Tamar Amilakhori (Georgian: თამარ ამილახორი) was a 17th-century Georgian noblewoman from the Amilakhori family and a favourite concubine of Safavid king Abbas I of Persia (r. 1588–1629).[1]

Tamar was a daughter of Faramarz Amilakhori and a sister of Abd-ol-Ghaffar Amilakhori.[2] Sometime around 1619, after Abbas I ordered roughly 40,000 immigrant Georgian and Armenian families in Farahabad to conduct the Epiphany ceremony, Tamar donated some 30,000 tomans for the construction of "an all-weather paved causeway to Farrokhabad". She dedicated the act to God as an offer for Abbas I's health.[3]

References

edit
  1. ^ Venning, Timothy (2023-06-30). A Compendium of World Sovereigns: Volume III Early Modern. Taylor & Francis. ISBN 978-1-000-86452-6.
  2. ^ Khintibidze, Elguja (2020-08-30). "The Path of The Man in a Panther-Skin to England and English Historical Sources". The Kartvelologist. 13 (28). ISSN 1512-1186.
  3. ^ Floor, Willem; Herzig, Edmund, eds. (2012). "Exploitation of the Frontier". Iran and the World in the Safavid Age. I.B. Tauris. p. 483. ISBN 978-1780769905.