- Nabil’s
chronicle gives us “not only great historical value but high moral power”
- Nabil
was “a participant in some of the scenes which he recites”
- Nabil’s
style of composition
- The
main features of Nabil’s narrative
- One
needs to have “some knowledge of the condition of church and state in
Persia [at that time] and of the customs and mental outlook of the people
and their masters”
- English
literature about Persia in the nineteenth century
- Pocket
Qur'an of the Báb (photo)
- Nineteenth
century Persia as seen by various Western observers
- ‘Abdu’l-Baha
compares Persia’s glorious past to her darkened condition in the
nineteenth century
- A
Church-State Country - The right to take life was vested in the Shah
alone; and so were all the functions of government, legislative,
executive, and judicial.
- All
major and many minor leadership posts were given to descendants of the
Shah
- Obstacles
to a Shah being able to make just decisions
- Robe
of the Báb (photo)
- The
system of giving and receiving gifts permeated government and all aspects
of life in Persia
- The
practice of the “balance of personal advantage” – “usually expressed in
money form”: a system “so open, so shameless, or so universal” in the
entire country in the nineteenth century Persia; “far from being limited
to the sphere of domestic economy or to commercial transactions, it
permeates every walk and inspires most of the actions of life.”
- Penalties
and prisons in 19th Century Persia
- Features
of government administration and judicial procedure in 19th Century Persia
- 1906:
One of Tehran's City Gates (photo)
- From
the beginning the Báb made “frank enunciation of His claims” and “open
presentation of His Cause”
- Prophetic
expectations of the Shi’ah sect of Islam
- Successorship
to Prophet Muhammad according to the Sunni sect of Islam
- A
“twofold Manifestation” expected by both Shi’ah and Sunni sects of Islam
- The
reason the Báb encountered intense opposition from the divines
- The
cause of the rejection and persecution of the Báb was similar to what
happened to Christ
- The
only European who met the Báb
- The
Báb “would win over almost all with whom He was brought into personal
contact”
- The
“mullás inaugurated a campaign of outrage and spoliation”
- The
happenings at Mázindarán, Nayríz, and Zanján – proof that “the mullás’
allegations of a political motive were untrue”
- Circumstances
that forced some Bábis to join together and take up arms – “the moral
aspect of their action”
- The
“fire, though smothered, was not quenched”
- “The
Second and greater Manifestation of God”: – “Nine years after the
beginning of the Bábí Dispensation”
- 1888:
Vakil Bazar in Shiraz, Persia (photo)
- The
full range and magnificence of the great Movement that the Báb prepared
- Nabíl’s
Chronicle – “He was throughout his life closely associated with the
leaders of the Cause”
- Nabil’s
close association with Baha’u’llah
- ‘The
Dawn-Breakers’ book currently available contains the first half of Nabil’s
chronicle – “parts of the manuscript were reviewed and approved, some by
Bahá’u’lláh, and others by ‘Abdu’l-Bahá”
- Shiraz,
circa 1850 (photo)
- Persia’s
state of decadence in the middle of the 19th Century: The Qajar Sovereigns
- The absolute powers of the king
- Persia’s
state of decadence in the middle of the 19th Century: The Qajar Sovereigns
– Some of the titles of the king
- Persia’s
state of decadence in the middle of the 19th Century: The Qajar Sovereigns
– How the public viewed the king
- Tabriz,
circa 1890 (photo)
- Persia’s
state of decadence in the middle of the 19th Century: The divinity
attributed to the Shah and his inability to fully address the needs of the
nation
- Persia’s
state of decadence in the middle of the 19th Century: - Qajar Kings proved
extraordinarily prolific of male offspring
- Persia’s
state of decadence in the middle of the 19th Century: - three successive
Kings put their respective Grand Vazírs to death
- Persia’s
state of decadence in the middle of the 19th Century: The Government –
“the arbitrary exercise of authority by a series of units in a descending
scale from the sovereign to the headman of a petty village.”
- Persia’s
state of decadence in the middle of the 19th Century: The Government: –
majority of Ministers and chief officers of the Court are “venal, artful,
and false”
- Portrait
of Muhammad Shah (1834 – 1848) and his Vizier Haj Mirza Aghasi (photo)
- Persia’s
state of decadence in the middle of the 19th Century: - “life itself, in
that country may be said to consist for the most part of an interchange of
presents”
- Persia’s
state of decadence in the middle of the 19th Century: - the “balance of
personal advantage, usually expressed in money form, which can be squeezed
out of any and every transaction”
- Persia’s
state of decadence in the middle of the 19th Century: - “the enormous
number of attendants and retainers that swarm round a minister, or
official of any description”
- Persia’s
state of decadence in the middle of the 19th Century: The Ecclesiastical
Order
- Persia's
Prime Minister: 1848-1851 (photo)
- Persia’s
state of decadence in the middle of the 19th Century: - the plight of the
Jews
- Persia’s
state of decadence in the middle of the 19th Century: “provision… for the
material solace” of pilgrims to the Shrine of Imam Reza, the eighth Shi'ih
Imam, in the city of Mashhad
- Persia
in mid-19th Century: - Penalties and Prisons
- circa
1908: The Anderoon Palace, Tehran (photo)
- Persia
in mid-19th Century: - Need for “a radical twist to the national character
and institutions”
- Baha’u’llah’s
Tribute to the Báb and His Chief Disciples: - “so great a Revelation”
- Baha’u’llah’s
Tribute to the Báb and His Chief Disciples: - “He prophesied His own
martyrdom”
- Baha’u’llah’s
Tribute to the Báb and His Chief Disciples: - He walked “the way of God”
and “yearned for aught else except His good-pleasure”
- Baha’u’llah’s
Tribute to the Báb and His Chief Disciples: - “what steadfastness He, the
Beauty of God, hath revealed!”
- Baha’u’llah’s
Tribute to the Báb and His Chief Disciples: - “that Essence of Essences
and Sea of Seas”; “All these stainless hearts and sanctified souls have,
with absolute resignation, responded to the summons of His decree.”
- Distinguishing
Features of Shi’ah Islam: - the doctrine of the Imámate
- Distinguishing
Features of Shi’ah Islam: - The Twelve Imáms
- 1946:
A village in Northwestern Iran (photo)
- Theory
and Administration of Law in the Middle of the Nineteenth Century Persia:
- “that which is administered by ecclesiastical, and that which is
administered by civil tribunals”
- Theory
and Administration of Law in the Middle of the Nineteenth Century Persia:
- “the ‘Urf, or Common Law”
- 1841:
Masjed-i-Shah, (Shah Mosque) Isfahan, Persia (photo)
- Nabil’s
intention for writing the chronicle
- Individuals acknowledged by the Guardian for their assistance with the book
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