Stanza 34
Seven and ten years had passed after seven hundred,
From the Flight, when lo, in the month Shawal …
The first piece of information Shabistari gives is the date of an event, 717 ah (1317 ce). Already we are into extreme importance but again we need to take into account something we never question today, which is how we calculate time and how we recognize “anniversaries”.
Briefly, in the divine universe, time is calculated by the more or less yearly motions of the stars and the absolutely specific space of time it takes for all of them to complete their multiple circuits and return to their point of origin. That space of time is an astronomical cycle. Advances in astronomy caused changes in the accepted span of a cycle but by Shabistari’s time the 19-year cycle had become de facto. These 19-year astronomical cycles marked important “anniversaries” and tied events and projects to particular cultures, ruling dynasties, and religious organizations. More importantly these cycle-dates showed that the events and their sponsors were acting in synchrony with divinely controlled time, and hence by implication in accordance with divine intentions. 717/1317 was such a cycle date[1].
Cycle dates began with a significant event: a change of ruling dynasty, the founding of a new religious body, etc. In this case, the origin event appears to have been the formalization of the Ilkhanate with the first use of the Ilkhan title in 658/1260. It was conferred on Hulagu Khan by Kublai Khan on his own election as Khan. For exactly two cycles, it was worryingly unclear which religion the Mongols would espouse. Ghazan Khan adopted Islam just prior to his enthronement, along with his brother and successor, and 100,000 of his followers in 694/1295[2]. But this was followed by a period of brutal intolerance, which finally ended precisely on the second cycle-date, 697/1298, when the instigator was executed and a new vazir appointed.
The new vazir was Rashid al-Din Hamadani, who was also commissioned to write the history of the Mongols to the time of Ghazan Khan – which he began within two years and completed perhaps ten years later[3]. By this time it had become the first World History: the Jame’-i al-Tawarikh (Compendium of Chronicles or Universal History). It is still the main source of information about the Mongols and how they saw themselves. By 709/1309, Rashid al-Din had founded a university city, with a mandate for the yearly copying and distributing of the Qur’an and a work on hadith[4], and from 713/1313 all his works, including the Jame’-i al-Tawarikh were to be copied in Persian and Arabic, too[5]. It is Rashid al-Din’s history that tells us about the first use of the Ilkhan title, Ghazan’s conversion, his major reform beginning 697/1298 in response to brutal religious intolerance by his emir Nawrūz, and the fact that the Ilkhanids had divine favour (dawlat)[6]. And it was with the appointment of Rashid al-Din in the cycle year that major fiscal reform led to a change in coinage to reflect this belief[7].
717/1317 is the next cycle year after the reforms of Ghazan and Rashid al-Din, and at this stage in the poem he is about to tell us how and why he came to write it (the Cause mentioned in the title). The poem outlines the complete metaphysics of Sufism, and as we shall see, this spiritual work is no less comprehensive, and no less authoritative, than the historical work of Rashid al-Din.
Summary: time and art
The nineteen-year astronomical cycles mark the moment when all the planets return to their points of origin, thus they define divine time. For human affairs, they take their starting point from a significant event, such as a change of ruling dynasty, the foundation of a religious order, and so forth. For convenience, the cycle-set discussed here could be called the Ilkhanid Cycle, since it began in 658/1260 with the ascent of Kublai Khan to the throne, at which date he also conferred on his brother Hulagu the lesser title, ilkhan. After an extended period of religious chaos Islam was finally established as the state religion when, towards the end of the second cycle, the Ilkhan Ghazan converted to Islam. But the definitive point was the cycle-year itself, 697/1260, which is recognized as a turning point in his reign. That year saw fiscal and monetary reforms, the appointment Rashid al-Din Hamadani as vazir, and his commission for a formal history of the Mongols up to the time of Ghazan. Shabistari’s poem, a formal and correct outline of Sufi orthodoxy (commissioned and endorsed at the highest levels as we shall see), was produced exactly on the third cycle year, 717/1317. The Ilkhanate had now formally defined itself in name, coinage, history and spirituality. All these, including the Ilkhanate itself, are works of art (non-inevitable works capable of causing change, brought into existence by a thinking agent with a purpose for them). By attaching them all to the divinely controlled astronomical cycles the Ilkhanate also announced its own conformation to the rule of God.
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[1] For simplicity, these cycle-dates are most easily computed using the western calendar, owing to the calendar reform under Ghazan Khan.
[2] Whinfield, Introduction, iv, where the date is erroneously given as 697/1298 http://gulshan-raz.lossofgenerality.com/gulshan-e-raz-text-with-bookmarks/
[3] Encyclopeaedia Iranica, Jāme’ al-tawārikh, esp paragraphs 1, 2, 21 http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/jame-al-tawarik
[4] Encyclopeaedia Iranica, Jāme’ al-tawārikh ii Illustrations, paragraph 2 http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/jame-tawarikh-ii
[5] Encyclopeaedia Iranica, Jāme’ al-tawārikh, paragraph 21 http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/jame-al-tawarik
[6] Kingship and Ideology in the Islamic and Mongol Worlds, Anne F Broadbridge, Cambridge University Press, 2008, 68 (chapter begins p 64) http://books.google.com/books?id=VxOcXC85tnQC&pg=PA68&source=gbs_toc_r&cad=3#v=onepage&q&f=false
[7] The Mongols in Iran: Chingiz Khan to Uljaytu, 1220–1309, Judith Kolbas, Routledge, 2013, 295, 276 (note 47), 305 http://books.google.com/books?id=tSRTAQAAQBAJ&pg=PA295#v=onepage&q&f=false