|
GHAZNAVIDS,
an
Islamic
Dynasty
of
Turkish
slave
origin
(366-582/977-1186),
which
in
its
heyday
ruled
in
the
eastern
Iranian
lands,
briefly
as
far
west
as
Ray
and
Jeba@l;
for
a
while
in
certain
regions
north
of
the
Oxus,
most
notably,
in
Kúa@razm;
and
in
Baluchistan
and
in
northwestern
India.
Latterly,
however,
its
territories
comprised
eastern
Afghanistan,
Baluchistan,
and
northwestern
India,
with
its
last
rulers
reduced
to
the
Punjab
only.
The
genesis
of
the
Ghaznavids
lay
in
the
process
which
took
place
in
the
middle
decades
of
the
4th/10th
century,
whereby
Turkish
slave
commanders
made
themselves
in
effect
autonomous
on
the
southern
fringes
of
the
Samanid
empire,
i.e.,
in
Bost
and
GÚazna
(qq.v.).
After
the
death
of
the
Amir
¿Abd-al-Malek
I
b.
Nu@há
I
in
350/961,
the
Turkish
slave
general
of
the
Samanid
army
in
Khorasan,
Alptigin
(q.v.),
withdrew
to
GÚazna
after
an
attempted
coup
to
place
his
own
candidate
on
the
throne
had
failed.
He
dispossessed
an
indigenous
family
who
had
ruled
in
GÚazna,
the
Law^ks
(?),
and
he,
and
following
him
a
series
of
slave
commanders,
ruled
there
as
nominal
vassals
of
the
Samanids;
they
struck
coins
but
placed
the
names
of
the
Samanids
on
them
(Gard^z^,
ed.
H®ab^b^,
pp.
161-62;
Ju@zja@n^,
T®abaqa@t,
I,
pp.
226-27;
Nezáa@m-al-Molk,
pp.
142-58;
aba@nka@ra÷^,
pp.
29-34;
Bosworth,
1965,
pp.
16-21).
The
fifth
of
these
commanders
was
Sebüktigin,
who
governed
GÚazna
for
twenty
years
till
387/997
with
the
title
(as
it
appears
from
his
tomb
inscription,
see
Flury,
pp.
62-63)
of
al-háa@jeb
al-ajall
(most
noble
commander).
In
fact,
he
laid
the
foundations
of
what
was
speedily
to
become
a
fully
independent
power
when
the
Samanids
went
into
terminal
decline
in
the
990s.
His
son
Mahámu@d
had
already
been
commander-in-chief
of
the
Samanid
forces
in
Khorasan
during
his
father's
lifetime,
when
the
last
amirs,
faced
with
invasions
by
the
Turkish
Qarakhanids
from
the
Inner
Asian
steppes,
had
had
willy-nilly
to
rely
on
Sebüktigin
and
Mahámu@d
to
withstand
these
attacks.
On
Sebüktigin's
death,
Mahámu@d
successfully
asserted
his
right
to
succeed
in
GÚazna
over
a
brother,
Esma@¿^l
(399/998),
and
thereafter
was
in
sole
control
of
all
the
former
Samanid
lands
south
of
the
Oxus,
comprising
Khorasan
and
what
is
now
Afghanistan.
He
secured
from
the
¿Abbasid
caliph
al-Qa@der
legitimation
of
his
independent
power
and
a
string
of
honorific
titles,
including
the
one
by
which
he
became
best
known,
Yam^n
al-Dawla
(Bosworth,
1962a,
pp.
215-18).
He
divided
up
the
former
Samand
dominions
with
the
Ileg
Nasár
(Gard^z^,
ed.
H®ab^b^,
p.
175),
who
took
over
all
the
lands
north
of
the
Oxus
for
the
Qarakhanids,
and
began
a
reign
of
thirty-two
years,
lengthy
by
contemporary
standards.
By
ceaseless
campaigning,
he
built
up
a
vast
military
empire
under
his
own
despotic
control.
He
continued
his
father's
raids
into
the
plains
of
India,
and
his
success
as
a
military
leader
ensured
that
there
was
always
a
numerous
body
of
volunteers
(@g@oza@t,
motÂawwe¿u@n),
eager
for
plunder,
flocking
to
his
standard
from
all
over
the
eastern
Islamic
world.
They
supplemented
his
professional
army
that
was
made
of
specialist
contingents
of
Arabs,
the
Daylamites,
etc.,
but
was
essentially
composed
of
Turks,
with
a
core
of
elite
Turkish
slaves,
namely
the
palace
guards
or
@g@ola@ma@n-e
kòa@sásÂ
(Bosworth,
Ghaznavids,
pp.
