Contexts
Xavier de Planhol
The major significance of the kārēz lies in its continuous discharge throughout the year. In contrast, irrigation systems that rely on surface water runoff can completely cease to discharge water during the dry season. The continuous discharge, however, needs be distinguished from a constant discharge. Significant seasonal variations can be observed.
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KĀRIZ iv. Origin and Dissemination
Xavier de Planhol
Far simpler techniques of water adduction involving underground channels must be clearly distinguished from kārēz, although they are often grouped together.
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KĀRIZ v. Kārēz in the Late 20th Century and Their Prospects
Xavier de Planhol
In 1990 it was estimated that the kārēz technique supplied water to around 1.5 million hectares of the planet’s total irrigated surface area, which constituted only the minor portion of approximately 0.6 percent.
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KARḴEH RIVER
Eckart Ehlers
the third longest river in Iran after the rivers Karun and Safidrud, flowing in the western provinces of the country. It rises from the Zagros mountain range.
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KARNĀ
Stephen Blum
designation of three types of musical instrument, the most prestigious being long trumpets made of brass, gold, silver, or other metals. Two regional instruments of Iran are also called karnā. Like the metal karnā, the long reed trumpet of Gilān and Māzandarān (also known as derāznāy “long reed”) lacks fingerholes and can produce only partials of the fundamental tone.
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KARRĀMIYA
Aron Zysow
the adherents to a theological and legal movement with a broad following in Khorasan and Afghanistan from the 10th to the 13th centuries, with its intellectual center in Nishapur (Nišāpur).
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KARSĀSP
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
Avestan dragon-slayer, son of Sāma, and eschatological hero. In the Pahlavi and Zoroastrian Persian traditions, several heroic feats are connected with him.
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KARSĪVAZ
Prods Oktor Skjærvø, Mahmoud Omidsalar
in the old Iranian epic tradition the brother of the Turanian king, Afrāsiāb, and the man most responsible for the murder of the Iranian prince Siāvaš.
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KART DYNASTY
Cross-Reference
See ĀL-E KART.
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KARTIR
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
a prominent Zoroastrian priest in the second half of the 3rd century CE, known from his inscriptions and mentioned in Middle Persian, Parthian, and Coptic Manichean texts.
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KARTLI
George Sanikidze
region occupying most of eastern Georgia. The original name of Georgia (Sakartvelo) and the Georgian people (Kartvelebi) derive from Kartli.
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KARUN RIVER i. Geography and Hydrology, ii
Habib Borjian
the largest river and the only navigable waterway in Iran. It rises in the Baḵtiāri Zagros mountains west of Isfahan, flows out of the central Zagros range, traverses the Khuzestan plain, and joins the Shatt al-Arab. before the latter discharges into the Persian Gulf.
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KARUN RIVER iii. The Opening of the Karun
Shabaz Shahnavaz
With the intensification of the Anglo-Russian rivalry in the late 1800s over Iran’s geopolitical position and commercial resources, Great Britain began to exert immense pressure on the shah’s government to provide it with access to the Karun trade route.
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KĀŠĀNI, ʿABD-AL-RAZZĀQ KHAN
Mangol Bayat
18th-century governor of Kashan under the Zand dynasty.
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KĀŠĀNI, SAYYED ABU’L-QĀSEM
Ali Rahnema
(1877-1962), the leading political cleric during the critical period of 1941-53. Until the departure of Reza Shah in 1941, Kāšāni stayed on the sidelines of domestic Iranian politics. The 21-year-old Mohammad Reza Shah ascended to his father’s throne on 16 September. On 8 October, Kāšāni voiced his grievances to Moḥammad ʿAli Foruḡi, the prime minister. In a letter, Kāšāni emphasized the necessity of applying the “divine laws.”
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KĀŠEF ŠIRĀZI
J. T . P. de Bruijn
Persian writer on ethics and poet of the Safavid period (b. Karbalā, ca. 1592; d. Ray, ca. 1653).
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KĀŠEF-AL-ḠEṬĀʾ, JAʿFAR
Hamid Algar
(1743-1812), Shiʿi scholar and jurist, broadly influential in both Iraq and Persia. His cognomen, meaning “remover of the veil,” alludes to one of his best known works.
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KĀŠEF-AL-ḠEṬĀʾ, MOḤAMMAD ḤOSAYN
Hamid Algar
(1877-1954), descendant of the great Shiʿite jurist of the early Qajar period, Sheikh Jaʿfar Kāšef-al-Ḡeṭāʾ, prodigious and versatile author, teacher, and lecturer.
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KĀŠEF-AL-SALṬANA
Ranin Kazemi
also known as Čāykār (tea planter), Qajar diplomat, reformer, author, constitutionalist, and promoter of tea cultivation (1865-1929)
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KĀŠEFI
Osman G. Özgüdenlı
(d. 15th century), author of the epic poem Ḡazā-nāma-ye Rum on the lives of the Ottoman sultans Morād II (r. 1421-44 and 1446-51) and Moḥammad II (r. 1444-46 and 1451-81).
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KĀŠEFI, KAMĀL-AL-DIN ḤOSAYN WĀʿEẒ
M. E . Subtelny
prolific prose-stylist of the Timurid era, religious scholar, Sufi figure, and influential preacher (b. Sabzavār, ca. 1436-37; d. Herat, 1504-5).
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KĀSEMI, NOṢRAT-ALLĀH
Mostafa Alamouti and EIr.
(1908-1996), physician, poet, writer, orator, and politician.
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KAŠF AL-ASRĀR
Cross-reference
wa ʿoddat al-abrār of Abu’l-Fażl Rašid-al-Dīn Meybodi. See MEYBODI. Forthcoming.
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KAŠF AL-LOḠĀT WA’L-EṢṬELĀḤĀT
Solomon Bayevsky
(Revealing [of the meaning] of words and terminology), title of a Persian dictionary compiled in India before 1608.
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KAŠF AL-MAḤJUB of Hojviri
Jawid Mojaddedi
the only surviving work of Abu’l-Ḥasan ʿAli b. ʿOṯmān Hojviri (d. between 1073 and 1077) and the oldest surviving independent manual of Sufism written in Persian.
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KAŠF AL-MAḤJUB of Sejzi
Hermann Landolt
(“Unveiling the hidden”), the Persian version of an Ismaʿili treatise originally written in Arabic by the 10th century dāʾi.
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KAŠF AL-ẒONUN
Kioumars Ghereghlou
(“Unveiling of suppositions”), a major bibliographical dictionary in Arabic, composed by Kāteb Čelebi Moṣṭafā b. ʿAbd-Allāh, also known as Ḥāji Ḵalifa (1609-57).
