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The Arab-Islamic Conquest and Forced Migrations

Last modified: December 21, 2024
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Estimated reading time: 12 min

The 7th-century Arab-Islamic conquest of Persia was an epoch-making event that altered the political, religious, and social landscapes of the Iranian plateau and beyond. In the wake of this conquest, the Sasanian Empire (224–651 CE), the last pre-Islamic Iranian empire, rapidly dissolved, and a new order emerged under the Rashidun and Umayyad caliphates. The ensuing centuries witnessed a dramatic decline of Zoroastrian dominance, the spread of Islam across West, Central, and South Asia, and the forced or voluntary migrations of Persian-speaking populations to lands as far as Central Asia and the Indian subcontinent. Simultaneously, these upheavals provided fertile ground for cultural synthesis—a process epitomized by the integration of Persian bureaucrats, scholars, and artisans under the Abbasid caliphate (750–1258 CE), headquartered in Baghdad.

In this article, we explore the Arab-Islamic Conquest of Persia by focusing on how and why Zoroastrian religious primacy declined, how Islam expanded across the Iranian world, and the ways in which populations sought refuge or formed diasporas in neighboring regions such as Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, and Tajikistan. A particular emphasis is placed on the Bukharan Jewish community, a Persian-speaking Jewish diaspora that thrived in Central Asia and maintained a distinct but intertwined identity with Persian culture. Finally, we investigate the role of Persian culture in emerging caliphates, highlighting the significant contributions of Persian bureaucrats, scholars, and artisans—culminating in a robust Perso-Islamic civilization under Abbasid leadership.

Throughout, we incorporate recent historiography alongside traditional sources to present a comprehensive, updated narrative of one of the most transformative periods in Iran’s long history.

(For brevity, all approximate dates conform to established academic conventions, and transliterations adhere to widely accepted forms. In-text citations follow the author-date system.)


The Arab-Islamic Conquest of Persia in the 7th Century CE

The Sasanian Context on the Eve of the Conquest

By the early 7th century CE, the Sasanian Empire had dominated the Iranian plateau and its surrounding regions since 224 CE, following the overthrow of the Parthian (Arsacid) dynasty (Daryaee 2008, 11). Under powerful monarchs such as Shapur I (r. 240–270) and later Khosrow I Anushirvan (r. 531–579), the Sasanians built a centralized imperial structure, championed Zoroastrianism as the state religion, and competed fiercely with the Byzantine Empire in the west (Frye 1983, 132). Despite their cultural and administrative achievements—including majestic cities like Ctesiphon—the Sasanians faced internal strife, especially after Khosrow II (r. 590–628) launched protracted wars against Byzantium (Howard-Johnston 2006, 123). These conflicts left the empire economically drained, politically destabilized, and militarily exhausted.

Further compounding the empire’s vulnerabilities were social grievances and sectarian tensions. Some Christians, Jews, and other religious minorities within Sasanian domains faced persecution or second-class status, though these policies varied with the changing fortunes of the imperial court (Morony 2004, 61). Meanwhile, the Zoroastrian clergy (magi), firmly entwined with the monarchy, often wielded immense political influence but alienated non-Zoroastrian communities. The result was a religiously fragmented empire poised for seismic changes.

Early Muslim Raids and Decisive Battles

The Arab-Islamic conquest began modestly after the death of Prophet Muhammad in 632 CE, as the Rashidun Caliphs (632–661) sought to extend Islamic governance into neighboring territories (Donner 1981, 75). Under Caliph Abu Bakr (r. 632–634) and later Caliph Umar (r. 634–644), small contingents of Arab-Muslim forces launched raids along the Sasanian frontier, initially focused on Mesopotamia (Iraq). Several key confrontations swiftly followed:

  1. Battle of Qadisiyyah (circa 636/637 CE): Often cited as the pivotal engagement for the conquest of the Iranian heartland, Qadisiyyah saw Arab forces triumph over a larger Sasanian army, largely due to superior mobility, the exploitation of disorganized Sasanian leadership, and possible local disaffection with the ruling elite (Kennedy 2016, 50).
  2. Fall of Ctesiphon (637 CE): The Sasanian imperial capital, Ctesiphon—south of modern-day Baghdad—fell soon after Qadisiyyah. Its capture not only delivered the administrative and symbolic center of the empire to Arab-Muslim rule, but also opened the Tigris-Euphrates region to further incursions (Frye 1983, 155).
  3. Battles of Jalula and Nihavand (642 CE): The confrontation at Nihavand, often termed the “Victory of Victories,” sealed the fate of the Sasanian Empire, sending waves of demoralization through Persian ranks (Daryaee 2008, 54). Sasanian monarch Yazdegerd III retreated eastward, attempting to preserve imperial rule from more distant provinces, but the empire effectively collapsed.

