You are currently viewing a new version of our website. To view the old version click .
Religions
  • Article
  • Open Access

27 December 2025

The Conversion of Christian Armenians to Islam in Iran in the Early Modern Period

1
Faculty of Oriental Studies, Yerevan State University, Yerevan 0025, Armenia
2
Matenadaran: Mashtots Institute of Ancient Manuscripts, Yerevan 0009, Armenia
3
Institute of Oriental Studies, National Academy of Sciences, Yerevan 0019, Armenia
4
Institute of Oriental Studies, Russian-Armenian (Slavonic) University, Yerevan 0051, Armenia
Religions2026, 17(1), 31;https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17010031 
(registering DOI)
This article belongs to the Special Issue Interreligious Dialogue and Conflict

Abstract

A considerable portion of the Armenian population living in the Armenian highland and the South Caucasian region was subject to the Iranian dynasties of the Safavids, Afsharids and Qajars in the period from the 16th till the beginning of the 19th centuries. The rulers of Iran often initiated and stimulated processes of conversion to Shi̒i Islam among its subjects with the purpose of increasing the religious and cultural homogeneity of the society. Apart from some forced methods of conversion applied by different rulers of Iran, there existed a number of factors stimulating the conversion of Christian Armenians and their assimilation in Iran in the early modern period. After a review over the various factors stimulating this process, author focuses on the law of Shi̒i Islam practiced in the hereditary matters of Armenians since the 1620s. It became a major factor leading to the conversion of Christian Armenians not only in the inner provinces of Iran but also in their native settlements in the regions of South Caucasus and Anatolia subordinated to the rule of Iranian states. The article considers the consequences of the implementation of this law for the Armenians living under the rule of Iran, as well as the ways they used to avoid the claims of their relatives who had adopted Islam and to bypass its harmful effects. The data and information of the contemporary sources have also allowed us to reveal the legal ways used by the Armenians during the purchase and transmission of property in order to protect it from various encroachments of their Muslim relatives. The article elucidates likewise the attempts of the leaders of the Armenian Church to withstand the harm caused by the implementation of the law and stop it with royal decrees.

