Persia in Revolution : With Notes of Travel in the Caucasus

Contributor(s): Material type: TextTextSubject(s): Abstract: "Zerin Tay (sic), the poetess of Babism, an emancipated Persian lady, was born in Kasvin." "...we have taken no account of the religious movement, called Babism, with which we did not come into contact. The rise of this native religious movement is, however, the most interesting circumstance of Persian history in the nineteenth century, as its growth and influence will probably be in the twentieth. Babism is, we are assured, indirectly connected with the modern political aspirations of the country."
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title.
No physical items for this record

-

-

"Zerin Tay (sic), the poetess of Babism, an emancipated Persian lady, was born in Kasvin." "...we have taken no account of the religious movement, called Babism, with which we did not come into contact. The rise of this native religious movement is, however, the most interesting circumstance of Persian history in the nineteenth century, as its growth and influence will probably be in the twentieth. Babism is, we are assured, indirectly connected with the modern political aspirations of the country."

Powered by Koha