These decisive battles illustrated the synergy between Arab-Muslim military tactics and pre-existing vulnerabilities within the Sasanian system.

Factors Behind the Conquest’s Success

Multiple factors converged to facilitate the Arab conquest of Persia:

  • Exhaustion from Wars: Repeated Byzantine-Sasanian conflicts left the empire militarily overstretched, with heavy casualties, reduced resources, and fractious internal politics (Pourshariati 2008, 209).
  • Local Disaffections: Certain religious or ethnic groups, especially non-Zoroastrian or lower-status populations, viewed Arab-Muslim rule as a relief from the burdensome taxes and potential persecution of the Sasanian clergy (Shahbazi 2005, 40).
  • Economics and Diplomacy: Arab-Muslim forces often adopted pragmatic strategies, offering tributes, partial autonomy, or negotiated treaties (amān) to local rulers, thus reducing immediate resistance (Donner 1981, 82).
  • Religious Fervor: Many early Muslim commanders were deeply motivated by the call to spread Islam, forging cohesive fighting forces under charismatic leadership (Kennedy 2016, 61).

In total, these factors combined to produce a swift, comprehensive transformation—one that toppled the once-mighty Sasanian Empire within a span of roughly two decades.


Decline of Zoroastrian Dominance and the Spread of Islam

The Gradual Decline of State-Sponsored Zoroastrianism

Zoroastrianism had enjoyed state patronage under the Sasanians, with fire temples built or refurbished across the empire and a close partnership between the magi and the monarchy. However, in the post-conquest period, this status began to erode:

  1. Loss of Royal Patronage: With Yazdegerd III unable to rally a coherent Sasanian restoration, the institutional pillars of Zoroastrian authority gradually disintegrated, depriving the clergy of political protection (Boyce 1979, 128).
  2. Islamic Governance: Under Arab-Muslim rule, Zoroastrians were initially recognized as ahl al-dhimma (protected people) in some regions, paying jizya (a non-Muslim poll tax) in exchange for security. However, legal privileges once enjoyed by Zoroastrian priests dwindled (Morony 2004, 117).
  3. Conversions: Over the following centuries, social incentives, tax burdens, and sometimes sporadic persecution encouraged many Zoroastrians to convert to Islam. Although forced mass conversions were not the universal norm, the gradual assimilation of Zoroastrians into the Islamic milieu was a major demographic shift (Bulliet 1979, 146).

While certain rural districts in Fars, Kerman, and Sistan maintained Zoroastrian communities—some of which survive to this day—the religion never again occupied the central pedestal it had under the Sasanians (Choksy 1997, 89).

Emergence and Spread of Islam in the Iranian World

Islam arrived not merely as a foreign conquest but as a belief system that, over centuries, integrated with and adapted to Persian cultural frameworks:

  1. Arab-Muslim Settlement: Following the initial military victories, Arab tribes settled in Kufa, Basra, and later in Iranian provincial centers, bringing new administrative structures and mosques (Donner 1981, 120). This started a process by which local Persian notables and bureaucrats interacted with Arab garrison towns, fostering mutual exchange.
  2. Persian Linguistic and Cultural Continuities: Despite the Arab conquests, Middle Persian (Pahlavi) and local dialects persisted widely, and many Persian elites learned Arabic for upward mobility within the new caliphate (Shahbazi 2005, 49). Over time, the fusion of Arabic and Persian linguistic elements produced a robust bilingual culture, particularly evident in eastern Iran and Transoxiana.
  3. Conversion Patterns: Conversion to Islam often occurred gradually, influenced by socio-economic incentives—like lower taxes for Muslims—and the integration of local elites into the Islamic administrative apparatus (Bulliet 1979, 153). Moreover, Sufi movements, which drew upon Persian spirituality and mysticism, played an essential role in popularizing Islam among rural and mountainous populations (Arberry 2008, 96).

