Ismail II
Ismail II (31 May 1537 – 24 November 1577) was the third shah of Safavid Iran, ruling from 1 September 1576 to 24 November 1577.[1] The second son of Shah Tahmasp I and his consort Ḵadam-ʿAli Solṭān Ḵānom, he was appointed governor of Shirvan in 1547 and designated crown prince in 1549, but was imprisoned from 1557 onward due to suspicions arising from his personal conduct.[1] Upon Tahmasp's death in May 1576, Ismail ascended the throne ahead of his visually impaired elder brother Mohammad Khodabandeh, immediately launching purges that executed dozens of royal kin, including brothers and nephews, as well as hundreds of Qizilbash Sufis and tribal leaders perceived as threats.[1] His reign's defining feature was a radical religious policy shift, embracing Sunni Islam by dismissing Shi'i clerics, banning Twelver Shi'i rituals, minting coins omitting the names of the Shi'i imams, and favoring Sunni scholars like Mirza Makhdum Sharifi, which challenged the empire's foundational Shi'i identity established by his grandfather Ismail I.[1][2] These measures, intended perhaps to reconcile with Sunni powers like the Ottomans, alienated the Qizilbash military elite and Shi'i establishment, culminating in his poisoning in Qazvin after 16 months of rule, with his body interred at a local shrine.[1] Though brief, Ismail's tenure represented a rare deviation from Safavid Shi'ism, highlighting internal fractures within the dynasty's power structure.[2]