List of wars involving Iran
This is a list of wars involving the Islamic Republic of Iran and its predecessor states. It is an unfinished historical overview.
Elamite Civilisation
[edit]Conflict | Ancient Iranian State (and allies) | Opponents | Results | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Elamite invasion of Sumer[1]
(Circa 2600 BC) |
Awan Elam | Sumer | Victory | Deposition of Balulu, end of First Dynasty of Ur and establishment of the Elamyte dynasty. |
Sumerian invasion of Elam
(Circa 2400 BC) |
Awan Elam | Sumer | Defeat | Eannatum manage to conquer parts of Elam (destroying Susa) and develop one of the first recorded empires. |
Elamite-Sumer skirmishes.[2][3]
(Circa 2400 BC) |
Awan Elam | Sumer | Stalemate | Elamite's success to expel Sumer's incursions from Iranian Plateau and sack some Sumer city states in Mesopotamia, but governors like Enentarzi expel them from its domains. |
Akkadian conquest of Elam[4]
(Circa 2300-2200 BC) |
Elam | Akkadian Empire | Defeat | South-Western Iran is conquered by Sargon of Akkad, his son Rimush defeat the revolts led by Abalgamash, and Manishtushu expands forward Anshan and seizure control of Persian Gulf. |
Narum-Sin campaign on Elam
(Circa 2200 BC) |
Elam
Marhasi co-belligerant: Sumer rebels Gutian people |
Akkadian Empire | Ceasefire | Accadian control of Khuzestan is reinforced, installing imperial governors to counter the power from native kings like Khita.[5] |
First Shar-Kali-Sharri campaign on Elam
(Circa 2100 BC) |
Elam | Akkadian Empire | Defeat | Status quo ante bellum |
Kutik-Inshushinak campaign against Gutians[6]
(Circa 2100 BC) |
Akkadian Empire | Gutian people | Victory | Elamyte-Accadians expand territories on the Zagros Mountains. |
Elamyte independence war against Akkadians[7][8]
(Circa 2090 BC) |
Elam
co-belligerant: Uruk |
Akkadian Empire | Victory |
|
Sumerian invasion of Elam[8][9]
(Circa 2090 BC) |
Elam | Neo-Sumerian Empire
co-belligerant |
Defeat | The King of Sumer and Akkad, Ur-Nammu and his son Shulgi, conquers parts of Elam surrounding Susa. The rest of Elam is conquered by the Shimashki dynasty, after the death of Puzur-Inshushinak. |
Sumerian border skirmishes on the north-east[10][11]
(Circa 2000 BC) |
Simurrum | Neo-Sumerian Empire | Inconclusive | Tribal invasions from Western Iran to Sumer are stopped. |
Elamyte conquest of Sumer[12][13]
(Circa 2004/1940 BC) |
Shimashki Elam | Neo-Sumerian Empire | Victory | Elamyte king, Kindattu, capture Sumerian king, Ibbi-Sin. End of the third dynasty of Ur and Elamyte military occupation and rule for 21 years. |
Amorite conquest of Sumer[14]
(Circa 1900 BC) |
Shimashki Elam | Amorites | Defeat | Ishbi-Erra expel the Elamytes from Ur, then gain the title of King of Sumer and expand over Sumer and Akkad. |
Revolts against Assyrian domain[15][16]
(722–702 BC)
|
Babylonia
Aram (Ancient Syrian cities) Ancient Levant cities Rebel Syro-Hittite states Rebel Mannaea Rebel Ellipi Supported by:
|
Neo-Assyrian Empire
Kingdom of Judah |
Stalemate |
|
Assyrian conquest of Elam
(655–639 BC) |
Elam | Neo-Assyrian Empire | Defeat | Assyrian conquers the Elamyte Domains. |
Median State
[edit]Conflict | Ancient Iranian State (and allies) | Opponents | Results | Notes | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
<span | Assyrian invasions of Media (10th – late 7th centuries BC) | Medes | Assyrian Empire | Defeat | Kingdoms and city-states of western Iran became Assyrian vassals | ||||
Median invasion of Assyria (the late 7th century BC) | Medes
Other Iranian peoples |
Assyrian Empire | Victory | Invasion of the Assyrian Empire by a coalition of Iranian peoples, led by Kashtariti of Media
| |||||
Medo-Babylonian invasion Assyria (626–609 BC) |
Median Kingdom Babylonia Persians |
Assyrian Empire | Victory | Alliance between various people of the region against the Assyrian Empire, led by the Median Kingdom and Babylonia
| |||||
Scythian invasion of Media (624–597 BC) | Median Kingdom | Scythians | Victory | War between two groups of Iranian peoples
| |||||
Siege of Harran (609 BC) |
Medes Babylonia |
Assyria | Victory | The Assyrian insurgency | |||||
Battle of Eclipse (585 BC) |
Medes | Kingdom of Lydia | Undecided | The battle ended due to an eclipse. | |||||
Medo-Persian conflict
(553–550 BCE) |
Medes Empire![]() |
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Defeat
(Regime change) |
Rise of Cyrus the Great. |
Achaemenid (Classic Persia)
[edit]Conflict | Persia (and allies) | Opponents | Results | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Achaemenid Empire (550–330 BC) | ||||
Battle of Hyrba (552 BC) |
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Medes Empire![]() |
Victory | |
Persian Revolt (552–549 BC) |
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Median Empire | Victory | By conquering Media, Iran became an empire. |
Battle of the Persian border (551 BC) |
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Medes Empire | Victory | Persian retreat to Pasargadae |
Conquest of Lydia (547 BC) |
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Lydian Empire | Victory | Lydia annexed by Iran |
Cyrus' first eastern campaign (545–540 BC) | ![]() |
Gedrosia | Victory | Persian conquest of Bactria, Arachosia, Sogdia, Saka, Chorasmia, Margiana and other provinces in the east after initial defeat |
Conquest of Babylonia (540–539 BC) |
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Neo-Babylonian Empire | Victory | Neo-Babylonian Empire annexed by Iran.
|
Cyrus' second eastern Campaign (533 BC) | ![]() |
Gedrosia | Victory | Cyrus the Great crossed the Hindu Kush mountains and collected tribute from the Indus vassalage cities. |
Conquest of Egypt (525 BC) |
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Kingdom of Egypt | Victory | Egypt annexed by Iran |
Persian incursions into Nubia[17]
(526 BC) |
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Kingdom of Kush | Defeat | Cambyses II fails to expand Achaemenid domains into the south to reach the limits of former Egyptian Empire.[18] Nubians maintains its independence and Persians establish frontier on Elephantine. |
Conquest of India (Indus Valley)
(518 – 323 BCE) |
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Mahajanapadas | Victory | Achaemenid military occupation of northwestern regions of India for about two centuries |
European Scythian campaign (513 BC) |
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Scythians in European Scythia | Victory | Achaemenid domination of the European Black Sea regions |
Greek Revolt
(499 BC–493 BC) |
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Greeks | Victory | Persia re-establishes control over Greek regions in Asia Minor and Cyprus |
Greco-Persian War (First)
(492–490 BC) |
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Greeks | Undecided | Persia conquers Macedonia and the Cycladic Islands, re-subjugates Thrace,but fails in an attempt to subjugate Athens and Sparta |
Babylonian revolts (484 BC) | ![]() |
Victory | Persian punish the rebelled Babylonian cities, reducing the size of their Satrapies and fomenting minority religions. | |
Greco-Persian War (Second)
(480–479 BC) |
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Greeks | Defeat | Macedonia, Thrace and Ionia regain independence from Persia |
Peloponnesian War (431–404 BC) |
Peloponnesian League (led by Sparta)
Supported by: |
Delian League (led by Athens) | Victory | Dissolution of the Delian League; Spartan hegemony over Athens and its allies |
Battle of Cunaxa (401 BC) |
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Cyrus the Younger | Victory | Artaxerxes II still in full control of the kingdom |
Corinthian War (395–387 BC) |
Athens Argos Corinth Thebes ![]() Other allies |
Sparta Peloponnesian League |
Victory
dictated by Iran) |
Ionia ceded back to Achaemenid Iran; Boeotian league dissolved; Union of Argos and Corinth dissolved. |
Artaxerxes' II Cadusian Campaign (385 BC) |
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Cadusii | Victory | Negotiated peace with rival chiefs |
Revolt of the Satraps (372–362 BC) |
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Rebel satrapies | Victory | Rebellions crushed |
Second conquest of Egypt (c. 340 BC) |
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Egypt | Victory | Egypt is conquered for a second time by Iran |
Abdashtart I's Revolt
(c. 340 BC) |
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Kingdom of Sidon | Victory | Revolt supressed. |
Macedonian invasion of Iran (355–328 BC) |
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Defeat
(Regime change) |
Iran conquered by the army of Alexander the Great |
Conflict | Persianizated State (and allies) | Opponents | Results | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Macedonian Empire (330–312 BC) | ||||
Indian campaign of Alexander the Great (327–325 BC) | ![]() |
Ancient India | Victory | Hellenic conquest of great part of the Indus Valley.
Iranic confrontation with the Nanda Empire of Magadha. |
Wars of the Diadochi
(322–281 BC) |
First War:
Second War: Third War: |
First War:
Second War:
Third War: |
Defeat | Death of Perdiccas.
