لر ممسنی | |
|---|---|
Mamasani women performing a traditional dance | |
| Regions with significant populations | |
| Parts of Fars province and Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad province | |
| Languages | |
| Mamasani Luri, Persian | |
| Religion | |
| Predominantly Shia Islam | |
| Related ethnic groups | |
| Other Lur tribes |
The Mamasani (Persian: ممسنی، مماسن),[1] also Mam-Hasani or Mohammad-Hosayni,[2][3] are a group of Lur tribes from the historic region of Mamasani in Iran, which was mostly part of Fars province. The Mamasani mainly comprised the tribes of Rostam, Baksh, Javid, and Doshmanziari.[4][5] They speak the Mamasani dialect of Southern Luri.[6]
History
The Mamasani confederation historically included four main tribes, Rustami, Bakash, Javidi (Javi), and Doshmanziari. They had migrated to Lur-e-Bozorg after 1203-04, and towards the end of Safavid rule, they migrated and occupied the ancient Shulestan. The Shul had been driven from Shulestan earlier by Fadlawi.[7]
The Mamasani territory was historically part of Lur-e-Bozorg. After the Safavid era, Lur-e-Bozorg was divided into the regions of Bakhtiari and Kuhgilu. In the 18th century, the Mamasani confederation occupied the historic Shulistan, which became known as Mamasani, becoming the third Lur territory, located between Kuhgilu and Shiraz. The regions of Mamasani and Kuhgilu were both part of the Fars province. The traditional capital of the Mamasani was Fahliyan. Kuhgilu was located to the west of Mamasani.[8] In the broader sense, Mamasani was the region between Kamfiruz, Ardakan, and Shiraz in the east, Razgird and Kuhgiluya in the west, Kazerun in the south, and Gurspid and Marg on the west. Mamasani, initially a less rigidly defined district between Basht and Ardakan, centering on Fahliyan, Qala-ye Sefid, and Nawbandjan, later became the Mamasani County of Fars province.[3]
The name Mamassani was generally considered a contraction of Mohammad-Hosayni, the putative eponymous ancestor of the tribe. Mamasani tribesmen in the early 20th century variously said he came from Arabia, Dashtestan, or Sistan, while those from the Fahliyan section "claim to have come originally from Jebel A’mal in the Hejaz." One of the earliest mentions of the "Memaseni" or "Memasty" dated back to the reign of the Emad al-Din Hazarasp, the atabek of Lorestan, in 1204-29 or 1252, to whom they pledged fealty as an ally. When Hazarasp took possession of Shulestan, he built villages and colonies. However, most sources indicated that the Mamasani migrated at a later date.[9]
Quintus Curtius Rufus mentioned a group called the "Memaceni" while describing Alexander’s campaign in Sogdiana, and while some scholars took them for the ancestors of the later Mamasani, others rejected any association between the two groups and their ethnonym. Frederic Shoberl considered "the tribes of the southern provinces, such as the Bakhtiarees, the Faeelees, and the Mamassounees…the descendants of those savage hordes which dwelt in the same parts in the time of Alexander", although all the other writers have indicated their origin outside of Fars.[10] Although one tradition suggested that the Mamasani were "transplanted" to Shulestan by Nader Shah, Hasan Fasa'i claimed that "during the last years of the Safavis the Lur tribes of Mamassani took possession of Shulistan and renamed the district after themselves." In 1945, some informants claimed that the Mamasani had occupied Shulestan "in the wake of the retreating Afghans before whom the original inhabitants" had fled. Hasan Beg Rumlu suggested an even earlier presence in Fars, mentioning "the leaders of Shulestan, and the Mamaseni", who consisted of 1000 men combined in 1548 during the reign of Shah Tahmasp I. Nevertheless, Shulestan became known as Boluq-e Mamasani, although in 1891, the name Shulestan was still used for the Mamasani region. The Mamasani provided tofangchis to Shah Abbas I during the war with the Ottomans. In 1671, Malek Mohammad served as the "minbashi-ye Mamasani", commander of 1,000 Mamasani soldiers, under Mortezaqoli Khan, the governor of Bandar Abbas, in his campaign against Kech-Makran. The Tohfa-ye Shahi, a register of tax obligations compiled in 1715/16 by Mirza Mohammad Hosayn, a treasurer during the later years of the reign of Shah Soltan Hosayn, listed the Mamasani as one of the divisions of the Lurs, calling them "vicious people, thieves and highwaymen." In 1786-87, Mohammad Khan Zand led a punitive mission against the Mamasani, and the following year Mohammad Khan, the paternal uncle of Lotf-Ali Khan, sought refuge with the Mamasani as his mother was a Mamasani. A decade later, the "Mumsany, one of the Farsi tribes", attacked Mohammad Khan Zand.[11]