78-114).
Ghaznavid
armies
penetrated
into
the
Ganges-Jumna
Do÷a@b
and
as
far
as
Gwalior
in
Central
India,
but
the
culmination
of
his
Indian
campaigns
was
the
attack
on
the
celebrated
shrine
of
Somnath
in
the
Kathiawar
peninsula
(416-17
/1025-6),
which
yielded
an
immense
haul
of
treasure
(Gard^z^,
ed.
H®ab^b^,
pp.
190-91;
Ebn
al-At¯^r,
IX,
pp.
342-46;
Na@záim,
pp.
115-21).
The
Sultans'
achievements
as
hammer
of
the
infidels
were
zealously
publicized
throughout
the
lands
as
far
as
Baghdad,
but,
as
Muhammad
Habib
pointed
out
(pp.
81
ff.),
Mahámu@d's
aims
were
essentially
secular
and
confiscatory,
not
the
conversion
of
souls.
The
Indian
princes
were
left
as
tributaries,
for
an
enforced
policy
of
Islamization
would
only
have
been
possible
with
an
immense,
thickly
spread
army
to
hold
down
the
populace
permanently;
the
real
Islamization
of
the
subcontinent
only
began
in
the
7th/13th
century
under
the
Slave
Kings
of
Delhi
(cf.
Na@záim,
pp.
86-122).
In
his
middle
years,
Mahámu@d
had
taken
over
K¨úa@razm
(see
CHORASMIA
ii),
and
towards
the
end
of
his
life,
he
also
extended
his
conquests
westwards
across
northern
Persia,
his
prime
target
here
being
the
branch
of
the
Buyid
dynasty
(q.v.)
ruling
at
Ray.
On
the
pretext
of
an
anti-Shi¿ite
crusade,
he
marched
against
Ray
in
420/1029,
deposed
its
ruler
Majd-al-Dawla
and
went
on
to
attack
various
Daylamite
and
Kurdish
princes
of
northwestern
Persia
(Ebn
al-At¯^r,
IX,
pp.
371-74).
Thus
by
his
death,
Mahámu@d
had
constituted
the
most
powerful
and
extensive
empire
known
in
the
Islamic
world
since
the
heyday
of
the
¿Abbasid
caliphate.
His
son
Mas¿u@d
I,
after
setting
aside
his
brother
Moháammad,
took
over
this
empire
(421/1030)
plus
the
mighty
but
expensive
army
which
underpinned
it.
Though
personally
brave,
Mas¿u@d's
judgement
was
inferior
to
that
of
his
father,
and
his
arbitrary
behavior
aroused
antagonisms
within
the
army
and
the
civilian
bureaucracy
which
impaired
the
efficiency
of
the
military
machine
and
the
administration
which
had
to
find
the
taxation
to
pay
for
it.
He
continued
his
father's
policy
of
campaigning
in
both
India
and
Persia,
personally
leading
the
army
on
occasion,
as
in
the
attack
on
the
Qal¿at-al-¿Adòra@÷
(Virgin
fortress)
of
Ha@ns^
to
the
northwest
of
Delhi,
in
428/1037
(Bayhaq^,
ed.
Fayya@zµ,
pp.
703-04;
Bosworth,
Ghaznavids,
pp.
128,
235).
In
Persia,
the
province
of
Kerma@n
was
taken
over
from
its
Buyid
ruler
in
424/1033,
but
the
Ghaznavid
force
sent
there
was
soon
driven
out
by
a
Buyid
contingent
sent
against
them
the
next
year
(Bayhaq^,
pp.
552-57).
Relations
with
the
Qarakhanids
of
Transoxania
were
far
from
smooth.
Ghaznavid
vassal
principalities
on
the
upper
Oxus,
K¨ottal
and
Ùa@g@a@n^a@n,
were
harried
by
Qarakhanid
raiders,
and
by
425/1034
the
outlying
province
of
K¨úa@razm
had
slipped
from
Ghaznavid
control.
But
most
serious
for
the
stability
of
the
empire
was
the
appearance
of
the
O@g@uz
Turks
or
Turkmen,
led
by
members
of
the
Saljuq
family.
These
nomads
had
been
infiltrating
into
Transoxania
in
the
early
decades
of
the
5th/11th
century,
acting
as
auxiliary
troops
for
the
various
powers
fighting
there,
namely
Samanids,
Qarakhanids,
and
Ghaznavids.
Towards
the
end
of
Mahámu@d's
reign
they
reached
the
northern
fringes
of
Khorasan
and
began
raiding
the
towns
and
oases
of
the
province,
pasturing
their
flocks
on
agricultural
lands,
devastating
the
countryside
and
disrupting
the
caravan
traffic
across
Khorasan
(Barthold,
Turkestan3,
pp.