Seleucus established himself in Babylon in 312 BC, then conquest Persia. |
Seleucid Empire (312-129 BC) | ||||
Babylonian War (311–309 BCE) | Seleucid Empire | Antigonid dynasty | Victory | Seleucid control of Babylonia, Media, and Elam |
Seleucid–Mauryan war (305–303 BCE) | Seleucid Empire | Maurya Empire | Defeat | Treaty of the Indus
|
Syrian Wars
(217–145 BC) |
Antigonid Macedonia | Ptolemaic Egypt | Stalemate | Coele-Syria intermitently changes of sovereign. |
Seleucus' Iranian Campaign
(245–235 BC) |
Seleucid Empire | Upper Satrapies | Defeat |
|
Antiochus's Bactrian Campaign
(208–206 BCE) |
Seleucid Empire | Greco-Bactrian Kingdom | Victory | Pirric Victory
|
Roman–Seleucid War (192–188 BC)[19] | Seleucid Empire
Supported by: Co-belligerent: |
![]() Supported by: |
Defeat | Peace of Apamea |
Campaigns of Artaxias I
(189–165 BCE) |
Seleucid Empire | ![]() |
Defeat | The regions of Caspiana, Faunitida, Basolropeda, Tmorik, Karenitis, Derksen, Akilisene and Antitaurus are annexed to Armenia. |
Parthian Persia
[edit]Conflict | Persia (and allies) | Opponents | Results | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Parthian Empire (247 BC–224 AD) | ||||
Parni Conquest Parthia
(238 BC) |
Parthian Empire | Seleucid Empire | Victory | • Rise of the Parthian Empire
• The beginning of the Seleucid–Parthian Wars |
Seleucid–Parthian Wars (238 BC–129 BC) |
Parthian Empire | Seleucid Empire | Defeat
(Regime change) |
• Expulsion of the Seleucids from Iran |
Parthian–Bactrian War (150 BC) | Parthian Empire | Greco-Bactrian Kingdom | Victory |
|
Second Parthian-Kushan War
(between c. 130 CE to c. 140 CE) |
Parthian Empire | Kushan Empire | Defeat | Kanishka I repels the invasion |
Battle of Ecbatana
(129 BC) |
Parthian Empire | Seleucid Empire | Victory | End of Hellenistic rule in Iran |
Nomad invasion of Drangiana[24][25]
(128-115 BC) |
Parthian Empire | Indo-Scythians | Victory | Parthian reconquers western Bactria and expand into Amu Darya and Arachosia
|
Parthian invasion of Armenia
(120–100 BCE?) |
Parthian Empire | ![]() |
Victory | Parthians add territories |
Parthian expedition to Arabia[26]
(119 BC) |
Parthian Empire | Ancient Arabs | Victory | End of Arab raids on Babylonia. |
Mithridates II's war with the Seleucids.
(112-109 BC) |
Parthian Empire | Seleucid Empire | Victory | Parthian conquers Mesopotamia and reduce Seleucids into Syria |
Chinese–Parthian War[27]
(104–102 BC) |
Parthian Empire | Han China | Stalemate | Emperor Wu of Han forced Mithridates II of Parthia to start commercial relations and the sell of Persian horse, but Parthians maintain its Sphere of influence on Fergana Valley. |
Armenian–Parthian War (87–85 BC) |
Parthian Empire | ![]() |
Defeat | Osroene and Atrpatakan loyalty to Tigranes the Great |
Battle of Carrahe
(53 BC) |
Parthian Empire | ![]() |
Victory | • Repelling the danger of the Romans
• Crassus killed • Roman desire to retaliate for Julius Caesar's planned invasion of the Parthian Empire |
Liberators' civil war
(43–42 BC) |
Liberatores
Supported by: |
Second Triumvirate
Supported by: |
Defeat | The Second Triumvirate wins the Roman Civil War, then reinstates control over the eastern provinces. |
Pompeian–Parthian invasion of 40 BC
(40–38 BC) |
Parthian Empire | ![]() |
Defeat | Status quo ante bellum |
Antony's Parthian War
(36–20 BC) |
Parthian Empire | ![]() |
Victory | • Antony's was unsuccessful in campaign against Iran
• Ended by formal peace in 20 BC |
Gondophares conquest on the East
(20–10 BC) |
Indo-Parthian Kingdom | Indo-Scythians | Victory | Gondophares conquers Arachosia, Seistan, Sindh, Punjab, and the Kabul valley. |
Pharasmanes I of Iberia invasion of Armenia
(35 AD) |
Parthian Empire | ![]() |
Defeat | Orodes of Armenia is deposed |
Kushan invasion of Indo-Parthia
(50s AD) |
Indo-Parthian Kingdom | Kushan Empire | Defeat | Kushans conquer Indo-Parthian territories in northern India. |
Iberian–Armenian War
(50–51 AD/51–53 AD) |
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Victory | The Roman–Parthian War of 58–63 start |
Roman–Parthian War of 58–63
(58–63 AD) |
Parthian Empire | ![]() Roman clients • Sophene • Iberia • Pontus |
Stalemate | Treaty of Rhandeia
|
Roman–Parthian Wars (66 AD–216) |
Parthian Empire Kingdom of Armenia |
![]() Pontus |
Status quo ante bellum | Borders changed several times. |
Trajan's Parthian campaign
(115–117) |
Parthian Empire
co-belligerant: Jewish/Judean zealots[citation needed] Babylonians rebels Armenian rebels |
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Stalemate |
|
Roman–Parthian War of 161–166
(161–166) |
Parthian Empire
Pro-Parthian Edessans |
![]() Pro-Roman Edessans |
Defeat | Minor Roman territorial gains and Armenia consolidated as a Roman client |
Battle of Ctesiphon (198) | Parthian Empire | ![]() |
Defeat | Roman sacks Persian capital |
Parthian War of Caracalla
(216–217) |
Parthian Empire | ![]() |
Victory |
|
Sassanid Persia
[edit]Conflict | Persia (and allies) | Opponents | Results | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Sassanid Empire (224–651) | ||||
Battle of Hormozdgan
(224) |
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Parthian Empire | Victory
(Regime change) |
• Fall of the Parthian Empire
• Rise of the Sasanian Empire |
Sasanian conquest of Sakastan | ![]() |
Indo-Parthian Kingdom | Victory | Consolidation of the Sasanian Empire on eastern Persia |
Ardashir I invasion of Armenia
(226–238) |
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Defeat | Sassanid withdrawal |
First Mesopotamian campaign of Ardashir I
(229–233) |
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Inconclusive | Both sides get territorial gains. |
Second Mesopotamian campaign of Ardashir I
(237–240) |
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Victory | The Sasanian Empire conquers several cities including Nisibis (237),Carrhae (238) and Hatra (240). |
Shapur I campaign on the East
(241–242)
|
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|
Victory | Persia annex territories as far as "Purushapura" (Peshawar) and the Hindu-Kush or even south of it.
Those includying Sogdiana, Bactria, and Gandhara. Kushans are deposed and replaced by the Kushanshah |
Sasanian campaign of Gordian III
(242–244) |
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Victory | The Sasanian Empire conquers Armenia and Mesopotamia |
Siege of Nisibis
(252) |
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Victory | Persian capture of Nisibis |
Battle Of Barbalissos
(253) |
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Victory | Shapur's army won against Valerian's army |
Siege of Antioch (253) | ![]() |
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Victory | Persian capture of Antioch |
Siege of Dura-Europos (256) | ![]() |
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Victory | Persian capture of Dura-Europos |
Battle of Edessa
(260)
|
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Victory |
|
Siege of Antioch (260) | ![]() |
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Victory | Sasanian Empire conquers Antioch |
Siege of Caesarea Cappadocia (260)
|
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Victory | Sasanian Empire conquers Caesarea Cappadocia |
Odaenathus' Sasanian Campaign
(261–266) |
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Inconclusive | Shapur lost part of his baggages while succeeding to come back to Persia with a great number of prisoners and booty |
Sasanian revolts against Barham II
(274–293) |
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Victory | Revolts suppressed | |
Carus' Sasanian Campaign
(283) |
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Victory | Withdrawal of the Roman forces |
Narseh's insurrection
(293) |
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Narseh's forces | Narseh's Victory | Bahram III is deposed, Kartir reforms are abolished, Zoroastrian theocracy ends and Sasanian empire is centralised. |
Battle of Carrhae (296) | ![]() |
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Victory | Persian invasion of Mesopotamia and Armenia success |
Battle of Satala (298) | ![]() |
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Defeat | Roman expels Persians from Armenia, capture Narseh's wife, raid Ctesiphon and gains territory on the Peace of Nisibis (299). |
Shapur ll's Arab Campaign
(325) |
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Arabs
|
Victory |
|
Perso-Roman wars of 337–361
(337–361) |
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Indecisive | Status quo ante bellum |
Wars of Shapur II with the Chionites and Kushans[30]
(350–358)
|
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Xionites/Kidarites | Victory |
|
Sasanian–Kidarite wars
(350–466)
|
![]() Alchon Huns Hepthalites |
Kidarites | Victory |
|
Shapur II's 1st Armenian campaign (359–361) | ![]() |
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Victory | Death of Arshak II |
Kidarites invasions of Bactria
(360s) |
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Kidarites | Defeat | Kidara I conquers Bactria and get the title of Kushanshah |
Julian's Persian expedition
(363) |
![]() Arab allies |
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Victory | Sasanian annexation of five regions & fifteen major fortresses from the Roman Empire in addition to the consequent annexation of Armenia |
Armeno-Sassanid War of 363–371 | ![]() |
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Defeat | Persians depose Arshak II of Armenia. Then
Armenia is under Roman suzerainty through Pap of Armenia entronization. |
Shapur III's Armenian Campaign (378–386) | ![]() |
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Victory | Peace of Acilisene
|
Hunnic invasion of the Sasanian Empire
(395) |
![]() co-belligerant
|
Hunnic Empire | Victory | Huns quit |
Roman–Sasanian War of 421–422
(421–422) |
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Inconclusive | Status quo ante bellum
|
Byzantine–Sasanian War of 440
(440) |
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Indecisive | Status quo ante bellum
|
Battle of Avarayr
(451) |
![]() Pro-Sasanian Armenians |
Christian Armenians | Victory | Following Persian the victory, Yazdegerd jailed some Armenian priests and nobles and appointed a new governor for Armenia but, the Armenians gained religious freedom for their Christian faith. |
Sassanian War of Succession[31]
(457–459) |
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Peroz Victory | Peroz deposes his older brother |
Albanian's Revolt
(457–459) |
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Caucasian Albania (independentists) | Defeat | Vache II of Albania, of the Arsacid dynasty of Caucasian Albania, success in stablish an independent Kingdom. |
Kidarite-Sassanid War (464–466)[32][33] | ![]() |
Kidarites | Victory | End of Kidarite menace to Persia in Bactria |
Hephthalite–Sasanian Wars
(484–565) |
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Hephthalite Empire | Victory |
|
Byzantine–Sassanid Wars (502–628) |
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Status quo ante bellum | Borders changed several times. |
Anastasian War
(502–506) |
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Draw | Status quo ante bellum[34]
•Byzantium pays a small amount of money[35]: 77 |
Aksumite invasion of Himyar
(518–525) |
Himyarite Kingdom
Supported by:
|
Kingdom of Aksum
Supported by:
|
Defeat |
|
Iberian War
(526–532)
|
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Inconclusive | *Sasanians retained Iberia
Byzantines retained Lazica
|
Lazic War
(541–562) |
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Disputed | Fifty-Year Peace Treaty |
Aksumite–Persian wars (570–578) |
![]() Supported by: Jewish Himyarites |
Kingdom of Aksum
Supported by:
|
Victory | Ethiopians expelled from the Himyarite Kingdom. (Yemen is annexed by the Sasanian Empire) |
War for the Caucasus
(572–591)
|
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Defeat | • Khosrow II is restored to the Sasanian throne.
