THE period of sixty-five years which we are now about to
consider begins with the death of Maliksháh, described at the
end of chap. iii, and ends with the death of his son Sanjar,
who, though he reigned supreme in the Seljúq Empire only
from A.D. 1117 to 1157, had ruled over Khurásán, and been
the dominant figure in the House of Seljúq, from A.D. 1096.
From the fratricidal wars which troubled this Empire before
his succession, Khurásán, thanks to his wise and firm government,
stood in large measure aloof, and only towards the end
of his reign did it suffer at the hands of the Ghuzz Turks
devastations which, frightful as they were, were eclipsed some
seventy years later by the horrors of the Mongol invasion.
The period which we are now considering may, therefore, fairly
be called “the Period of Sanjar,” and with his death the epoch
of the “Great Seljúqs” came to an end. Alike in length of
life and brilliant achievements, according to ar-Ráwandí's
Ráḥatu'ṣ-Ṣudúr,
*
Sanjar surpassed all the other Seljúq monarchs.
From the time he was made king of Khurásán by Barkiyáruq,
he effected, during a period of forty years, nineteen conquests.
He took Ghazna and made Bahrámsháh king over it, on condition
that he should pay him a tribute of one thousand dínárs
a day. He also took captive the king of Samarqand, Aḥmad
Khán, who had rebelled on Barkiyáruq's death, in A.D. 1130,
and subdued Sístán and Khwárazm. Yet from the political
point of view the Seljúq power was no longer what it had
been in the days of Alp Arslán and Maliksháh; for, apart
from the fratricidal wars which marked the beginning of this
period, the catastrophe of the Ghuzz invasion with which it
ended, and the revolts of various turbulent amírs, which were
Rivals of the
Seljúqs.
of constant occurrence, two or three rival powers,
even in Persia, were always ready to contest the
supremacy of the “Great Seljúqs.” Of these the
most important were, in the north-east the “Kings of the
mountains” of Ghúr, whose rising power gave to the House of
Ghazna the coup de grâce; and the new dynasty of Khwárazm-
In literature and science this period was as brilliant as any which preceded or followed it; the number of Persian writers,
Literary and scientific character of the period. both in prose and verse, vastly increased, while much important Arabic work continued to be produced in Persia. In the reign of Sanjar, of the great Persian poets Shaykh Farídu'd-Dín 'Aṭṭár (A.D. 1120) and Nidhámí of Ganja (A.D. 1140) were born; 'Umar Khayyám (A.D. 1121-22), Azraqí (A.D. 1130), Mas'úd b. Sa'd (A.D. 1131), Adíb Ṣábir (A.D. 1143-44), Mu'izzí (A.D. 1147-48), and 'Am'aq of Bukhárá (A.D. 1148-49), died; and Saná'í, Nidhámí-i-'Arúḍí of Samarqand, the great Anwarí, Rashídu'd-Dín Waṭwáṭ, the satirist Súzaní, and a host of less famous singers, flourished. Of contemporary Persian prose works, the great medical Encyclopædia entitled Dhakhíra-i-Following the plan hitherto adopted, we shall first take a general view of the political history of Persia and the neighbouring countries during this period, and shall then pass to the literary and other intellectual manifestations to which it gave birth.
Maliksháh left behind him on his death four sons—Barki-
Meanwhile Turkán Khátún, aided by her advisers Majdu'l-
Fortunately for him, ere this cruel intention had been
carried out his brother Maḥmúd sickened with the small-
Reign of Barkiyáruq b.
Maliksháh.
pox and died within the week, whereupon the
Amírs placed Barkiyáruq once more upon the
throne, and the disappearance of Turkán Khátún,
who had been put to death in the autumn of A.D. 1094,
doubtless tended to simplify matters. Barkiyáruq was in turn
attacked by the disease which had proved fatal to his brother,
but recovered, though his life was despaired of, and in the
following year defeated and killed his uncle Tutush. Arslán
Arghún, another rebellious uncle, was assassinated by one of
his pages at Merv, and Barkiyáruq himself hardly escaped a
similar fate at the hands of one of the “heretics” of Alamút.
Shortly afterwards, having made his brother Sanjar king of
Khurásán (A.D. 1096), Barkiyáruq returned to 'Iráq, but in
A.D. 1099 his power was more seriously threatened by the
rebellion of his brother Muḥammad, who was aided by the
Mu'ayyidu'l-Mulk, the ablest of the late Nidhámu'l-Mulk's
sons, whom Barkiyáruq had, by dismissing him from his
service, converted into an irreconcilable foe. This unnatural
war lasted with little intermission, and with varying
fortune, till A.D. 1103-4, and five pitched battles were
fought ere a truce was patched up a year or two before
Barkiyáruq's death. During this period many fierce and
cruel deeds were done; Barkiyáruq's mother, Zubayda, was
taken prisoner and strangled by Muḥammad in her forty-third
year (A.D. 1099); Majdu'l-Mulk of Qum, who had succeeded
Mu'ayyidu'l-Mulk as Barkiyáruq's Prime Minister, was torn to
pieces, notwithstanding his master's attempt to save him, by
the infuriated soldiers, who suspected him of leaning towards
the doctrines of the heretical Assassins; and Mu'ayyidu'l-