(Qashqaai, Qashqa'i, Ghashghai)
The Qashqai
compose a community of settled, semi-settled, and pastoral
nomadic households who reside mainly in the Fars region of southern
Iran. They speak Qashqai Turki (Turkish). Most of them also speak, at least, Persian (Farsi). They are Shia Muslims.
Photo: A. Shiva, 2002
The nineteenth century Fars
velayat (region or province) covered the present-day provinces
of Fars, Kohgiluyeh, and Bushehr. For centuries Fars had been
a multi-ethnic region in which tribal and pastoral nomadic groups composed
a large part of the population.
Turkic-speaking pastoral nomadic tribal groups began entering central and southern Iran during the eleventh and twelfth centuries. Historical movement of larger and smaller groups of pastoral nomadic households of different ethnic backgrounds, including Turks, into and out of Fars continued up to the nineteenth century.
The Qashqai, as a large tribal confederacy, composed of pastoral nomadic housefolds, dates back at least to the early eighteenth century, when some Turkish(Turki)-speaking tribal groups in the Fars region existed under the name Qashqai and leadership of the head(s) of a certain lineage called Shahilu.
During the nineteenth century the Qashqai was transformed into a large tribal confederacy composed of mainly Turkic-speaking pastoral nomads. Their summer pastures stretched to areas in central Iran, and their winter pastures to areas close to the Persian Gulf. Many Turki(Turkish)-speaking tribal groups, as well as groups belonging to other ethnic groups in the region, were integrated into the Qashqai. The non-Turk groups, in time, adopted the language and other ethnic identity markers of the Qashqai.
Photo: A. Shiva, 2002
Since the 1960s the general trend has beed a sharp
increase in sedentarization of Qashqai nomads and involvement
in non-pastoral and non-traditional economic activities. Presently
the Qashqai form mainly settled and semi-settled households. Qashqai population of today is estimated
between one and one and a half million.
Photo: A. Shiva, 2002