• Khosrow II gives the Byzantine Empire most of Persian Armenia and western half of Iberia after the Sasanian civil war of 589–591 • Byzantium stops paying tribute to Sasanian empire[36] |
First Perso-Turkic War (588–589) |
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Hephthalite Empire Göktürks |
Victory | The Sassanids captured Balkh. |
Sasanian civil war of 589–591
|
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Supporters of Bahram Chobin
Dissatisfied Sasanian nobles supported by: |
Khosrow II Victory | Khosrow II faction's victory |
Vistahm Rebellion
(590–596) |
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Parthians led by Vistahm | Victory | Revolt suppressed |
Byzantine–Sasanian War of 602–628 | ![]() Avars (and Slavic allies) |
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Defeat |
|
War of the Camel's Udder
(604–611) |
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Pre-Islamic Arabia
|
Defeat | Sasanian rule briefly interrumpted until restored by Ruzbi, the frontier governor (marzban) of al-Hira.[37] |
Second Perso-Turkic War (614–616) |
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Western Turkic Khaganate Hephthalite Empire |
Victory | Smbat IV Bagratuni successfully defend Sasanian Central Asia from the Turkic invasion. |
Jewish revolt against Heraclius (614–617/625) | ![]() ![]() |
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Status quo ante bellum | Jewish surrender and expulsion after a brief rule by Persians and Jews over parts of the Byzantine Diocese of the East. |
Sasanian incursions into Nubia (620s)[38] | ![]() Kingdom of Makuria |
Kingdom of Nobatia | Inconclusive | Persians are expelled by Byzantines, but Persian incursions destroy Christian Churchs and debilitate Nobatians, causing its decline and further conquest by simultaneous Makurian invasion. |
Third Perso-Turkic War (627–629) |
![]() Supported by: |
Western Turkic Khaganate Supported by: |
Defeat | Byzantine control of Georgia |
Sasanian civil war of 628–632 | The Parsig faction
The Nimruzi faction |
The Pahlav (Parthian) faction
Shahrbaraz's army |
Stalemate |
|
Muslim conquest of Persia (633–654) |
![]() Supported by: |
Rashidun Caliphate | Defeat
(Regime change) |
|
Sasanids attempts to recuperate the Persian throne (657–679) | ![]() |
Rashidun Caliphate (until 661)
|
Defeat | The Tang campaigns against the Western Turks (by Pei Xingjian) success and the Chinese established a "Persian military commandery" (波斯都督府) in the city of Zābol (疾陵城 Jilicheng) in Tokharistan, and Peroz was appointed as Military Commander (都督 Dudu). Then this government, with the capital at Zirang, fell in 673/674.
After that, Narsieh went west with his troops to liberate Iranshahr in 679 and fought against the Arabs in Takharistan for almost thirty years.
|
Medieval Islamic Era
[edit]Conflict | Persianate State (and allies) | Opponents | Results | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Iranian Intermezzo (821–1090) | ||||
Muslim conquest of Transoxiana
(673–751) |
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|
Principalities of Tokharistan
Sogdian principalities |
Victory |
|
Second Fitna (Muslim civil war of 680–692) | Zubayrid Caliphate
Alids Kharijites |
Umayyad Caliphate | Defeat | Kharijite faction, the Azariqa, captures Fars and Kirman from the Zubayrids. Ex-Zubayrid loyalists help Umayyad to secured Iraq, and consequently most of its dependencies in Persia. Then, Umayyad victory after Siege of Mecca. |
Umayyad campaigns in India
(712–740) |
Umayyad Caliphate | Gurjara-Pratihara | Defeat |
|
Third Fitna
(744–750) |
![]() Supported by:
Kharijites |
Umayyad Caliphate
Supported by: |
Victory |
|
Tabaristan uprising
(781–805) |
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![]() Supported: |
Defeat | Arabs conquered Tabaristan in 758-759.
|
Abbasid expeditions to East Africa
(804, 827/837) |
1st phase
|
1st phase
Africans from Zanj 2nd phase
|
Victory | The Kharaj is imposed on the Africans.
Persian rebels against Mihna get a compromise. |
Fourth Fitna (Abbasid civil war of 811–813/819) | Al-Ma'mun (supported mostly by Persian forces) | Al-Amin (supported mostly by Arab forces) | Victory | Defeat and death of al-Amin; al-Ma'mun is recognized as Caliph on 27 September 813. Tahir ibn Husayn rewarded as governor of Khorasan, which marked the beginning of the Tahirids. |
Hamza ibn Azarak's Kharijites rebellion in Sistan
(823–828) |
Tahirid dynasty | Kharijites | Inconclusive | Hamza's death in 828 and the death of Talha shortly after put an end to this series of conflicts. |
Mazyar uprising
(839) |
Tahirid dynasty | Spahbed Mazyar and
Khaydhar ibn Kawus al-Afshin's forces |
Defeat | Mazyar was arrested and sent to Baghdad. Tahirid control over Tabaristan was therefore secured.
Mazyar was Crucified next to babak in 840CE[41] |
Zaydid revolt of 864 | Tahirid dynasty | Hasan ibn Zayd's forces | Defeat | Hasan, who assumed the regnal name al-Da‘ī ila’l-ḥaqq ("He who summons to the Truth"), was recognized as emir of Tabaristan. |
Caspian expeditions of the Rus'
(864–1041) |
![]() • • |
![]() • |
Stalemate |
|
Battle of al-Baida
(874/875) |
Saffarids | Kharijites | Victory | Ya'qub ibn al-Layth defeated the Kharijite leader Muhammad ibn Wasil |
Battle of Dayr al-Aqul | Saffarids | ![]() |
Defeat | Abbasid rule in Iraq is defended. |
Samanid conquest of northern Iran
(900–901) |
Samanid Empire
Supported by: |
Saffarids | Victory | Samanids took over the province of Tabaristan, Ismail then appointed his cousin Abu'l-Abbas Abdullah as the governor of Tabaristan. |
Sajid invasion of Georgia
(914) |
Sajid dynasty | ![]() |
Stalemate | Despite military victories, sajid withdraw from Georgia |
Sajid invasion of Armenia
(921) |
Sajid dynasty | ![]() |
Defeat | Armenia success to maintain its independence. |
Qarmatian invasion of Iraq (927–928) | ![]() |
Qarmatians of Bahrayn
Baqliyya rebels |
Stalemate | End of Qarmatian expansionism
Collapse of the Abbasid Empire |
Battle of Iskhabad
(940)
|
Ziyarid dynasty | Samanid Empire | Defeat | Samanid conquest of the territory |
Battle of Baghdad (946) | Buyids | Hamdanids | Victory | Buyid Emirate is consolidated in Iraq. |
Rebellion of Bardas Phokas the Younger
(987–989) |
Rebels from Phokas clan
Support from: Rebels from Bardas Skleros
|
![]()
|
Defeat | Revolt supressed |
Saffarid dynasty (861–1003) | ||||
Yaqub's campaigns to the east (861–870) | Saffarid dynasty | Zunbils | Victory | Ya'qub ibn al-Layth al-Saffar marched through Bost, Kandahar, Ghazni, Kabul, Bamyan, Balkh and Herat, conquering them in the name of Islam. |
Saffarid-Abbasid War (873–876)
|
Saffarid dynasty | ![]() |
Defeat |
|
Battle of Mecca (883)
|
Saffarid dynasty | Tulunids | Victory | The invaders are expelled from the holiest city of Mecca. |
Battle of Balkh
(900) |
Saffarid Amirate | Samanid Empire | Defeat | The Saffarids lose much territory to the Samanids in Khorasan, and were left with the control of Fars, Kerman and Sistan, but they also lost these provinces after a civil war. |
Saffarid Campaign in the Fars province
(900–904) |
Saffarid Amirate | ![]() |
Victory | Temporarily regained Fars, but the Saffarids withdrew soon afterwards. |
Military expedition against Makran
(907 or 908) |
Saffarid Amirate | Ma'danids | Victory | Saffarids able to compel the Ma'danid to give three years of tribute. |
Civil war between Tahir and the pretender Al-Layth (909–912) | Tahir ibn Muhammad ibn Amr | Al-Layth | Stalemate | Sebük-eri, who had managed to win over Tahir's commanders, won an easy victory and captured the brothers. They were sent to the Caliph and imprisoned in Baghdad, though they were treated well for the remainder of their lives. |
Buyid-Saffarid War (967–968) | Saffarid dynasty | Buyid dynasty | Defeat | Adud al-Dawla negotiated peace with the Saffarid ruler Khalaf ibn Ahmad, who agreed to recognize Buyid authority. |
1° Turco-Persian Era
[edit]Conflict | Persianate State (and allies) | Opponents | Results | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ghaznavid dynasty (962–1186) | ||||
Ghaznavid campaigns in East Persia (999–1004) | Ghaznavid Empire | Saffarid Empire | Victory | North-Eastern Persia annexed by the Afghan-centered Ghaznavid Sultanate (although still under suzerainty to the Abbasid Caliphs), and fall of both Samanids and Saffarids. |
March of Sultan Mahmud of Ghazni to India (1001–1027) | Ghaznavid Empire | Medieval India | Victory | The northern parts of India were annexed by Iran. Somnath temple was destroyed and its treasures looted. |
Kara-Khanid invasion of Khorasan
(1006–1008) |
Ghaznavid Empire | Kara-Khanid Khanate | Victory | Ghaznavids expels the invaders. |
Ghaznavid conquest of Khwarazm
(1017) |
Ghaznavid Empire | Ma'munids | Victory | Ghaznavids expands to Central Asia. |
Ghaznavid campaigns in West Persia
(1026–1030) |
![]() |
Buyids | Victory | |
Ghaznavid–Kakuyid war
(1029–1039)
|
Ghaznavid Empire | Kakuyids | Inconclusive | Conflict suspended due to the death of Ala al-Dawla Muhammad and the Seljuk expansionism.
