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Topic: Mohammad Shah Qajar


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In the News (Sun 29 Nov 09)

  
 Fath Ali Shah Qajar - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fat'h Ali Shah (1771 - 1834) was the second Qajar King of Persia.
Fat'h Ali Shah also ordered the making of much royal regalia, including a coronation chair which was also used by later kings, and the 'Taj-e-Kayani', or Kayanid Crown, a modification of the crown of the same name invented by his uncle.
During the early reigns of Fath Ali Shah, Georgian ruler Gorghin Khan claimed independence from Persia and Alexander I of Russia was quick to support him.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Fath_Ali_Shah   (662 words)

  
 Qayyoomi's SSNV Paper
Seyyed Noor-ad-din Ne’matollâh, the son of Mir Abdullah, known as Shah Ne’matollâh-e Vali (literary: ‘king Ne’matollâh –the saint’) is one of the
According to its inscription, its patron was Baktâsh-khân, the ruler of Kerman and Baluchistan provinces in the period of shah Abbâs I Safavid (r.
Shah Abbâs I, as the first court, and the only elements built in the time of Mohammad-shah were the two minarets of its portal.
www.ssnv.org /Qayyoomi_SSNV_Paper.htm   (3488 words)

  
 PersianIran.com - HISTORY OF IRAN, Political and cultural personalities ---
When Mohammad Shah died in 1848 the succession passed to his son Naser-e-Din, who proved to be the ablest and most successful of the Qajar sovereigns.
With the death of Mohammad Shah in 1848, Mirza Taqi was largely responsible for ensuring the crown prince's succession to the throne.
Ahmad Shah, who succeeded to the throne at age 11, proved to be pleasure-loving, effete, and incompetent and was unable to preserve the integrity of Iran or the fate of his dynasty.
www.persianiran.com /history/qajar.asp   (1637 words)

  
 Definition of Ahmad Shah Qajar - Biocrawler   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Ahmad Shah Qajar (احمد شاه قاجار in Persian) ‎(January 21, 1898 - 21 February, 1930) was Shah of Persia from July 16, 1909 to October 31, 1925.
He was the last Shah of the Qajar dynasty.
He died in 1930 in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France, though the dynasty was continued by his brother, the former crown prince Mohammad Hassan Mirza.
www.biocrawler.com /encyclopedia/Ahmad_Shah_Qajar   (303 words)

  
 Mohammad Ali Shah - TheBestLinks.com - Persian language, Iran, July 16, January 8, ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Mohammad Ali Shah, Persian language, Iran, July 16, January 8, Russia, 1909...
Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar (Persian: محمدعلی شاه قاجار)‎ (1872 - 1925) was the shah of Iran from January 8 1907 to July 16 1909.
His son and successor, Ahmad Shah Qajar was the last ruler in the Qajar dynasty.
www.thebestlinks.com /Mohammad_Ali_Shah.html   (166 words)

  
 Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi --  Encyclopædia Britannica
Mohammad Reza was the eldest son of Reza Shah Pahlavi, an army officer who became the ruler of Iran and founder of the Pahlavi dynasty in 1925.
Mohammad Reza was educated in Switzerland and returned to Iran in 1935.
Shah was the old title of the kings of Persia (now Iran), and, when expanded into shahanshah, it means “king of kings.” The two Pahlavi kings were Reza Shah Pahlavi and his son, Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi.
www.britannica.com /eb/article-9053194   (659 words)

  
 QAJAR DYNASTY FACTS AND INFORMATION   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
The Qajar dynasty was the ruling family of Persia from 1781 to 1925.
Under the rule of Fath_Ali_Shah, Persia was forced to cede its northern part of Azerbaijan and lesser Caucasia to Russia, while the British later took effective control of the south with its rich oil deposits.
The Qajar Shahs made several attempts at modernization during the 19th_century and the start of the 20th_century, with a constitution and parliament being established in 1906.
www.bigspringbreak.com /Qajar_dynasty   (244 words)

  
 A History of 163 Years of Iranian Press (the Story of Repeated Efforts)
The first article of this paper was more in tune of giving advice to rebellious princes and the glorious services of Mohammad Shah as well as the tendency of the status quo and the royal court for the welfare of the peasants.
The assassination of Nasereddin Shah coincided with the massacre of three writers and journalists at the hand of Mohammad Ali Mirza the crown prince in Tabriz.
Mohammad Shah's regaining royal absolutism called the smaller autocracy lasted for eleven years during which the king dominated the lives and wealth of the people.
www.parstimes.com /history/press_history.html   (3879 words)