2. The Law of Imam Ja‘far: The Start of Its Implementation, Its Juridical Aspects and the Main Target

As observed above, the year 1620 should be considered as a turning point for the Shāh ‘Abbās I’s policy towards its non-Muslim subjects, including Christian Armenians.
Apart from forced methods of conversion, the year 1620 marked the start of implementation of a law referring to the hereditary rights of Christians that became a major factor stimulating their conversion to Islam. Sources connect this law with the name of the sixth Imam Ja‘far (Raphaël Du Mans 1890, pp. 46–47; Sanson 1695, p. 199; P‘ap‘azyan 1956, pp. 87–88; Tajiryan 2017, p. 114), who was one of the most authentic figures of Shi̒i Islamic ideology and jurisprudence.
Hakob Papazian was one of the first scholars to have researched on the conversion of the Armenians in the Safavid age and considered the consequences of the implementation of this law in their hereditary issues (P‘ap‘azyan 1956, pp. 87–92). Later, also other scholars touched the problem in their researches. However, the history of the Shi‘i law on inheritance of dhimmīs and its juridical aspects has not well considered and elucidated till now.
The hereditary rights of Armenian dhimmīs in Persia were regulated according to the laws of Shi̒i Islam, which differed in some points from the laws of Sunni Islam. All Islamic juridical schools and religious sects (Hanbalis, Shi̒i Imamite, Shafi‘i, Maliki and Zeydiyye) admit that the non-Muslims cannot inherit the property of a Muslim, whereas not all these juridical schools deny the right of a Muslim to inherit the property of a non-Muslim (Shaykh ul-Islāmī 1356, pp. 164, 166). According to the Shi̒i Imamite law on inheritance, a Muslim could inherit the property of a dead dhimmī relative, no matter how far (up to seventh generation) their kinship was, depriving the closer dhimmī relatives of this right (Shaykh ul-Islāmī 1356, pp. 167–68).
The first evidence about the implementation of this law is from the Safavid age, particularly the 1620s. An early evidence on the implementation of this law is in a Persian fatwá7 of 1620/1621, where there is a clear statement that in case of the death of a dhimmī, his Muslim heirs have the privilege to receive the whole inheritance, thereby depriving closer relatives of their share (P‘ap‘azyan 1959, doc. 16). Therefore, the creation of this law and its implementation may be initiated by Shāh ‘Abbās I, as it is in full conformity with his general treatment with the Christians of his state from the 1620s. The law has been likewise recorded in the unfinished work ‘Jāma-yi ‘Abbāsī’ of Shaykh Bahā al-Dīn Amilī (died in 1621) (‘Āmilī 1331, p. 264), the Shaykh al-Islam and most influential Shi̒i figure of the period (Nasr 1986, p. 667), who might also have been committed to the creation of the law. Father Carmelites state in their chronicle that Shāh ‘Abbās I issued the order on implementation of this law shortly before his death (A Chronicle 1939, p. 288). This means that the law was fully institutionalised by the year 1629, the year of Shāh ‘Abbās I’s death, and Jaʿfarī jurisprudence was combined with political considerations.
Although the law referred to all dhimmīs of the Safavid state, as attested in many contemporary sources, its main target were the Armenians. As already noticed by other scholars, Georgians who were largely included as Ghulāms in the ranges of the Safavid military and administrative officials were assimilated in Persia very quickly and ‘alongside Iranians and Turks, formed the third ethnic element of modern Persian society’, and for the Jews, ‘all kinds of coercive measures and underhand practices were employed’ (Roemer 1986, pp. 285, 303).
The law had a harmful effect on the state of Armenian people under Persian rule, stimulating their Islamization. It caused a hard blow to the Armenians of New Julfa, and it also harmed the Armenians living in their native settlements in the provinces of Yerevan (Chukhur Sa’ad), Naxijevan and Karabagh of Transcaucasia. The cases of conversion to Islam were especially frequent among merchants and artisans dwelling in towns (P‘ap‘azyan 1956, p. 92) and particularly in Yerevan (Karapetyan 1987, p. 107). As attested in the encyclical of Catholicos Astvatsatur of Hamadan, many of the Armenian merchants preferred to leave Persia than adopt Islam (Karapetyan 1988, p. 220).
Often, rich Armenians adopted Islam to protect their property, while others did so to appropriate the property of their relatives. As a result, many wealthy Armenians lost their property and there were a great number of disputes between dhimmī Armenians and their relatives who had adopted Islam, reflected in the Persian documents and other sources (P‘ap‘azyan 1956, pp. 87–88). There is evidence in the works of the Armenian historiographers Aṙak‘el Davrižec‘i, Zak‘aria Agulec‘i in the 17–18th centuries about the disputes around inheritance raised by Muslim Armenians and the damage caused to the Christian Armenians (Aṙakel of Tabriz 2005, p. 77; Zakaria of Agulis 2003, pp. 149–50). There were cases when a Muslim having no relative ties with a wealthy Christian, who had died, would claim upon his property telling:
“I am your relative. All your property and possessions are mine. Return them to me,” and other similar slanders, anything they can imagine. The judges, according to their impious law, accept the words of the apostate, citing the law that, since he has converted to Islam, all the property of his relatives should revert to him (Aṙakel of Tabriz 2005, p. 77).
Another statement of a similar case is in the request of Armenians from K‘anak‘eṙ in Yerevan, which was, however, rejected by Shāh Sulayman’s decree of 1667 (Kostikyan 2005, doc. 18). Zak‘aria K‘anak‘eṙc‘i, the Armenian historian in the 17th century, has recorded the details of the case happening in K‘anak‘eṙ (Zak‘aria of K‘anak‘er 2004, p. 91). Catholicos Esayi Hasan Ǯalalyanc‘, in describing the effects of the conversion processes among Armenians, states the widespread poverty and loss of property among rich Armenians in Julfa and Yerevan, which resulted in complete disorder there (Esayi Hasan Ǯalaleanc‘ 1868, p. 18).
According to the evidence of the Carmelite missionaries, ‘by 1654, i.e., in twenty years, it was calculated that in order to escape beggary more than 5000 Christians were renegades and lost to the Christian Faith’ (A Chronicle 1939, p. 288).
The information provided by the sources helps elucidate the following details concerning the implementation of the law of Imam Ja‘far: the ways how Armenians tried to avoid its harmful effects and the efforts made by the Catholicoi of Holy Ēǰmiacin to stop its implementation.
One of the easiest ways to avoid loss of property in case of the appearance of any Muslim relative was the adoption of Islam. If the dhimmī heirs also adopted Islam before the division of the inheritance, they could restore their rights upon it. Nevertheless, the relatives who had earlier adopted Islam had an advantage over other Islamized heirs (P‘ap‘azyan 1956, p. 91). In such cases, the problem was often solved with money paid by the nearer relative(s).8
The law was applied as regards the Gregorian as well as Catholic Armenians. The reports of Catholic fathers describe the hard consequences of the law on the ethno-religious processes in the Catholic villages of Naxiǰevan (Karapetyan 2000, pp. 8–10). Alexander VII, the Pope, as the head and patron of the Armenian Catholics, expressed his discontent with the situation in his letter addressed to Shāh ‘Abbās II (A Chronicle 1939, p. 366).

