FOOTNOTES
[1] The author has, with a few exceptions, accentuated native words only where they first occur in the book.
[2] The dates given with regard to this persecution are approximately correct; but, although reasonable care has been taken to find the exact year in which the changes of restriction were made, the absolute accuracy of some of these dates cannot be guaranteed.
[3] The Yezdi realises the link of a common language, but by this he means a common dialect. Consequently I have included this idea in fellow-townsmanship; it in no way takes the place of the bond of country.
[4] I was informed, however, by Dr Griffith that the Mussulmans of Kirman welcomed his coming and the work of the medical mission on the ground that his savabs, being the savabs of an infidel, would be credited not to him but to the account of the Mohammedans of the town, who stood rather sorely in need of them.
[5] This only refers to visits of ceremony. When people found that they could come to my house without notice, I often had a continual succession of visitors throughout the day.
[6] Certainly the Light also operates inside Islam. During the Babi massacre a number of women who had been horrified by the sights in the streets said to my wife, “They say that we can’t be Mussulmans if we mind these things, but cannot these things sicken even Mohammedans?”
[7] The opinion that Persia is changing its religion, or at least its form of Mohammedanism, is not confined to missionary circles.
GLOSSARY
INDEX
- Abbās, 67
- Abu Jahl, 67
- Abu Tālib, Mohammed’s uncle, 67
- Aīvan, 18
- Ali, Imam, 75-77
- Ali Mohammed (Bab), 90, 91
- Anjuman, 49
- Arbāb Jamshīd, a wealthy Parsi at Tehran, 51
- Arches, 16
- Arkhālūq, 45
- Armenian Christians, 58, 107
- Aryan Parsis, 62
- Atmosphere, absence of moisture in, 13
- Bāb, gate of knowledge, 73
- ——, first book-bearer of the Behāīs, founder of the Babi sect, 90, 91
- Babis, the, 79, 86, 88, 91, 94, 108, 177, 187, 193, 212;
- massacre of, 104, 155-157, 186;
- martyrs, 138, 139
- Bād-gīr, 14, 15, 46
- Bāgh, 9-11
- Bazaars, 11
- Behāīs, the, 61, 81;
- massacre of, 44, 52, 87-89, 104;
- tenets of, 86, 90, 92-96, 104, 114
- Behaū’llah, first book-bearer of the Behāīs, 81, 87, 89, 90, 92, 95, 193
- Bigotry, in Yezd, 44
- Bird, Miss, 260
- Boyland, Mr, 261
- Brighty, Miss, 261
- Browne, Professor E. G., translator of the Tārīkhi Jadīd, 91
- Bruce, Canon, 58, 59
- Carpenters, of Yezd, 23
- Carpets, 22
- Caspian Sea, 2
- Chādar, 122
- Chairs, 24
- Church Missionary Intelligencer, 95
- Church Missionary Society, 55, 230, 232
- Cleanliness, of Yezdis, 26
- Converts, problem of, 196-198, 212-215
- Crime, indifference to, 184
- Curtains, 21
- Deserts, salt and sandy, 2, 3
- Dīnyār, Qalāntar of the Parsi Committee, 49
- Divorce, 178
- Dīvs, 121, 122
- Doors, 19, 20
- Etiquette and Manners, of the Yezdis, 158
- European colony, in Yezd, 55
- Evil Eye, 122
