Pari Khan Khanum

Pari Khan Khanum
پریخان خانم
Painting of a seated princess, most likely Pari Khan Khanum[1]
BornAugust 1548
Ahar, Iran
Died12 February 1578 (aged 30)
Qazvin, Iran
BetrothedBadi-al Zaman Mirza Safavi
DynastySafavid
FatherTahmasp I
MotherSultan-Agha Khanum
ReligionShia Islam

Pari Khan Khanum (Persian: پریخان خانم, romanizedPariḵān Ḵānom; August 1548–12 February 1578) was a Safavid princess, daughter of the second Safavid Shah, Tahmasp I and his Circassian consort, Sultan-Agha Khanum. From an early age, she was well-loved by her father and was allowed to partake in the court activities, gradually becoming an influential figure who attracted the attentions of the prominent leaders of the militant Qizilbash tribes.

She played a central role in the succession crisis after her father's death in 1576. She eliminated her brother Haydar Mirza and his supporters and enthroned her favoured candidate, Ismail Mirza, as Ismail II. Despite her expectations, Ismail curtailed her power and put her under house arrest. He died from poisoning in 1577, and Pari Khan may have been the mastermind behind his assassination. With her endorsement, her elder brother Mohammad Khodabanda was chosen as Ismail's successor. Mohammad was almost blind, and this fact made him a suitable choice for Pari Khan. She expected to rule while Mohammad remained a figurehead but his influential wife, Khayr al-Nisa Begum, emerged as an opponent to Pari Khan and successfully plotted her death. Pari Khan was strangled at the age of thirty.

Regarded as the most powerful woman in the Safavid history, she was praised by her contemporaries for her intelligence and competence, though in later chronicles she was portrayed as a villain who murdered two of her brothers and aspired to usurp the throne. She was a patron of poets, among them Mohtasham Kashani who wrote five eulogies in her praise. Writers of the time dedicated works to her, like Abdi Beg Shirazi and his Takmelat al-akhbar and she was compared to Fatima, the daughter of Muhammad, prophet of Islam. In a society that imposed harsh restrictions on high-class women, Pari Khan was able to take leadership of the ineffective Safavid court and gather hundreds of loyal followers.

  1. ^ Soudavar 2000, pp. 60, 68.