3. The Efforts of the Christian Armenians to Avoid the Loss of Property in Consequence of the Claims of Their Muslim Relatives

European travellers, missionaries and other sources of the period have recorded some cases and ways which allowed Christian Armenians to avoid the loss of property in spite of the claims of their Muslim relatives. French missionary Gabriel de Shinon witnesses that, in order to avoid the loss of property, the Armenians living in Persia resorted to false vowing, “and rejected being the heirs of their parents… and the Armenian clergymen easily freed them from all moral duties” (Tajiryan 2017, p. 69).
Another way of protection of their property was the transfer of the property to a Persian reliable person or friend, who would afterwards return it to the heir. However, in cases of unfaithfulness, the Muslim person would easily appropriate it (Tajiryan 2017, pp. 69–70), and such cases also happened. A similar way is described by Rafaël Du Mans, who stated that Armenians would come to terms with the Muslim judges (qazi) and sell their property to another person, who would afterwards resell it to the real heir. Although this method freed the real heir from the claims of Islamized relatives, it paved the way for the bribery of the judges (Raphaël Du Mans 1890, p. 47).
According to Ełia Karnec‘i, the Shahrimanyans of New Julfa9 managed to free their bath-house in Tabriz from the claims of their Muslim relative Mehrali through composing a false certificate confirmed by several rich Julfans, stating that the bath-house was mortgaged by Shahrimanyan’s representative (vakīl) Andreas for a debt and left as a deposit by Father Piłatos (Ełia Karnec‘e 1968, pp. 292–93).
Sanson, the Catholic missionary who settled in Persia in the late 17th century, stated that usually when a rich Armenian knew about the Islamization of a relative, he would convert one of his sons to Islam and write a testament of transfer of all his property to that son. The latter would later divide the whole property giving the shares of his brothers and sisters. Afterwards, he could return to Christianity through bribery under the pretext that he could not adapt himself to the demands and rules of Islam: doing all purifications and praying, sustaining the restrictions of Ramazan, keeping the fast, etc. (Sanson 1695, pp. 199–202).
These were unlawful ways, contradicting the demands of both Christian and Islamic religious laws and dogmas, which were practiced by using false conversion and bribery in courts. Apart from these, there were also legal ways to protect the property of the dhimmīs, and as evidenced by the Persian documents, they were widely used by the Armenians in the 17–19th centuries.

5. The Attempts of the Catholicoi of Holy Ēǰmiacin to Stop the Implementation of the Law of Imam Ja‘far with Royal Decrees

