Iase Tushi (იასე თუში) was a Georgians writer who worked and lived in Safavid Iran. He is known for his poem Sametsniero ("an enquiry"; lit. "scientific"), an illuminated work distinguished by one of the earliest examples of a Georgian–Persian language dictionary, and is "the earliest Georgian manuscript so far discovered in Iran".
In his Sametsniero, Tushi criticized Christianity from a Shia Islam perspective, heralded Shia Islam in general (which he refers to "as a complete and perfect faith"), and praised then incumbent Safavid king ( shah) Abbas I (1588–1629). Author Khatuna Baindurashvili notes that the Sametsniero is "one of the most intriguing texts from the Georgian Renaissance period" and that the "use of Georgian poetry to criticise Christianity from the standpoint of Shia Islam" highlighted the complexity of Georgian–Safavid relations.
In his poem, Tushi discussed biblical stories and criticised Christianity from a Quran, particularly a Shia Islam, perspective. Tushi stated in his work that he finds "the doctrine of God in three hypostates to be theologically untenable and unacceptable, and he rejects Jesus as Son of God, identifying him instead, in line with Islamic teaching, as one of the great prophets who came before Muhammad, and thus referring to him as Holy Prophet Jesus". His assertion rejected the notion that God could assume an incarnate form.
Tushi consistently praised the Islamic prophet Mohammad and Ali throughout the work. In line with Shia principles, Tushi considered the Twelve Imams of Twelver Shia Islam to be the disciples of Mohammad and compared them to Twelve Apostles of Jesus's. Tushi also praised Abbas I throughout the work. In the seventh chapter of the work, Tushi referred to Shia Islam, in particular, "as a complete and perfect faith". He died in Isfahan, possibly in the second half of the 17th century.
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