Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Social and Political Transformations in the Timurid Period, with a Focus on the Structure of Power under Shāhrukh Mirzā

View through CrossRef
The Timurid period, particularly during the reign of Shāhrukh Mirzā, was marked by a profound transformation in the understanding and exercise of power. In the historiography of the Timurid dynasty, Timur is commonly depicted as the founder of a militaristic and authoritarian form of rule, one that relied on continuous and often ruthless conquests to establish a conception of sovereignty grounded in coercion and personal authority. However, with the accession of Shāhrukh Mirzā to power, a more nuanced perception of the tension between physical and symbolic forms of power emerged, prompting a shift in the structure of governance from predominantly military models toward bureaucracy, institutionalization, and cultural rationality. The principal objective of this study is to demonstrate how, during the reign of Shāhrukh Mirzā, power evolved from a physical and person-centered phenomenon into a structured, rational, and institution-based system, and was subsequently redefined as a cultural and intellectual construct. Employing a descriptive–analytical methodology and drawing on library-based sources, court historiographies, administrative records, and the cultural and architectural productions of the period, this research offers a renewed examination of transformations in power within the Timurid political order. The findings indicate that under Shāhrukh Mirzā, the model of governance shifted from an emphasis on military dominance toward bureaucratic administration and the active participation of cultural and religious elites. Furthermore, the role of women—most notably exemplified by Gawhar Shād Begum—attained a level of managerial and political influence that can be understood as a reconfiguration, and indeed a reconstruction, of prevailing forms of governance. Ultimately, by foregrounding knowledge and culture, Shāhrukh Mirzā relocated power from the realm of coercion to that of thought, rendering it a rational, meaning-laden, and structured phenomenon.
Title: Social and Political Transformations in the Timurid Period, with a Focus on the Structure of Power under Shāhrukh Mirzā
Description:
The Timurid period, particularly during the reign of Shāhrukh Mirzā, was marked by a profound transformation in the understanding and exercise of power.
In the historiography of the Timurid dynasty, Timur is commonly depicted as the founder of a militaristic and authoritarian form of rule, one that relied on continuous and often ruthless conquests to establish a conception of sovereignty grounded in coercion and personal authority.
However, with the accession of Shāhrukh Mirzā to power, a more nuanced perception of the tension between physical and symbolic forms of power emerged, prompting a shift in the structure of governance from predominantly military models toward bureaucracy, institutionalization, and cultural rationality.
The principal objective of this study is to demonstrate how, during the reign of Shāhrukh Mirzā, power evolved from a physical and person-centered phenomenon into a structured, rational, and institution-based system, and was subsequently redefined as a cultural and intellectual construct.
Employing a descriptive–analytical methodology and drawing on library-based sources, court historiographies, administrative records, and the cultural and architectural productions of the period, this research offers a renewed examination of transformations in power within the Timurid political order.
The findings indicate that under Shāhrukh Mirzā, the model of governance shifted from an emphasis on military dominance toward bureaucratic administration and the active participation of cultural and religious elites.
Furthermore, the role of women—most notably exemplified by Gawhar Shād Begum—attained a level of managerial and political influence that can be understood as a reconfiguration, and indeed a reconstruction, of prevailing forms of governance.
Ultimately, by foregrounding knowledge and culture, Shāhrukh Mirzā relocated power from the realm of coercion to that of thought, rendering it a rational, meaning-laden, and structured phenomenon.

Related Results

MILITARY AND POLITICAL ACTIVITY OF MIRANSHAH IBN TIMUR (1366-1408)
MILITARY AND POLITICAL ACTIVITY OF MIRANSHAH IBN TIMUR (1366-1408)
The article explores the military-political activity of Miranshah ibn Timur (1366-1408), the son of the emir Timur and the statesman of the Timurid Empire. The author considers the...
Mazzinianesimo, fascismo, comunismo: l'itinerario politico di Delio Cantimori (1919-1943)
Mazzinianesimo, fascismo, comunismo: l'itinerario politico di Delio Cantimori (1919-1943)
Delio Cantimori (1904-1966) was one of the most important Italian historians of the twentieth century. His studies on sixteenth-century religious history, on Italian 'Jacobinism' a...
Responsibilised Resilience? Reworking Neoliberal Social Policy Texts
Responsibilised Resilience? Reworking Neoliberal Social Policy Texts
Introduction This essay begins with the premise that resilience, broadly defined as positive adaptation despite adversity (Garmezy and Rutter), and resilience building are importa...
THE ROLE OF WOMEN IN NAVOI'S LITERARY UNIVERSE A REFLECTION OF TIMURID SOCIETY AND IDEALS
THE ROLE OF WOMEN IN NAVOI'S LITERARY UNIVERSE A REFLECTION OF TIMURID SOCIETY AND IDEALS
Alisher Navoi, a seminal figure of the Timurid Renaissance, offers a literary universe where women play a critical role in reflecting and shaping societal and philosophical ideals....
ON THE AUTHORSHIP OF THE “SONGS OF MIRZA SHAFI”: IN THE CONTEXT OF THE PHILOSOPHICAL CONFESSIONS OF BUSTAN EFENDI
ON THE AUTHORSHIP OF THE “SONGS OF MIRZA SHAFI”: IN THE CONTEXT OF THE PHILOSOPHICAL CONFESSIONS OF BUSTAN EFENDI
It is a rare phenomenon when two different authors who lived at the same time are always remembered at the same time years later. Considering that these authors represent completel...

Back to Top