Why Iran Speaks Persian (Farsi), Not Arabic After 1400 Years
Автор: GeoLingua Atlas
Загружено: 2026-01-19
Просмотров: 65
Описание:
00:00 The Paradox: Why Persia Didn’t Become Arabic
01:26 The Sassanian Legacy & Cultural Memory
02:59 Geography, Demography, and Failed Arabization
04:39 Abbasids, Bureaucrats, and Persian Power
05:48 Poetry, Ferdowsi, and the Shahnameh
09:26 Why Egypt Lost Its Language (and Iran Didn’t)
Why does Iran speak Persian (Farsi)—not Arabic—after 1,400 years of Arab-Islamic rule?
How did the language of a conquered people become the tongue of emperors?
When Arab armies conquered Persia in the 7th century, they erased ancient languages across much of the Middle East. Egypt, North Africa, and the Levant gradually shifted to Arabic. Yet Iran did not. Persian survived—and more remarkably, it later became the elite language of Islamic empires stretching from the Balkans to India.
In this video, we explore why Iran speaks Persian (Farsi), not Arabic, despite centuries of Arab political and religious dominance. The answer is not a single cause, but a rare combination of geography, bureaucracy, and culture.
We’ll trace the story from the Sassanian Empire to the Abbasid Revolution, from Persian administrators running the caliphate to poets who revived the language through literature. You’ll see how New Persian adapted, adopting Arabic script while preserving its grammatical soul—and how Ferdowsi’s Shahnameh became one of history’s most powerful acts of cultural resistance.
By comparing Iran’s experience with Egypt and Turkey, this video reveals a deeper truth: languages don’t survive by accident. They survive when power, prestige, and storytelling align.
If you enjoy deep dives into language, history, and geopolitics, consider subscribing.
Leave a comment: which language survival story should we explore next?
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