|
Battle of Dabusiyya
(1032) |
Ghaznavid Empire | Kara-Khanid Khanate | Stalemate | Indecisive. |
Ghaznavid campaigns in India
(10th and 11th centuries) |
Ghaznavid Empire | Medieval India | Victory |
|
Seljuq Empire (1037–1194) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Seljuk-Ghaznavid Wars | ![]() |
Ghaznavid Empire | Victory
(Regime change) |
• Fall of the Ghaznavid Empire in Iran.
• Rise of the Seljuk Empire and Turco-Persian tradition. | |
Siege of Hamadan (1047) | ![]() |
Kakuyids | Victory | Hamedan and Isfahan are conquered by Seljuk empire. | |
Georgian–Seljuk wars
(1048–1213) |
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![]() |
Defeat | Initial victory on the Great Turkish Invasion. Then Georgia liberates from being tributary of Seljuk and even invades Iran. | |
Byzantine–Seljuq wars (1048–1308) |
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![]() ![]() ![]() |
Victory | Most of Anatolia conquered by the Seljuks, starting Turkification of modern Turkey. | |
Sieges of Baghdad (1055–1059) | ![]() Supported by:
|
Buyid dynasty
Supported by: Fatimid Caliphate |
Victory | ||
Overthrow of the Qarmatians
(1058–1077) |
![]() |
Qarmatians | Victory | End of Qarmatian rule in eastern Arabia | |
Seljuk war of succession
(1063) |
Alp Arslan forces | Qutalmish forces | Victory | Alp Arslan obtains the throne. | |
Battle of Manzikert (1071) |
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![]() ![]() |
Victory | Seljuks enter Anatolia. | |
Seljuk Civil War
|
![]()
|
Kerman Seljuk Sultanate
|
Victory | Malik Shah maintains the throne | |
Battle of Ain Salm
(1086) |
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Sultanate of Rûm | Victory | Death of Suleiman ibn Qutalmish | |
Nizari–Seljuk conflicts
(1090–1194) |
|
(Nizari) Ismailis of Persia and Syria | Stalemate | Nizaris consolidate a state in Daylam, Quhistan, and Jabal Bahra', then controls other scattered areas in Alborz mountains, Zagros mountains, and Khurasan. | |
First Crusade
(1095–1099)
|
|
Defeat |
| ||
Siege of Mosul (1096) | ![]() |
Uqaylid dynasty | Victory | Seljuks conquers the territory of the Uqaylid State | |
Battle of Ghazni (1117) | ![]() |
Ghaznavid Empire | Victory | Bahram of Ghazna succeeded to the throne as the Seljuk's vassal | |
First Siege of Baghdad (1136) | ![]() |
Abbasid Caliphate | Victory | al-Rashid fled the city for Mosul, where he abdicated the caliphate. His uncle, al-Muqtafi, was raised to the throne instead by Mas'ud, who then retired to the east. | |
Battle of Qatwan
(1141) |
![]() |
Qara Khitai (Western Liao) | Defeat | Khwarazm became a vassal state of the Kara-Khitan. | |
Second Crusade
(1147–1150)
|
Western front (Reconquista) Wendish Crusade
|
Victory | |||
Second Siege of Baghdad (1157) | ![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | Caliph al-Muqtafi successfully defended his capital against the coalition armies of Seljuq Sultan Muhammad of Hamadan and Qutb ad-Din of Mosul. |
Ghurid dynasty (879–1215) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Battle of Ghazni (1148) | Ghurid dynasty | Ghaznavids | Victory | The Ghurid ruler Sayf al-Din Suri defeated Bahram-Shah and took the city while Bahram-Shah fled to India. |
Battle of Ghazni (1151) | Ghurid dynasty | Ghaznavids | Victory | The Ghurid ruler Ala al-Din Husayn defeated Bahram-Shah, captured the city, and destroyed it as revenge for the execution of his brother Quṭb ud-Dīn in 1149. |
Indian campaigns of Muhammad of Ghor
(1175–1206) |
Ghurid dynasty | Rajput confederacy | Victory |
|
Ghurid-Qara Khitai conflicts[43]
(1198–1200s) |
Ghurid dynasty | Qara Khitai | Defeat | Qara Khitai raiders plundered successfully the northern part of the Ghurid state. |
Ghurid conquest of Khorasan
(1200–1201) |
Ghurid dynasty | ![]() |
Victory | Ghurid expansion to the north as far as Gorgan and Bastam. |
Battle of Andkhud
(1204) |
Ghurid dynasty | ![]() |
Defeat | Ghurids lost suzerainty of Khurasan to the Khwarezmian Empire, starting their decline. |
Ghurid invasion of Tibet
(1206) |
Ghurid dynasty | Tibetan people (Era of Fragmentation) | Defeat |
|
Khwarazmian dynasty (1077–1231) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Khwarazmian conquest of Persia (1156–1215)[44]
|
![]() Supported by:
|
![]() Ghurid dynasty |
Victory
(Regime change) |
|
Irghiz River skirmish
(1209/1219) |
![]() |
![]() |
Stalemate | Inconclussive due to Mongol retreat in order to chase Merkits or Naimans dissidents instead of start a war with Persia. |
Khwarazmian–Qara Khitai Wars[46]
(1210–1220) |
![]() Co-belligerant:
|
Qara Khitai
Supported by: Mongol clans |
Inconclussive |
|
Mongol invasion of Persia (1218–1256) | ![]()
Co-belligerant: |
![]() |
Defeat
(Regime change) |
|
Georgian-Khwarazmid war (1225–1228) | ![]()
|
![]() |
Victory | Khwarezmian last domains added the Georgian domains |
Seljuk-Khwarazmid war
(1230) |
![]() Seljuk rebels |
Seljuk Sultanate of Rûm | Defeat | Khwarezmian last domains partitioned between Seljuks and Mongols |
Siege of Jerusalem (1244) | ![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Muslim capture of Jerusalen |
Conflict | Persianate State (and allies) | Opponents | Results | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Ilkhanid dynasty
(1256–1335) | ||||
Mongol invasions of Anatolia (1241–1335)
|
Mongol Empire | Sultanate of Rum
Anatolian Beyliks |
Victory | Mongols adds the Anatolian domains to Persian-centered Ilkhanate. |
Georgian Rebellion of 1256
|
Mongol Empire | ![]() |
Victory | Rebellion supressed. Georgian vilayats are submitted to Persia-centered Ilkhanate. |
Siege of Baghdad (1258) | Mongol Empire | ![]() |
Victory |
|
Mongol-Ayyubid War (1259-1260) | Mongol Empire | ![]() |
Victory | Mongols adds Aleppo (modern Syria) to the Persian-centered Ilkhanate. Then clashes with the Mamluk Sultanate. |
Mongol invasions of the Levant (1260–1323) | ![]()
|
![]()
Karamanid rebels |
Defeat | Mongols fail to conquer Egypt or get a formal Franco-Mongol alliance. |
Toluid Civil War
(1260–1264) |
Kublai Khan and his allies | Ariq Böke and his allies | Victory | Fragmentation of the Mongol Empire |
Berke–Hulagu war
(1262) |
![]() Supported by:
|
![]() Supported by:
|
Inconclusive | Fragmentation of the Mongol Empire |
Kaidu–Kublai war
(1268–1301) |
Yuan dynasty
|
![]()
|
Inconclusive | Fragmentation of the Mongol Empire |
Esen Buqa–Ayurbarwada war
(1314–1318) |
Yuan China | ![]() |
Victory | Fragmentation of the Mongol Empire |
Golden Horde-Ilkhanate War
(1318–20) |
![]() |
![]() Rebels:
|
Victory | Fragmentation of the Mongol Empire |
Chupanid Rebellion
(1322–1327) |
![]() Supported by: |
Chobanids | Victory | Amir Chupan is executed by Abu Sa'id Bahadur Khan, who then gets to marry with Baghdad Khatun (daughter of Chupan). |
Disintegration of the Ilkhanate
(1335–57) |
![]() |
![]() |
Collapse of the dynasty
(Regime change) |
Fragmentation ot the Ilkhanate
|
Jalayirid dynasty
(1335–1432) | ||||
Jalayirid conquest of Azerbaiyan
(1356–60) |
Chobanids[48] (until 1357) | ![]() Muzaffarids |
Victory |
|
Muzaffarid Civil War
(1363–74) |
Muzaffarids loyals to sha Mahmud
Supported by: Jalayirid Sultanate |
Muzaffarids loyals to Shah Shoja Mozaffari | Stalemate | Jalayirid expands their domains in Iran, but Shah Shoja Mozaffari gets to rule the Muzaffarid state (from Isfahan to Balochistan). |
Anti-Jalayirid revolts of 1364–1367[49] | Jalayirid Sultanate | Shirvanshah Kavus' rebels of Shirvan
Khwaja Murjan's rebels of Baghdad Supported by: |
Victory | Both revolts are supressed and the rulers agains recognise the Vassalage to Jalayirids. |
Jalayarid conquest of Eastern Iran[50][51]
(1371–74) |
Jalayirid Sultanate | Wali of Astarabad
Sarbadars |
Victory | Jalayirid's rule is consolidated over whole Iran. |
Jalayarid wars of Succession[50]
(1374–1384) |
Jalayirid Sultanate
Support against invaders:
|
Jalayarid pretenders:
Invaders:
|
Stalemate | Shaikh Hussain Jalayir maintains his rule over whole Jalayirid domains, but starting the decadence of the Sultanate.
