What is san haram ?
The sentence "
Ey Xətayi, deməgil anın şərabın sən haram" means "O Khatai, don't say that his wine is haram"
"While as the Safavids were an Iranian people , their origins were a Turkish speaking Iranian people which also spoke Persian, from the northern part of Iran, and also they went on to keep their Persian identity and thrive under it, Referring to themselves as Persian and not as Turks."
Their supposed "Iranian origin" involves that the ultimate ancestor moved from some other region of Iran to Azerbaijan, where the family would supposedly adopt Turkic tongue because of living among Turks. So your repeated mentionings of their supposed "Iranian origin" and talking about "northern Iran" does not make sense, their supposed non-Turkic ancestry involves it from being somewhere else! But that it also not true, and even if true, has no relevance to when Safavid Empire was actually founded. Shah Ismail was a Turk by blood, apart from that, he had a Aq-Qoyunlu side aswell like said. His native tongue was Azerbaijani Turkish, and he was one of the few to write so extensive in Azerbaijani Turkish during that period. "They spoke Persian" does not make slightest sense, as Persian was the lingua-franca of the Muslim world. Any educated person spoke it. On the other hand, their primary and mother tongue was Azerbaijani Turkish.
How can you disregard the Turkic Qizilbash element is also beyond me. Remember, Safavid empire was also a Qizilbash empire at the same time.
How did they consider themselves as "Persian"? That is, as belonging to Persian ethnicity? That is totally retarded. Your example is totally irrelevant too: "This verse occurs in the Ahsanu't-Tawarikh and runs, "The illuminator of the crown and throne of the Kayánians, The upholder of the star of the Káwayán"
That says absolutely nothing about what he considered himself as. That is only a reference to him being the ruler of Iran, you honestly don't understand that? There is no such reference to be found in his poetry whatsoever.