256-57;
Bosworth,
Ghaznavids,
pp.
219-26).
The
ponderous
Ghaznavid
armies
failed
to
stem
these
incursions.
By
427-28/1036-37
major
cities
like
Marv,
Ray,
and
N^æa@pu@r
were
opening
their
gates
to
the
O@g@uz,
despairing
of
ever
receiving
adequate
protection
from
the
sultan.
In
a
battle
at
Danda@nqa@n
(q.v.)
in
the
desert
between
Sarakòs
and
Marv
(431/1040),
the
Ghaznavid
army
was
decisively
defeated
by
the
lightly-armed
but
more
mobile
Turkmen
cavalrymen.
The
whole
of
Khorasan
and
the
lands
further
west
were
now
lost
to
Mas¿u@d,
and
the
Og@uz
moved
into
northern
Persia
to
lay
the
foundations
there
for
the
Great
Seljuq
sultanate
of
Persia
and
Iraq.
Mas¿u@d,
despaired
of
retrieving
the
situation
and
fully
expecting
to
lose
GÚazna
itself,
retired
to
India,
but
he
was
deposed
and
killed
by
a
rebellion
of
his
troops
when
crossing
the
Indus
in
432/1041
(Bayhaq^,
pp.
831-46;
Ra@vand^,
pp.
99-101;
Ebn
al-At¯^r,
IX,
pp.
473-87;
aba@nka@ra÷^,
pp.
79-81).
It
fell
to
Mas¿u@d's
son
Mawdu@d
in
his
reign
of
some
seven
or
eight
years
to
wreak
vengeance
on
his
father's
killers
and
to
endeavor
to
stem
further
Saljuq
raids
into
S^sta@n
which
might
outflank
the
Ghaznavid
territories
from
the
south.
Balkò,
Hera@t,
and
Termedò
eventually
passed
out
of
Ghaznavid
control
and
the
Nasrid
amirate
in
S^sta@n
was
now
within
the
Saljuq
orbit,
but
Mawdu@d's
energy
enabled
him,
after
a
series
of
campaigns
in
southern
Afghanistan,
to
stabilize
the
situation
there
and
to
continue
the
Ghaznavid
traditions
of
raids
(g@azv)
in
India.
The
late
1040s
and
early
1050s
were
something
of
a
"Time
of
Troubles"
for
the
Ghaznavids,
with
some
ephemeral
reigns
and
that
of
Mahámu@d's
surviving
son
¿Abd-al-Raæ^d
(q.v.)
ending
in
upheaval
in
443/1052,
when
one
of
Mawdu@d's
former
commanders,
the
Turk
T®og@rïl,
murdered
the
sultan
and
usurped
the
throne
in
GÚazna
for
several
months
(Ebn
Fondoq,
pp.
177-78;
Ebn
al-At¯^r,
IX,
pp.
582-85;
Bosworth,
Later
Ghaznavids,
pp.
20-33,
37-47).
Re-establishment
of
the
sultanate
on
a
firmer
basis
fell
to
two
sons
of
Mas¿u@d,
Farrokòza@d
and
Ebra@h^m
(qq.v.),
the
latter
of
whom
reigned
for
forty
years.
Not
surprisingly,
the
Saljuq
ruler
of
the
east,
Ùag@rï
Beg
(q.v.)
tried
to
take
advantage
of
Ghaznavid
weakness
at
the
time
of
T®og@rïl's
usurpation,
but
a
Saljuq
attack
on
Ghazna
was
beaten
off.
When
Ebra@h^m
came
to
the
throne
in
451/1059,
irredentist
hopes
of
recovering
the
lost
territories
in
western
Afghanistan
began
to
look
completely
unrealistic,
hence
Ebra@h^m
negotiated
a
peace
agreement
with
the
Saljuqs
on
a
basis
of
what
was
then
the
status
quo.
The
Ghaznavid
empire,
though
now
truncated,
still
comprised
the
region
of
eastern
Afghanistan
from
Kabul
to
Bost,
Baluchistan,
and
extensive
lands
in
northwestern
India,
and
was
strong
enough
in
many
ways
to
deal
with
the
Great
Saljuqs
on
a
basis
of
equality.
This
now
became
a
time
of
perceptible
cultural
and
social
interaction
between
the
two
empires,
with
marriage
alliances,
a
free
flow
of
poets
and
scholars
from
one
to
the
other,
imitation
by
the
Ghaznavids
of
Saljuq
titulature
practices
(seen,
e.g.,
in
the
formal
use
now
on
Ghaznavid
coins
of
the
characteristic
Saljuq
formula
al-soltÂa@n
al-mo¿azázáam,
"highly-exalted
sultan"),
etc.