Then, Ahmad Jalayir depose his brother in 1382 and defeat the rest of his brothers. |
Golden Horde raid to Iranian Azerbaiyan[54]
(1385) |
Jalayirid Sultanate | ![]() Co-Belligerants: |
Defeat | Jalayirid domains are devastated by the raids, being weakened to near collapse. |
2° Turco-Persian Era
[edit]Conflict | Persianate State (and allies) | Opponents | Results | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Timurid dynasty (1370–1507) | ||||
Campaigns of Timur (1380–1402) |
![]() |
Muzaffarids Jalayirid Sultanate Tughlaq dynasty |
Victory |
|
Battle of Mush (1387)
|
![]() |
Defeat | Qara Yusuf expel temporarly the Timurids. | |
Battle of Algami Canal
(1402)
|
![]() |
Victory | Sultan Ahmed Jalayir and Qara Yusuf both escaped Iraq again and fled towards Egypt | |
Timurid Civil Wars (1405–~1501) |
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![]() |
Collapse of the dynasty
(Regime change) |
Rise of the Shi'ite Safavid dynasty |
Georgian invasion of Timurid Domains
(1405–1407)
|
![]() ![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | George VII of Georgia succeeded in expanding Georgia's borders temporarily to their former extent (regaining Nakhchivan and Ganja).[56] |
Battle of Nakhchivan (1406)
|
![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | Invasion repelled and Qara Qoyunly conquest of Whole Azerbaijan. |
Battle of Qarabagh
(1469) |
![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | Timurid loses the control of Azerbaiyan and any chance to reconquer Iran or Iraq. |
Qara Qoyunlu (1374–1468) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Battle of Sardrud[57]
(1408) |
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![]() |
Victory |
|
Qara Qoyunlu invasion of Northern Iran[58]
(1409) |
![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | Timurids expels invaders from Northern Iran. |
Qara Qoyunlu conquest of Mardin[59]
(1409) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Mardin is captured by the Qara Qoyunlu. |
Qara Qoyunlu–Jalayirid War[58][57]
(1410–1411) |
![]() |
Jalayirid Sultanate | Victory | Ahmad Jalayir is executed and forced to crown Pirbudag, son of Qara Yusuf, as Shah of Iran (giving legitimacy to the Qara Qoyunlu). |
Battle of Chalagan
(1412) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory |
|
Qara Qoyunly–Aq Qoyunlu war[58][62]
(1417–1418) |
![]() |
![]() Supported by: |
Victory | Qara Osman fled to Aleppo. |
Timurid-Qara Qoyunlu War
(1420-1434) |
![]() |
![]() Local rebel forces in Azerbaiyan and Kurdistan |
Stalemate | Iskandar is briefly depossed by Shah Rukh and Qara Qoyunlu loses territories, but avoid to be fully re-conquered by Timurids. |
Qara Qoyunlu-Georgia War[63]
(1440–1444) |
![]() |
![]() |
Stalemate | Tbilisi is sacked, but Jahan Shah returns without territorial gains. |
Qara Qoyunlu 2nd conquest of Baghdad[64]
(1445–1447) |
![]() Supported by:
|
Arab Iraq rebels
Supported by: |
Victory | Jahan Shah depose Alvand Mirza. |
Timurid–Qara Qoyunlu War[65]
(1454–1459)
|
![]() |
![]() ![]() |
Victory |
|
Qara Qoyunly-Aq Qoyunlu war (1457–1469)
|
![]() |
![]() |
Defeat
(Regime Change) |
Death of Jahan Shah, Mirza Yusuf and Rise of Aq Qoyunlu. |
Revolt of Azerbaijan[67]
(1459) |
![]() |
Hasan Ali rebel forces | Victory | Revolt Supressed |
Revolt of Fars and Shiraz[68]
(1464) |
![]() |
Pir Budaq rebel forces | Victory | Revolt Supressed
|
Revolt of Baghdad[69]
(1466) |
![]() |
Pir Budaq rebel forces | Victory | Revolt Supressed
|
Aq Qoyunlu (1378–1508) | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Turkoman invasions of Georgia
(1407–1502)
|
![]()
|
![]()
|
Victory | End of invasions against Georgia and consolidation of Safavids in Persia |
Siege of Gerger
(1464–1465) |
![]() |
![]() |
style="background:#AF9" |Victory | Harpoot conquered by Aq Qoyunlu. |
Battle of Qarabagh
(1469) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Decline of Timurids. |
Aq Qoyunlu–Mamluk War (1470–1474) | ![]()
|
![]() |
Defeat | Decline of Aq Qoyunlu. |
Aq Qoyunlu–Ottoman War (1473) | ![]() Supported by: |
![]() Supported by: |
Defeat | Rise of the Ottoman Empire in West Asia. |
Battle of Khoy (1478) | ![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | Sultan Yaqub overthrow Sultan Khalil as Padishah |
Revolts against Yaqub[70]
(1478–80) |
![]() |
Bayandur princes | Victory | Revolts supressed |
Battle of Urfa (1480) | ![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Mamluk invasion is repelled. |
Safavid Persia
[edit]Conflict | Iran (and allies) | Opponents | Results | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Safavid dynasty (1501–1736) | ||||
Campaigns of Ismail I
(1500–1510)
|
![]() |
Victory
(Regime change) |
Safavid Iran is stablished. | |
Persian-Uzbek Wars (1502–1598) |
![]() |
Uzbeks
Supported by: Kazakh Khanate |
Victory |
|
Ottoman–Persian wars (1505–1517) | ![]() Supported by: |
![]() Supported by: |
Defeat |
|
Kurdish-Yazidi uprising against the Safavids (1506–1510) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Uprising suppressed when the Yazidi leader, Shir Sarim, was defeated in the battle |
Portuguese–Safavid wars (1507–1625) | ![]()
|
![]() Supported by:
|
Victory | The Iranian military sought to punish the Portuguese in the Persian Gulf for the Iranians' grievances of Gambron, not only liberating the island of Hormuz but also forcing the Portuguese to withdraw to Mombasa in Kenya.
Britain recognized Iran's sovereignty over the entire Persian Gulf. |
Battle of Ghazdewan
(1512) |
![]() |
Khanate of Bukhara | Defeat | Uzbeks reconquerst of Transoxiana |
Ismail I invasion of Georgia
(1516–1522) |
![]() Samtskhe-Saatabago rebels |
![]() |
Stalemate | Initial Persian victories, putting vassal governors in Georgia. Then withdrawal after Ottoman intervention |
Battle of Jam (1528) | ![]() |
Uzbeks | Victory | Safavids Empire defeated Uzbeks and reconquered Herat. |
Ottoman–Safavid War of 1523 (1532–1555),
|
![]() Supported by: |
![]() Supported by: ![]() |
Defeat | Ottomans captured Lower Mesopotamia and Baghdad. First partition of the Caucasus between the Ottomans and Persians. Western Armenia and western Georgia falls in Ottoman hands, Eastern Armenia, eastern Georgia, Dagestan and the contemporary Republic of Azerbaijan remain in Persian hands.