The existence of such a discriminating law in Persia which stimulated the adoption of Islam by Christian Armenians caused the anxiety of the Catholicoi of all Armenians. Therefore, they tried to obtain royal decrees to weaken the harm caused by the law and even to stop its implementation as regards the Armenians.
After Shāh Sulṭān Ḥusayn’s abdication in 1722, Catholicos Astvacatur I Hamadanc‘i succeeded in obtaining a decree that counteracted the law of Imam Ja‘far. The decree was issued in 1723 by Shāh Tahmāsb II,16 favouring the interests of Christians in this respect. It stated that:
‘The Jadīd al-Islāms having arguments with Armenians, must cause no oppression to them until they had not proved their claims in the highest court in the presence of the local bīglarbīg17s, ḥākims18 and ‘āmils19 of each maḥal20 according to Shar‘…21 They should not obstinately receive the claimed sum until they had not sent a witnessing document on the matter, sealed by the local kadkhudās,22 ḥākim and other dignitaries” (Kostikyan 2005, p. 375).
They could claim the property of their Christian relatives only after proving their rights in some judicial and administrative instances. This decree was to form some difficulties for the newly converted Armenian Muslims who claimed upon the property of their dhimmī relatives. In fact, Catholicos Astvacatur states in a letter addressed to Movses, the head of New Julfan eparchy: “By God’s will an order (raqam) will be received to stop the evil of Jadid Islams. But before that the local governor has given an order banning the deeds of Jadid Islams. They [the newly converted Muslims] can’t start a dispute any more, whoever wishes to do, is taken to prison. The local Christians and those of Naxiǰevan are in great joy. By God’s will if it applied, it would be a great kindness for the Armenian people” (Varužan Archbishop 2015, p. 86).
This was the year following the fall of Safavid power, when Afghans had already captured Isfahan and the Ottoman Empire had conquered most of Transcaucasia, except for the Syunik region, where Armenians led by Davit‘ Beg still resisted Ottoman troops. Tahmāsb II, the Safavid heir, seeking allies against advancing Ottomans, tried to encourage Armenians in their struggle. The historical sources have kept evidence about the cooperation of the Armenian armed forces of Syunik and Qarabagh with those of Ṭahmāsb II Ṣafavid in the wars against Ottomans attacking the south-eastern regions of Armenia and Tabriz (Step‘anos Šahumyan 1871, pp. 59, 63). Ṭahmāsb II even had acknowledged Davit‘ Beg, the leader of the Armenian troops, as the head of the region of Kapan, giving him the right to mint coins in his own name (Step‘anos Šahumyan 1871, p. 59).
The same factor is more evident in the causes of giving another decree fitting the same purpose: abolition of the law. It was obtained by Catholicos Abraham Xošabec‘i from Shāh Tahmāsb II in 1731 during the latter’s unsuccessful campaign against Ottoman troops in the province of Yerevan. It addressed the governor of Chukhūr Sa‘ad (in spite of the fact that the area was under the rule of Ottoman Turkey) with strict instruction to forbid the quarrels of the Jadīd al-Islāms with their Christian relatives over their property (Kostikyan 2005, doc. 89). Actually, Abraham Xošabec‘i, took advantage of more appropriate political conditions formed during the campaign when the Safavid heir needed the assistance of the local Armenians and received a stricter decree preventing the implementation of the law. It should also be considered that soon after this unsuccessful campaign, Nādir dethroned Tahmāsb Safavid and placed his little son ‘Abbās on the throne.
However, the document should have become an argument for the next Catholicos, Abraham of Crete, in his later efforts to stop the practice of the law in the hereditary issues of Armenians. We have the evidence of the Catholicos about receiving such decree from Nādir in 1735, when the latter visited Holy Ēǰmiacin and gifted precious presents to the monastery. Catholicos Abraham of Crete states in his history the decree stipulated that ‘those [Armenians] who had converted would lose their inheritance’ (Abraham of Crete 1999, p. 32). This order was also obtained under similar circumstances: Nādir needed the assistance of the Armenians led by the Catholicos and the Armenian Meliks during his campaign against the Ottoman troops in the province of Yerevan, which was more successful for the Persians.
A decree of similar content was received by Catholicos Łazar Ǯahkec‘i from Nādir’s viceroy and son Riżā Qulī Mīrzā in 1740, in the period of Shāh’s campaign in India. It stated: ‘Whenever an Armenian has the honour to adopt Islam and become a Muslim he must have no arguments with his relatives for inheritance’ (Kostikyan 2008, doc. 16). Since the matter was of great importance, the same statement was reaffirmed in another decree obtained from Ibrāhīm Shāh Afshār in 1748 by Catholicos Łazar Ǯahkec‘i (Kostikyan 2008, doc. 28).
Although very few cases have survived documenting disputes over property between the Jadīd al-Islāms and Christians from the period of semi-independent Yerevan khanate in the second half of the 18th century, it shows that such cases usually were solved in the interests of the Christian close relatives in return for small penalties paid by them, like in the case recorded in a document dated 176123.
Another significant step in this direction was taken at the beginning of the 19th century during Russo-Persian conflict over the Caucasus by Qajar crown prince ‘Abbās Mīrzā. The latter issued a decree in 1825 which equated the hereditary rights of the Armenians to that of the Muslims (Kostikyan 2021, doc. 86), thus trying to gain the favour of his Armenian subjects in Azerbayjan and Yerevan Khanate. More decisive was the decree issued in 1848 by Shāh Nāsir al-Dīn Qajar, which deprived the Islamized Armenians not only of the right to claim upon the property of any of his relatives but also of their paternal direct inheritance24.
However, in spite of the abovementioned decrees issued by different rulers of Persia which counteracted the law of Imam Ja‘far and were aimed at stopping its implementation in the hereditary issues of the Christian Armenians, it continued functioning and exerted its destructive effects on Armenians living in Persia till the end of the 19th century. The cause was that it was sanctioned by the Shar‘īa courts where the laws of Shi̒i Islam were considered more important and prevailed over other circumstances. It continued to stimulate the Islamization of Armenians in Persia. Tēr Yovhanean, the Armenian historian in the 19th century, still speaks about the implementation of the law in the judicial cases of the Armenians over inheritance in his times as well (Tēr Yovhaneanc‘ 1880, p. 209).