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KAŠF O ŠOHUD
Cyrus Ali Zargar
(“unveiling and witnessing”), terms commonly used by Muslim mystics to describe the acquisition of esoteric knowledge and the constant first-hand encountering of the divine presence.
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KAŠF-E ḤEJĀB
Cross-reference
See VEILING AND UNVEILING. Forthcoming.
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KAŠFI, MIR MOḤAMMAD ṢĀLEḤ ḤOSAYNI
Sunil Sharma
(d. 1651), calligrapher and poet in Mughal India. Authored several works in verse and prose.
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KĀŠḠARI, SAʿD-AL-DIN
Hamid Algar
(d. 1456), propagator of the Naqšbandi order in Timurid Herat, noteworthy primarily as the initiator ofʿAbd-al-Raḥmān Jāmi into the path.
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KASHAN
Multiple Authors
historical city and a sub-province of the province of Isfahan on the north-south axial route of central Iran (lat 33° 59ʹ 30ʹʹ N, long 51° 27ʹ 00ʹʹ E; elev. 950 m).
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KASHAN i. GEOGRAPHY
Habibollah Zanjani and EIr.
Covering an area of approximately 9,647 km2, the sub-province of Kashan is situated between the Karkas mountains on the west to the Central Desert on the east.
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KASHAN ii. HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY
Xavier de Planhol
Geographic foundations and the origins of the urban area. To the northeast of the well-watered mountain ranges of western and southern Iran, a line of bountiful oases which have given rise to important urban areas stretches along the piedmont bordering the desert basins of central and southeastern Iran.
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KASHAN iii. HISTORY
Pending
Pending online.
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KASHAN iv. POPULATION
Habibollah Zanjani
Approximately 90 percent of the Kashan Sub-province population lives in the city of Kashan, so the demographic data for the sub-province closely resembles that of the city.
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KASHAN v. ARCHITECTURE (1) URBAN DESIGN
Mohammad- Reza Haeri and EIr.
The city of Kashan, similar to other older Iranian cities, preserved its traditional architectural features and urban design into the early 20th century.
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KASHAN v. ARCHITECTURE (2) HISTORICAL MONUMENT
Mohammad- Reza Haeri and EIr.
This section briefly describes nine landmark monuments of Kashan.
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KASHAN v. ARCHITECTURE (3) TRADITIONAL ARCHITECTURE
Mohammad- Reza Haeri and EIr.
In line with the trend towards modernization in Iran’s recent history, most residential houses built by the middle classes in Kashan since 1950 comprise all or some of the following units: entrance, courtyard, living room, reception room, kitchen, lavatory, bath, bedroom, storage, staircase, and hall.
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KASHAN v. ARCHITECTURE (4) HISTORIC MANSIONS
EIr.
The city of Kashan boasts at least nineteen historic mansions that are well preserved; they are presented in the first volume of the Ganjnameh devoted to these structures.
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KASHAN vi. THE ESBANDI FESTIVAL
Habib Borjian
An elaborate festival held in the Kashan region on the eve of the month Esfand.
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KASHAN vii. KASHAN WARE
Pending
Kashan ware will be discussed in a future online entry.
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KASHAN viii. RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES (1) JEWISH COMMUNITY
Mehrdad Amanat
This sub-entry is devided into two sections: (1) Jewish community. (2) Bahai community.
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KASHAN viii. RELIGIOUS COMMUNITIES (2) BAHAI COMMUNITY
Mehrdad Amanat
Like many Bahai communities in Iran, Kashan Bahais can trace their roots to the early years of the Babi movement.
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KASHAN ix. THE MEDIAN DIALECTS OF KASHAN
Habib Borjian
This sub-entry is divided into two sections: (1) Rural Rāji dialects. (2) Urban Jewish dialect.
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KASHAN ix. THE MEDIAN DIALECTS OF KASHAN (2) URBAN JEWISH DIALECT
Habib Borjian
Kashan may be characterized as exclusively Persian speaking and Muslim from the time when the city was abandoned by its Jewry, who spoke a variety of Central dialects.
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KASHGAR
Pavel Lurje
(Kāšḡar), town in Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region in northwestern China, in the westernmost extremity of the Tarim Basin.
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KASHMIR
Multiple Authors
This entry is divided into five articles: i. Introduction. ii. Persian language in Kashmir. iii. Persian language in the state administration. iv. Persian elements in Kashmiri. v. Persian influence on Kashmiri art.
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KASHMIR i. INTRODUCTION
Siegfried Weber
Iranian influence in and beyond the region of Kashmir is a long-term phenomenon. Inscriptions in Sogdian, Parthian, and Middle Persian demonstrate pre-Islamic contacts there with Iranian-speakers.
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KASHMIR ii. PERSIAN LANGUAGE IN KASHMIR
Siegfried Weber
Persian was the basis of administrations all over western Asia and the highly prestigious language at the courts. Hence, Persian learning radiated into Kashmir and found a fertile soil after the initial impulse.
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KASHMIR iii. PERSIAN LANGUAGE IN THE STATE ADMINISTRATION
Siegfried Weber
Officially Persian became the court language in Kashmir during the 14th and 15th centuries.
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KASHMIR iv. Persian Elements in Kashmiri
Omkar N. Koul
This entry discusses the nature and extent of Persian influence on the Kashmiri language. The influence of one language on another primarily takes place as a result of linguistic contact.
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KASHMIR v. PERSIAN INFLUENCE ON KASHMIRI ART
Mehrdad Shokoohy
The Iranian influence on the art and architecture of Kashmir is indirect, appearing in ancient times via Hellenistic and Kushan culture and later through Muslim India.
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KASHTARITI
M. Dandamayev
(kaš-ta-ri-ti, Old Iranian Khshathrita), a city lord of Karkashshi in the Central Zagros mountains. during the reign of the Assyrian king Esarhaddon (680–669 BCE).
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KĀŠI
Cross-Reference
and Kāšisāzi. See CERAMICS xiv. THE ISLAMIC PERIOD, 11TH-15TH CENTURIES.
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KĀŠI, ḠIĀṮ-AL-DIN
George Saliba
ḠIĀṮ-AL-DIN JAMŠID B. MASʿUD B. MOḤAMMAD (ca. 1386-1429), mathematician, astronomer, and scientific instrument-maker of the highest rank.
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KĀŠI, MUSĀ KHAN
Houman Sarshar
Jewish master of Persian classical music, teacher, and innovative kamānča player also known for his mellow singing voice.
