The Safavid shah of Iran, Abbas I …

Years: 1540 - 1683

The Safavid shah of Iran, Abbas I (1587-1629), is the ruler most affected by the rise of Portuguese power.

The shaykh of Hormuz, during the time he possesses effective control over gulf ports, continues to pay lip service and tribute to the Safavid shah, but when the Portuguese arrive, they force the shaykh to pay tribute to them.

The shah can do little because Iran is too weak to challenge the Portuguese.

For this the shah requires another European power; he therefore invites the English and the Dutch to drive the Portuguese out of the gulf, in return for half the revenues from Iranian ports.

Both countries respond to the shah's offer, but it is England that proves the most helpful.

In 1622 the English, along with some of the shah's forces, attack Hormuz and drive the Portuguese out of their trading center there.

Initially, the Dutch cooperate with the English, but the two European powers will eventually became rivals for access to the Iranian market.

The English won and by the beginning of the nineteenth century will become the major power in the gulf.

Struggles between Iranians and Europeans contribute to a power vacuum along the coast of Oman.

The English attacks on the Portuguese coincide with the rise of the Yarubid line of Ibadi imams in the interior of Oman.

The Yarubids take advantage of Portuguese preoccupation with naval battles on the Iranian side of the gulf and conquer the coastal cities of Oman around 1650.

The imams move into the old Portuguese stronghold of Muscat and so bring the Omani coast and interior under unified Ibadi control for the first time in almost a thousand years.

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