Note that others can easily steal your history too (though we don't want because we already have a great one). For instance, based on these reasons I can argue Turk history is part of Persian history: Turks were Islamized by Persians, Turkish (particularly Ottoman Turkish) culture, from many aspects, is copy'n'paste of Persian culture, majority of Ottoman Turkish words were borrowed from Persian, many Turkish Sultans had Persian names (Khurram Sultan, Mihrimah, Mihrishah, Gul-jemal, you name it), etc.
Akkoyunlus and Karakoyunlus were a bunch of uncivilized nomads. Seljuk, Afshariye and Timurid dynasties were totally Persianized and their language were Persian as well. Btw, Shah Ismail was not Turkic, other Safavids were Azeri-speaking though, but all of them were quite pro-Iranian.
why would we steal someones non existent history other than like 2000 years ago , you are trying to steal our history , you go as far as nearly claiming seljuks but because you dont want to look like an idiot you instead say turco-persian , we dont need to steal anyones history , its too great already , although safavids was a turkic empire and clearly an azeri empire.
azeri dynasties that ruled iran
Atabegs of Azerbaijan, with their capital in Nakhchivan. At the height of their power, their borders reached south of Iran.
Eldiguzids (Atabegs of Azerbaijan) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Qara-Qoyunlu and Ağ-Qoyunlu Oghuz Turks. Qara-Qoyunlu means "Black-Sheep" and Ağ-Qoyunlu means "White-Sheep" in Azeri Turkish. Their capital was Tabriz. Most likely, the language they spoke was today's Azeri Turkish, as Shah Ismail's native language was Azeri Turkish and he descendet from Ağ-Qoyunlu.
Kara Koyunlu - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Aq Qoyunlu - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Safavids, with their capital in Tabriz. Safavid court and military language was Azeri Turkish. The founder of Safavid Empire, Shah İsmail, was also a poet in Azerbaijani language. He wrote 1400 verses in Azeri Turkish, in comparision to only 50 in Persian.
Qizilbash (Qızılbaş, meaning Red-Head in Azeri Turkish, refering to the red headgears they wore) consisted of Shia Turkoman tribes from Azerbaijan and Anatolia. The language Qizilbash used, I.E, the Safavid military langauge, was Azeri Turkish. Military titles was also in Azeri Turkish. For instance, after reforms of Shah Abbas, new military units were created, like Topchu (Topçu) and Tufengchi (Tüfəngçi), which means artillerymen and musketeer in Azeri Turkish.
It is estimated that during Safavid rule 1,200 Azerbaijani words entered Persian language
Safavid dynasty - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Qajars. Qajars are the Kacarlu tribe, a branch of Azeri Turks. Qajar tribe still exist, they speak a dialect of Azeri Turkish.
Qajar dynasty - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Qajar dynasty - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
and these are only some of the strong turkic empires - 16 turkic empires
Turkish presidential seal
Just some turkish empires
Great hunnic empire
Gokturk empire
Timurid empire
Mughal empire
Great seljuk empire
Ottoman empire - 1299-1922
Let me make you clear about Mughals. Mughals were Chughtai Turks. Babur wrote his autobiography in Chughtai Turkish language but later on it was translated into Persian language. Babur's grandson "Akbar the Great" married local Indian princess and thus Indianized themselves, although Persian remain the court language. They patronized Persian literature, Urdu languages developed because of Persian influence and little Turkic influence, even the music Mughals patronized was Persian.
In really there is nothing Turkic in Turkic legacy in India and Pakistan, its mostly Persian.
yh you know nothing , urdu word even comes from ordu which means army in turkic because in turkic empires in india because their was so much different ethnicities in the army .
The word Urdu is derived from the same Turkish word that has given English horde. Urdu arose in the contact situation which developed from the invasions of the Indian subcontinent by Turkic dynasties from the 11th century onwards,[19] first as Sultan Mahmud of the Ghaznavid empire conquered Punjab in the early 11th century, then when the Ghurids invaded northern India in the 12th century, and most decisively with the establishment of the Delhi Sultanate.