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ḴAṢIBI
Yaron Friedman
(d. 969), founder of Noṣayrism. The mystical Shiʿite sect whose present-day followers in Syria and southern Turkey call themselves ʿAlawis.
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KAŠK
Francoise Aubaile-Sallenave
(Ar. kešk, Turk. keşk), Persian term used primarily for a popular processed dairy food but also applied to various grain products, both in Iran and widely in the Middle East.
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KAŠKUL
Pending
an oval-shaped bowl carried by dervishes. Forthcoming online.
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KAŠKUL-E ŠAYḴ BAHĀʾI
Devin J. Stewart
the title of a large literary anthology compiled by Shaikh Bahāʾ-al-Din Moḥammad ʿĀmeli, commonly known as Shaikh Bahāʾi, the gifted polymath and leading jurist of the Safavid empire during most of the reign of Shah ʿAbbās I (r. 1587-1629).
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KAŠKULI BOZORG
Pierre Oberling
one of the five major tribes of the Qashqāʾi (Qašqāʾi) tribal confederacy of Fārs province.
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KASMĀʾI, MIRZĀ ḤOSAYN
Pezhmann Dailami
(1862-1921), a constitutionalist active in the revolutionary movement in Gilan (1915-20), led by Mirzā Kuček Khan Jangali.
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KAŠMIRI, BADR-AL-DIN
Devin Deweese
a prolific writer active in Central Asia during the second half of the 16th century; he was closely linked with the eminent Juybāri shaikhs of Boḵārā.
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KASRAVI, AḤMAD
Multiple Authors
influential social thinker, prominent historian, a pioneer of Iran’s linguistic studies, well-known social and religious reformer with a sense of prophetic mission, and prolific author.
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KASRAVI, AḤMAD i. LIFE AND WORK
Ali Reżā Manafzadeh
born in Ḥokmāvār, a poor rural quarter in the suburbs of Tabriz, to Ḥāji Mir Qāsem, a small merchant in a family of religious functionaries.
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KASRAVI, AḤMAD ii. ASSASSINATION
Moḥammad Amini
The surge in activities of Islamic groups and the intensification of the rhetoric of mullahs at mosques coincided with the escalation and sharpening of Kasravi’s criticism of the foundation of Shiʿite concepts and values.
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KASRAVI, AḤMAD iii. AS HISTORIAN
Alireza Manafzadeh
At the time when Kasravi began to write history, most historical research in Iran was carried out within the framework of political historiography with a nationalist purpose.
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KASRAVI, AḤMAD iv. AS LINGUIST
Pending
Pending online.
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KASRAVI, AḤMAD v. AS SOCIAL AND RELIGIOUS REFORMER
Mohammad Amini
Kasravi founded the “Society of Free Men” (Bāhamād-e āzādegān), announced his call for pākdini (pure faith)—born out of his sense of prophetic mission—and became the most outspoken intellectual against religious superstition and illusion.
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KASRAVI, AḤMAD vi. ON MYSTICISM AND PERSIAN SUFI POETRY
Lloyd Ridgeon
By the turn of the 20th century the Sufi tradition in Iran no longer enjoyed the popularity and following that it attracted in previous centuries.
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KASRAVI, AḤMAD vii. A BIBLIOGRAPHICAL SURVEY
EIr. and M. Amini
Aḥmad Kasravi was a prolific writer. From the age of 25, when he began to write in Tabriz in 1915, until his assassination 30 years later in 1946.
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KASRA’I, HOSAYN SIAVASH
Hušang Ettehād
(1939-2003), painter.
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KASRA’I, Siavash
Kāmyār ʿĀbedi
(1926-1996), Marxist poet and political activist of the 20th century who, in different stages of his literary career, assumed several pseudonyms.
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ḴĀṢṢ BEG
C. Edmund Bosworth
ARSLĀN B. PALANG-ERI, Turkish ḡolām who became the ḥājeb “chamberlain” and court favorite of the Great Saljuq Sultan Masʿud b. Moḥammad b. Malek Šāh (r. 1134-52).
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ḴĀṢṢ O ʿĀM
Cross-Reference
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ḴĀṢṢA
Willem Floor
an Arabic term that in the early Muslim period as well as later denoted people and things that were “special, elite, private” as against those that were “public, common, general” (ʿāmma; Morony, p. 258).
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KAŠŠI, ABU ʿAMR MOḤAMMAD
Liyakat Takim
an Imami traditionist and an important figure in Shiʿite biographical literature (rejāl).
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KASSITES
Ran Zadok
a people who probably originated in the Zagros and who ruled Babylonia in the 16th-12th centuries BCE.
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KAŠVĀD
Mahmoud Omidsalar
the name of the ancestor of the Gōdarziān clan of heroes in the Šāh-nāma.
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KĀṮ
Habib Borjian
the old capital of Chorasmia, situated by the Oxus/Āmu Daryā river. Kāṯ owes both its glory and demise to the Oxus, an unending source of sustenance as well as destruction destruction in human history.
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KATA
Etrat Elahi and EIr
a simple, everyday rice dish characteristic for the Caspian provinces, Gilan and Mazanderan.
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KATĀYUN
Mahnaz Moazami
a mythological figure in the Šāh-nāma and in the Bundahišn. In the Šāh-nāma, Katāyun is the daughter of the emperor of Rum who marries Goštāsp while he is in exile.
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KĀTEB
Cross-Reference
"secretary, scribe." See DABIR.
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ḴAṬIB
Cross-Reference
See KHATIB AND KHOTBA (pending); FRIDAY PRAYER.
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ḴAṬIB ROSTAM DEDE
Osman G. Özgüdenli
Ottoman Sufi, writer, and poet, author of the Wasila al-maqāṣed elā aḥsan al-marāṣed, a Persian-Turkish dictionary.
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KATIBA
Cross-Reference
"inscription." See CALLIGRAPHY.
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KAṮĪR DYNASTY
Cross-Reference
See ĀL-E KAṮĪR.
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KATIRĀ
Cross-reference
See TRAGACANTH (pending).
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ḴATM AL-ḠARĀʾEB
Anna Livia Beelaert
the only maṯnawi written by the poet Ḵāqāni Šervāni; its final version dates from 552/1157.
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ḴAṬMI
Ahmad Aryavand and Bahram Grami
(or ḵeṭmi), “marshmallow,” Althaea officinalis L. of the family Malvaceae (the mallow family), an important pharmaceutical plant.
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ḴATNA
Cross-reference
See CIRCUMCISION.
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KATPATUKA
Cross-reference
See CAPPADOCIA.