(Bosworth,
1962a,
pp.
223-24,
230-31).
The
half-century
or
so
from
Ebra@h^m's
death
in
492/1099
till
the
struggle
for
power
in
eastern
Afghanistan
between
the
Ghaznavids
and
the
Ghurids
(q.v.),
which
broke
out
around
543/1148,
is
spanned
by
the
reigns
of
Mas¿u@d
III
b.
Ebra@h^m
and
his
own
three
sons,
^rza@d,
Malek
Arsla@n
or
Arsla@næa@h,
and
Bahra@mæa@h,
ruling
successively.
Apart
from
the
two
or
three
years
of
fraternal
strife
(see
below),
it
was
a
period
of
comparative
tranquillity
for
the
empire,
deriving
from
the
stability
and
prosperity
attained
by
Ebra@h^m's
restraint
and
sagacity,
which
was
to
continue
substantially
until
the
protracted
struggle,
ultimately
lethal
for
the
Ghaznavid
empire,
with
the
aggressive
and
expansionist
Ghurids.
Raids
across
the
plains
of
northern
India,
mounted
from
the
center
of
Ghaznavid
power
in
the
Punjab,
Lahore,
continued,
for
the
exploitation
of
the
riches
of
India
was
increasingly
the
raison
d'être
for
the
empire's
existence,
shorn
as
it
now
was
of
its
western
lands,
although
these
raids
rarely
went
forward
unchallenged;
in
the
early
6th/12th
century
the
Muslim
armies
faced
powerful
and
resolute
Hindu
opponents
from
such
dynasties
as
the
Parama@ras
of
Ma@lwa
and
the
Ga@hadáavalas
of
Kanawj.
Mas¿u@d
III
was
an
enthusiastic
warrior
whose
armies
were
active
in
India
against
the
infidels.
It
seems
that
Mas¿u@d,
like
the
rest
of
his
dynasty,
employed
the
spoils
of
war
and
the
temple
treasures
of
India
to
beautify
his
capital
GÚazna
and
to
construct
gardens
and
palaces
(Bosworth,
Later
Ghaznavids,
pp.
35,
87-89).
Adjacent
to
the
minaret
of
Mas¿u@d
(formerly,
and
wrongfully,
attributed
to
Sultan
Mahámu@d),
the
Italian
Archaeological
Mission
in
Afghanistan
excavated
a
palace
of
his,
notable
for
what
was
apparently
a
Persian
poetic
text
on
marble
slabs
forming
a
dado
round
an
inner
courtyard.
The
poem
extolls
the
sultan
and
his
forebears
both
as
Muslim
g@a@z^s
and
as
heroes
connected
with
the
Iranian
epic,
legendary
past
(see
Bombaci).
Signs
of
weakness
in
the
state
became
apparent
when
Mas¿u@d
III
died
in
508/1115
and
a
period
of
internecine
warfare
amongst
his
sons
followed,
out
of
which
Bahra@mæa@h
(q.v.)
finally
emerged
triumphant
(511/1117),
but
only
thanks
to
military
aid
from
his
Saljuq
patron,
the
Sultan
Sanjar
(Ju@zja@n^,
T®abaqa@t
I,
p.
241,
tr.
Raverty,
p.
108;
Fakòr-e
Modabber,
pp.
269-71).
Bahra@mæa@h
now
had
to
reign
as
a
Saljuq
vassal,
paying
a
heavy
tribute
and
sending
his
son
as
a
hostage
at
Sanjar's
court
in
Marv;
only
once,
in
529/1135,
did
he
unsuccessfully
rebel
against
Saljuq
control.
Thus
now,
for
the
first
time
since
Mahámu@d
had
thrown
off
Samanid
authority
in
389/999,
the
Ghaznavid
realm
was
subject
to
an
outside
power.
Bahra@mæa@h
was
an
active
leader
of
raids
into
India,
and
his
exploits
there
were
hymned
by
his
court
panegyrist,
the
poet
Sayyed
H®asan
GÚÚaznav^
(q.v.),
but
exact
details
of
these
military
campaigns
are
lacking
(Khan,
pp.
62-91).
In
the
later
part
of
his
reign,
it
was
his
fate
to
come
up
against
the
increasing
power
of
the
Ghurids
from
GÚu@r
in
central
Afghanistan.