6. Conclusions

The conversion of Armenian Christians in early modern Persia was a long-term process stimulated by force methods as well as social-economic incentives. Their conversion led to separation from the Armenian community, loss of identity and their final assimilation in the Muslim environment. Safavid Empire worked out its own effective methods for stipulating converting processes among non-Muslims based on Ja‘fari jurisprudence and new religious norms.
One of the most harmful measures for Armenians was the law of Imam Ja‘far existing in Shi‘i Islam and created in the 1620s during the reign of Shāh ‘Abbās I. It referred to the hereditary issues of dhimmī Armenians, stimulating their conversion to Islam not only during Shāh ‘Abbās I’s reign but also under his successors and later rulers of Persia. The weakening of Safavid administration at the end of the 17th century and the beginning of the 18th century, followed by its fall and later disorders in Persia, allowed some Armenians to bypass it and protect their property through various illicit ways, including false conversion and bribing the judges.
The Shi̒i Islamic law, however, left space for those, who knew its rules and regulations. Those, especially high clergymen and some wealthy merchants, who were aware of Shi̒i laws, secured the inviolability of their property and its safe transmission to their real heirs through donation and purchase formulated in the contracts of vaqf, ṣulḥ and haba.
The Catholicoi of Holy Ēǰmiacin in their turn managed to obtain royal decrees from various rulers of Persia in the 18–19th centuries, which were to lay obstacles for the Armenians who had newly adopted Islam to claim the property of their dhimmī relatives or stop the implementation of the law at all. However, there is evidence about conversion among Christian Armenians because of this law and quarrels for inheritance till the end of the 19th century, which indicate that the Sharīʿa court continued its implementation in spite of the mentioned royal edicts.

Funding

This research received no external funding.

Institutional Review Board Statement

Not applicable.

Data Availability Statement

The original data presented in the study are openly available.

Conflicts of Interest

The author declares no conflict of interest.

Notes

1
See about this status in (Savory 2003, pp. 435–36).
2
See more about the size of jizya in Moreen (2018), Kostikyan et al. (2024).
3
Their title in Persian documents was ‘katalikūz—کتله کوز’ (Puturidze et al. 1995, pp. 383, 411, 425, 474, 476, etc.).
4
Ghulām, slave, servant. So or “ghuls” were called the cavalrymen, who had adopted Islam or were the descendants of Christians who had adopted Islam. They formed the personal guard-cavalry of shah, consisting from 10 to 30 thousand ghulāms.
5
Khāṣṣah[-i sharifah], so were called the crown estates, workshops and workhouses, and all establishments belonging to the royal family, in general. All of them had an administration of special affairs, called “sarkār-i khāṣṣah-’i sharīfah”.
6
Tuyūldārī, the office of the holder of a tuyūl. Great tuyūldārs often had also administrative and judicial rights as regards the inhabitants of the objects granted to them.
7
Legal-theological opinion issued by Islamic clerics.
8
Matenadaran, Archive of Catholicosate, file 1e, doc. 1107. See the document researched and published (Kostikyan 2020, pp. 502–12).
9
Family of Armenian rich merchants who in 17th century adopted Catholicism and henceforth became the agents of the Catholic missionaries.
10
This specification of a vaqf is present already in the vaqfnāmas of Vałaršapat, Aštarak, Bat‘rinǰ, Noragavit‘, Tełenis-Kiraǰlu and Mułni villages dated 1430 and stating of its being the inviolable estate of the Holy Ēǰmiacin 1430–131 (P‘ap‘azyan 1968, doc. 4, 5).
11
M.A.C., f. 4, doc. 25, see the document published in (Kostikyan and Khecho 2018, doc. 14).
12
Hiba (gift), the standard Arabic term for donation.
13
M. A.C. f. 1f, doc. 1068, see the document published in (Kostikyan and Gevorgyan 2018, pp. 64, 70–72).
14
See the document M.A.C., file 1e, doc. 1107 and its publication in (Kostikyan 2020, pp. 502–12).
15
See more about these contracts in Mkrtumyan (2021).
16
Tahmasb, the son of Shāh Sultan Husayn Safavid had managed to escape from the siege of Isfahan to Qazvin, where, on November 10, he declared himself shāh, stroke coins and issued decrees. However, he had power only over a small territory including some regions in Azerbayjan and Mazandaran and after the rise of Nadir Khan was just a nominal ruler over the territory of Iran freed from the Afghan rule (Roemer 1986, p. 326).
17
Bīglarbīg, bīglarbīgī, title held by provincial governors or governors-general. There were 13 bīglarbīgs in Iran in 16–17th centuries, the bīglarbīgs of Azerbayjan, Karabagh, Shirvan and Chukhur Sa’ad were in the North-Western part of Iran.
18
Ḥākim, governor, judge.
19
‘Āmil, tax-collector. ‘Āmils counted all taxable objects, measured the sown areas and orchards, made a list of all able-bodied adult men, and accordingly decided how much tax should be levied from the object.
20
Maḥal, region, district. In 17–19th centuries it was an administrative unit.
21
Shar‘, the chief Moslem religious legislative-judicial council, consisted of the high clergymen of the place.
22
Kadkhudā, village headman, a member of the council of the village elders; head of a clan or tribal sub-group.
23
See the document in the Matenadaran archive (M.A.C. n.d., file 1c, doc. 437)
24
See the document in the Matenadaran archive (M.A.C. n.d., file 4, doc. 51).

