With Iran a political obsession for the United States since at least 1979 (and of course back into the 1950s), an obsession renewed lately with the "nuclear deal," it is timely to remind people that there are plenty of non-Muslim Persians and Iranians just as there are--as I remarked here, inter alia--plenty of Arab Christians and other non-Muslims in the Middle East. A new collection shows us the diverse mixture of religious groups in late antique Iran: Richard E. Payne, A State of Mixture: Christians, Zoroastrians, and Iranian Political Culture in Late Antiquity (University of California Press, 2015), 320pp.
About this book the publisher tells us:
Christian communities flourished during late antiquity in a Zoroastrian
political system, known as the Iranian Empire, that integrated
culturally and geographically disparate territories from Arabia to
Afghanistan into its institutions and networks. Whereas previous studies
have regarded Christians as marginal, insular, and often persecuted
participants in this empire, Richard Payne demonstrates their
integration into elite networks, adoption of Iranian political practices
and imaginaries, and participation in imperial institutions.
The rise of Christianity in Iran depended on the Zoroastrian theory and
practice of hierarchical, differentiated inclusion, according to which
Christians, Jews, and others occupied legitimate places in Iranian
political culture in positions subordinate to the imperial religion.
Christians, for their part, positioned themselves in a political culture
not of their own making, with recourse to their own ideological and
institutional resources, ranging from the writing of saints’ lives to
the judicial arbitration of bishops. In placing the social history of
East Syrian Christians at the center of the Iranian imperial story, A State of Mixture helps explain the endurance of a culturally diverse empire across four centuries.
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