The
sultan's
capture
and
execution
of
the
Ghurid
Sayf-al-D^n
Su@r^
in
544/1149
provoked
a
punitive
expedition
by
Sayf-al-D^n's
brother
¿Ala@÷-al-D^n
H®osayn
(q.v.),
culminating
in
a
frightful
sacking
of
GÚazna
in
about
545/1150-51.
Bahra@mæa@h
was
driven
into
India,
only
returning
after
the
Ghurid
ruler
had
been
defeated
by
the
Saljuqs
and
made
captive
by
them
(Ju@zja@n^,
T®abaqa@t
I,
pp.
241-42,
336;
Fakòr-e
Modabber,
p.
437;
Ebn
al-At¯^r,
XI,
p.
135,
164-66;
Khan,
pp.
199-217;
Bosworth,
Later
Ghaznavids,
pp.
114-19).
The
exact
date
of
his
death
is
uncertain,
but
probably
fell
in
552/1157.
The
line
of
the
Ghaznavids
continued
for
some
thirty
more
years,
briefly
under
Bahra@mæa@h's
son
K¨osrowæa@h,
and
then,
with
a
greater
duration,
under
the
latter's
son
K¨osrow
Malek
(the
two
similar
names
are
often
confused
and
the
events
of
their
reigns
conflated
in
the
sources).
Historical
information
on
this
period
now
grows
sparse.
It
seems
that
there
were
further
attacks
by
the
Ghurids
and
that,
by
the
early
years
of
K¨osrowæa@h's
reign,
Bost
and
Zam^nda@var
were
lost
to
the
Ghaznavids.
Perhaps
by
the
accession
of
K¨osrow
Malek
in
555/1160
or
soon
afterwards,
GÚazna
itself
was
lost,
not
immediately
to
the
Ghurids
but
to
a
group
of
Og@uz
Turkish
adventurers
from
Khorasan;
these
incomers
injected
a
new
element
into
the
political
structures
of
the
region,
and
held
up
Ghurid
expansion
into
the
GÚazna
region
and
Za@bolesta@n
for
up
to
fifteen
years.
K¨osrow
Malek,
meanwhile,
had
moved
his
capital
to
Lahore,
carrying
on
raids
(g@azv)
against
the
Indian
princes
and
making
the
Punjab
the
last
redoubt
of
Ghaznavid
power.
The
Ghurid
eha@b-al-D^n
or
Mo
¿ezz-al-D^n
Moháammad
nibbled
away
at
K¨osrow
Malek's
remaining
territories,
capturing
Multan
and
then
Peshawar,
and
forced
him
to
pay
tribute
and
to
send
his
son
to
the
Ghurid
court
as
a
hostage.
Finally,
K¨osrow
Malek
was
besieged
in
Lahore
and
in
582/1186
forced
to
surrender,
being
then
deposed
and
apparently
executed
shortly
afterwards
(Bosworth,
Later
Ghaznavids,
pp.
120-31).
The
Ghurids
thereby
succeeded
to
the
heritage
of
the
Ghaznavids
in
Afghanistan
and
northwestern
India,
but
did
not
enjoy
it
for
long;
within
a
generation,
their
empire
succumbed
in
turn
to
their
ancient
rivals,
the
K¨úa@razmæa@hs.
The
ethos
of
the
Ghaznavid
empire
was,
from
the
outset,
strongly
orthodox
Sunni,
with
the
sultans
personally
followers
of
the
Hanafite
legal
school.
Mahámu@d
was
assiduous
in
cultivating
good
relations
with
the
¿Abbasid
caliphs
in
order
to
supplement
the
naked
force,
which
was
the
practical
foundation
for
his
authoritarian
rule,
with
a
moral
and
religious
element.
Immediately
on
his
accession,
he
recognized
the
caliph
al-Qa@der
in
the
kòotÂba
of
Khorasan,
where
the
Samanids
had
continued
to
acknowledge
his
predecessor
al-T®a@÷e¿.
He
regularly
sent
presents
to
Baghdad
from
the
captured
plunder
of
India.
He
emphasized
his
personal
role
as
the
enforcer
of
orthodoxy
against
dissidents
within
his
own
lands
and
against
outside
heretics
like
the
Isma¿ilis
of
Multan
and
the
Shi¿ites
and
Mu¿tazilites
of
Ray.
At
the
end
of
his
life,
without
dwelling
at
all
on
the
practicalities
involved,
he
proclaimed
that
he
was
going
to
lead
a
crusade
against
the
Isma¿ili
Fatimids
of
Egypt
and
Syria
(Bosworth,
1962b,
pp.
59-74).
