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Abstract

The Fars tribes living during the Zand and Qajar dynasties served as some politically and socially influential groups of their period. When the revenues of a tribe did not suffice their necessities, they would attack other cities, mainly Shiraz, where there were abundant wealth and goods, and they would plunder, pillage and murder everywhere. Shiraz was the political center of Iran during the Zand period as well as the center of political power in the vast land of Fars for the Qajar dynasty. In addition, the economic, social and cultural advantages of Shiraz made them establish some congruities and incongruities with the sedentary tribes of Shiraz. The manner, role and influence of this process in the spatial framework of Shiraz from the Zand period up to the end of the Qajar dynasty (1750-1895) have not been examined under any historical studies. The geographical conditions further contributed to such congruities and incongruities among the nomadic-sedentary tribes of Shiraz. This paper deals with the processes involved in the congruities and incongruities established among the nomadic and sedentary tribes of Shiraz which influenced the localities and the cultural, social and economic environments of the city

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