Abbas takes control as a hostage to the Ottoman court, in order to seal the
Peace Treaty of Constantinople in 1590. The empire Abbas inherited was in a desperate state. The
Ottomans had seized vast territories in the west and the north-west (including the major city of
Tabriz) and the
Uzbeks had overrun half of
Khorasan in the north-east. Iran itself was riven by fighting between the various factions of the
Qizilbash, who had mocked royal authority by killing the queen in 1579 and the
grand vizier Mirza Salman Jaberi in 1583. Firstly, Abbas settled his score with his mother's killers, executing three of the ringleaders of the plot and exiling four others. His next task was to free himself from the power of Murshid Qoli Khan. Murshid made Abbas marry Hamza's widow and a Safavid cousin, and began distributing important government posts among his own friends, gradually confining Abbas to the palace. Meanwhile, the Uzbeks continued their conquest of Khorasan. When Abbas heard they were besieging his old friend Ali Qoli Khan Shamlu in Herat, he pleaded with Murshid to take action. Fearing a rival, Murshid did nothing until the news came that Herat had fallen and the Uzbeks had slaughtered the entire population. Only then did he set out on campaign to Khorasan. But Abbas planned to avenge the death of Ali Qoli Khan, and he arranged for four Qizilbash leaders to kill Murshid after a banquet on 23 July 1589. With Murshid gone, Abbas could now rule Iran in his own right. Abbas decided he must re-establish order within Iran before he took on the foreign invaders. To this end he made a humiliating peace treaty, known as the
Treaty of Constantinople, with the Ottomans in 1590, ceding to them the provinces of
Azerbaijan,
Karabagh,
Shirvan, and
Dagestan, as well as parts of
Georgia,
Lorestan and
Kurdistan. This demeaning treaty even ceded the previous capital of
Tabriz to the Ottomans. Finally, Shah Abbas had to give as hostage to the Ottomans one of the possible successors to the Safavid throne: his nephew the young
Haydar Mirza was sent to Constantinople in 1590, where he would die in 1596.
Reducing the Qizilbash's power and Caucasus invasions ,
Isfahan. Commissioned by his grandson
Abbas II, circa 1647-50. The
Qizilbash had provided the backbone of the
Safavid army from the very beginning of Safavid rule and they also occupied many posts in the government. As a result, effective power in the state in the early days of the dynasty was held by the Qizilbash, leaving the shah often powerless. To counterbalance their power and as a decisive answer to this problem, Abbas turned to the newly introduced members of Iranian society (an initiative put in place by Shah
Tahmasp I) the
ghulams (a word literally meaning "slaves"). From these newly introduced slaves, the Shah created a military force of up to 37,000 soldiers, completely funded by the Crown. This weakened the power that the Qizilbash had against the crown significantly as they no longer had a "military monopoly" in Iran. Like the
janissaries of the neighbouring
Ottoman Empire, the
ghulams were mainly
Georgians,
Circassians and
Armenians who had been brought into Iran
en masse (by conquest and slave trade), had converted or had been converted to Islam, and had taken up service in the army, royal household or the civil administration, and were loyal only to the shah. Under Abbas' leadership this new grouping in Iranian society (also called the
third force) grew in influence and power, with many thousands of ethnic
Georgians,
Circassians and
Armenians becoming an integral part of Iranian society and taking up key government, royal household and military positions. Tahmasp I, the second Safavid shah, had realised, by looking at his own empire and that of the neighbouring Ottomans, that he faced ongoing threats from dangerous rival factions and internal family rivalries that were a threat to him as the head of state. If not properly managed, these rivalries represented a serious threat to the ruler or could lead to unnecessary court intrigues. For Tahmasp, the problem revolved around the military tribal elite of the empire, the Qizilbash, who believed that physical proximity to and control of a member of the immediate Safavid family guaranteed spiritual advantages, political fortune and material advancement. Therefore, between 1540 and 1555, Tahmasp conducted a series of invasions of the
Caucasus region which provided battle experience for his soldiers, as well as leading to the capture of large numbers of
Christian Circassian and Georgian slaves (30,000 in just four raids). These slaves would form the basis of a Safavid military slave system. These slaves would serve a similar role in their formation, implementation and use to the
janissaries of the neighbouring Ottoman Empire. Their arrival in such large numbers led to the formation of a new grouping in Iranian society solely composed of ethnic Caucasians. Although the first slave soldiers would not be organised until Abbas' reign, during Tahmasp's time Caucasians would already become important members of the royal household, the
harem and in the civil and military administration. , Vagharshapat, Armenia Learning from his grandfather, Abbas (who had been used by the vying Qizilbash factions during his youth) decided to encourage this new (Caucasian) grouping in Iranian society, as he realised that he must impose his authority on the Qezelbāš or remain their puppet. So Abbas single-handedly encouraged the growth in influence and power of this new grouping, also called the
third force. It is estimated that during Abbas' reign alone some 130,000 to 200,000 Georgians, tens of thousands of