References

  1. Abisaab, Rula J. 2004. Converting Persia: Religion and Power in the Ṣafavid Empire. London and New York: I.B. Tauris. [Google Scholar]
  2. Abraham of Crete. 1999. The Chronicle of Abraham of Crete. Introduction and Annotated Translation by George. A. Bournoutian. Costa Mesa: Mazda Publishers. [Google Scholar]
  3. A Chronicle of the Carmelites in Persia and the Papal Mission of the 17th and 18th Centuries. 1939. London: Eyre and Spottis-Woode, vol. I.
  4. Al-Arabi Hāshimī, Shukūh al-Sādāt. 1394. Arāmana-i Julfa-ye Nau dar aṣr-i Safavi. Tehran: Sāzmān-i Asnād va Kitābkhāna-i millī Jumhūrī-i Islāmī-i Iran. [Google Scholar]
  5. Aṙakel of Tabriz. 2005. The History of Vardapet Arakel of Tabriz. Introduction and Annotated Translation by G. A. Bournoutian. Costa Mesa: Mazda Publishers. [Google Scholar]
  6. ‘Āmilī, Muḥammad b. Ḥusayn. 1331. Jāma‘-i ‘Abbāsī. Tehran: Farahani. [Google Scholar]
  7. Babaie, Sussan, Kathryn Babayan, Ina Baghdiantz-McCabe, and Massumeh Farhad. 2004. Slaves of the Shah: New Elites of Safavid Iran. London and New York: I.B. Tauris. [Google Scholar]
  8. Danielyan, Gagik. 2016. ‘Hṙomklayi kat‘ołikosakan at‘oṙi patmut‘yan arabakan skzbnałbyurnerǝ’ (The Arabic Sources of the History of Catholicosate of Hromkla). In Kilikyan Hayastanǝ Sahmanakic‘ Petakan Miavorneri ǝnkalumnerum. Yerevan: Gitut‘yun, pp. 200–88. [Google Scholar]
  9. Ełia Karnec‘e. 1968. Divan (Collection). Edited by A. Abrahamyan. Yerevan: Mitk‘. [Google Scholar]
  10. Esayi Hasan Ǯalaleanc‘. 1868. Patmut’yun Hamaṙot Ałuanic’ erkri (Short History of the Country of Ałvank). Jerusalem: Print-House of the Apostolic See of St. James Monastery. [Google Scholar]
  11. Freidenreich, David M. 2011. Christians in Early and Classical Shii Law. Waterville: Colby College, Faculty Scholarship, vol. 19, Available online: https://digitalcommons.colby.edu/faculty_scholarship/19 (accessed on 25 November 2025).
  12. Herzig, Edmund. 1990. The Deportation of the Armenians in 1604–1605 and Europe’s Myth of Shah ‘Abbas I. Pembroke Papers 1: 59–71. [Google Scholar]
  13. Hovhannisyan, Ashot G. 1972. Hayastani K‘ałak‘akan vijakə Irani ev Osmanyan T‘urkiyayi tirapetut‘yan tak (The Political situation of Armenia under the Rule of Ian an Ottoman Turkey). In Hay žołovrdi patmut‘yun (History of Armenian People). Yerevan: Pub. AS ArmSSR, vol. IV. [Google Scholar]
  14. Iskandar Bīg Turkimān. 1335. Tārīkh-i ‘ālam-ara-yi ‘Abbāsī. Tehran: Print-House Musavī, vol. II. [Google Scholar]
  15. Karapetyan, Meružan M. 1987. Bnakč‘ut‘yan et‘nik kazmə Yerevanum 1724–1800 t‘vakannerin (The Ethnic Composition of the Population in Yerevan in 1724–1800). Historical-Philological Journal 3: 95–103. [Google Scholar]
  16. Karapetyan, Meružan M. 1988. Imam Ǯafari orenk‘ə ev arevelahayerə (The law of Imam Ja‘far and Eastern Armenians). Historical-Philological Journal 1: 219–21. [Google Scholar]
  17. Karapetyan, Meružan M. 2000. Hay Kat‘ołike t‘emə ev et‘nodavanakan gorcənt‘ac‘nerə Naxiǰevanum XVII–XVIII darerum (Armenian Catholic Eparchy and Ethno-Religious Processes in Naxiǰevn in 17th–18th Centuries). In Jemjemean Father Sahak, Naxiǰevani Hayoc‘ Varžaranə ev Hṙomə (Armenian School of Naxiǰevan and Rome). Venice: St. Lazar. [Google Scholar]
  18. Khuzani Isfahani, Fazli Beg. 2015. A Chronicle of the Reign of Shah ‘Abbas I. Edited by K. Ghereghlu. Introduction by K. Ghereghlu and Ch. Mellville. Exeter: Gibb Memorial Trust, vols. I, II. [Google Scholar]
