Portugal, the Persian Gulf and Safavid Persia

Conference - Programme

8-9 September 2007
Freer & Sackler Galleries, Independence Avenue, Washington DC

On the 500th anniversary of Afonso de Albuquerque's attempts to take Hormuz in the Persian Gulf, this conference will focus on the contacts of the Portuguese with Safavid Persia and various aspects of their activities in the Persian Gulf basin.

Programme

7 September
18.00-20.00 Reception and private viewing of the 'Encompassing the Globe: Portugal and the World from the Fifteenth to the Eighteenth Centuries' exhibition

 
8 September
9.30-10.00Registration
10.00-10.30Welcome note
10.30-12.45Session 1: The Kingdom of Hormuz and port cities of the Persian Gulf
Chair: Michael Barry, Department of Near Eastern Studies, Princeton University, USA, Metropolitan Museum of Arts
10.30-11.15Fiscal administration in Hormuz 1515-1543
Willem Floor, Independent Scholar, Bethesda, Maryland, USA
11.15-12.00The Portuguese on Qeshm
Daniel Thomas Potts, School of Archaeology, University of Sydney, Australia
12.00-12.45Signal defeat: Causes of the Portuguese loss of Comorao (Gambrun) in 1614 and its political and commercial consequences
Edward K. Faridany, Independent Scholar, East Sussex, UK
12.45-14.15Lunch
14.15-17.45Session 2: Iberian-Persian cross cultural relations
Chair: Michele Bernardini, Instituto Universitario Orientale, Italy
14.15-15.00The Persian ventures of Fr. Antonio de Gouveia
Rui Manuel Loureiro, Centro de Historia de Alem-Mar, Faculdade de Ciencias Sociais e Humanas, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal
15.00-15.45The Catholic Monarchy's last emissary and embassy to Persia: D. Garcia de Silva y Figueroa and his Comentarios
George Bryan Souza, Department of History, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA
15.45-16.15Break
16.15-17.00Don Juan de Persia and the Society of Jesus
Enrique Garcia Hernan, Instituto de Historia del Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas, Spain
17.00-17.45Joao de Barros (1496-1570) and the renaissance Portuguese perception of Persia
Michael Barry, Department of Near Eastern Studies, Princeton University, USA

 
9 September
9.30-11.00Session 3: Geography, cartography and trade
Chair: George Bryan Souza, Department of History, University of Texas at San Antonio, USA
9.30-10.15Commerce in opium and medicinal plants between the Portuguese Estado da India and Persia, 1550-1700
Timothy D. Walker, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth, USA and Universidade Aberta de Lisboa, Portugal
10.15-11.00Mapping the backyard of an empire: Portuguese cartographies of the Persian Gulf during the Safavid period
Zoltan Biedermann, Centro de Historia de Alem-Mar, Faculdade de Ciencias Sociais e Humanas, Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Portugal
11.00-11.30Break
11.30-16.45Session 4: Regional conflicts and global politics
Chair: Willem Floor, Independent Scholar, Bethesda, Maryland, USA
11.30-12.15Imperial smackdown: The Portuguese in the Persian Gulf between imamate and caliphate
Giancarlo Casale, Department of History, University of Minnesota, USA
12.15-13.00Portuguese-Ottoman rivalry in the Persian Gulf in the mid-sixteenth century: The siege of Piri Reis to Hormuz in 1552 according to new sources
Dejanirah Couto, Section des Sciences Historiques et Philologiques, Ecole Pratique des Hautes Etudes - Sorbonne, France
13.00-14.30Lunch
14.30-15.15Giovambattista and Gerolamo Vecchietti and the Portuguese in Hormuz (end of the sixteenth century - beginnings of the seventeenth century)
Michele Bernardini, Instituto Universitario Orientale, Italy
15.15-16.00Iran and Portugal: Mutual Interests in the sixteenth century
Rudi Matthee, Department of History, University of Delaware, USA
16.00-16.45Solving Rubik's Cube: Goa, Hormuz, Qandahar and the Western Deccan between Shah Abbas and Jahangir (c. 1613-1622)
Jorge Flores, Department of History, Brown University, USA
16.45-17.30Concluding remarks