by Caskhades » Tue Sep 28, 2010 9:09 pm
I was amused enough by the exchange to dig up my copy of "The Cambridge history of Iran: From Nadir Shah to the Islamic Republic"
-Willam Fisher, Peter Avery, Gavin Hambly, and Charles Melville
p. 583:
"Eighteen and nineteenth century Iran [...] remained a slave owning and slave-importing society. Slaves reached Iran from several directions: from across the Aras river, from across the frontier with the vilayat of Baghdad, and by way of the Persian Gulf. Christian Armenians and Georgians from the Caucasus region were brought back in border forayes. After the sack of Tiflis in 1795, Agha Muhammad Khan is said to have carried off 15,000 Georgians into slavery, mainly women and children. The women became household slaves, while the more attractive were placed in the harems of the nobility. Young males were frequently castrated. [...] The abducting of women across the border continued throughout the 19th century.
Apart form Caucasian Christians, most slaves in Iran were of African origin. There were used mostly as forced agricultural workers in the south, and especially in the date plantations of the garmsir.
Wyrd bið ful aræd