  
 Celebrating The Constitutional Revolution Of 1905-1911 And The Constitution Of 1906
These progressive and liberal democratic values were the rule of law [hokomat qanon], rule of the people [hokumat mardom], freedom of the press [azadi matbooat], freedom of political parties [azadi ahzab], modernity [tajadod], and separation of religion and politics [hokumat orfi].
Mohammad Reza Pahlavi established a brutal dictatorship: there were no freedom of expression, no free elections, no freedom for political parties, no freedom of the press.
The Iranian Revolution of 1977-1979 was a response by the people of Iran to the dictatorship of Mohammad Reza Shah and his subservience to foreign rule.
iranscope.ghandchi.com /Anthology/Kazemzadeh/mashrooteh.htm   (1413 words)

  
 FIRST IRANIANS (9)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
It should be noted that by the early 19th century Iranian reformers had become keenly sensitive to what they perceived as the relative weakness of their society in comparison to the growing threats from Russia to the north and the British authorities in the south.
The major specific of this publication was that it went to print under the autocratic order of Mohammad Shah Qajar and not for the fact that there was a public need for it.
Secondly, the objective for its publication was to communicate the decisions taken at the royal court and neutralization of activities of Fathali Shah's children, who had then made claims to the throne of Mohammad Shah who was not Fathali Shah's son.
www.expage.com /fi9   (498 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
This, according to legend, is Nader Shah's "All Conquering Sword" though the inscription on the blade attributes it to Fathali Shah.
There is however, a mural in the Marble Room of the Golestan Palace which shows Mohammad Shah Qajar, the successor to Fathali Shah, wearing the sword while on horseback.
The reverse side of the sword and scabbard shows a picture of the Shah on the hilt along with a few lines of verse, and the pictures of two of his 50 sons.
www.geocities.com /Pentagon/Base/1406/jewel/79.html   (141 words)

  
 The Modern Magazine for Amir Kabir, Persian Weddings, Cuisine, Culture & Community
Mirza Taqi returned to Iran in where he was appointed by Mohammad Shah-e Qajar to the court of the crown prince, Naser o-Din, in Azerbaijan.
The Shah's relatives, courtiers, and flatterers, who were there to take advatnage of him regarded Amir Kabir as a threat and formed alliances against him.
She plotted against him and convinced the Shah that Amir Kabir was after the Shah's throne.
www.persianmirror.com /culture/famous/bios/AmirKabir.cfm   (693 words)

  
 Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi and Iran's Monarchy Constitution, Mashrouteh
The original Electoral Law of Persia with 33 articles was signed by Mozzafar-oddin Shah Qajar on September of 1906.
The members of the parliament used to be hand picked by the Shah not by the people’s vote and the rest was FAKE elections.
According to the last 150 years of Iran's history, the kings of Iran, who were all dictators, either were killed by the people or died in exile, except Mozzafar-oddin Shah Qajar who signed the Iran's Monarchy Constitution, in 1906.
www.angelfire.com /home/iran/election.html   (240 words)

  
 Muhammad Shah - Wikpedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
During his reign, the Mughal empire eventually broke up into a loosely-knit collection of several regional states, each with its own ruler, thus declining the authority of the emperor into a greater extent.
However, contributing to the poor tatctics of countering with Nadir Shah's forces, Muhammad Shah's army was easily defeated, browsing its way into Delhi within a time span of one month, where he had the Khutba read in his name.
In response, Nadir Shah agreed to withdraw, but paying the consequence of handing over the keys of his royal treasury, losing even the Peacock Throne to the Persian emperor.
www.bostoncoop.net /~tpryor/wiki/index.php?title=Mohammed_Shah   (199 words)

  
 THE IRANIAN: Prince Arfa's house , Manoutchehr Eskandari-Qajar
He received the title "Prince" from Mozaffar-ed-Din Shah, one among a handful of individuals during the Qajar era to receive such a title without himself being of royal blood, and he served loyally four Qajar shahs from Nasser-ed-Din Shah to Soltan Ahmad Shah Qajar in various capacities from advisor to ambassador to minister.
Prince Arfa' ed-Dowleh was a trusted companion of Soltan Ahmad Shah during some of the most crucial times of Soltan Ahmad Shah's exile, including of course the above scene at the funeral of his father, Mohammad Ali Shah.
Prince Arfa' ed-Dowleh's was also present at the historic meeting in Geneva in 1925 where the return of Soltan Ahmad Shah to Tehran was discussed in light of a telegram sent to him by Mustafa Kemal together with a guarantee of troops and assistance if Soltan Ahmad Shah wished to invoke the help of Turkey.
www.iranian.com /EskandariQajar/2003/November/Arfa   (1044 words)