Mas¿u@d
I
continued
this
policy
of
identifying
his
rule
with
the
caliphate
and
religious
orthodoxy,
and
it
was
only
the
rise
of
the
Saljuqs
and
the
interposition
of
their
empire
between
the
Ghaznavids
and
Iraq
which
reduced
direct
connections
with
Baghdad
for
the
later
Ghaznavids
(Bosworth,
1962b,
p.
76).
The
Ghaznavid
sultans
were
ethnically
Turkish,
but
the
sources,
all
in
Arabic
or
Persian,
do
not
allow
us
to
estimate
the
persistence
of
Turkish
practices
and
ways
of
thought
amongst
them.
Yet
given
the
fact
that
the
essential
basis
of
the
Ghaznavids'
military
support
always
remained
their
Turkish
soldiery,
there
must
always
have
been
a
need
to
stay
attuned
to
their
troops'
needs
and
aspirations;
also,
there
are
indications
of
the
persistence
of
some
Turkish
literary
culture
under
the
early
Ghaznavids
(Köprülüzade,
pp.
56-57).
The
sources
do
make
it
clear,
however,
that
the
sultans'
exercise
of
political
power
and
the
administrative
apparatus
which
gave
it
shape
came
very
speedily
to
be
within
the
Perso-Islamic
tradition
of
statecraft
and
monarchical
rule,
with
the
ruler
as
a
distant
figure,
buttressed
by
divine
favor,
ruling
over
a
mass
of
traders,
artisans,
peasants,
etc.,
whose
prime
duty
was
obedience
in
all
respects
but
above
all
in
the
payment
of
taxes.
The
fact
that
the
personnel
of
the
bureaucracy
which
directed
the
day-to-day
running
of
the
state,
and
which
raised
the
revenue
to
support
the
sultans'
life-style
and
to
finance
the
professional
army,
were
Persians
who
carried
on
the
administrative
traditions
of
the
Samanids,
only
strengthened
this
conception
of
secular
power.
The
offices
of
vizier,
treasurer,
chief
secretary,
head
of
the
war
department,
etc.,
were
the
preserves
of
Persians,
and
no
Turks
are
recorded
as
ever
having
held
them.
It
was
not
for
nothing
that
the
great
Saljuq
vizier
K¨úa@ja
Nezáa@m-al-Molk
held
up
Mahámu@d
and
the
early
Ghaznavids
as
exemplars
of
firm
rule
(Nezáa@m-al-Molk,
passim;
Barthold,
Turkestan3,
pp.
291-93;
Bosworth,
Ghaznavids,
pp.
55-97).
Persianisation
of
the
state
apparatus
was
accompanied
by
the
Persianisation
of
high
culture
at
the
Ghaznavid
court.
Ferdows^
sought
Mahámu@d's
beneficence
towards
the
end
of
his
life,
but
Mahámu@d
and
Mas¿u@d
are
most
notably
known
as
the
patrons
of
Persian
poets
with
a
simple,
lyrical
style
like
¿Onsáor^,
Farrokò^,
and
Manu±ehr^
(Rypka,
Hist.
Iran.
Lit.,
pp.
173-77;
Clinton;
Moayyad).
The
level
of
literary
creativity
was
just
as
high
under
Ebra@h^m
and
his
successors
up
to
Bahra@mæa@h,
with
such
poets
as
Abu'l-Faraj
Ru@n^,
Sana@÷^,
¿Ot¯ma@n
Mokòta@r^,
Mas¿u@d-e
Sa¿d-e
Salma@n,
and
Sayyed
H®asan
GÚaznav^
(Rypka,
Hist.
Iran.
Lit.,
pp.
196-97;
Bosworth,
Later
Ghaznavids,
pp.
75-77,
107-10).
We
know
from
the
biographical
dictionaries
of
poets
(tadòkera-ye
æo¿ara@)
that
the
court
in
Lahore
of
K¨osrow
Malek
had
an
array
of
fine
poets,
none
of
whose
d^va@ns
has
unfortunately
survived,
and
the
translator
into
elegant
Persian
prose
of
Ebn
Moqaffa¿'s
Kal^la
wa
Demna,
namely
Abu'l-Ma¿a@l^
Nasár-Alla@h
b.
Moháammad,
served
the
sultan
for
a
while
as
his
chief
secretary
(Bosworth,
Later
Ghaznavids,
pp.
127-28).
The
Ghaznavids
thus
present
the
phenomenon
of
a
dynasty
of
Turkish
slave
origin
which
became
culturally
Persianised
to
a
perceptibly
higher
degree
than
other
contemporary
dynasties
of
Turkish
origin
such
as
Saljuqs
and
Qarakhanids.
