When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Religion in Iran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religion_in_Iran

    Religion in Iran has been shaped by multiple religions and sects over the course of the country's history. Zoroastrianism was the main followed religion during the Achaemenid Empire (550-330 BC), Parthian Empire (247 BC-224 AD), and Sasanian Empire (224-651 AD). Another Iranian religion known as Manichaeanism was present in Iran during this period.

  3. Turco-Persian tradition - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turco-Persian_tradition

    In a sense, Iranian Islam is a second advent of Islam itself, a new Islam sometimes referred to as Islam-i Ajam. It was this Persian Islam, rather than the original Arab Islam, that was brought to new areas and new peoples: to the Turks, first in Central Asia and then in the Middle East in the country which came to be called Turkey, and of ...

  4. Safavid Iran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safavid_Iran

    Mamalik-i Mahrusa-yi Iran (Guarded Domains of Iran) was the common and official name of the Safavid realm. [42] [43] The idea of the Guarded Domains illustrated a feeling of territorial and political uniformity in a society where the Persian language, culture, monarchy, and Shia Islam became integral elements of the developing national identity ...

  5. Iranian religions - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iranian_religions

    The Faravahar is one of the symbols of Zoroastrianism, an Iranian religion. The Iranian religions, also known as the Persian religions, are, in the context of comparative religion, a grouping of religious movements that originated in the Iranian plateau, which accounts for the bulk of what is called "Greater Iran".

  6. Safavid conversion of Iran to Shia Islam - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Safavid_conversion_of_Iran...

    In order to gain authority and instill public compliance to clerical decisions across different ethnic and social groups, the Amilis would borrow aspects of Iran's culture. With the Amilis acting as their representatives, the Safavids significantly shaped Iranian legal and doctrinal traditions and altered the political landscape of Iranian society.

  7. Baháʼí Faith in Iran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baháʼí_Faith_in_Iran

    This happened in spite of the fact that, as a signatory to Article 18 of the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights, Iran is legally bound to uphold every person's human right "to have or to adopt a religion or belief of [one's] choice," and "to manifest [one's] religion or belief in worship, observance, practice and teaching."

  8. Persecution of Zoroastrians - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Persecution_of_Zoroastrians

    The Iranian Muslims thus believed that the Shia imams descended from Sasanian royalty. [26] [27] These two beliefs made it easier for Zoroastrians to convert. An instance of religious oppression is recorded when an Arab governor appointed a commissioner to supervise the destruction of shrines throughout Iran, regardless of treaty obligations. [28]

  9. Zoroastrianism in Iran - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zoroastrianism_in_Iran

    The Muslim conquest of Persia, also known as the Arab conquest of Iran, led to the end of the Sasanian Empire in 651 and the eventual decline of the Zoroastrian religion in Iran. Arabs first attacked the Sassanid territory in 633, when general Khalid ibn Walid invaded Mesopotamia (what is now Iraq), which was the political and economic center ...