- Fanaticism, of Yezdis, 54
- Farrāsh, 47
- Fireplaces, 21
- Fittings of houses, 21
- Flower-beds, 33, 34
- Forgiveness of sins, Mohammed’s teaching on the, 98
- Furniture, 21-26
- Gardens, 9
- Griffith, Dr, 100, 260
- Gudarz, Mr, a prominent Parsi merchant of Yezd, 261
- Gypsum, 17
- Hakim Khānum, lady doctor, 102
- Hanifs, reformers, 65, 66, 68, 70
- Hasan, Imam, 133, 134
- Heaven and Hell, Mussulman idea of, 98, 99
- Hill villages, 31, 32
- Hookahs, Persian, 25
- Houses, 13-33; built for heat, 29, 30
- Husain, Imam, 133, 134
- Huts, mud, 28
- Ibn Ishāk, the biographer, 68
- Ibrāhīm Qalīl Khān, 50
- Imam Ali, 75-77
- —— Hasan, 133, 134
- —— Husain, 133, 134
- Imams, the, 73, 76, 77
- Industrial missions—a suggestion, 197-201
- Infidels, Persian attitude towards, 130
- Insularity, of Yezd, 36
- Isaiah, quoted, 95
- Isfahan, 36
- Isfahanis, and Yezdis, 38
- Isfandiār, a Parsi schoolmaster at Taft, 51
- Islām, doctrine of, 64, 65, 80-82, 96, 97, 110, 132, 133;
- has ruined Persia, 112
- Isolation, of Yezd, 36
- Jadīd, a convert from Parsiism, 62
- Jalālu’d Daula, the, 52, 183
- Jazīya, 47, 49
- Jews, in Yezd, 44, 52;
- Mohammed’s dealings with, 71
- Jins, 121, 122
- Julfa, a suburb of Isfahan, 58
- Jus Paternum, in Yezd, 181
- Ka’aba, a heathen temple of the Meccans, 65
- Kāshān, 7, 43
- Khadīja, wife of Mohammed, 66
- Khalīfs, the, 72, 76
- Khauf u jizā, fear of hell and expectation of heaven, 98
- Kirmān, 7, 36
- Koelle, Life of Mohammed, 67, 68, 71
- Kūcha Biyuk, village, 49
- Kursī, 22, 30
- Lāla, 25
- Lamps, 25
- Language, Persian, 152
- Lāristān, 43
- Lattices, 19
- Ledges, 16
- Looking-glasses, 21
- Lūtīs, 51, 58
- Mahdi, or Mehdi, the last of the Imams, 72, 73, 75
- Mānukjī Limjī, Parsi representative in Tehran, 48, 50
- Manzil, 34
- Marriages, Persian, 178
- Mazra’, 4, 5
- Mecca, 63, 65, 69, 70
- Medical Missions, in Yezd, 55, 229, 248-254
- Medina, 63, 70, 71
- Mihraban, a Parsi, 64
- Miracle play, Muharram, 126, 134
- Missionary in Persia, the, his difficulties, 188-216;
- the problem of converts, 196-198, 212-215;
- his tasks and duties, 217-255;
- philanthropic work, 229-232;
- poor relief, 232-239;
- school and medical work, 239-254
- Missions, Christian, tolerated in Yezd, 55, 56;
- industrial, 197-201
- Mohammed, 63-72, 84, 85, 90, 91, 96, 97, 112, 113, 128, 130;
- his birth, 65;
- his wife, 66;
- head of the Hanif movement, 67;
- his admiration of the Jews, 124
- Mohammedanism, Persian, 60, 64-114;
- aspects in Yezd of, 115-135
- Monogamy, 177, 178
- Mountain streams, 5
- Muballigh, teacher and missionary, 88, 89
- Mud, use of, 12;
- huts of, 28
- Muhammad Hasan Khan, Governor of Yezd, 48
- Muharram, 133
- Mujtahid, 46-48, 56, 58, 73-75, 88
- Mulla Bahrām of Khuramshār, a Parsi, 48
- Munāfiqīn, hypocrites, 80
- Mushīru’l Mamālik, the, 51
- Mussulman v. Armenian morality, 118
- Muzaffaru’d Dīn, Shah, 49
- Nakhl, 134