Circassians, and around 300,000
Armenians were
deported from the Caucasus to Persia's heartland, with a significant number gaining responsibilities and roles in Iranian society, including some of the highest positions of the state, including the
ghulam corps. Many of those deported from the Caucasus settled in various regions of Iran and became craftsmen, farmers, cattle breeders, traders, soldiers, generals, governors and peasants within Iranian society. As part of the ghulam slave system, Abbas greatly expanded the ghulam military corps (also known as
ḡolāmān-e ḵāṣṣa-ye-e šarifa, "crown servants") from just a few hundred during Tahmasp's era, to 15,000 highly trained cavalrymen, as part of a whole army division of 40,000
Caucasian ghulams. Abbas then reduced the number of Qizilbash provincial governorships and systematically moved Qizilbash governors to other districts, thus disrupting their ties with the local community and reducing their power. Most were eventually replaced by ghulams, whose loyalty was to the shah. By 1595,
Allahverdi Khan, a
Georgian, had become one of the most powerful men in the Safavid state when he was appointed the Governor-General of
Fars, one of the richest provinces in Persia. His power reached its peak in 1598, when he became the commander-in-chief of all the armed forces. Not only did the ghulam system allow the shah to control and manage the rival Qizilbash Turks and Persians, it also resolved budgetary problems, in the short term at least, for by restoring the Shah's complete control of the provinces formerly governed by the Qizilbash chiefs, the provinces' revenues now supplemented the royal treasury. From now on, government officials collected the taxes and remitted them directly to the royal treasury. In the harem, the Circassians and Georgians rapidly replaced the Turcoman factions gaining, as a result, a significant direct influence on the
meritocratic Safavid bureaucracy and the court of the Safavid state. The Georgians and Circassians struggle against the Qizilbash for power and influence, with the related court intrigues, saw queens (and their supporters in the harem, court and bureaucracy) compete against each other in order to get their own sons on the throne. This competition increased under Abbas and his successors which weakened the dynasty considerably. Abbas' own son and
crown prince,
Mohammad Baqer Mirza, was caught in the court intrigue involving several leading Circassians, which eventually led to him being executed under Abbas' orders. Though the
ghulam system did not work as well as it had after the Safavids, the
third force would continue to play a crucial role during the rest of the Safavid era and later until the fall of the
Qajar dynasty.
Reforming the army and
Robert Shirley (
pictured in 1622) helped modernise the Persian Army. Abbas needed ten years to get his army into shape so that he could effectively confront his Ottoman and Uzbek enemies. During this period, the Uzbeks and the
Ottomans took swaths of territory from Iran. He also used military reorganisation as another way of side-lining the Qizilbash. He created a standing army of many thousands of
ghulams (always conscripted from ethnic Georgians and
Circassians), and to a much lesser extent Iranians, to fight alongside the traditional, feudal force provided by the Qizilbash. The new army regiments' loyalty was to the Shah. The new army consisted of 10,000 to 15,000 cavalry or squires (conscripted Caucasian
ghulams) armed with muskets and other weapons (then the largest cavalry in the world), a corps of musketeers, or
tufangchiyan, (12,000 strong) and a corp of artillery, called
tupchiyan (also 12,000 strong). In addition Abbas had a personal bodyguard, composed of Caucasian ghulams, that was increased to 3,000. This force amounted to about 40,000 soldiers paid for and beholden to the Shah. Abbas greatly increased the number of cannon at his disposal so that he could field 500 cannon in a single battle. Ruthless discipline was enforced and looting was severely punished. Abbas was also able to draw on military advice from a number of European envoys, particularly the English adventurers Sir
Anthony Shirley and his brother
Robert Shirley, who arrived in 1598 as envoys from the
Earl of Essex on an unofficial mission to persuade Persia to enter into an anti-Ottoman alliance. From 1600 onwards, the Safavid statesman
Allāhverdī Khan, in conjunction with Robert Shirley, undertook further reorganisations of the army, which led to a further increase in the number of
ghulams to 25,000.
Consolidation of the Empire During the 1590s, Abbas moved to depose the provincial rulers of Persia. He started with
Khan Ahmad Khan, the ruler of
Gilan, who had disobeyed Abbas' orders when he requested that Khan Ahmad Khan's daughter
Yakhan Begum marry Abbas' son,
Mohammad Baqer Mirza, since Khan Ahmad Khan had no male successor. Khan Ahmad Khan disagreed due to the age of his daughter. This resulted in a Safavid invasion of Gilan in 1591 under the leadership of one of Abbas' favourites,
Farhad Khan Qaramanlu. In 1593–94,
Jahangir III, the
Paduspanid ruler of
Nur, travelled to the court of the Abbas, where he handed over his domains to him, and spend the rest of his life on an estate at
Saveh, which Abbas had given to him. In 1597, Abbas deposed the
Khorshidi ruler of
Luristan. One year later,
Jahangir IV, the Paduspanid ruler of
Kojur, killed two prominent Safavid nobles during a festival in
Qazvin. In response, in 1598 Abbas invaded his domains and besieged Kojur. Jahangir managed to flee, but was captured and killed by a pro-Safavid Paduspanid named Hasan Lavasani. ==Reconquest==