That Shaykh Ṣafiyyu'd-Dín, the saintly recluse of Ardabíl from whom the Ṣafawí kings of Persia derived their descent Proofs of the fame, influence and greatness of Shaykh Ṣafiyyu'd-Dín. and their name, was really an important and influential person in his own day, is a fact susceptible of historical proof. He who wins a throne and founds a great dynasty destined to endure for more than two centuries is apt, if he be of lowly origin, to create, or allow to be created, some legend connecting his ancestors with famous kings, statesmen or warriors of old, or otherwise reflecting glory on a House which, till he made it powerful and illustrious, held but a humble place in men's esteem. But Sháh Isma'íl, sixth in descent from Shaykh Ṣafí (as we shall henceforth call him for brevity), who founded the Ṣafawí dynasty about the beginning of the sixteenth century of the Christian era, and raised Persia to a position of splendour which she had scarcely held since the overthrow of the ancient and noble House of Sásán by the Arabs in the seventh century, had no occasion to resort to these devices; for whether or no Shaykh Ṣafí was directly descended from the seventh Imám of the Shí'a, Músá Káẓim, and through him from 'Alí ibn Abí Ṭálib * and Fáṭima the Prophet's daughter (and his claim is probably at least as good as that of any contemporary Sayyid), two facts prove that in his own time (the thirteenth century) he was highly accounted as a saint and spiritual guide.
The first and more important of these two facts is the concern shown by that great Minister Rashídu'd-Dín Faḍ- The high esteem in which he was held by the Minister Rashídu'd-Dín Faḍlu'lláh. lu'lláh for his welfare, and the desire to win his favour and intercession. In the very rare collection of the Minister's letters known as the Munsha'át-i-Rashidí * there occur two documents affording proof of this. The first is a letter (No. 45 of the collection, ff. 145b-149a of the MS.) addressed to Shaykh Ṣafiyyu'd-Dín himself, offering to his monastery (Khánqáh) a yearly gift of corn, wine, oil, cattle, sugar, honey and other food-stuffs for the proper entertainment of the notables of Ardabíl on the anniversary of the Prophet's birthday, on condition that prayers should be offered up at the conclusion of the feast for the writer and benefactor. The second (No. 49, ff. 161a-169b) is addressed by Rashíd to his son Mír Aḥmad, governor of Ardabíl, enjoining on him consideration for all its inhabitants, and especially “to act in such wise that His Holiness the Pole of the Heaven of Truth, the Swimmer in the Oceans of the Law, the Pacer of the Hippodrome of the Path, the Shaykh of Islám and of the Muslims, the Proof of such as attain the Goal, the Exemplar of the Bench of Purity, the Rose-tree of the Garden of Fidelity, Shaykh Ṣafiyyu'l-Millat wa'd-Dín (may God Most High perpetuate the blessings of His Holy Exhalations!) may be well pleased with and grateful to thee.” * These letters, and especially the second, which is filled with the most exaggerated praises of Shaykh Ṣafí, sufficiently prove the high repute which he enjoyed amongst his contemporaries.*
The second fact germane to our thesis is that comparatively
soon after his death a most extensive monograph
The great monograph on his life
entitled Ṣafwatu'ṣ-Ṣafá.
on his life, character, teachings, doctrines, virtues
and miracles was compiled by one of his followers,
the darwísh Tawakkul
*
ibn Isma'íl, commonly
called Ibnu'l-Bazzáz, apparently under the inspiration
and direction of Shaykh Ṣadru'd-Dín, who succeeded
his father Shaykh Ṣafí as head of the Order and held
this position for fifty-eight years (A.D. 1334-1392). This
rare and important book has never been printed,
*
but is the
chief source of all later accounts of the head of the family
and dynasty, in most of which it is frequently and explicitly
cited. A much later recension of it was made in the reign
of Sháh Ṭahmásp (A.D. 1524-1576) by a certain Abu'l-
That the seventh Imám Músá Káẓim had, besides the
son 'Alí Riḍá who succeeded him in the Imámate, another
The seventh
Imám Músá
Káẓim.
son named Ḥamza, from whom Shaykh Ṣafí
claimed descent, is a fact vouched for by the
historian al-Ya'qúbí,
*
but the next dozen links
in the chain (including five Muḥammads without further
designation) are too vague to admit of identification. The
earliest ancestor of the Ṣafawís who is invested with any
Fírúzsháhi-Zarrín-kuláh.
definite attributes is Fírúzsháh-i-Zarrín-kuláh
(“Golden-cap”), who is stated by the Silsilatu'n-