Shabaran Explained

Shabaran
Caption:Ruins of Shabaran
Map Type:Azerbaijan
Coordinates:41.2956°N 48.8814°W
Region:Shirvan
Type:Settlement
Condition:Ruined

Shabaran (also spelled Shaburan and Shaberan; Persian: شاوران), was a town and district in the historical region of Shirvan, in what is now the eastern part of Azerbaijan.

Shabaran was founded by the Sasanian king Shapur II . The 10th-century Persian geography Hudud al-'Alam refers to it as Shav.ran, whilst The Georgian Chronicles calls it Shaburan, which points to a possible relation to Shavur (Shapur?), an Iranian name that is attested in the Caucasus. Shabaran was the earliest capital of the Shirvan kingdom.

It was often contested between the Shirvanshahs, the Hashimids of Darband, and the rulers of Arran. According to the 10th-century Arab geographer al-Maqdisi, the majority of Shabaran's population was Christian. In 983, the Shirvanshah Muhammad IV had a wall constructed around Shabaran. The sudden emergence of Iranian names among the descendants of Shirvanshah Yazid ibn Ahmad is significant in relation to the fact that he and his daughter Shamkuya were buried in Shabaran. This development most likely resulted from Yazid ibn Ahmad's union with a princess of an ancient local dynasty.

In 1167, Akhsitan I of Shirvan asked the King of Georgia George III to help him to defend from Kipchak, Khazar, Alan and Rus' assaulters. George III marched against them and conquered Shabaran, which in Georgian sources is referred to as "Shaburani". George III proceeded to give this town to Shirvanshah, who was his subject.[1]

In 1538 Shirvanshah rule was abolished by the Safavid shahs (kings) of Iran, who turned Shirvan into a province, which Shabaran was part of. The German explorer Engelbert Kaempfer (died 1716) mentions Shabaran as one of the villages in Iran that had coffeehouses.

Shabaran was completely destroyed in 1723.

Sources

. Floor. Willem M.. Willem Floor. Titles and Emoluments in Safavid Iran: A Third Manual of Safavid Administration, by Mirza Naqi Nasiri. 2008. Mage Publishers. 978-1933823232.

. Matthee . Rudolph P. . Rudi Matthee. The pursuit of pleasure: drugs and stimulants in Iranian history, 1500-1900 . 2005 . Princeton University Press . 978-0691144443.

. Minorsky . Vladimir . Vladimir Minorsky. Ḥudūd al-ʿĀlam, The Regions of the World: A Persian Geography. 1937. Oxford University Press. 978-0906094037. registration.

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Georgian Chronicles. Georgian National Academy of Science. 2012. 234–235.