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Rebellion of Sheikh Ahmad Madani

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Rebellion of Sheikh Ahmad Madani
Part of Naderian Wars, Mohammad Khan Baluch's Rebellion
DateJanuary 1730-Mid June 1734
Location
Result

Rebellion suppressed

Belligerents

Safavid Empire
Nader's personal domains

Supported by:
English East India Company
Dutch East India Company (VOC)
Forces Loyal to Sheikh Ahmad Madani
Forces Loyal to Sheikh Jabbara
Forces Loyal to Sheikh Rashid bin Sa'id of Basaidu
Rebelling Arab tribes
Hotak remnants and Afghan raiders
Commanders and leaders
Tahmasp Qoli Khan
Emamverdi Khan
(Until 1733) Mohammad Khan Baloch
Sheikh 'Allaq Huwala
Mohammad Latif Khan
Mir Mehr-e 'Ali
Hajji Ghani Beg
Mohsen Khan
Mohammad 'Ali Khan
Hajji 'Ali Qoli Khan
Mirza Mohammad
Sheikh Ahmad Madani
Sheikh Jabbara
Sheikh Rashid bin Sa'id of Basaidu
Esma'il Safidbani
Ashraf Hotak
Neda Khan
Ahmad Beg
Mohammad Safidbani
Strength

(1731) ≥5,000

(1732) ≥12,000
(1730) 6,000
(1732) 30,000

The Rebellion of Sheikh Ahmad Madani (Persian: شورش شیخ احمد مدنی) was a revolt in the Garmsirat region of Iran from January 1730 as the Hotaks were being pushed out of Iran up until May 1734 when Sheikh Ahmad Madani was captured.[1] However, remnants of the rebellion continued to fight until the middle of June 1734 before it was finally crushed.[2]

It began as a result of the Restoration of the Safavids in late 1729. The Hotaks were expelled from Iran and many fled to the Garmsirat instead of taking the long route back to Kerman.[3] The coastal Arab chieftains used this opportunity to seize independence and gave shelter to the Afghans.[2] Outrageous taxes were also a factor in the rebellion.[4] Many Arabs joined Sheikh Ahmad Madani and Iranian forces sent against Madani were unable to defeat him as they lacked sufficient naval forces to encircle the rebels.[2]

Dutch East India Company letters reported he was collecting revenue in the areas between Lar and Shiraz.[1] In the Autumn of 1730 Mohammad 'Ali Khan was able to defeat the rebels several times. However Mohammad 'Ali refused to accept any attempt at peace because he wanted to end them once and for all. He failed to do so however, and Ahmad Madani's stronghold remained safe.[1] In October 1731 Sheikh Ahmad Madani had taken Lar again and besieged the citadel but were driven off and defeated.[5][1] Sheikh Ahmad Madani still remained a threat to the region however.

In 1732 Mohammad Khan Baloch was sent with some 12,000 men to destroy Sheikh Ahmad Madani.[1] However, he instead dealt with his own feud with the governor of Jahrom and did nothing to stop the rebels.[6][1] In the autumn of 1733 Mohammad Khan Baloch revolted against Tahmasp Qoli Khan with the help of Sheikh Ahmad Madani, and this was the last straw. Nader Shah marched against the rebels with the assistance of the Dutch and English. By May 1734, Ahmad's stronghold at Maragh had fallen and Sheikh Ahmad Madani was captured. By the middle of June 1734 the Campaign against Sheikh Ahmad Madani was over.[2] However, some remnants of the rebellions of Sheikh Ahmad Madani and Mohammad Khan Baloch fled to Kish and held it against Safavid forces for a brief period.[3]

Background

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Hotak Campaigns in Lar and the Garmsirat