  19. Kostikyan, Kristine P. 2005. Persian Documents of Matenadaran. Decrees. Yerevan: Zangak 97, vol. III. [Google Scholar]
  20. Kostikyan, Kristine P. 2008. Persian Documents of Matenadaran. Decrees. Yerevan: Nairi, vol. IV. [Google Scholar]
  21. Kostikyan, Kristine P. 2020. Matenadarani Parskeren Vaveragrerə Agulisi XVII dari hay vajaṙakanneri masin (The Persian of the Matenadaran about the Armenian Merchants of Agulis in 17th Century). The Countries and Peoples of the Near and Middle East 33: 488–531. [Google Scholar]
  22. Kostikyan, Kristine P. 2021. Persian Documents of Matenadaran. Decrees. Yerevan: pub. Matenadaran, vol. V. [Google Scholar]
  23. Kostikyan, Kristine P., and Haykaz Gevorgyan. 2018. Sefyan šaheri norahayt hrovartaknerə Matenadarani kat‘ołikosakan divanum [The Recently Discovered Decrees of the Safavid Shahs in Matenadaran’s Archive of the Catholicosate]. Bulletin of Matenadaran 26: 58–75. [Google Scholar]
  24. Kostikyan, Kristine P., and Movses Khecho. 2018. Matenadarani Parskeren vaveragrerə [Persian Documents of the Matenadaran], III, Šariat‘akan Notarakan Pastat‘łt‘er (17th–18th Centuries) [Sharī‘a Notarial Documents]. Yerevan: Gitut‘yun. [Google Scholar]
  25. Kostikyan, Kristine P., Gevorg S. Stepanyan, and Anahit A. Tovmasyan. 2024. Jizya in Eastern Transcaucasia from the 17th to the First Half of the 19th Century. History, Archeology and Ethnography of the Caucasus V 20: 246–59. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  26. M.A.C. (Matenadaran, Archive of Catholicosate). n.d. File 1c, doc. 427, 437; file 1e, doc. 1107; file 1f, doc. 1068; file 4, doc. 25, 51.
  27. Matthee, Rudi. 2005. Christians in Safavid Iran: Hospitality and Harassment. Studies on Persianate Societies III: 3–43. [Google Scholar]
  28. Matthee, Rudi. 2019. Confessions of an Armenian Convert. In The Empires of the Near East and India, Source Studies of the Safavid, Ottoman and Mughal Literate Communities. Edited by Hani Khafipur. New York and Chichester: Columbia University Press, pp. 11–31. [Google Scholar]
  29. Mkrtumyan, Gayane. 2021. An Historical Evaluation of the Covenants of the Prophet Muḥammad and ‘Alī ibn Abī Tālib in the Matenadaran. Religions 12: 138. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  30. Moreen, Vera B. 2018. Jezya. Encyclopædia Iranica 14: 643–45. [Google Scholar]
  31. Mukharrom, Tamyiz, and Supriyanto Abdi. 2023. Harmonizing Islam and Human Rights through the Reconstruction of Classical Islamic Tradition. SAMARAH: Jurnal Hukum Keluarga dan Hukum Islam 7: 40–56. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  32. Nasr, Seyyed Hossein. 1986. Spiritual Movement, Philosophy and Theology in the Safavid Period. In The Cambridge History of Iran. Edited by Peter Jackson and Lorence Lockhart. Cambridge, London, New York, New Rochelle, Melbourne and Sydney: Cambridge University Press, vol. 6 (The Timurid and Safavid Periods), pp. 656–98. [Google Scholar]
  33. P‘ap‘azyan, Hakob. 1956. Sefyan Irani asimilyatorakan k’ałak’akanut’yan harc’i šurǰ (About the Issues Referring to the Assimilyative Politics of Safavid Iran). Banber Matenadarani 3: 86–98. [Google Scholar]
  34. P‘ap‘azyan, Hakob. 1959. Matenadarani Parskeren Vaveragrerə [P2ersian Documents of the Matenadaran], I, Hrovartakner (Decrees). Yerevan: AS ArmSSR, vol. II. [Google Scholar]
  35. P‘ap‘azyan, Hakob. 1968. Matenadarani Parskeren Vaveragrerǝ. Kalvacagrer (The Persian Documents of the Matenadaran). Yerevan: AS ASSR, vol. I. [Google Scholar]