  
 List of kings of Persia @ BasketballLiving.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
In the East however, Shah Rukh was able to secure his rule in Transoxiana and Fars.
The modern Iranian monarchy was established in 1502 after the Safavid Dynasty came to power under Shah Ismail I, and ended the so-called "fourth era" of political fragmentation.
Shah Rukh, 1748-1797, he lost power in 1750 but nominally remained Shah.
www.basketballliving.com /allabout/List_of_kings_of_Persia   (1182 words)

  
 Iran: Constitutional Movement Confab opens, Museum inaugurated in Tabriz
The one-day event aims to commemorate the social, anti-despotic and law-oriented agreements taken as part of the achievements of the Constitutional Movement which culminated in 1906 by a signature put on the first Constitution of Iran by Mozaffar eddin Shah of Qajar.
The revolution resulted in toppling of Mohammad-Ali Shah and the establishment of parliament (Majlis) in Iran.
Mohammad Mosaddeq and the 1953 Coup in Iran
www.payvand.com /news/05/aug/1066.html   (433 words)

  
 Coins of Ahmad Shah Qajar era
Ahmad Shah Qajar, the last king of the dynasty, reigned for about 16 years.
The coins that are minted before his coronation resemble the coins of Mohammad Ali Shah's era.
The Farsi script is: " Alsultan-e Sultan, Ahmad Shah Qajar" or The son of a king, Shah Ahmad Qajar.
irancollection.alborzi.com /Qajarcoin/AhmadShah.htm   (328 words)

  
 Muhammad Shah - TheBestLinks.com - Mohammad Shah, List of kings of Persia, India, TheBestLinks.com:Find or fix a stub, ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Muhammad Shah - TheBestLinks.com - Mohammad Shah, List of kings of Persia, India, TheBestLinks.com:Find or fix a stub,...
Mohammad Shah, Muhammad Shah, List of kings of Persia, India...
Muhammad Shah (1702 - 1748) was a Mughal emperor of India between 1719 and 1748.
www.thebestlinks.com /Mohammad_Shah.html   (106 words)

  
 Qajars Dynasty
Qajars - Turkoman dynasty of the shahs of Persia
against Shah Muzaffar al-Din (1896-1907).ln 1908 there was a popular uprising in Tehran due to the storming of the parliament by the shah's Cossack brigade.
The powerless last Qajars, Ahmed Mirza (1909-1925), had to accept the occupation of further parts of Persia by the British and Russians (leading to a British protectorate in 1919), as well as revolts by the Shiites in the south.
www.islamicarchitecture.org /dynasties/qajars.html   (809 words)

  
 History of Iran: Iranologie.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
Aash Pazan, cooking Aash (Iranian soup) during the Qajar Era.
Mohammad Shah Qajar father of the famous Naser al-Din Shah.
Kaakh-e-Golestan a former residence of Shah of Iran
www.iranologie.com /photo/photo.html   (454 words)

  
 Early Photography in Iran;Mohammad Reza Tahmasbpoor | History of iranian photography | Kargah.com | Iranian Artists' ...   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
The first photographs, in the form of daguerreotypes, were made during the reign of Mohammed Shah Qajar by Nikolaj Pavlov (One of the young Russian diplomats) in Dec1842.
During Naser- od-din Shah’s reign the language of these books became simpler, although in writing decrees, letters or poems eulogizing the king, a complicated prose in the old literary style were still used.
The first photographs advocated to royal court of Naser-odin Shah included illustrative history of different stages of life- from youth till old age and some ones from child hood till youth Wonder and influence of photography in Iran is as far as that Iranian painting had influenced for several hundreds years.
www.kargah.com /history_of_iranian_photography/early/index.php?other=1   (2190 words)