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ḴAṬṬ-E FĀRSI
Cross-reference
See IRAN vi. IRANIAN LANGUAGES AND SCRIPTS. (3) WRITING SYSTEMS.
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ḴAṬṬ-E MIḴI
Cross-reference
See CUNEIFORM SCRIPT.
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ḴAṬṬĀBIYA
Mohammad Ali Amir-Moezzi
an extremist Shiʿite sect named after Abu’l-Ḵaṭṭāb al-Asadi (killed ca. 755) who for some time was an authorized representative of Imam Jaʿfar al-Ṣādeq (d. ca. 765) in Kufa.
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ḴATTĀʾI, ʿALI-AKBAR
Cross-reference
See ḴETTĀʾI, ʿALI-AKBAR (pending).
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KATTĀN
Cross-reference
See LINEN (pending).
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ḴAṬṬĀTI
Cross-reference
See CALLIGRAPHY.
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ḴĀTUN
C. Edmund Bosworth
a title of high-born women in the pre-modern Turkish and Persian worlds.
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ḴĀTUNI, ABU ṬĀHER
cross-reference
See ABU ṬĀHER ḴĀTUNI.
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KĀVA
Mahmud Omidsalar
the name of a heroic blacksmith in the Šāhnāma who rebels against the tyrant Żaḥḥāk and helps Ferēdun wrest the kingdom from him.
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KĀVA NEWSPAPER
Iraj Afšār
(Kaveh), a Persian journal (1916-22) published in Berlin by Sayyed Ḥasan Taqizāda, who headed a group of nationalist Persians living in Germany known as Komita-ye Melliyun-e Irāni dar Berlan (Iranian Nationalist Committee of Berlin).
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ḴĀVARĀN-NĀMA
Cross-reference
See KHAVARAN-NAMA (pending).
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ḴĀVARI KĀŠĀNI
Mehrdad Amanat
preacher, poet, journalist, and constitutional activist. Ḵāvari learned the fundamentals of traditional learning from his preacher father, Sayyed Hāšem Wāʿeẓ.
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KAVI
cross-reference
See KAYĀNIĀN.
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ḴĀVIĀR
Cross-reference
See CAVIAR.
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KAVIR
Cross-Reference
Persian word meaning "desert." See DESERT.
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KĀVUS
Cross-reference
See KAYĀNIĀN.
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KAWĀD I
Multiple Authors
Sasanian king, son of Pērōz I. This entry is divided into two sections: i. Reign. ii. Coinage.
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KAWĀD I i. Reign
Nikolaus Schindel
The reign of Kawād I, lasting with an interruption of some three years from 488 to 531, is a turning point in Sasanian history.
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KAWĀD I ii. Coinage
Nikolaus Schindel
Since the reign of Jāmāsp interrupts the two regnal periods of Kawād I, and because of marked differences between the two, they should be treated separately. Kawād employs only one obverse and one reverse type during his first reign. The obverse shows the king’s bust to the right wearing a crown consisting of a crescent and two mural elements, which corresponds to the second crown of Pērōz (457-84).
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KAWĀD II
Cross-Reference
Sasanian king (r. 628), son of ḴOSROW II. See ŠIRUYA (entry pending).
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ḴAWARNAQ
Renate Würsch
a medieval castle built in the vicinity of the ancient city of al-Ḥira by Laḵmid rulers of Iraq to whose name frequent references has been made in pre-modern Persian literary works.
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KAY
Cross-reference
See KAYĀNIĀN.
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KAY KĀVUS
Cross-reference
See KAYĀNIĀN.
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KAY ḴOSROW
Cross-reference
See KAYĀNIĀN.
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KAY-ḴOSROW KHAN
Hirotake Maeda
(1674-1711), Georgian royal prince of the Kartlian branch, also known as Ḵosrow Khan.
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KAY QOBĀD
Cross-reference
See KAYĀNIĀN.
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ḴAYĀL, Mir Moḥammad-Taqi
Mohammad Sohayb Arshad
(d. 1759), Indian author of a collection of historical and fictitious stories composed in Persian in fifteen volumes over fourteen years and titled Bustān-e ḵayāl.
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KAYĀNIĀN
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
(Kayanids), in the early Persian epic tradition a dynasty that ruled Iran before the Achaemenids, all of whom bore names prefixed by Kay from Avestan kauui.
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KAYĀNIĀN i. Kavi: Avestan kauui, Pahlavi kay
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
Kavi is the Indo-Iranian term for “(visionary) poet.” The term may be older than Indo-Iranian, if Lydian kaveś and the Samothracean title cited by Hesychius as koíēs or kóēs are related.
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KAYĀNIĀN ii. The Kayanids as a Group
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
References to the kauuis in the Avesta are found in the yašts in the lists of heroes who sacrificed to various deities for certain rewards.
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KAYĀNIĀN iii. Kauui Kauuāta, Kay Kawād, Kay Kobād (Qobād)
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
Kauui Kauuāta (Figure 1) has no epithets in the Avesta to describe him, and the descriptions in the Pahlavi sources are mostly vague.
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KAYĀNIĀN iv. “Minor” Kayanids
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
The Avesta contains no information on Aipi.vahu, Aršan, Pisinah, and Biiaršan, but, according to the Pahlavi tradition, Abīweh was the son of Kawād and the father of Arš, Biyarš (spelled <byʾlš>), Pisīn, and Kāyus.
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KAYĀNIĀN v. Kauui Usan, Kay-Us, Kay Kāvus
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
With Kauui Usan (Usaδan), Pahlavi Kay Us (Kāy Us), Persian Kay Kāvus, the sources become a bit more substantial. His name corresponds to Old Indic Kāvya Uśánas.
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KAYĀNIĀN vi. Siiāuuaršan, Siyāwaxš, Siāvaš
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
Siiāuuaršan, “the one with black stallions,” is listed in the Avesta in Yašt 13.132 as a kauui and the third with a name containing aršan “male.”
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KAYĀNIĀN vii. Kauui Haosrauuah, Kay Husrōy, Kay Ḵosrow
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
The name Haosrauuah is a vriddi formation of *husrauuah “he who has good fame” and ought to mean “good fame” by itself.
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KAYĀNIĀN viii. Kay Luhrāsp, Kay Lohrāsb
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
In the Avesta, Vištāspa’s father is Auruuaṯ.aspa, who is mentioned only once, when Zarathustra asks Anāhitā for the ability to make Vištāspa, son of Auruuaṯ.aspa, help the daēnā along with thoughts, words, and deeds, a wish he is granted.