  36. Puturidze, Vladimir, Adolf Berzhe, Makar Khubua, and Magali Todua. 1995. Tbilisskaya Kollekciya Persidskikh Firmanov (Tbilisi Collection of Persian Firmans). Kutaisi: publication of Kutaisi University, vol. I. [Google Scholar]
  37. Raphaël Du Mans. 1890. L’estat de la Perse en 1660. Publié avec Notes et Appendice par Ch. Schefer. Paris: 28 Rue Bonaparte. [Google Scholar]
  38. Rezvani, Babak. 2008. The Islamization and Ethnogenesis of the Fereydani Georgians. Nationalities Papers 36: 593–623. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  39. Roemer, Hans R. 1986. The Safavid Period. In The Cambridge History of Iran. Edited by P. Jackson and L. Lockhart. Cambridge, London, New York, New Rochelle, Melbourne, and Sydney: Cambridge University Press, vol. 6 (The Timurid and Safavid Periods). pp. 189–351. [Google Scholar]
  40. Sanson, Nicolas. 1695. Voyage, ou, Relation de l’etat Present du Royaume de Perse: Avec une Differtation Cureuse fur les Murs, Religion and Gouvernement de Det Etat. Paris: Chez la veuve Mabre Cramoisi. [Google Scholar]
  41. Savory, Roger M. 2003. Relations between the Safavid State and its Non-Muslim Minorities. Islam and Christian-Muslim Relations 14: 435–58. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
  42. Shaykh ul-Islāmī, As‘ad. 1356. Aḥkām-i vaṣīyyat va irs-i dhimmī az nażar-i fuqah-i Islāmī. Maqāllat va barrasī-hā 30: 136–73. [Google Scholar]
  43. Step‘anos Erec‘. 2017. Patmagirk‘ (Book of History). Tehran: Alik‘. [Google Scholar]
  44. Step‘anos Šahumyan. 1871. Davit‘ Bēg, Ěntir patmut‘yun Davit‘ Bēgin ev paterazmats Hayotsn Khapanu (An Excellent History of the War of the Armenians of Kapan). Vagharšapat: Printing house of the Mother See of Holy Ējmiacin. [Google Scholar]
  45. Tajiryan, Ēlizabet‘. 2017. Nor Jughan Evropakan Aghbyurnerum 17–18-rd darerum (New Julfa in the 17th–18th Century European Sources). Yerevan: Arch. Mesrob Ashjian Book Series, vol. II. [Google Scholar]
  46. Tavernier, Jean-Baptiste. 1678. The Six Voyages of John Baptista Tavernier. London: William Godbid. [Google Scholar]
  47. Tēr Yovhaneanc‘, Yarut‘yun. 1880. Patmut‘iun Nor Ǯułayu vor yAspahan [History of New Julfa in Isfahan]. New Julfa: Pub. All Saviour Monastery, vol. I. [Google Scholar]
  48. Tournefort, Joseph P. 1718. A Voyage into the Levant Performed by Command of the Late French King. London: Printed for D. Browne, A. Bell, J. Darby [and 8 others], vol. II. [Google Scholar]
  49. Varužan Archbishop. 2015. Divan Nor Ǯułayi S. Amenap‘rkič‘ vank‘i, II. Ēǰmiacni katołikosneru kondakner (Collection of the All Saviour Monastery, II, Encyclicals of the Catholicoi of Ēǰmiacin). Isfahan: All Saviour monaster. [Google Scholar]
  50. Zakaria of Agulis. 2003. The Journal of Zakaria of Agulis. Annotated Translation and Commentary by George Bournoutian. Costa Mesa: Mazda Publishers, Inc. [Google Scholar]
  51. Zak‘aria of K‘anak‘er. 2004. The Chronicle of Zak‘aria of K‘anak‘er. Introduction and Annotated Translation by George. A. Bournoutian. Costa Mesa: Mazda Publishers. [Google Scholar]
  52. Zak‘aryan, Seyran. 2014. Hayoc‘ ink‘nut‘yan k‘ristoneakan harac‘uyc‘ǝ (The Christian Paradigm of Armenian identity). In Hayoc‘ ink‘nut‘yan harc‘er 2. Yerevan: Limush, pp. 6–24. [Google Scholar]
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content.

Article Metrics

Citations

Article Access Statistics

Article metric data becomes available approximately 24 hours after publication online.