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Nomadism in Iran - From Antiquity to the Modern Era (Paperback)
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Nomadism in Iran - From Antiquity to the Modern Era (Paperback)
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The classic images of Iranian nomads in circulation today and in
years past suggest that Western awareness of nomadism is a
phenomenon of considerable antiquity. Though nomadism has certainly
been a key feature of Iranian history, it has not been in the way
most modern archaeologists have envisaged it. Nomadism in Iran
recasts our understanding of this "timeless" tradition. Far from
constituting a natural adaptation on the Iranian Plateau, nomadism
is a comparatively late introduction, which can only be understood
within the context of certain political circumstances. Since the
early Holocene, most, if not all, agricultural communities in Iran
had kept herds of sheep and goat, but the communities themselves
were sedentary: only a few of their members were required to move
with the herds seasonally. Though the arrival of Iranian speaking
groups, attested in written sources beginning in the time of
Herodutus, began to change the demography of the plateau, it wasn't
until later in the eleventh century that an influx of Turkic
speaking Oghuz nomadic groups-"true" nomads of the steppe-began the
modification of the demography of the Iranian Plateau that
accelerated with the Mongol conquest. The massive, unprecedented
violence of this invasion effected the widespread distribution of
largely Turkic-speaking nomadic groups across Iran. Thus, what has
been interpreted in the past as an enduring pattern of nomadic land
use is, by archaeological standards, very recent. Iran's
demographic profile since the eleventh century AD, and more
particularly in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, has been
used by some scholars as a proxy for ancient social organization.
Nomadism in Iran argues that this modernist perspective distorts
the historical reality of the land. Assembling a wealth of material
in several languages and disciplines, Nomadism in Iran will be
invaluable to archaeologists, anthropologists, and historians of
the Middle East and Central Asia.
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