Iran | Iran national football team | Safavid dynasty | Maku, Iran | Iran hostage crisis | President of Iran | Iran Pro League | Bam, Iran | Tus, Iran | Iran Bethel School | Islamic Republic of Iran Broadcasting | Chalus, Iran | Royan, Iran | Religious conversion | religious conversion | Islamic Republic of Iran Air Force | Iran Electronics Industries | Iran Air Flight 655 | Iran Aircraft Manufacturing Industrial Company | Rey, Iran | Prime Minister of Iran | Mining in Iran | Iran men's national volleyball team | Iran-Contra affair | Iran Air | Greater Iran | Conversion to Judaism | Conversion to Christianity | Central Bank of the Islamic Republic of Iran | Arak, Iran |
‘Ibn al-Tiqtaqā’, or the son of a chatterbox, was an onomatopoeic nickname for the Iraqi historian Jalāl-ad-Dīn Abu Ja’far Muhammad ibn Tāji’d-Dīn Abi’l-Hasan ’Ali, the spokesman of the Shi'a community in the Shi’ī holy cities—Hillah, Najaf, and Karbala; in an Iraq that was to remain the stronghold of Shi'ism, until the forcible conversion of Iran by Shah Ismail I Safavi.