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The history of the expansion of the Ismāīlī da
wa (mission) in Pamir and Badakhshan remains obscure. It is not known when exactly Ismā
īlism arrived in the region and whether it was the first Islamic branch to accommodate the variety of indigenous beliefs and practices (veneration of the sun and the moon, cult of spirits, and elements of Zoroastrianism, Buddhism and Shamanism) of the pre-Islamic period in its doctrinal framework. Nevertheless, it is a matter of historic fact that in the eleventh century an Ismā
īlī dā
ī (missionary) and famous Persian poet-traveller, Nā
ir-i Khusraw (d.1080), arrived in Badakhshan and spent the rest of his life there preaching the Fā
imid Ismā
īlī da
wa.10 Moreover, it is with his name that the local Ismā
īlī tradition identifies itself, regarding him as the Pīr (the religious guide) of Kuhistān (i.e., Badakhshan and Pamir). It is, therefore, argued in this study that, although unique cases of conversion (usually that of the rulers) to either Islam or Ismā
īlism could have occurred before Nā
ir-i Khusraw’s trip to the region, the actual course of Islamisation, as a long and continuous process of shifting identities, started with his da
wa in the eleventh century and was continued into the post-Alamut period (thirteenth through the fifteenth centuries) through other missionaries.
This study presents a brief historical account of the religious development in the mountain regions of Pamir from Nāir-i Khusraw’s mission until the nineteenth century. More specifically, it examines the historical development of Ismā
īlism in Pamir during its two main periods, which are identified here as the period of Da
wat-i Nā
ir (Nā
ir’s mission) and the period of Panj-Tanī (the Fivers) faith. It should be pointed out that this terminological application has an empirical rather than a theoretical implication. Although these two historical periods witnessed substantial doctrinal differences, the religious significance of the terms always remained the same. The term Panj-Tanī is derived from a common Shī
ī perception of ‘the five pure persons’ (panj tan-i pāk), including Muhammad,
Alī, Fā
ima,
asan and
usayn, whose names feature in the Ismā
īlī hierarchy of sanctity. These names were, of course, the key elements in Nā
ir-i Khusraw’s mission itself and remained the sacred codes of religious conduct henceforward.