Pp. 273-303,
with the pedigree of the Ruling Family of the Feili Lurs (Pusht-i-Kuh), p.
278. - H. C.] This was divided into two principalities, Great Lur and
Little Lur, distinctions still existing. The former was ruled by a Dynasty
called the Fasluyah Atabegs, which endured from about 1155 to 1424,
[when it was destroyed by the Timurids; it was a Kurd Dynasty, founded by
Emad ed-din Abu Thaher (1160-1228), and the last prince of which was
Ghiyas ed-din (1424). In 1258 the general Kitubuka (Hulagu's Exp. to
Persia, Bretschneider, Med. Res. I. p. 121) is reported to have reduced
the country of Lur or Luristan and its Atabeg Teghele. - H. C.]. Their
territory lay in the mountainous district immediately west of Ispahan, and
extended to the River of Dizful, which parted it from Little Lur. The
stronghold of the Atabegs was the extraordinary hill fort of Mungasht, and
they had a residence also at Aidhej or Mal-Amir in the mountains south of
Shushan, where Ibn Batuta visited the reigning Prince in 1327. Sir H.
Rawlinson has described Mungasht, and Mr. Layard and Baron de Bode have
visited other parts, but the country is still very imperfectly known.
Little Luristan lay west of the R. Dizful, extending nearly to the Plain
of Babylonia. Its Dynasty, called Kurshid, [was founded in 1184 by the
Kurd Shodja ed-din Khurshid, and existed till Shah-Werdy lost his throne
in 1593. - H. C.].
The Lurs are akin to the Kurds, and speak a Kurd dialect, as do all those
Ilyats, or nomads of Persia, who are not of Turkish race. They were noted
in the Middle Ages for their agility and their dexterity in thieving. The
tribes of Little Lur "do not affect the slightest veneration for Mahomed
or the Koran; their only general object of worship is their great Saint
Baba Buzurg," and particular disciples regard with reverence little short
of adoration holy men looked on as living representatives of the Divinity.
(Ilchan. I. 70 seqq.; Rawlinson in J. R. G. S. IX.; Layard in
Do. XVI. 75, 94; Ld. Strangford in J. R. A. S. XX. 64; N. et E.
XIII. i. 330, I. B. II. 31; D'Ohsson, IV. 171-172.)
IV. SHULISTAN, best represented by Ramusio's Suolstan, whilst the old
French texts have Cielstan (i.e. Shelstan); the name applied to the
country of the Shuls, or Shauls, a people who long occupied a part of
Luristan, but were expelled by the Lurs in the 12th century, and settled
in the country between Shiraz and Khuzistan (now that of the Mamaseni,
whom Colonel Pelly's information identifies with the Shuls), their central
points being Naobanjan and the fortress called Kala' Safed or "White
Castle." Ibn Batuta, going from Shiraz to Kazerun, encamped the first day
in the country of the Shuls, "a Persian desert tribe which includes some
pious persons." (Q. R. p. 385; N. et E. XIII.
Enter page number
PreviousNext
Page 271 of 655
Words from 141687 to 142188
of 342071