Whereas
most
of
the
Great
Saljuq
sultans
seem
to
have
remained
illiterate,
many
of
the
Ghaznavids
were
highly
cultured;
as
emerges
from
the
pages
of
Bayhaq^,
Mas¿u@d
I
had
a
good
knowledge
of
Arabic
poetry
and
was
a
competent
Persian
chancery
stylist
(Bosworth,
Ghaznavids,
pp.
129-30);
¿Abd-al-Raæ^d
commissioned
the
copying
in
GÚazna
of
a
superb
manuscript
on
traditions
describing
the
Prophet
which
survives
today
(Stern).
Art
and
architecture
enjoyed
a
great
florescence
in
the
Ghaznavid
period
under
the
stimuli
first,
of
enthusiastic
patronage
from
the
ruling
dynasty
and
its
high
officials
and
commanders,
not
only
in
GÚazna
but
in
provincial
centers
like
Hera@t,
Balkò
and
Bost,
and
second,
of
the
great
amount
of
money
available
for
the
arts
of
peace
flowing
in
from
the
spoils
of
India.
It
is
possible
that
idols
and
other
trophies
of
war
were
on
occasion
actually
set
into
the
fabric
of
public
buildings
like
mosques
and
palaces
in
the
capital
as
symbols
of
the
triumph
of
Islam
over
paganism
(Scerrato).
It
is
literary
sources
like
Abu'l-Fazµl
Bayhaq^
and
Abu@
Sa¿^d
Gard^z^
(qq.v.)
which
tell
us
about
the
numerous
gardens,
kiosks,
and
palaces
laid
out
by
the
sultans
in
the
cities
of
the
empire,
since
gardens
are
transient
affairs
and
the
use
of
sun-dried
brick
as
the
standard
building
material
equally
makes
for
impermanence
(Bosworth,
Ghaznavids,
pp.
135-40).
Nevertheless,
some
constructions
have
fortunately
survived.
At
GÚazna,
we
have
the
tombs
of
Sebüktigin,
the
minarets
of
Mas¿u@d
III
and
Bahra@mæa@h,
and
the
palace
of
Mas¿u@d
III
mentioned
above.
At
Laækar^
Ba@za@r
on
the
banks
of
the
Helmand
river
near
Bost
there
survives
an
extensive
complex
of
military
encampments
and
palaces,
whose
foundation
may
go
back
to
Sebüktigin
or
even
earlier
(cf,
Bombaci,
"Ghaznavidi").
All
these
provide
us
with
evidence
of
the
fine
quality
of
Ghaznavid
architecture
and
the
elegance
of
its
decoration.
On
a
smaller
scale,
finds
of
ceramics
and
bronze
work
show
us
a
plastic
art
which
evolved
from
Samanid
models
but
came
to
be
influenced
by
Saljuq
ones,
whilst
the
fortunate
preservation,
albeit
fragmentarily,
of
some
mural
paintings
in
the
reception
hall
of
the
Laækar^
Ba@za@r
palace,
depicting
the
sultans'
Turkish
guards,
indicates
the
existence
of
a
lively
representational
art.
h
Bibliography:
Primary
sources.
Contemporary
sources
for
early
Ghaznavids
are
extensive;
the
major
historical
sources
are:
Moháammad
¿Otb^'s
al-Ta÷r^kò
al-yam^n^
(with
commentary
of
A.
Man^n^,
2
vols.,
Cairo,
1286/1869;
tr.
Na@sáehá
b.
Záafar
Jorfa@daqa@n^
as
Tarjama-ye
Ta@r^kò-e
yam^n^,
ed.
J.
e¿a@r,
Tehran,
1345
./1966);
Abu'l-Fazµl
Bayhaq^
(passim);
Gard^z^
(ed.
H®ab^b^,
pp.
162-206);
and
Moháammad
b.
¿Al^
aba@nka@ra÷^,
Majma¿
al-ansa@b
(ed.
M.
H.
Moháaddet¯,
Tehran,
1363
./1984,
pp.
29-88).
These
may
be
supplemented
by
some
literary
sources,
including
anecdotal
collections
such
as
Moháammad
¿Awf^'s
Jawa@me¿
al-háeka@ya@t
wa
lawa@me¿
al-rewa@ya@t
(partial
editions
by
M.-T.
Baha@r,
Tehran,
1324
./1945,
M.
Nizamuddin,
Hyderabad,
1960,
and
B.
Mosáaffa@
Kar^m^,
Tehran,
1352-53
./1973-74);
the
"Mirrors
of
Princes"
literature,
such
as
Nezáa@m-al-Molk
T®u@s^'s
S^ar
al-molu@k/S^a@sat-na@ma
(ed.
H.
Darke,
Tehran,
1347
./1968,
tr.
H.