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KAYĀNIĀN ix. Kauui Vištāspa, Kay Wištāsp, Kay Beštāsb/Goštāsb
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
The name Vištāspa presumably means “he who gives the horses free rein” (cf. Rigveda 6.6.4víṣitāso áśvāḥ “horses let loose or given free rein”).
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KAYĀNIĀN x. The End of the Kayanids
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
In the Pahlavi texts. The Bundahišn only records that, when Wahman, son of Spandyād, came to the throne, Iran was a wasteland, and the Iranians were quarreling with one another.
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KAYĀNIĀN xi. The Kayanids and the Kang-dez
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
According to the Pahlavi texts, Kay Siāwaxš built the Kang castle (Kang-diz) by miraculous power (Pahlavi Rivāyat: with his own hands, by means of the [Kavian] xwarrah and the might of Ohrmazd and the Amahrspands).
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KAYĀNIĀN xii. The Kavian XVARƎNAH
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
The nature of the Avestan xᵛarənah and its three subtypes, the Aryan (airiiana), the “unseizable” (? axᵛarəta), and the Kavian (kāuuaiia).
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KAYĀNIĀN xiii. Synchronism of the Kayanids and Near Eastern History
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
The desire of the medieval historians to fit all the ancient narratives into one and the same chronological description of world history from the creation led them to coordinate the Biblical, Classical, and Iranian sources.
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KAYĀNIĀN xiv. The Kayanids in Western Historiography
Prods Oktor Skjærvø
In Western historiography up into the 19th century, the historicity of the pre-Achaemenid Persian dynasties was taken for granted, and the Kayanids, the “second dynasty of Persian kings,” were commonly identified with the Babylonian, Assyrian, and Median kings.
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KAYĀNSĪH
A. Panaino
Pahlavi form of the name of a mythical sea, Av. Kąsaoiia-, connected in tradition with the Hāmun lake. According to Later Av. sources it is from the Kąsaoiia that the Saošiiaṇt Astuuat̰.ərəta- will rise.
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KAYFI SABZAVĀRI
Sunil Sharma
Persian poet, also known as Kayfi Sistāni and Kayfi Now-Mosalmān.
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KAYHAN
EIr.
a leading daily newspaper published in Tehran under the aegis of Moṣṭafā Meṣbāḥzādeh (1908-2006) from 1942 until the 1979 Revolution.
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KAYKĀVUS B. ESKANDAR
J.T.P. de Bruijn
author of a famous Mirror for Princes, best known as the Qābus-nāma, although other, more general titles such as Naṣiḥat-nāma, or Pand-nāma, also occur in the sources.
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KAYKĀVUS B. HAZĀRASP
Cross-reference
See BADUSPANIDS.
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ḴAYMA
Cross-reference
See TENTS.
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KAYOMARṮ
Cross-reference
See GAYŌMART.
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ḴAYRḴᵛĀH HERĀTI
Farhad Daftary
Nezāri Ismaʿili dāʿi, author, and poet (15th-16th centuries).
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KAYSĀNIYA
Sean W. Anthony
occasionally referred to also as Moḵtāriya, the Shiʿite sectarian movement(s) emerging from the Kufan revolt of Moḵtār b. Abi ʿObayd Ṯaqafi in 66-67/685-87.
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ḴAZʿAL KHAN
Shahbaz Shahnavaz
(Shaikh Ḵazʿal, also known as Moʿez-al-Salṭana, Sardār Aqdas), chieftain of the Banu Kaʿb tribe of Khuzestan (1861-1936).
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KĀZARUNIYA
Hamid Algar
a Sufi order (ṭariqat) so named after Abu Esḥāq Kāzaruni, alternatively designated as Esḥāqiya, especially in Turkey, or more rarely as Moršediya.
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KĀẒEM RAŠTI
Armin Eschraghi
(d. 1844), student and successor of Shaikh Aḥmad b. Zayn-al-Din Aḥsāʾi and head of the Šayḵi movement. The main sources for Rašti’s biography are some of his own works which contain autobiographical information.
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KĀẒEM RAŠTI, MALEK-AL-AṬEBBĀʾ
Hormoz Ebrahimnejad
one of the high-ranking traditional physicians in 19th-century Iran.
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KĀẒEM, MUSĀ
Cross-reference
, Imam. See MUSĀ B. JAʿFAR (pending).
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KAZEMAYN
Meir Litvak
a suburban town in the northwest of Baghdad and one of the four Shiʿite shrine cities in Iraq, known in Shiʿi Islam as ʿatabāt-e ʿāliāt.
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KĀẒEMI, ḤOSAYN
Vida Nassehi-Behnam
(1924-1996), painter. He was part of a group of painters who started a modern movement in painting in Persia. They opened the first art gallery, Apādānā, in Tehran (1949) where they offered courses in painting and organized lectures and exhibitions. It became also a meeting place for artists and intellectuals.
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ḴĀZENI, ABU’L-FATḤ
Faiza Bancel
astronomer, mathematician, and mechanist originally from the city of Marv in Khorasan.
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KAZERUN
Multiple Authors
city and sub-province in the province of Fars, west of Shiraz. This entry is divided into the following three sections: i. Geography. ii. History. iii. Old Kazerun dialect.
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KAZERUN i. Geography
Jean Calmard
the sub-province (šahrestān) of Kazerun is bounded by the sub-provinces of Shiraz to the east, Mamasani to the north, Bušehr to the west and southwest, and Farrāšband to the southeast.
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KAZERUN ii. History
Jean Calmard
From late Safavid times, European travelers provided valuable information on Kazerun (variously spelled) and its region.
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KAZERUN iii. Old Kazerun Dialect
ʿAlī Ašraf Ṣādeqī
The old dialect of the city of Kazerun was commonly used by the local people up to around the 14th-15th centuries.
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KĀZERUNI FAMILY
Habib Borjian
an entrepreneurial family based in Isfahan, best known for their role in the textile industry, above all the pioneering Waṭan factory. This entry is divided into three sections: Moḥammad-Ḥosayn Kāzeruni; The Waṭan factory; After the patriarch.
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ḴAZINADĀR
Willem Floor
title of the royal treasurer since the early Islamic period.
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KĒD
NICHOLAS SIMS-WILLIAMS
Pahlavi and Bactrian word with meanings ranging from “soothsayer” to “priest,” probably derived from OIran.
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KÉGL, SÁNDOR
Miklos Sarkozy
Hungarian orientalist, polymath, and bibliophile, who devoted a major part of his studies to Persian literature.
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KELĀRDAŠT
Cross-reference
(or Kalārdašt), see KALĀRESTĀQ.