- Nāsiru’d Dīn, Shah, 48
- Nāsiru’d Dīn, Mulla, and his mule, story of, 149
- Nijāsat, 132
- Non-conformity in Persia, 61
- Oasis, 3, 4
- Omar, Khalīf, 76, 135
- Opium trade, 170
- Ornamentation, of houses, 17
- Paighambarī, 84, 85, 96, 110, 127
- Parsis in Yezd, oppression and persecution of, 44-52
- Pilgrimages, Mussulman, 118, 128
- Plain, a typical Persian, 7
- Polygamy, 177
- Poor relief, 232-239
- Postal arrangements, in Yezd, 36
- Qabā, 45, 48
- Qalāntar, 49
- Qaliān, 25
- Qum, 119
- Qurān, the, 73, 74, 76, 77, 92, 93, 105, 107-109, 119, 120, 124, 130
- Rainfall, 6, 29
- Ramazān, Mohammedan Fast, 78
- Rasht, 43, 233
- Rice, Rev. W. A., 95
- Rustami Ardishīri Dīnyār, a Parsi, 49
- Rūza khānī, 126, 196
- Sahāmu’l Mulk, 51
- Sāhibi kitāb, a book-bearer, Mohammed regarded as the last, 72
- Salāmat, a Parsi, 51
- Salt and sandy deserts, 2, 3
- Saughāts, 162
- Savābs, 98-105
- School work, in Yezd, 239-248
- Seyid, a descendant of Mohammed, 50, 101, 102
- Shaikhi sect, the, 91
- Shahr, a town, 39
- Shiahs, or nonconformists, 60, 73-78, 86, 87, 93-98, 103, 105-109, 124, 128, 134, 177, 212
- Shīrāz, 36, 43
- Silkworms, 233
- Soldiers, Persian, 156
- Streams, mountain, 5
- Subhi Azal, second book-bearer of the Behāīs, 90, 92
- Sufis, sect of the, 86, 108
- Summer buildings, 15, 29
- Sunnat, 73, 74
- Sunnis, and their creed, 63, 72, 74, 77, 80, 94, 106
- Superstition, 121-123
- Tables, 23, 24
- Taft village, 51, 134
- Tālār, summer portico, 14, 15
- Tāqchas, ledges, 16, 24-26
- Taqdīr, 97
- Taqiya, 212
- Tārīkhi Jadīd, 91
- Tauhid, 127
- Taylor, Dr Elsie, 260
- Teheran, 2
- Telegraph line, native, 37
- Tīrandāz, a Parsi, 49
- Tomān, 47
- Trinket boxes, 26
- Turners, of Yezd, 23
- Uncleanness, degrees of, 130-132
- Untruthfulness of Persians, 116, 142
- Vatan, home-district, 39
- Villages, 8;
- hill-, 31, 32
- Walls, house-, 16
- Waraka ibn Nawfal, a prominent Hanif, 66
- Water system, 6
- White, Dr Henry, 204, 260, 261
- Windows, 19, 20
- Winter rooms, 18
- Yailāq, 31
- Yazīd, 134
- Yezd district, houses in, 1-35;
- its isolation and insularity, 36
- Yezdis, and Isfahanis, 38;
- their religion, 111, 120-126;
- character of the, 136-187;
- systematised inconsistency, 137;
- loyalty, 138;
- sense of shame, 147;
- humour, 148;
- their disregard of time, 150;
- difficulties of their language, 152;
- lack of initiative, 154;
- their courage, 155;
- etiquette and manners of, 158;
- their triviality, 160;
- pride, 165, 166;
- kindliness, cruelty, 166;
- dishonesty, 142, 168;
- lack of business habits, 171;
- fatalism, 173;
- latent strength, 176;
- their family ties, 177;
- jus paternum, 181;
- religious liberty, 181-183;
- indifference to crime, 184;
- open-handness, 184
- Zaid, 71
- Zaid ibn Amr, 66
- Zainab, 71
- Zardūshtī (Zoroastrian), 50
- Zillu’s Sultān, 50, 52
- Zoroastrians, in Yezd, 46-53, 113
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