Sāmānid Dynasty

Sāmānid Dynasty

▪ Iranian dynasty
      (AD 819–999), first native dynasty to arise in Iran after the Muslim Arab conquest. It was renowned for the impulse that it gave to Iranian national sentiment and learning.

      The four grandsons of the dynasty's founder, Sāmān-Khodā, had been rewarded with provinces for their faithful service to the ʿAbbāsid caliph al-Maʾmūn: Nūḥ obtained Samarkand; Aḥmad, Fergana; Yaḥyā, Shāsh; and Elyās, Herāt. Aḥmad's son Naṣr became governor of Transoxania in 875, but it was his brother and successor, Ismāʿīl I (Ismāʿīl I ibn Aḥmad) (892–907), who overthrew the Ṣaffārids in Khorāsān (900) and the Zaydites of Ṭabaristān, thus establishing a semiautonomous rule over Transoxania and Khorāsān, with Bukhara as his capital.

      Under the loosely centralized feudal government of the Sāmānids, Transoxania and Khorāsān prospered, with a notable expansion of industry and commerce, attested by the use of Sāmānid silver coins as currency throughout northern Asia. The main cities of Samarkand and Bukhara became cultural centres. Persian literature flourished in the works of the poets Rūdakī and Ferdowsī, philosophy and history were encouraged, and the foundations of Iranian Islāmic culture were laid.

      The most important contribution of the Sāmānid age to Islāmic art is the pottery produced at Nīshāpūr and Samarkand. The Sāmānids developed a technique known as slip painting: mixing semifluid clay (slip) with their colours to prevent the designs from running when fired with the thin fluid glazes used at that time. Bowls and simple plates were the most common forms made by Sāmānid potters. The potters employed stylized Sāsānian motifs such as horsemen, birds, lions, and bulls' heads, as well as Arabic calligraphic design. Polychrome pieces usually had a buff or red body with designs of several colours, bright yellows, greens, black, purples, and reds being the most common. Many pottery pieces were produced at Nīshāpūr, however, with only a single line on a white background. The art of bronze casting and other forms of metalwork also flourished at Nishāpūr throughout the Sāmānid period.

      Although few Sāmānid buildings have survived, a mausoleum of Ismāʿīl the Sāmānid (d. 907), still standing in Bukhara, shows the originality of the architecture of the era. The perfectly symmetrical mausoleum is constructed entirely of brick; brick is also used to form decorative patterns in relief, based on the position and direction of each architectural unit.

      From the mid-10th century, Sāmānid power was gradually undermined, economically by the interruption of the northern trade and politically by a struggle with a confederation of disaffected nobles. Weakened, the Sāmānids became vulnerable to pressure from the rising Turkish powers in Central Asia and Afghanistan. Nūḥ II (976–997), to retain at least nominal control, confirmed Sebüktigin, a former Turkish slave, as semi-independent ruler of Ghazna (modern Ghaznī, Afg.) and appointed his son Maḥmūd governor of Khorāsān. But the Turkish Qarakhanids (Qarakhanid Dynasty), who then occupied the greater part of Transoxania, allied with Maḥmūd and deposed the Sāmānid Manṣūr II, taking possession of Khorāsān. Bukhara fell in 999, and the last Sāmānid, Ismāʿīl II, after a five-year struggle against the Ghaznavid Maḥmūd and the Qarakhanids, was assassinated in 1005.

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Universalium. 2010.

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