In 1918, the Bakash tribe of the Mamasani included the clans of Karai, Alivand, Babar Salar, Babar Dangehi, Hezar-o-Si, Shir Espari, Ali Lor Amiri, Sheikh Shahru, Gojar, Pir-al-Dini, Ali Hemmati, Khalafi, Zayn-al-Dini, Atuni, Barmaki, and Shirmard, altogether numbering 1200 families. The Javidi tribe included the clans of Khalifa Harun, Javi Do Dungeh, Musa Arabi, Ahmad Harun, Salari, Laleh, Khas, Zir Zardi, Kira, Mehrengun, Madui, Amui, Goja, Mal Qaid, Jogun, Pir Hasan Abdullah, and Surnabadi, altogether numbering 700 families. The Rostam tribe included the clans of Shah Hasani, Masiri, Bageri, Zameni, Behyari, Mangudarz, Shahjahan Ahmadi and Ghului, Dehnani, Uruji, Giveh Kesh, Dehtuti, Pehrin, Tugak, Gol Bakun, Tirazgun, Surneh, Bardengan, and Dashti, altogether numbering 800 families.[12] They spoke the Mamasani dialect of the Boyer-Ahmadi group of Southern Luri.[13]
In 1945, the Mamasani consisted of four divisions, the Rostam, Bakash, Javidi, and Fahliyan. By this time, the Doshmanziari, who were considered Mamasani in 1910, were no longer considered part of the confederation.[14] The Doshmanziari of the Mamasani confederation was a separate tribe from the Doshmanziari of the Kohgiluyeh confederation.[15] Moreover, most of the tribe became sedentary agriculturalists. By the late 1990s, out of the total provincial population of Mamasani, estimated at over 200,000, only 20,000 were nomadic.[16]
In 1921, the armed strength of the Mamasani was about 2000 riflemen and 230 cavalry. Throughout the 1920s, the Mamasani were involved in a conflict with the Pahlavi government. Even after the government crackdown on the region, the Mamasani rebelled in 1928, and joined a broader tribal rebellion in 1929. After the region was pacified in 1934, the Boyer-Ahmadi and Mamasani lands were "occupied by military posts and these tribes were increasingly divided up into small sections." In 1962-63, the Mamasani joined a large number of tribes in a rebellion against the government. The rebellion was quickly suppressed.[17]
There was also a Brahui-speaking tribe known as Mohammad Hasani or "Mamasani Baluch" of Zabol, and a tribe known as Duzdap Mamasani of Sistan, as well as a Kurdish tribe called Mamasani belonging to the Surchi confederation. However, their relation to the Mamasani Lurs were unclear.[18]
References
- مقاله علمی مقدمهای تاریخی بر مردمشناسی ایل مَماسَن (ممسنی)، ص 303، جلال یوسفی، نامه انسانشناسی، سال نوزدهم، شماره 35، پاییز و زمستان 1401، ص 305-335.
- "ʿAŠĀYER". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2026-05-30.
- "MAMASSANI". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2026-05-30.
- Minorsky, V. (1986). "Lur". In Bosworth, C. E.; van Donzel, E.; Lewis, B. & Pellat, Ch. (eds.). The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Volume V: Khe–Mahi. Leiden: E. J. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-07819-2.
- Minorsky, V. (1986). "Luristān". In Bosworth, C. E.; van Donzel, E.; Lewis, B. & Pellat, Ch. (eds.). The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Volume V: Khe–Mahi. Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 829–832. ISBN 978-90-04-07819-2.
- "LORI LANGUAGE ii. Sociolinguistic Status of Lori". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2026-06-03.
- Minorsky, V. (1986). "Lur". In Bosworth, C. E.; van Donzel, E.; Lewis, B. & Pellat, Ch. (eds.). The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Volume V: Khe–Mahi. Leiden: E. J. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-07819-2.
- Minorsky, V. (1986). "Luristān". In Bosworth, C. E.; van Donzel, E.; Lewis, B. & Pellat, Ch. (eds.). The Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Volume V: Khe–Mahi. Leiden: E. J. Brill. pp. 829–832. ISBN 978-90-04-07819-2.
- "MAMASSANI". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2026-05-30.
- "MAMASSANI". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2026-05-30.
- "MAMASSANI". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2026-05-30.
- "MAMASSANI". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2026-05-30.
- "LORI LANGUAGE i. LORI DIALECTS". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2026-05-30.
- "MAMASSANI". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2026-05-30.
- "DOŠMANZĪĀRĪ". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2026-05-30.
- "MAMASSANI". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2026-05-30.
- "MAMASSANI". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2026-05-30.
- "MAMASSANI". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 2026-05-30.