A Habsburg–Persian alliance is consolidated in reaction to the Franco-Ottoman alliance. |
Georgian-Safavid wars
(1541–1659) |
![]() |
![]() |
Stalemate | Persians subdue Georgian kingdoms as vassals of Safavids, but Georgians got restoration of its autonomy |
Uzbek invasion of Khorasan (1578) | ![]() |
Shaybanids | Victory | Uzbeks withdrew from northeastern Iran and Persians refused to pay them tribute. |
Ottoman–Safavid War of 1578 (1578–1590) |
![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | Treaty of Constantinople (1590) |
Khorasan Civil War
(1580) |
![]()
|
![]()
|
Defeat | Rise of Abbas the Great. |
Siege of Nishapur
(1581) |
![]()
|
![]()
|
Defeat | Ali-Qoli Khan Shamlu (mentor of Abbas Mirza) deposes Morteza Qoli Khan Parnak Turkman and is confirmed as local ruler of Khorasan by Mohammad Khodabanda. |
Siege of Torbat
(1582) |
![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | Expansion of Ali-Qoli Khan Shamlu and Abbas Mirza domains. |
Battle of Tirpol
(1583) |
![]() |
![]() |
Stalemate | Reconciliation between the two parties. |
Qizilbash Civil War
(1585) |
![]()
Supported by:Khanate of Bukhara |
Ustajlu rebels | Defeat | Ali-Qoli Khan Shamlu retires to Herat and Abbas Mirza is captured by Morteza Qoli Khan Parnak Turkman (who became local ruler of Mashhad) |
Uzbek–Iranian War of 1588–89 | ![]() |
Khanate of Bukhara | Defeat | Persian loss of Herat and death of Ali-Qoli Khan Shamlu. |
Battle of Herat
(1598) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Khorasan returned to Persians |
Ottoman–Safavid War of 1603 (First Stage) (1603–1612) |
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![]() |
Victory | Treaty of Nasuh Pasha (1612) |
Siege of Dimdim (1609–1610) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Uprising suppressed |
Ottoman–Safavid War of 1603 (Second Stage)
(1612–1618) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Treaty of Serav (1618) |
Capture of Ormuz
(1622) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Ormuz annexed to Persia |
Mughal–Safavid War of 1622 (1622–1623) |
![]() |
Mughal Empire | Victory | Kandahar falls to Persia |
Ottoman–Safavid War of 1623 (1623–1639) |
![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | Permanent partition of the Caucasus; western Georgia and Western Armenia go to the Ottomans, while Eastern Armenia, Dagestan, eastern and southern Georgia, and Azerbaijan remain under Persian rule. Ottomans decisively gain control of Mesopotamia. |
Battle off Hormuz
(1625)
|
![]() Supported by: |
![]() |
Draw | End of Portuguese influence on the Persian Gulf |
Uzbek invasion of 1626 | ![]() |
Khanate of Bukhara | Victory | Uzbek withdrawal. |
Gharib Shah's Revolt
(1629–1630) |
![]() aided by Qizilbash |
Mazandaran and Gilan province
aided by Uzbeks |
Victory | Caspian Iran becomes a Khasah (Royal domain) and the local Sultanates are abolished to strenghten the Absolute monarchy. |
Khan Ahmad Khan Ardalan revolt
(1630) |
![]() |
Emirate of Ardalan
Supported by:
|
Victory | Kurdish Revolt supressed |
Sher Khan revolt
(1631) |
![]() |
Pashtuns of Pushang
Supported by: Mughal Empire |
Victory | Afghan Revolt supressed |
Dervish Reza's rebellion in Qazvin
(1632) |
![]() |
Dervish
Supported by: |
Victory | Ban of Esoteric interpretation of the Quran. |
Davud Khan's rebellion in Karabakh
(1632) |
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Caucasus States
Supported by:
|
Victory | Revolt supressed |
Tahmurts of Kakheti revolts in Georgia
(1632–1648) |
![]() |
Georgians loyals to Teimuraz I of Kakheti | Victory | Revolts supressed |
Capture of Julfar
(1633)
|
![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | Omanis captured the two forts on Ras Al Khaimah. |
Uzbek invasion of 1634 | ![]() |
Khanate of Bukhara
Supported by: |
Victory | Uzbek withdrawal and Abd al-Aziz Khan of Bukhara's properties are sacked by Persians. |
Qandahar Cession
(1638) |
![]()
Supported by:
|
Ali Mardan Khan rebels
Supported by: |
Defeat | Mughal Shah Jahan annex Qandahar |
Mughal–Safavid war of 1649 (1649–1653) |
![]() |
Mughal Empire | Victory | Persia recaptured Kandahar |
Russo-Persian War of 1651 (1651–1653) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Russian fortress on the Iranian side of the Terek River destroyed, and its garrison expelled |
Bakhtrioni uprising
(1659) |
![]() Turcoman tribes |
![]() |
Inconclusive | Kakheti remained under Persian rule |
Safavid occupation of Basra
(1697–1701) |
![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | Safavids retreats from the Persian Gulf. |
Balochi raids
(1699–1710s) |
![]() |
Baloch people | Inconclusive |
|
Hotaki-Safavid War
(1716–1722) |
![]() |
![]() Supported by: |
Defeat
(Regime change) |
Afghan control of most of Iran
Rise of Nader Shah against Mahmud Hotak and then Ashraf Hotak. |
1717 Omani invasion of Bahrain
(1717) |
![]() |
![]()
|
Defeat | Persian loss of Bahrain |
Sack of Shamakhi
(1721) |
![]() |
Rebellious Sunni Lezgins | Defeat | The Shia population is massacred and the city, ransacked |
Russo-Persian War of 1722 (1722–1723)
|
![]() ![]() |
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Co-belligerant: |
Defeat | Treaty of Saint Petersburg (1723): Russians capture Derbent, Baku, and the provinces of Shirvan, Gilan, Mazandaran, and Astrabad for about a decade.
Treaty of Constantinople (1724): Partition of Iran with the Ottomans, who receives Tiflis, Erevan, Ganja, Khoy, Quschi, Tasuj, Marand and Tabriz. Start of Ottoman-Hotaki War (1722-1727). |
Hotaki dynasty's interruption (1722–1729) | ||||
Ottoman–Hotaki War (1722–1727) | ![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Treaty of Hamedan
|
Return of Safavids(Nader) (1726–1729) |
![]() Supported by: |
![]() |
Defeat
(Regime change) |
End of the Hotaki dynasty |
Safavid Restoration (1729–1736) | ||||
Rebellion of Sheikh Ahmad Madani
(1730) |
![]() Supported by:
|
Forces Loyal to Sheikh Ahmad Madani
Forces Loyal to Sheikh Jabbara Forces Loyal to Sheikh Rashid bin Sa'id of Basaidu Rebelling Arab tribes |
Victory | Revolt suppressed and reincorporation of Gulf Arabs to the empire |
Battle of Zarghan (1730) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Afghans expelled from Iran (Persia) |
Herat campaign of 1731
(1731) |
![]() Afghan loyalists |
Sadozai Sultanate of Herat | Victory | Fall of Sadozai Sultanate of Herat |
Ottoman-Safavid war of 1730 (Nader) (1730–1735) | ![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Persian (Nader) reconquest of the entire Caucasus |
Mohammad Khan Baluch's Rebellion
(1733–1734)
|
![]() |
Forces loyal to Mohammad Khan Baloch | Victory | Southern Persia is re-annexed. |
Transition from Safavid to Qajar
[edit]Conflict | Iran (and allies) | Opponents | Results | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Afsharid dynasty (1736–1796) | ||||
Afsharid Siege of Kandahar (1737–1738)
|
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | End of the Hotaki dynasty |
Afsharid conquest of the Persian Gulf (1738–1747)
|
![]() |
Omani Empire | Victory | The Persian empire becomes the arbiter of the Persian Gulf until the collapse of the empire. |
Afsharid invasion of India (1738–1739) |
![]() |
Mughal Empire | Victory | Persian plundering of India |
Afsharid Conquest of Central Asia (1738–1740)
|
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Conquest of the Central Asian khanates |
Afsharid invasion of Daghestan
(1741–1745) |
![]() |
![]() Mekhtuly Khanate |
Victory | The Persian Empire annexes almost all of Dagestan. |
Afsharid–Ottoman War War of 1743 (1743–1746) |
![]() |
![]() |
Stalemate | Treaty of Kerden, Status quo ante bellum |
Moḥammad Taqi Khan Shirazi's Rebellion
(1744) |
![]() |
Persian rebels | Victory | Revolt supressed |
Division of the Afsharid Empire
(1747–1796) |
![]() Supported by: Qara Bayat Amirdom |
![]() Supported by: Supported by: ![]() Supported by: ![]() Durrani Empire Supported by: Georgians Supported by: |
Regime change |
|
Durrani Campaign to Khorasan (1754–55) | ![]() |
Durrani Empire | Defeat | Afghan dominance in the region |
Zand dynasty (1751–1779) | ||||
Campaign against Azad Khan (1754–1762) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Azad Khan's surrender |
Bajalan uprising (1755) |
![]() |
Bajalan Tribe (Kurds)[77] Bajalan Tribe[78] | Victory | Uprising uppressed |
Battle of Astarabad (1759) | ![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Zand captures Astarabad. |
Zand-Dutch War
(1765) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Kharg Island reconquered by Persia and destruction of Fort Mosselstein |
Ottoman-Persian War of 1775 (1775–1776) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Persia captures Basra. |
Bani Utbah invasion of Bahrain
(1782–1783) |
![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | Al Khalifa annexes Bahrain into its sheikhdom. |
Siege of Kerman (1794) |
![]() |
![]() |
Defeat
(Regime change) |
Qajars conquer and sack Kerman. |
Qajar Persia
[edit]Conflict | Iran (and allies) | Opponents | Results | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Qajar dynasty (1785–1925) | ||||
Battle of Krtsanisi (1795) |
![]() |
![]() ![]() |
Victory | Tbilisi captured and sacked by Iranians. Persian reconquest of the Caucasus and Georgia. Then, for reunificating all Persian provinces, Agha Mohammad is formally crowned Shah in 1796 in the Mughan plain.[79] |
Persian Expedition (1796) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory |
|
Russo-Persian War of 1804 (1804–1813),
|
![]() Supported by: |
![]() |
Defeat | Treaty of Gulistan. Iran irrevocably cedes most of its Caucasus territories (Dagestan, Georgia, and most of the Azerbaijan Republic) to Russia. |
Battle of Izki
(1808)
|
![]() |
![]()
|
Defeat | Samail Fort captured by Saudi forces, who also sacked Muttrah. |
Battle of Kafir Qala
(1818)
|
![]() |
![]() |
Inconclusive | Both armies retreated |
Ottoman–Persian War of 1821 (1821–1823) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Treaty of Erzurum, status quo ante bellum |
Russo-Persian War of 1826 (1826–1828) |
![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | Treaty of Turkmenchay. Iran irrevocably cedes its last Caucasus territories comprising parts of the contemporary nation of Azerbaijan that were not ceded in 1813, as well as all of what is the current Republic of Armenia. |
Rawanduz Revolt (1829–1835) |
![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | Qajar lose control of Iranian Kurdistan, which is the current Mukriyan region. |
Siege of Herat (1837–1838)
|
![]() Supported by: |
![]() Supported by: |
Defeat | Successful Persian siege at Herat; breach eventually repelled; temporary British occupation of Kharg Island; Persian withdrawal from Herat |
First British occupation of Bushehr
(1838) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory | British expelled |
Battle of Fort Tabarsi
(1848–1849) |
![]() |
Bábís | Victory | Successful repression |
Siege of Herat
(1856) |
![]() |
![]() Supported by: |
Victory | Successful siege of Herat; continued occupation until Persia's compliance with the Treaty of Paris; installment of Sultan Ahmad Khan as puppet ruler of Herat |
Anglo-Persian War (1856–1857) |
![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | Persian force occupies and later withdraws from Herat.