By the 9th and 10th centuries CE, Persian-speaking Islamic polities such as the Samanids (819–999 CE) rose in Transoxiana, representing a powerful synergy of Islamic governance with resurgent Persian cultural identity (Bosworth 1993, 312).


Refuge, Resistance, and the Formation of Diasporas in Central Asia

Fleeing Populations: Motives and Modes of Migration

In the immediate decades following the Arab-Muslim conquest, not all communities accepted the new order. Many Zoroastrians, nobles, and other groups fled eastward—into remote regions of the Iranian plateau (like Tabaristan) or beyond the Oxus River (Amu Darya) into Central Asia (Pourshariati 2008, 224). Key motives included:

  • Desire to Preserve Religion: Pockets of devout Zoroastrian clergy and lay followers sought to escape taxes, assimilation pressures, or potential violence, traveling to more distant lands (Boyce 1979, 140).
  • Political Ambitions: Some remnants of the Sasanian nobility envisioned forging alliances with local rulers in Tokharistan or beyond, hoping to mount a counter-offensive to reclaim southwestern territories (Daryaee 2008, 68).
  • Economic Prospects: Central Asia offered new commercial routes connected to the Silk Road. Persian merchants, artisans, and intellectuals found Transoxiana to be a prosperous region for trade and patronage (Grenet 2006, 447).

The “Refuge” Paradigm: Central Asia as a Haven

Central Asia—encompassing Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan, and parts of Kazakhstan—became a vital haven for populations fleeing the unsettled conditions of southwestern Iran and Mesopotamia. Key sub-regions:

  1. Khwarezm (Chorasmia) and Bactria: These zones, with deep Iranian influences predating the Achaemenids, welcomed new waves of Persian-speaking refugees. Local polities balanced nominal recognition of Arab suzerainty with internal autonomy, thus fostering enclaves where Iranian mores persisted (Frye 1984, 71).
  2. Sogdiana (centered around Samarkand and Bukhara): Already a major hub of Iranian civilization, Sogdiana had a well-established tradition of city-states, mercantile networks, and cross-cultural interactions. Refugees from southern Iran integrated with existing Sogdian elites (Grenet 2006, 449).
  3. Farghana Valley: Geographically more isolated, it attracted smaller bands of Iranian emigrants, many of whom strove to maintain Persian or Zoroastrian identity in new enclaves.

Establishment of Persian-Speaking Communities in Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan

From the 8th to the 10th centuries, Uzbekistan (especially Bukhara, Samarkand), Turkmenistan (Merv, Nishapur region), and Tajikistan (the upper Oxus territories) saw the flourishing of Persian-speaking communities:

  • Merv in present-day Turkmenistan had served as a Sasanian administrative center; post-conquest, it attracted Iranian settlers who developed vibrant intellectual and religious circles (Gibb 1923, 36).
  • Bukhara and Samarkand in Uzbekistan became epicenters of Persian culture, partly due to the supportive environment of local dynasties and the synergy with Sogdian commercial networks (Bosworth 1993, 313).
  • Tajikistan (the historical region of Khuttal, Badakhshan, etc.) was more mountainous and peripheral, yet these areas offered relative autonomy where Iranian refugees could regroup and preserve cultural traditions (Spooner 2018, 4).

Such diaspora formations maintained a distinctly Persian cultural identity while also adapting to local Iranian dialects (Sogdian, Khwarezmian) and gradually embracing Islam, especially once local dynasties like the Samanids championed Persian-Islamic synergy (Shamsuddinov 2006, 189).


Case Study: Bukharan Jews

Historical Background of the Bukharan Jewish Community

Among the myriad diaspora communities that crystallized in Central Asia, the Bukharan Jews stand out as a compelling example of intertwined identities and cultural exchange. This community, centered in and around the city of Bukhara (in modern Uzbekistan), claims origins that may trace back to the medieval or early Islamic eras, when Jewish merchants from Persia and Mesopotamia settled in the region (Ben-Dor Benite 2009, 215). Over time, these Jewish families intermingled with Persian-speaking and Turkic communities, acquiring local linguistic and cultural elements.