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ḴELʿAT
Willem Floor
(Ar. ḵelʿa, pl. ḵelaʿ), term used in Iran, India, Central Asia for gifts, but in particular a robe of honor.
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KELIDAR
Mohammad Reza Ghanoonparvar
(1978-1984), a monumental novel of nearly three thousand pages in five volumes consisting of ten books by Maḥmud Dawlatābādi (b. 1940), the noted novelist.
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Kent, Roland Grubb
Rüdiger Schmitt
American scholar of Indo-European studies, who specialized also in Old Persian studies. He went to Berlin and Munich universities to continue for two years his classical studies, including (apart from the languages) Greek epigraphy, history, and archeology.
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KÉPES, GÉZA
András Bodrogligeti
(1909-1989), Hungarian poet and translator of Persian poetry. He was the son of a blacksmith and proud of his origins, claiming that the legacy of his father’s craftsmanship as a skilled artisan.
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KERIYA
Alain Cariou
(Chin. name Yutian), city and county in the southern Tarim basin in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China.
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ḴERQA
Erik S. Ohlander
term for the tattered cloak, robe, or overshirt traditionally worn by the Sufis as a symbol of wayfaring on the mystical path.
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KEŠ
Pavel Lurje
(Kešš, Kašš), an important ancient and medieval city, located in the upper Kaškā-daryā valley, now Shahrisabz, Uzbekistan.
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Kesāʾi Marvazi
J. T. P. de Bruijn
(also vocalized Kasāʾi), 10th-century Persian poet.
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KETĀB AL-FOTUḤ
ELTON L. DANIEL
an important early Arabic historical text by Ebn Aʿṯam Kufi (d. 314/926?), which was translated, at least in part, into Persian towards the end of the 6th/12th century.
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KETĀB-E IQĀN
Sholeh Quinn and Stephen N. Lambden
a major work of Mirzā Ḥosayn-ʿAli Nuri Bahāʾ-Allāh (d. 1892) in defense of the religious claims of Sayyed ʿAli-Moḥammad the Bāb.
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ḴEṬĀY-NĀMA
RALPH KAUZ
“Book on China,” written by Seyyed ʿAlī Akbar Ḵeṭāʾī in Istanbul.
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KEYVĀNLU TRIBE
Pierre Oberling
a Kudish tribe of Khorasan. It was one of those Kurdish tribes that Shah ʿAbbās I forced to migrate from western Persia around 1600 for the purpose of fighting off the incursions of the Uzbeks.
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KHACHIKIAN, Samuel
Jamsheed Akrami
(Sāmuʾel Ḵāčikiān), Iranian filmmaker (b. 20 October 1923, Tabriz; d. 21 October 2001, Tehran).
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KHADEMI, Ali Mohammad
Chapour Rassekh
(1913-1978), Air Force officer, first general manager of Iran Air 1962-78.
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KHAKSAR, Mansur
Khosrow Davami
poet, writer, editor and political activist. Khaksar completed his primary and secondary education in Abadan, and had two eminent Persian poets, Maḥmud Mošref Tehrāni and Ḥassan Pastā, as his teachers in the last two years of high school. In 1959, his first poem was published in Omid-e Irān, a noted weekly journal published by Moḥammad Āṣemi in Tehran.
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KHALAJ
Multiple Authors
The Khalaj are usually referred to as Turks, but Josef Marquart (pp. 251-54) claimed that they were remnants of the Hephthalite confederation. This entry is divided into two sections: i. Tribe Originating in Turkistan. ii. Language.
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KHALAJ i. TRIBE ORIGINATING IN TURKISTAN
Pierre Oberling
tribe originating from Turkistan, generally referred to as Turks but possibly Indo-Iranian.
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KHALAJ ii. Language
Michael Knüppel
spoken by the inhabitants of Khalaj, located approximately 250 km to the southwest of Tehran.
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KHALCHAYAN
Lolita Nehru
in Surxondaryo prov., southern Uzbekistan, site of a settlement and palace of the nomad Yuezhi, with paintings and sculptures of the mid-1st century BCE. The Yuezhi, and perhaps other nomad groups, overthrew the Hellenistic Greek dynasty which had ruled there since the mid-3rd century as successor to the post-Achaemenid governments of Alexander and the Seleucids.
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KHALILI, Abbas
Ḥasan Mirʿābedini
(1895-1971), political activist, journalist, translator, poet, and novelist.
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KHALKHAL
Marcel Bazin
the southeasternmost district of Azerbaijan. Its main city and administrative center, Heruābād, is located at lat 37°28′ N, long 48°31′ E.
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KHARG ISLAND
D.T. Potts
island in the Persian Gulf, situated at about 30 km northwest of Bandar-e Rig and 52 km northwest of Bušehr.
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KHARIJITES IN PERSIA
C. Edmund Bosworth
sect of early Islam which arose out of the conflict between ʿAli b. Abi Ṭāleb (r. 656-61) and Moʿāwiya b. Abi Sufyān (r. 661-80).
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KHAYYAM, OMAR ix. ILLUSTRATIONS OF ENGLISH TRANSLATIONS OF THE RUBAIYAT
William H. Martin and Sandra Mason
The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam contain some of the best-known verses in the world. The book is also one of the most frequently and widely illustrated of all literary works. The stimulus to illustrate Khayyam’s Rubaiyat came initially from outside Persia, in response to translations in the West.
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KHAYYAM, OMAR x. MUSICAL WORKS BASED ON THE RUBAIYAT
William H. Martin and Sandra Mason
The enduring popularity of the verses in the Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam is reflected in the large number of musical works they have inspired.
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KHAYYAM, OMAR xi. IMPACT ON LITERATURE AND SOCIETY IN THE WEST
Jos Biegstraaten
The first scholar outside Persia to study Omar Khayyam was the English orientalist, Thomas Hyde (1636-1703).
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KHORASAN i. ETHNIC GROUPS
Pierre Oberling
The population of Khorasan is extremely varied, consisting principally of Persians, Arabs, Turks, Kurds, Mongols, Baluch, and smaller groups of Jews, Gypsies, and Lors.
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KHORASANI
Cross-Reference
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KHORESH
Etrat Elahi
(ḵoreš or ḵorešt), common dish consisting of pieces of meat fried with chopped onion, herbs or vegetables, and other ingredients.
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KHOTAN
Multiple Authors
town (lat 37°06′ N, long 79°56′ E) and major oasis of the southern Tarim Basin in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of China, historically an important kingdom with an Iranian-speaking population.