Treaty of Paris (1857) is signed |
Uprising of Sheikh Ubeydullah
(1879–1880) |
![]() Supported by: |
Kurdish tribes | Victory | Successful repression |
Tobacco Protest
(1890–1891) |
![]() Limited support: |
Iranian Protesters:
Limited support: |
Defeat | Tobacco Régie is abolished. |
Ottoman incursion into Persia[82]
(1905) |
![]() |
![]() |
Inconclusive | Increase of territorial conflicts between both empires. |
Persian Constitutional Revolution (1905–1911) | ![]() Supported by: |
Iranian constitutionalists
Supported by: ![]() ![]() |
Stalemate | |
Ottoman invasion of Persia
(1906) |
![]() |
![]() |
Defeat | Ottomans (with Kurdish allies) succes to invade Iranian Azerbaijan and Luristan, occupying Behik, Serdasht, Bani, Khanajin, Urmia, Gangachin, Mahabad, Khoy. |
Revolt of Salar-al-Daulah
(1911–1913) |
![]() |
Forces of Salar-al-Daulah | Victory | Rebellion suppressed |
Swedish intervention in Persia
(1911–1916) |
![]() |
Anti-Qajar insurgents | Victory |
|
Revolt of Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar[84]
(1911) |
![]() |
Forces of Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar
Supported by: |
Victory | The Shah is expelled against from the country. |
Persian Campaign (1914–1918)
|
![]() Jungle Movement |
![]() ![]() |
Stalemate |
|
Jungle Movement insurrection on Gilan (1915–1921)
|
![]() ![]()
|
Jungle revolutionaries
Supported by:
|
Victory |
|
Yarahmadzai uprising
(1916–1934) |
![]() Supported by: |
Yarahmadzai tribe
Supported by: |
Victory | Balochistan is pacified and partitioned between Iran and British India. |
Simko Shikak revolt (1918–1922)
|
![]() |
Irregular Kurdish militias
Supported by: |
Victory | Revolt suppressed |
Mohammad Khiabani's uprising (1920) | ![]() |
Mohammad Khiabani's forces | Victory | Revolt suppressed |
Pessian's Khorasan Revolt (1921)[87] | ![]() |
![]() |
Victory | Revolt suppressed after the death of Mohammad Taqi Pessian |
1921 Persian coup d'état (1921) | ![]() ![]() Simko Kurdish rebels
Supported by:
|
Persian Cossack Brigade Supported by: |
Defeat |
|
Sheikh Khazal rebellion (1922–1924) | ![]() |
![]() Supported by: |
Victory |
|
Turkoman Rebellion in Eastern Iran (1924–1926)[88]
(1924–1926) |
![]() loyalist Kurdish tribes
Supported by: |
Turkmen rebels
rebel Kurdish tribes
Supported by: |
Victory | Rebellion suppressed and Soviet plans to stablish a Turkic protectorate are avoided. |
Pahlavi Iran
[edit]Conflict | Iran (and allies) | Opponents | Results | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
Pahlavi dynasty (1925–1979) | ||||
Simko Shikak revolt (1926) | ![]() |
Irregular Kurdish militias | Victory | Revolt suppressed; Simko Shikak fled to Mandatory Iraq |
Persian conquest of West Baluchistan[90][91][92][93]
(1928–1935)
|
![]() |
West Baluchistan | Victory | Iranian authority on West Bauchistan is reinforced- |
Persian tribal uprisings of 1929
(1929–1933) |
![]() |
Rebel tribes | Victory | Iranian government offered amnesties and most rebel leaders surrendered then. The rest gets a peace agreement. |
Jafar Sultan revolt (1931) | ![]() |
Jafar Sultan's Kurdish rebels | Victory | Revolt suppressed |
Goharshad Mosque rebellion
(1935) |
![]() |
Bazaaris | Victory | Iranian government impose the Kashf-e hijab and other anticlerical reforms against the Shias to Westernize Iran. Further de-Islamization and continuation of claims by the clergy about heretical innovations in the government. |
Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran (1941)
|
![]() ![]() |
![]() ![]() |
Defeat | Abdication of Rezā Shāh, Allied occupation of Iran and expulsion of German intelligence in Iran. |
Hama Rashid revolt (1941–1944) | ![]() |
Kurdish tribesmen | Victory | Hama Rashid driven into Iraq |
Operation François
(1943) |
![]() Supported by: |
![]() |
Victory | The Germans fail to instigate a nomadic rebellion in the Persian Corridor. |
Khuzestan revolt[94]
(1943) |
![]() |
![]() Supported by: Arab nationalist |
Victory | Revolt suppressed. |
Iran Crisis of 1946 (1945–1946) |
![]() |
![]() ![]() Supported by: ![]() |
Victory | Dissolution of Mahabad and Azerbaijan |
Abadan Crisis
(1951–1954) |
![]() Supported by: |
![]() Supported by:
|
Stalemate |
|
First Iraqi–Kurdish War
(1961–1970) |
![]() Supported by:
|
Before 1968:
After 1968: |
Stalemate |
|
Dhofar Rebellion (1963–1976)[98] |
![]() ![]() |
![]() ![]() |
Victory | Defeat of insurgents, modernization of Oman |
1967 Kurdish revolt in Iran (1967) | ![]() |
Revolutionary Committee leadership: | Victory | Kurdish revolt suppressed: |
Insurgency in Balochistan (1948–present) | ![]() Forces involved: ![]() Forces involved:
|
![]()
![]()
Supported by:
|
Ongoing | Ongoing
|
Seizure of Abu Musa and the Greater and Lesser Tunbs
(1971) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory |
|
Second Iraqi–Kurdish War
(1974–1975) |
![]() Supported by: |
![]() |
Defeat |
|
Arvand Conflict (1974–1975) |
![]() |
![]() |
Victory |
|
Islamic Republic of Iran (since 1979)
[edit]Minor conflicts, proxy wars, military incidents and alleged interventions
[edit]See also
[edit]- History of Iran
- Swedish intervention in Persia
- Military history of Iran
- Iranian expansionism
- Cyrus in Babylon and the Jewish connection
- List of massacres in Iran
- Greco-Persian Wars
- Roman–Persian Wars
- Parthian army
- Military of the Sasanian Empire
- List of Sasanian revolts and civil wars
- Göktürk–Persian wars
- Hephthalite–Persian Wars
- Aksumite–Persian wars
- Military of Safavid Iran
- Persian–Uzbek wars
- Ottoman–Persian Wars
- Military of Afsharid Iran
- Mughal–Persian Wars
- Russo-Persian Wars
- Persian Corridor (a.k.a. Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran)
- Consolidation of the Iranian Revolution (1979–1982/83)
- The policy of exporting the Islamic Revolution
- Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps
- Kurdish separatism in Iran
- Iran–Israel proxy conflict
- Iran–Saudi Arabia proxy conflict
- Hybrid warfare against Iran
- Iran and state-sponsored terrorism
- Cyberwarfare and Iran
- List of Iranian assassinations
- Iranian intervention in Iraq (2014–present)
- Iranian intervention in the Syrian civil war
- Iran-United States conflict
- Iranian influence operations in the UK
Notes
[edit]- ^ Kriwaczek, Paul (2014-08-07). Babylon: Mesopotamia and the Birth of Civilization. Atlantic Books. ISBN 978-1-78239-567-6.
- ^ THUREAU-DANGIN, Fçois (1907). "Une Incursion Élamite en Territoire Sumérien: A l'Époque Présargonique". Revue d'Assyriologie et d'archéologie orientale. 6 (4): 139–142. ISSN 0373-6032. JSTOR 23283625.
- ^ Kramer, Samuel Noah (1963) [1963]. The Sumerians: Their History, Culture, and Character. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-45238-8.
{{cite book}}
: ISBN / Date incompatibility (help) - ^ Jr, William H. Stiebing (July 2016). Ancient Near Eastern History and Culture. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-315-51116-0.
- ^ Potts, D. T. (2016). The Archaeology of Elam: Formation and Transformation of an Ancient Iranian State. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-1-107-09469-7.
- ^ Hall, H. R. (Harry Reginald) (1913). The ancient history of the Near East, from the earliest times to the battle of Salamis. University of British Columbia Library. London : Methuen & Co.
- ^ Ehrenberg, Erica (2002). Leaving No Stones Unturned: Essays on the Ancient Near East and Egypt in Honor of Donald P. Hansen. Eisenbrauns. ISBN 978-1-57506-055-2.
- ^ a b Steinkeller, Piotr. "Puzur-Inˇsuˇsinak at Susa: A Pivotal Episode of Early Elamite History Reconsidered". Susa and Elam. Archaeological, Philological, Historical and Geographical Perspectives. Mémoires de la Délégation en Perse.
- ^ Foundation, Encyclopaedia Iranica. "Elam - Simashki dynasty, F. Vallat". iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 2024-09-07.
- ^ Eidem, Jesper; Læssøe, Jørgen (2001). The Shemshāra Archives. Kgl. Danske Videnskabernes Selskab. ISBN 978-87-7876-245-0.
- ^ Frayne, Douglas (1990-01-01). Old Babylonian Period (2003-1595 BC). University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-0-8020-5873-7.
- ^ Frayne, Douglas (1997). Ur III Period (2112-2004 BC). University of Toronto Press. ISBN 978-1-4426-2376-7. JSTOR 10.3138/j.ctt13x1qkz.
- ^ Dahl, Jacob Lebovitch (2003). The ruling family of Ur III Umma. A Prosopographical Analysis of an Elite Family in Southern Iraq 4000 Years ago (PDF). UCLA dissertation. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2006-05-12.