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When Sultan Husayn abdicated on October 23 to Mahmud Hotak,[7] the Hotaks didn't control much of the country. They slowly consolidated their position around Isfahan by taking notable villages and towns in Iraq-e Ajam[8][7][6] and then moved south. On July 7, 1723, A Hotaki force moved out of Isfahan to besiege Shiraz.[9] They first subdued Hajji Baqer, the Arab warlord that controlled the district of Qomisheh[8][9][7] and besieged Shiraz by July 28.[9] On April 14, 1724, Shiraz fell,[9] allowing Hotak forces to spread to take more major towns in the South. In late June 1724 Lar was occupied by the Afghans, and on November 3 Bandar Abbas was occupied by an Afghan force coming from Lar.[7][9] The Afghans were only able to control the major cities during their occupation of Iran. As Willem Floor notes in his book "The Rise and Fall of Nader Shah: Dutch East India Company Reports, 1730-1747":

"During the 1726-1730 period the Afghans certainly were not the absolute masters of Larestan or the Garmsirat. In fact, they were only obeyed in those places where they had a strong garrison or when they sent an army to subjugate a certain village. In October 1729 Neda Khan, the Afghan governor of Lar, was unable to destroy Sulgari, because he lacked the proper artillery. He was also opposed at the village of Gheyst (?). For his logistical and military support Neda Khan relied on the local Sunni Arab petty rulers."[1]

On June 3, 1725, pro-Safavid forces recaptured Lar (although Afghan forces were still in the vicinity) and on June 10 Bandar Abbas was recaptured.[9] In 1726 the expansion of a Safavid prince, Shah Ahmad Marashi, threatened the Afghan hold on the region. However, by late 1727 the Afghans made a counterattack. On December 20, 1727, the Afghans entered Bandar Abbas (a town which had been controlled by Shah Ahmad since October 1727)[9] and by September 1728 the rebellion was crushed and he was executed. On December 16, 1729, Bandar Abbas was re-occupied by Safavid forces.[7][1] However a few days later the Afghans retook the city. On January 9, 1730, the Afghan governor of Bandar Abbas fled to Shiraz, and the Battle of Zarghan on 15 January 1730[10] destroyed the Afghan effort completely. Various groups of Afghans fled to Lar while others were murdered by the villagers of the surrounding area.[6] The Afghan power had been utterly shattered, and many fled into the arms of the welcoming coastal Arabs.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Floor, Willem M. (2009). The Rise and Fall of Nader Shah: Dutch East India Company Reports, 1730-1747. Mage Publishers. ISBN 978-1-933823-32-4.
  2. ^ a b c d Floor, Willem M. (2007). The Persian Gulf: The Rise of the Gulf Arabs : the Politics of Trade on the Persian Littoral, 1747-1792. Mage Publishers. pp. 7–8. ISBN 978-1-933823-18-8.
  3. ^ a b Axworthy, Michael (2011). "Nader Shah and Persian Naval Expansion in the Persian Gulf, 1700—1747". Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society. 21 (1): 31–39. ISSN 1356-1863. JSTOR 23011520.
  4. ^ Axworthy, Michael (2009-02-28). The Sword of Persia: Nader Shah, from Tribal Warrior to Conquering Tyrant. Bloomsbury Academic. pp. 139–143. ISBN 978-1-84511-982-9.
  5. ^ Floor, Willem M. (2014). The Hula Arabs of the Shibkuh Coast of Iran. Mage Publishers. ISBN 978-1-933823-66-9.
  6. ^ a b c Ḥazīn, Muḥammad ʻAlī (1830). The life of Sheikh Mohammed Ali Hazin. F. C. Belfour. London, Printed for the Oriental translation fund, sold by J. Murray [etc.]
  7. ^ a b c d e Lockhart, Laurence (1958). The Fall of the Safavī Dynasty and the Afghan Occupation of Persia, by Laurence Lockhart ... University Press.
  8. ^ a b di Sarkis Gilanentz, Petros. The Chronicle of Petros di Sarkis Gilanentz.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Floor, Willem M. (1998). The Afghan Occupation of Safavid Persia, 1721-1729. Peeters Publishers & Booksellers. ISBN 978-2-910640-05-7.
  10. ^ Hanway, Jonas (1762). An Historical Account of the British Trade Over the Caspian Sea: With the Author's Journal of Travels from England Through Russia Into Persia, and Back Through Russia, Germany and Holland : to which are Added, The Revolutions of Persia During the Present Century, with the Particular History of the Great Usurper Nadir Kouli : Illustrated with Maps and Copper-plates. T. Osborne [and 9 others].