  1. Legends of Origin: Some local traditions suggest an even earlier presence, linking Bukharan Jews to the “Lost Tribes of Israel” or to exiles from the time of the Babylonian captivity. However, historical evidence strongly indicates that significant expansions of Jewish settlement coincided with major Persian migrations, especially from the 8th century onward (Baramidze 2020, 99).
  2. Language and Culture: Bukharan Jews predominantly spoke a dialect of Judeo-Persian, evolving eventually into a more localized variant often called Bukhori, which blended classical Persian structure with Hebrew and local lexical influences (Salahshour 2003, 194). Over centuries, many also became fluent in Chagatai or Uzbek, reflecting the multi-lingual environment of the region (Levy 1999, 45).

Intertwined Identities and Cultural Exchange

Bukharan Jews exhibit the cultural tapestry arising from centuries of Persian-Islamic interplay:

  • Religious Observances: They maintained Jewish religious traditions, observing holidays like Passover and Sukkot, while adopting local customs regarding food, dress, and even wedding ceremonies (Manashe 2016, 58).
  • Architecture and Neighborhoods: In Bukhara, Jewish quarters (maḥallas) were often adjacent to Muslim neighborhoods, sharing street layouts and architectural motifs. Houses were designed with interior courtyards reflective of Persian-influenced city planning (Ben-Dor Benite 2009, 217).
  • Artistic Synthesis: Musical traditions of Bukharan Jews, often dubbed the “Shashmaqam,” combined Persian classical scales with Hebrew liturgical elements, producing a unique cultural form recognized across Central Asia (Fathi 1997, 105).

Economic Roles and Cross-Regional Contacts

Historically, Bukharan Jews played significant roles as merchants, artisans, and at times diplomatic intermediaries:

  • Merchant Networks: Operating along branches of the Silk Road, they facilitated commerce between Persia, Russia, and China, dealing in textiles, spices, precious metals, and occasionally slaves (Salahshour 2003, 196).
  • Patron-Client Ties: Some Jewish families served in the courts of local emirs in Bukhara and Samarkand, offering financial expertise or craftsmanship (Levy 1999, 46).
  • Diasporic Hubs: As religious minorities under Muslim khanates, Bukharan Jews sometimes faced extra taxes or discriminatory rules but also found spaces of relative protection by forging alliances with local authorities who valued their economic skills (Manashe 2016, 64).

Persistence and Modern Trajectories

Across centuries, Bukharan Jews preserved Persian linguistic heritage while coexisting in a predominantly Sunni Muslim environment. In modern times (19th–20th centuries), waves of migration took many Bukharan Jews to the Russian Empire’s urban centers, Israel, and the United States—shifting the diaspora once again (Baramidze 2020, 111). Despite these movements, collective memory of a Persianate Jewish identity remains a hallmark of Bukharan Jewish communities worldwide.


The Role of Persian Culture in Emerging Caliphates

Persian Influence Under the Rashidun and Umayyads (7th–8th Centuries)

As Arab-Muslim forces consolidated power, they encountered sophisticated Persian administrative traditions. Even in the early years, certain Persian notables, scribes, and local dynasts collaborated with the conquerors, forming a new synergy:

  • Provincial Administration: The Arab conquerors recognized the utility of Persian scribal practices (diwan) and bureaucratic structures for tax collection. Over time, Persians trained in the Sasanian system of finance and governance became indispensable to nascent Muslim provincial administrations (Morony 2004, 155).
  • Language Issues: Initially, Arabic was the new empire’s religious and administrative language, but Persian continued to flourish, particularly in the eastern provinces (Choksy 1997, 112). By the mid-8th century, Persian elites had begun adopting Islam, setting the stage for deeper cultural fusion.

The Abbasid Revolution (750 CE) and Persian Ascendancy

A watershed moment for Persian influence occurred with the Abbasid Revolution (746–750 CE), which toppled the Umayyad dynasty. The Abbasids, backed by Persian and other eastern Muslim forces, moved the capital from Damascus to Baghdad (founded in 762 CE):

  1. Baghdad as a Melting Pot: Conceived partly by Persian engineers, Baghdad was strategically located near the old Sasanian capital region. Its cosmopolitan environment attracted Persian families, merchants, scholars, and craftsmen from across Khorasan and beyond (Kennedy 2004, 170).
  2. Barmakid Family and Bureaucratic Elites: One emblematic example was the Barmakids, a Persian family from Balkh, who became powerful viziers under early Abbasid caliphs like al-Mansur and Harun al-Rashid (Frye 1984, 219). Their prominence exemplified how Persian aristocratic culture, administrative genius, and courtly etiquette permeated the heart of the caliphate.