- ^ Michalowski, Piotr (2011). The Correspondence of the Kings of Ur: An Epistolary History of an Ancient Mesopotamian Kingdom. Penn State University Press. doi:10.5325/j.ctv1bxh118. ISBN 978-1-57506-194-8. JSTOR 10.5325/j.ctv1bxh118.
- ^ Glassner, Jean-Jacques; Foster, Benjamin Benjamin Read (2005). Mesopotamian Chronicles. BRILL. ISBN 978-90-04-13084-5.
- ^ Frahm, Eckart (2017-06-12). A Companion to Assyria. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 978-1-4443-3593-4.
- ^ Baker, Tim (2000). The Traditional Bowyer's Bible. Lyons Press. ISBN 978-1-58574-087-1.
- ^ Briant, Pierre (2002-01-01). From Cyrus to Alexander: A History of the Persian Empire. Eisenbrauns. ISBN 978-1-57506-120-7.
- ^ Foundation, Encyclopaedia Iranica. "SELEUCID EMPIRE". iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 2023-06-23.
- ^ a b Grainger 2002, p. 217.
- ^ Sarikakis 1974, p. 80.
- ^ a b c d Grainger 2002, p. 268.
- ^ Taylor 2013, p. 139.
- ^ Frye, Richard Nelson (1984). The history of ancient Iran. Internet Archive. München : C.H. Beck. ISBN 978-3-406-09397-5.
- ^ Bosworth, Clifford Edmund (1997). "Sīstān". In Bosworth, C. E.; van Donzel, E.; Heinrichs, W. P. & Lecomte, G. (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam. Volume IX: San–Sze (2nd ed.). Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 681–685. ISBN 978-90-04-10422-8
- ^ Olbrycht, Marek Jan. "Mithridates VI Eupator and Iran".
- ^ "Han Emperor Wu-ti". www.silkroadfoundation.org. Retrieved 2024-08-28.
- ^ Dahlheim, Werner (2010). Augustus: Aufrührer, Herrscher, Heiland. Eine Biographie (in German). C.H. Beck. p. 111. ISBN 9783406605932.
- ^ Olbrycht, Marek Jan (2016). "Dynastic Connections in the Arsacid Empire and the Origins of the House of Sāsān". In Curtis, Vesta Sarkhosh; Pendleton, Elizabeth J.; Alram, Michael; Daryaee, Touraj (eds.). The Parthian and Early Sasanian Empires: Adaptation and Expansion. Oxbow Books. ISBN 978-1-78570-208-2
- ^ Ghosh, Amalananda (1965). Taxila. CUP Archive. pp. 790–791.
- ^ Pourshariati, Parvaneh (2008-03-30). Decline and Fall of the Sasanian Empire: The Sasanian-Parthian Confederacy and the Arab Conquest of Iran. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-1-84511-645-3.
- ^ Di Cosmo, Nicola; Maas, Michael, eds. (2018). Empires and Exchanges in Eurasian Late Antiquity: Rome, China, Iran, and the Steppe, ca. 250–750. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.1017/9781316146040. ISBN 978-1-107-09434-5.
- ^ Payne, Richard (2015). "The Reinvention of Iran: The Sasanian Empire and the Huns". In Maas, Michael (ed.). The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Attila. Cambridge University Press. pp. 282–299. ISBN 978-1-107-63388-9
- ^ Heather, Peter J. (2018). Rome resurgent: war and empire in the age of Justinian. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199362745. OCLC 1007044617.[page needed]
- ^ Procopius. History of the Wars, I.9.24; Greatrex, Geoffrey; Lieu, Samuel N. C. (2002). "The Anastasian War and its aftermath (502–525)". The Roman Eastern Frontier and the Persian Wars (Part II, 363–630 AD). New York and London: Routledge. pp. 62–81. ISBN 978-0-415-14687-6.
- ^ Howard-Johnston, James (2010). Witness to a World Crisis: Historians and Histories of the Middle East in the Seventh Century. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0199208593.
- ^ Morony, Michael G. (2015-01-14). Iraq After The Muslim Conquest. Gorgias Press. doi:10.31826/9781463236663. ISBN 978-1-4632-3666-3.
- ^ Werner, Roland (2013). Das Christentum in Nubien: Geschichte und Gestalt einer afrikanischen Kirche (in German). LIT Verlag Münster. ISBN 978-3-643-12196-7.
- ^ Pourshariati, Parvaneh (2008-03-30). Decline and Fall of the Sasanian Empire: The Sasanian-Parthian Confederacy and the Arab Conquest of Iran. Bloomsbury Academic. ISBN 978-1-84511-645-3.
- ^ Compareti, Matteo (20 July 2009). "Chinese-Iranian Relations xv. The Last Sasanians in China". Encyclopædia Iranica.
- ^ Crone, Patricia (2012). The Nativist Prophets of Early Islamic Iran. Cambridge, New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 67.
about the same time as Mazyar, so that they were crucified together with babak (after execution) in Baghdad in 225/840.
- ^ Flood, 165. The exact motivations for Ya`qub's advance have been debated; Tor, pp. 159, for example, argues that he was an Abbasid legitimist whose actions were prompted by a misguided attempt to protect the caliphate.
- ^ Richards, D. S. (2010-01-01). The Chronicle of Ibn al-Athir for the Crusading Period from al-Kamil fi'l-Ta'rikh. Part 3. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. ISBN 978-0-7546-6952-4.
- ^ Huddle, Frank; Grousset, Rene (October 1971). "The Empire of the Steppes: A History of Central Asia". The American Historical Review. 76 (4): 1204. doi:10.2307/1849340. ISSN 0002-8762. JSTOR 1849340.
- ^ Mustafayev, Shahin. Z.M. Buniyatov. A History of the Khorezmian State under the Anushteginids, 1097-1231. (Editors: Shahin Mustafayev, Thomas Welsford) Samarkand: IICAS, 2015. - 212 p.
- ^ "The Empire of the Qara Khitai in Eurasian History". Cambridge University Press & Assessment. Retrieved 2025-07-02.
- ^ a b Demurger, 80–81; Demurger 284
- ^ Ta'rīkh-i Shaikh Uwais : (History of Shaikh Uais) : Am important source for the history of Adharbaijān in the fourteenth century.
- ^ Wing, Patrick (2016-02-01). The Jalayirids. Edinburgh University Press. doi:10.3366/edinburgh/9781474402255.001.0001. ISBN 978-1-4744-0225-5.
- ^ a b c McChesney, Robert (1988). "The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 6, The Timurid and Safavid Periods, Peter Jackson and the late Laurence Lockhart eds., Cambridge, 1986, xxiii, 1987 pp. 72 plates". Iranian Studies. 21 (3–4): 171–176. doi:10.1017/s0021086200016601. ISSN 0021-0862. Cite error: The named reference ":2" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
- ^ Smith, John M. (1971-12-31). The History of the Sarbadar Dynasty 1336-1381 A.D. and its Sources. DE GRUYTER. doi:10.1515/9783110801101. ISBN 978-90-279-1714-0.
- ^ Ashurbeyli, Sara (2006). Shirvanshahs' State (in Azerbaijani). Baku: Poliqraf. pp. 214–217. ISBN 978-5-87459-229-5.
- ^ Minorsky, V. (February 1955). "The Qara-Qoyunlu And The Qutb-Shahs". Bulletin of SOAS. 17 (1): 50–73. doi:10.1017/S0041977X00106342. ISSN 1474-0699.
- ^ Khachatrian, Alexander (2003). "The Kurdish Principality of Hakkariya* (14Th-15Th Centuries)". Iran and the Caucasus. 7 (1): 37–58. doi:10.1163/157338403x00024. ISSN 1609-8498.
- ^ Kouymjian, Dickran, and Dickran Kouymjian. 1998. Armenia from the fall of the Cilician Kingdom (1375) to the forced emigration under Shah Abbas (1604); and, A critical bibliography for the history of Armenia from 1375 to 1605. [Fresno]: Armenian Studies Program, California State University, Fresno.
- ^ Rayfield, Donald (2012). Edge of Empires : A History of Georgia. Reaktion Books.
- ^ a b Grousset, René (1970). The empire of the steppes; a history of central Asia (in English and French). Internet Archive. New Brunswick, N.J., Rutgers University Press. ISBN 978-0-8135-0627-2.
- ^ a b c d "KARAKOYUNLULAR". TDV İslâm Ansiklopedisi (in Turkish). Retrieved 2025-07-16. Cite error: The named reference ":4" was defined multiple times with different content (see the help page).
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{{cite book}}
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- ^ from:
- ^ from:
- ^ Iraq claimed victory following a successful 1988 counter-offensive aimed at expelling Iranian forces from Iraq which compelled Iran to submit to a ceasefire the same year, and also due to the country becoming the dominant power in the Middle East as a result of the conflict. Iran also claimed victory for expelling Iraqi forces from Iran following 1982 offensives, despite failing in its later-goal to overthrow the Iraqi government and also despite suffering higher military and economic losses than Iraq.[136][137]
- ^ Iraq claimed victory following a successful 1988 counter-offensive aimed at expelling Iranian forces from Iraq which compelled Iran to submit to a ceasefire the same year, and also due to the country becoming the dominant power in the Middle East as a result of the conflict. Iran also claimed victory for expelling Iraqi forces from Iran following 1982 offensives, despite failing in its later-goal to overthrow the Iraqi government and also despite suffering higher military and economic losses than Iraq.[136][137]
- ^ After the war concluded, Iraq continued to maintain control over the entire Shatt al-Arab and other Iranian territories it had occupied along the border, covering an area of 9,600 km2. It was not until 16 August 1990 that Iraq agreed to return these occupied territories to Iran and to divide sovereignty over the Shatt al-Arab. This restored the border to the terms established by the 1975 Algiers Agreement.