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KHOTAN ii. HISTORY IN THE PRE-ISLAMIC PERIOD
Hiroshi Kumamoto
ancient Buddhist oasis/kingdom on the branch of the Silk Road along the southern edge of the Taklamakan Desert in the Tarim basin, in present-day Xinjiang, China.
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KHOTAN iv. KHOTANESE LITERATURE
Mauro Maggi
the body of writings contained in a large number of manuscripts and manuscript folios and fragments written from the 5th to the 10th century in the Khotanese language, the Eastern Middle Iranian language of the Buddhist Saka kingdom of Khotan on the southern branch of the Silk Route (in the present-day Xinjiang-Uygur Autonomous Region of the People’s Republic of China).
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KHUJAND
Keith Hitchins
(Ḵojand), city in northwestern Tajikistan on the middle course of the Syr Daryā River, about 150 km south of Tashkent and near the entrance to the Farḡāna valley.
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KHWARAZMSHAHS i. Descendants of the line of Anuštigin
Clifford Edmund Bosworth
After the Saljuq takeover in Khwarazm in the early 1040s, the Saljuq Sultans appointed various governors in the province, including several Turkish ḡolām commanders.
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KIĀ, ṢĀDEQ
Habib Borjian
educator, lexicologist, and the director of the second Persian Language Academy (Farhangestān-e zabān-e Irān).
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KIĀNI, Sayyed NĀDERŠĀH
S. J. Badakhchani
(d. 1970), 20th century Ismaʿili poet and writer of Afghanistan, born in Kulāb, southwestern Tajikistan.
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KIDARITES
Frantz Grenet
a dynasty which ruled Tukharistan and later Gandhāra, probably also part of Sogdiana; the initial date is disputed (ca 390 CE for some modern authors, ca. 420-430 for others).
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KILIZU
Antonio Invernizzi
capital of the Assyrian province of the same name, near the mound Qaṣr Šemāmok in northern Mesopotamia, where a Parthian necropolis was brought to light.
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KIMIĀ
Pierre Lory
“Alchemy.” Externally, the purpose of alchemy was the conversion of base metals like lead into silver or gold by means of long and complicated operations leading to the production of a mysterious substance, the ‘philosopher’s stone,’ able to operate the transmutation.
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KING OF THE BENIGHTED
NASRIN RAHIMIEH & DANIEL RAFINEJAD
a novella by the writer and literary critic Hushang Golshiri, first appeared in an English translation by Abbas Milani (Washington D. C., 1990), with the pseudonym Manuchehr Irani listed as its author.
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KIRSTE, Johann Ferdinand Otto
Michaela Zinko
(1851-1920), Austrian scholar of Indo-Iranian languages. He served from 1892 until his death as professor of Oriental languages at the University of Graz.
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KISH ISLAND
D. T. Potts
(Ar. Qeys), small island in the lower Persian Gulf, noted for its palm gardens.
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KOBRAWIYA i. THE EPONYM
Hamid Algar
Abu’l-Jannāb Aḥmad b.ʿOmar Najm-al-Din Kobrā, eponym of the Kobrawiya, was born in Ḵᵛārazm in 1145 or possibly a decade later.
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KOBRAWIYA ii. THE ORDER
Hamid Algar
The crystallization of a given line of Sufi tradition as an “order” should not be understood as imposing on all the spiritual descendants of the eponym a definitive and permanently binding choice of methods and emphases.
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KOFRI, Moḥammad Kermānšāhi
Shireen Mahdavi
(1829-1908), physician and surgeon, the son of Pir Moḥammad Zāreʿ, a merchant.
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KOH-I-NOOR
Iradj Amini
(Kuh-e Nur; lit. “Mountain of Light”), the most celebrated diamond in the world, with rich legendary and historical associations.
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ḴOJESTĀNI, Aḥmad b. ʿAbd-Allāh
C. Edmund Bosworth
(d. 882), commander of the Taherids in Khorasan, and after the Ṣaffarid occupation of Nishapur in 873, a contender for power.
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KOLAYNI
Etan Kohlberg
, Abu Jaʿfar Moḥammad b. Yaʿqub b. Esḥāq Rāzi (d. 941), prominent Imami traditionist.
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KOLUKJĀNLU
Pierre Oberling
a Kurdish tribe in the Ḵalḵāl region of eastern Azerbaijan.
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KONDORI, MOḤAMMED B. MANṢUR
C. Edmund Bosworth
(b. ca. 1024, d. 1064), vizier to Ṭoḡrel Beg (r. 1040-63), the first sultan of the Great Saljuqs, and, briefly, to Ṭoḡrel’s successor Alp Arslān (r. 1063-72).
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KONOW, STEN
Fridrik Thordarson
(1867–1948), Norwegian orientalist, an all-around Indologist, whose extensive scholarly work covers most branches of Indian studies.
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KORA-SONNI
Pierre Oberling
a tribe in western Persian Azerbaijan.
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KORK
Rudi Matthee
soft wool, also called Kermān wool, used for the manufacture of fine clothing and felt hats.
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KÖROĞLU i. LITERARY TRADITION
Hasan Javadi
early-17th-century folk hero and poet, whose stories are mainly known among the Turkic peoples but have also passed into other folk literatures and circulate in Azerbaijan and Khorasan. Bards usually perform the Köroǧlu/Goroḡli epic to the accompaniment of a string instrument, such as the sāz, the dambura, or the dutār.
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KÖROĞLU ii. PERFORMANCE ASPECTS
Ameneh Youssefzadeh
Bards usually perform the Köroǧlu/Goroḡli epic to the accompaniment of a string instrument, such as the sāz, the dambura, or the dutār.
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ḴORRAMIS
Patricia Crone
adherents of a form of Iranian religion often identified as a survival or revival of the Zoroastrian heresy, Mazdakism.
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ḴORRAMIS IN BYZANTIUM
Evangelos Venetis
Iranians who fought the ʿAbbasid caliph Moʿtaṣem be’llāh (r. 833-41) and enrolled in the Byzantine army of the iconoclast emperor Theophilos I (r. 829-42).
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ḴOSROW I i. LIFE AND TIMES
Multiple Authors
Sasanian king (r. 531-579). i. Life and Times (forthcoming).
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ḴOSROW I ii. Reforms
Zeev Rubin
a series of reforms in Sasanian taxation and military organization, probably initiated already under Kawāḏ I.
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ḴOSROW I iii. COINAGE
Nikolaus Schindel
The reign of Ḵosrow I (531-79) is generally regarded as the heyday of the Sasanian empire, but his coinage marks the nadir of Sasanian coin art. The most noteworthy features are innovations in reverse typology. In the first type, the assistant figures are shown frontally, a totally new depiction; and they hold what appears to be a spear, an attribute encountered previously under Wahrām II (276-93).