Darke
as
The
Book
of
Government,
London,
1960);
and
¿Onsáor-al-Ma¿a@l^
Kayka@vu@s
b.
Eskandar,
Qa@bu@s-na@ma
(ed.
GÚ.-H®
Yu@sof^,
Tehran,
2nd
ed.
1352
./1973);
as
well
as
by
sources
such
as
Ebn
Fondoq's
Ta@r^kò-e
Bayhaq
(ed.
A.
Bahmanya@r,
Tehran,
n.d.);
Fakòr-e
Modabber
Moba@rakæa@h's
AÚda@b
al-háarb
wa'l-æaja@¿a/AÚda@b
al-molu@k
(ed.
A.
Sohayl^
K¨úa@nsa@r^,
Tehran,
1346
./1967);
S®adr-al-D^n
H®osayn^'s
Akòba@r
al-dawla
al-salju@q^ya
(ed.
M.
Eqba@l,
Lahore,
1933);
Moháammad
b.
¿Al^
Ra@vand^'s
Ra@háat
al-sáodu@r
wa
a@yat
al-soru@r
(ed.
M.
Eqba@l,
London,
1921,
repr.
with
commentary
by
M.
M^nov^,
Tehran,
1346
./1967);
and
Ta@r^kò-e
S^sta@n.
These
sources
are
discussed
in
C.
E.
Bosworth,
1963,
and
in
idem,
Ghaznavids,
pp.
7-24,
with
full
bibliographical
details
given
in
the
bibliography
at
pp.
308-14
(updated
in
the
2nd
ed.,
Beirut,
1973,
pp.
315-318).
For
the
later
Ghaznavids,
the
sources
are
much
sparser.
Apart
from
Gard^z^
(see
above)
for
the
earlier
years,
we
depend
mainly
on
non-contemporary
sources
like
Ju@zja@n^'s
T®abaqa@t
and
Ebn
al-At¯^r,
in
addition
to
the
literary
sources,
all
discussed
in
Bosworth,
Later
Ghaznavids,
pp.
1-4,
with
full
bibliographical
details
at
pp.
187-91.
Studies.
The
whole
history
of
the
dynasty
is
covered
in
Bosworth,
Ghaznavids,
and
idem,
Later
Ghaznavids.
Several
articles
by
Bosworth
dealing
specifically
with
Ghaznavid
history,
literature,
and
culture
are
collected
together
in
his
Medieval
History
of
Iran,
Afghanistan
and
Central
Asia,
Variorum
Reprints,
London,
1977,
nos.
X-XVI,
XVIII.
Of
recent
studies
which
touch
upon
Ghaznavid
history,
see
R.
W.
Bulliet,
The
Patricians
Of
Nishapur:
A
Study
in
Medieval
Islamic
Social
History,
Cambridge,
Mass.,
1972.
See
also:
A.
Bombaci,
The
Kufic
Inscription
in
Persian
Verses
in
the
Court
of
the
Royal
Palace
of
Mas¿u@d
III
at
Ghazni,
ISMEO,
Centro
Studi
e
Scavi
Archeologici
in
Asia,
Reports
and
Memoirs
5,
Rome,
1966.
Idem,
"Ghaznavidi,"
in
Enciclopedia
universale
dell'
arte
VI,
Venice
and
Rome,
ca.
1955,
cols.
5-16.
C.
E.
Bosworth,
"The
Early
Ghaznavids,"
in
Camb.
Hist.
Iran
IV,
pp.
162-97;
Idem,
"Mahámu@d
b.
Sebüktigin,"
in
EI2
VI,
pp.
65-66.
Idem,
"Ghaznavid
Military
Organization,"
Der
Islam
36,
1960,
pp.
37-77.
Idem,
"The
Titulature
of
the
Early
Ghaznavids,"
Oriens
15,
1962a.
Idem,
"The
Imperial
Policy
of
the
Ghaznawids,"
Islamic
Studies:
Journal
of
the
Central
Institute
of
Islamic
Research
(Karachi)
1/3,
1962b,
pp.
59-74.
Idem,
"Early
Sources
for
the
History
of
the
First
Four
Ghaznavid
Sultans,"
Islamic
Culture
7,
1963,
pp.
3-22.
Idem,
"Notes
on
the
Pre-Ghaznavid
History
of
Eastern
Afghanistan,"
Islamic
Culture
9,
1965,
pp.
16-21.
Idem,
"The
Development
of
the
Persian
Culture
under
the
Early
Ghaznavids,"
Iran
6,
1968,
pp.
33-44.
J.
W.
Clinton,
"Court
Poetry
at
the
Beginning
of
the
Classical
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