Integration of Persian Bureaucrats, Scholars, and Artisans

Under the Abbasids, the synergy of Islamic governance and Persian heritage blossomed into a vibrant, transregional civilization sometimes called the “Perso-Islamic” or “Iranian Intermezzo” in historical literature (Bosworth 1993, 314). Key dimensions:

  1. Administrative and Political Contributions
    • Diwan al-Kharaj (tax bureau): Abbasid caliphs relied on Persian bureaucrats to systematize taxation, land records, and revenue. Their familiarity with Sasanian models of governance proved essential (Kennedy 2004, 172).
    • Vizierate: The position of vizier (chief minister) often fell to Persian or Persianized families, whose skills in statecraft dated back to Sasanian antecedents (Shahbazi 2005, 81).
  2. Scholarly and Intellectual Flourishing
    • Translation Movement: During the 8th–10th centuries, numerous Greek, Syriac, and Sanskrit works were translated into Arabic. Persian scholars like Ibn al-Muqaffa‘ played a pivotal role, bridging Persian literary forms and Arabic philosophical discourse (Gutas 1998, 53).
    • Science and Philosophy: Figures such as al-Khwarizmi (a Persian mathematician in the 9th century) made seminal contributions to algebra, astronomy, and geography under Abbasid patronage. Persian polymaths integrated Hellenistic knowledge with local insights, propelling the “Islamic Golden Age” (Kennedy 2004, 178).
  3. Artistic and Cultural Synthesis
    • Architecture: Persian building techniques, including the use of iwans and domes reminiscent of Sasanian palaces, influenced Abbasid architecture (Ettinghausen et al. 2001, 66).
    • Literature: Although written in Arabic, many early Abbasid court poets and scribes hailed from Persia. Over time, the blossoming of New Persian literature in the 10th century under dynasties like the Samanids, Ghaznavids, and Buyids further exemplified the enduring Persian imprint within the Islamic world (Yarshater 1983, 94).

Consequences for Identity and Power Dynamics

This extensive integration of Persian elites in the Abbasid order helped shape a new, hybrid identity: Muslim in faith yet strongly Persian in cultural and intellectual orientations. In the centuries that followed, Persianate courts proliferated across Iran and Central Asia, from the Samanids to the Timurids, each carrying forward a legacy that fused the caliphate’s Islam with the aesthetic, literary, and administrative hallmarks of Iranian civilization.


The Arab-Islamic conquest of Persia, while initially marked by military subjugation and the decline of Zoroastrian power, ultimately yielded a dynamic cultural renaissance. The forced migrations of Persian-speaking communities—whether Zoroastrian refugees, noble families in flight, or disenfranchised groups—established fresh diasporas in Central Asia (Uzbekistan, Turkmenistan, Tajikistan). Over centuries, these diasporas created new cultural mosaics that kept vestiges of Sasanian traditions alive while also engaging with emergent Islamic norms.

The Case of the Bukharan Jews underscores how deep-rooted Persian culture transcended religious boundaries. Their sustained presence in Bukhara, speaking dialects of Persian, weaving Jewish religious practices with local traditions, and participating in Silk Road commerce, highlights the multilayered complexity of diaspora identity in post-Sasanian Asia.

Concurrently, the integration of Persian bureaucrats, scholars, and artisans in the evolving caliphates, especially under the Abbasids in Baghdad, triggered a Perso-Islamic cultural synthesis. This synergy seeded the Islamic Golden Age, fueling advancements in science, philosophy, art, and administration. Persian identity, though reshaped by Islam, became an integral driver of the caliphate’s prestige and intellectual vitality.

Thus, the 7th-century conquest did not mark a mere rupture; rather, it catalyzed waves of forced and voluntary migrations that reconfigured the Iranian world, forging diaspora communities across Central Asia and weaving Persian cultural patterns into the very fabric of the Islamic empire. These developments ensure that the Arab-Islamic conquest remains one of history’s pivotal chapters—an intersection of faith, empire, diaspora, and cultural resilience whose echoes continue to resonate through modern-day Iran, Central Asia, and beyond.


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