  
 QAZVIN PROVINCE ADVERTISING, MARKETING AND INFORMATION   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
In Qajar period there existed nine gates surrounding the city which were connected to each other through a wall around the city.
Following Shah Tahmasb’ s stubborn policies against philosophers and mystics and destroying Ghazali’s tomb, a group of his disciples took the remains of his body to the present place in Imamzadeh Ismail alley and constructed a new mausoleum for him.
Beside Ghazali’s tomb there is another tomb belonging to Soltan Seyed Mohammad Vali which dates back to 1625 CE Molla Khalil Ibn Ghazi Qazvini: Famous faghih (religious jurist) and famous commentator of the Qur'an in Safavid period (d 1678).
www.adscontractors.com /Qazvin_Province   (1652 words)

  
 Welcome to Netiran!   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-11-03)
In the beginning of Fathali Shah Qajar's rule, Napoleone's military adjutant, Romio, who appointed as the emperor's representative in Tehran passed away after being infected with indigenous diseases and was buried in Tehran.
It should be noticed that after the Russians managed to defeat the Iranian Armed Forces in 1243 AH and they forced Iran to sign the Turkmenchai contract, they called for a summer residence in northern Tehran for their minister of plenipotentiary and the family as well as the senior embassy members.
The two villages of Zargandeh and Qolhak were unfortunately given to the Russians and Britons by Qajar kings as presents and against the international laws of the time mainly because the Tesarian Russian and Britain officially supported the descendent of the Crown Prince Abbas Mirza to become a monarch.
www.netiran.com /?fn=artd(2026)   (1785 words)

  
 Mirza Abolhassan married Kokab
He however removed the crown from his head and placed it on the head of Agha Mohammad's nephew who became Fat-h Ali Shah Qajar.
During the reign of Nasser-e-Din Shah (the fourth king of Qajars), the son of Mohammad Biglar Baygie called Assef-ol- Saltaneh who was the governor of the Khorasan province in eastern Iran decided to claim the crown for himself.
In the ensuing war, he and four of his sons were killed and his remaining son, Mirza Mehdi Khan was taken by the Shah as a hostage (as a guarantee against any further uprisings by the Davaloo tribe).
home.online.no /~hhakimi/album/fore/abolhassan.htm   (246 words)

  
 Iran Zamin
Born in Shiraz in 1705, Karim Khan was the founder of Zand dynasty in Iran.
During the reign of Fathali Shah and by his order, a great throne was made under the supervision of Nezamoldoleh Mohammad Hossein Khan Sadr Isfahani, the governor of Isfahan, using gold and loose stones from the treasury.
Mohammad Ebrahim, the Royal Mason, oversaw the construction and several celebrated masters of the time worked on the execution of this masterpiece.
dooroodiran.blogspot.com   (14551 words)

  
 Iran Daily - Arts & Culture - 10/18/05
According to CHN, the penitence letter of Bab is one of documents of the Qajar king, Nasser-eddin Shah which was once kept at Golestan Royal Palace, but, was moved to the Majlis Treasury after the victory of the Constitutional Movement in 1906.
The Constitutional Movement culminated with a signature of Mozaffar-eddin Shah of the Qajar dynasty on the then Constitution on August 5, 1906.
Sheikh Ali Mohammad Shirazi called Bab (gate) was living in Shiraz under despotic rule of Mohammad Shah of Qajar (1871-1885).
www.iran-daily.com /1384/2404/html/art.htm   (1532 words)

  
 Ethnic Cleansing and Dictatorship vs. Pluralism and Democracy:
Although the Prophet Mohammad and his successors Abu Bakr and Omar used the sword to consolidate their power, nevertheless for most of the Arabs of the Arabian peninsula, Islam was (and is) a genuine home-grown religion and worldview.
The racist policies of Reza Shah, Mohammad Reza Shah, and Khomeini are responsible for the resentments among various groups.
Reza Shah banned wearing the Islamic hijab and the police were ordered to tear off women’s hijabs and beat them if they came to the streets covering their hair.
www.ghandchi.com /iranscope/Anthology/Kazemzadeh/ecp.htm   (4644 words)

  
 Children of Mohammad Shah Qajar
(By Khadijeh Khanom, daughter of Emam Verdi Mirza, son of Fath Ali Shah)
Mohammad Taqi Mirza, (b.1840--d.1901), "Rokn-ed-Dowleh," ancestor of the Rokni family.
-- Mohammad Shah had four more wives from which he had no issue, Zobeideh Khanoum, Mehral Khanoum, Nezareh Khanoum, and Narges Khanoum.
www.qajarpages.org /mohammadshahchildren.html   (272 words)

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