Iran
Iran is an imperial civilization of remarkable continuity, where Achaemenid governance, Persian literary culture, Safavid state-building, and a modern revolutionary republic form a long arc of reinvention that illuminates how identity, institutions, sectarian politics, and great-power rivalry continue to shape the modern Middle East.
Why Iran matters now
Strategic reasons this country is essential reading today.
Iran remains a central actor in Middle East security, proxy conflicts, and regional diplomacy.
Nuclear negotiations and sanctions shape global energy markets and geopolitical risk.
Domestic politics—religion, reform, and repression—continue to evolve under generational pressure.
Iran’s historical ‘Persianate’ cultural influence still shapes neighboring societies and languages.
Regional & Global Relationships
Who shapes Iran — and who Iran shapes
Timeline by period
Key moments mapped to Strabo's global eras.
Imperial Persia
550 BCE – 330 BCEHellenistic to Late Antique Iran
330 BCE – 651 CEIslamic Iran & the Persianate World
651 – 1501Safavids to Qajars
1501 – 1925Revolution & the Islamic Republic
1925 – PresentStart Here
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