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ḴOSROW II
James Howard-Johnston
the last great king of the Sasanian dynasty (590-628) in the last few decades before the coming of Islam. The principal extant history of the period, written in Armenia in the early 650s, was appropriately entitled The History of Khosrow.
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ḴOSROW KHAN GORJI QĀJĀR
Hirotake Maeda
(1785/86-1857), an influential eunuch (Ḵᵛāja) of the Qajar era, who lived in the period spanning the reigns Fatḥ-ʿAli Shah (r. 1797-1834) to Nāṣer-al-Din Shah (r. 1848-96).
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ḴOSROW MALEK
C. Edmund Bosworth
the last sultan of the Ghaznavid dynasty, in northwestern India, essentially in the Panjab, with his capital at Lahore. Various honorifics are attributed to him in the historical sources, in the verses of poets eulogizing him, and in the legends of his coins in the collections of the British Museum and Lahore
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ḴOSROW O ŠIRIN
Paola Orsatti
the second poem of Neẓāmi’s Ḵamsa, recounting the amorous relationship between the Sasanian king Ḵosrow II Parviz (r. 590-628 CE), and the beautiful princess Širin.
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ḴOSROWŠĀH B. BAHRĀMŠĀH
C. Edmund Bosworth
penultimate ruler of the Ghaznavid dynasty, apparently still in Ghazna until the dynasty found its last home at Lahore in northwestern India at a date around or soon after the time of his death.
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ḴOTBA
Cross-Reference
See KHATIB AND KHOTBA (pending); FRIDAY PRAYER.
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ḴOTTAL
Clifford Edmund Bosworth
a province of medieval Islamic times on the right bank of the upper Oxus river in modern Tajikistan. A region of lush pastures, Ḵottal was famed for horse-breeding.
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KRÁMSKÝ, JIRÍ
Jiri Bečka
(1913-1991), Czech general linguist who specialized in Persian language studies. He then studied English and Persian (the latter under Professor J. Rypka) at the Charles University, Prague.
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Křikavová, Adéla
Jiri Bečka
(1938-2002), Czech scholar of Iranian and particularly Kurdish studies.
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KRYMSKIĬ, Agfangel Efimovich
Natalia Chalisova
(1871-1942) Ukrainian orientalist, author of over 1,000 works on the history and culture of Iran, Arab countries, Turkey, the Khanate of the Crimea, and Azerbaijan.
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KUFTA
Etrat Elahi
popular Persian dish usually made of ground lamb or beef, and more recently, ground chicken or turkey in a mixture of herbs, spices, or other ingredients. There are two kinds of kufta: with rice and without.
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KUKADARU, JAMSHEDJI SORAB
Michael Stausberg and Ramiyar P. Karanjia
(1831-1900), Parsi Zoroastrian priest. He was renowned for his spiritual powers, in particular with respect to healing and divination.
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KULĀB
Habib Borjian
or Kōlāb, city and former province (the greater part of medieval Ḵottal[ān]) of Tajikistan.
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KURDISH LANGUAGE i. HISTORY OF THE KURDISH LANGUAGE
Ludwig Paul
from Old and Middle Iranian times, no predecessors of the Kurdish language are yet known; the extant Kurdish texts may be traced back to no earlier than the 16th century CE.
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KURDISH LANGUAGE ii. HISTORY OF KURDISH STUDIES
Joyce Blau
The article provides a brief account of Kurdish studies, which is a relatively recent academic field. The earliest studies of the Kurdish language and civilization were carried out by missionaries.
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KURDISH TRIBES
Pierre Oberling
Kurdish tribes are found throughout Persia, eastern Anatolia and northern Iraq, but very few comprehensive lists of them have been published.
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KURDISH WRITTEN LITERATURE
Philip G. Kreyenbroek
Written, “elevated” poetry traditionally played a less prominent role in Kurdish society than folk poetry (q.v.) did. The number of written literary works in Kurdish is far smaller than in the surrounding cultures.
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KURDOEV, QENĀTĒ
Joyce Blau
(1909-1985), Kurdish philologist and university professor.
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KURGAN TEPE
Habib Borjian
(Qūrḡonteppa in Tajik orthography; Kurgan-Tyube in Russian), provincial capital and former province of Tajikistan.
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KURUNI
Pierre Oberling
a Kurdish tribe of Kurdistan and Fārs. Most of the tribe was transplanted from Kurdistan to Fārs by Karim Khan Zand during the 1760s.
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KUŠ-NĀMA
Jalal Matini
part of a mythical history of Iran written between 1108 and 1111, dealing with the eventful life of Kuš the Tusked.
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KUSA
Anna Krasnowolska
a carnival character known to the medieval and modern folklore of central and western Persia.
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KUSHAN DYNASTY i. Dynastic History
A. D. H. Bivar
During the first to mid-third centuries CE, the empire of the Kushans (Mid. Pers. Kušān-šahr) represented a major world power in Central Asia and northern India.
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ḴᵛĀJANURI, EBRĀHIM B. ḤABIB-ALLAH
Majdoddin Keyvani
lawyer, politician, author, translator, journalist, psychologist, and founder of the popular psychoanalytical center of Panā[h] in Tehran.
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ḴᵛĀJAVAND
Pierre Oberling
a Kurdish tribe in the Caspian province of Māzandarān. According to L. S. Fortescue, the tribe “was originally brought from Garrūs and Kurdistān by Nādir Shāh.”
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ḴᵛĀJAZĀDA ASʿAD EFENDI
Tahsin Yazıcı
(1570-1625), Ottoman šayḵ-al-Eslām, poet, and translator of Saʿdi’s Golestān. He was the second son of Ḵᵛāja Saʿd-al-Din Efendi Eṣfahāni, the famous Ottoman historian, statesman, and šayḵ-al-Eslām.
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ḴᵛĀJU KERMĀNI
J. T. P. de Bruijn
(1290-ca. 1349), Persian poet and mystic. Ḵᵛāju was undoubtedly a versatile poet of great inventiveness and originality.
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ḴᵛĀNSĀLĀR
Willem Floor
title by which the supervisor and other workers of the kitchen department of the royal palace were known in the Ghaznavid and Saljuq periods.
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ḴᵛĀNSĀR
Multiple Authors
historical district and town in Isfahan province.
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ḴᵛĀNSĀR i. Historical Geography
Habib Borjian
historical district and town in Isfahan province.


