Rating: Not rated
Tags: Biography, History, Lang:en
Summary
Throughout history, many an ambitious diplomatic initiative
has slipped into obscurity, but few have been so thoroughly
forgotten as the efforts of a young man named Pedros Bedik to
foster an alliance between two great seventeenth century
powers, Persia and the Holy Roman Empire, against the mighty
Ottoman Empire that lay between them. As a related enterprise,
he worked to end the separation between the Western and Eastern
versions of Christianity. In 1678, he published a
book—written in Latin, with a Persian
introduction—intended to explain the East to the West and
thus further those aims. Never reprinted or translated, it has
remained virtually unknown until now. Bedik was raised in an
Armenian, Christian community in Ottoman-ruled Aleppo. At the
age of 16, he was sent to Rome by his mother to avoid forced
conversion to Islam. For seven years he attended a missionary
college there, but his theological education abruptly ended in
1668 when he was expelled for carousing. Soon after, he left
Rome in the company of the archbishop of Nakhchivan, in
present-day Azerbaijan. En route the two agreed to launch a
project to unite the Armenian Church with that of Rome. Bedik
wanted to use this plan as leverage to get European Roman
Catholic support for the protection of Armenian Christians.
From Armenia Bedik travelled to Iran and spent 5 years there.
In his book, which is mostly about his time in there, he is
aggressively Christian and scathing about Islam, but not about
Iran and Iranians. And he goes to great pains to show that the
Shah was more than willing to enter into a pact with the Pope
and the Christian princes of Europe to jointly attack the Turks
from all sides. The value of this long-forgotten book lies in
Bedik’s talents as a knowledgeable,
linguistically-skilled and keen-eyed observer, although a
highly partisan one. Its pages contain fascinating descriptions
of the court, customs, and people of Iran, including such
unique information as the ash-e su memorial banquet ceremony;
the abbasiyaneh drinking custom; how Persians threw a party and
their cooking; the Nowruz ceremonies; the various breeds of
horses; the race of messengers, and the Caspian Kalmyk nomadic
tribe’s annual oath to the Russian tsar. Bedik eventually
returned to Europe, entered the Holy Roman Emperor’s
service as diplomat and soldier, and was made a count. In 1683,
he was appointed ambassador and sent to Iran to discuss joint
military action against the Ottomans and to seek better
treatment for Iran’s Christians. En route, after
discussions in Warsaw, he disappeared in Russia. In this book,
his vital and adventurous spirit lives again. **