Ali Mirza Safavi | |
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7th Sheikh of the Safavid order | |
In office 1488–1494 | |
Preceded by | Shaykh Haydar |
Succeeded by | Ismail I |
Personal details | |
Born | AH 874 (1469/1470) Sham Asbi, Aq Qoyunlu |
Died | 1494 | (aged 23–24)
Parents |
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Relatives | Ismail I (brother) Fakhr-Jahan Khanum (sister) Ebrahim Mirza (brother) Malek Khanum (sister) Sayyed Hassan (brother) |
Ali Mirza Safavi (Persian: علیمیرزا صفوی), also known as Soltan-Ali Safavi (سلطان علی صفوی) [1] (died 1494), was the penultimate head of the Safavid order. Having grown wary of his political power, Ali Mirza was captured by the Ak Koyunlu and spent several years in captivity in Fars before being released in 1493 by prince Rostam. In the ensuing period he and his men assisted the prince in defeating Baysonqor bin Yaqub. A year later however, in 1494, now perceiving the Safavid order as a threat to his own position, Rostam ordered for the execution of Ali Mirza Safavi. Realizing his inevitable fate, shortly before his death, Ali Mirza Safavi appointed his brother Ismail as his successor. Ismail, in turn, eventually came to establish the Safavid Empire, with the regnal name Ismail I (r. 1501–1524).[2]