Alid dynasties of northern Iran explained

Common Name:Alids
P1:Rashidun Caliphate
S2:Ziyarid dynasty
Flag Alt:White flag of the Alavids
Era:Middle Ages
Government Type:Theocratic aristocracy
Life Span:645–928
Year Start:645
Year End:928
Capital:Amol
Capital Exile:Sari and Astarabad
Common Languages:Arabic, Mazandarani
Religion:Islam
Currency:Dinar (gold coins),Dirham(silver coins),Fals(copper coins)
Year Leader1:645-670(first)
Year Leader2:927–928 (last)
Leader1:Hasan ibn Ali
Leader2:Hasan ibn Qasim al-Da'i ila'l-Haqq
Title Leader:Emir

Alid dynasties of northern Iran or Alavids . In the 9th–10th centuries, the northern Iranian regions of Tabaristan, Daylam and Gilan, sandwiched between the Caspian Sea and the Alborz range, came under the rule of a number of Arab Alid dynasties, espousing the Zaydi branch of Shia Islam.

The first and most powerful Zaydi emirate was established in Tabaristan in 864 and lasted until 928. It was interrupted by Samanid occupation in 900, but restored in 914 by another Alid branch.

The second period of the Alid emirate was plagued by internal dissensions and power struggles between the two branches, and ended in the second conquest of the region by the Samanids in 928. Subsequently, some of the soldiers and generals of the Alavids joined the Samanids, among them Mardavij, founder of the Ziyarid dynasty, and the three sons of Buya (Ali, Hassan and Ahmad), founders of the Buyid dynasty.

Local Zaydi rulers survived in Daylam and Gilan until the 16th century.

List of Zaydi emirs and imams of Tabaristan

See also

References