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1921 Persian coup d'état

1921 Persian coup d'état, known in Iran as 3 Esfand 1299 coup d'état (Persian: کودتای ۳ اسفند ۱۲۹۹ with the Solar Persian date), refers to several major events in Qajar Persia in 1921, which eventually led to the deposition of the Qajar dynasty and the establishment of the Pahlavi Empire as the ruling house of the country in 1925.

1921 Persian coup d'état
Date21 February 1921[1]
Location
Result

Persian Cossack Brigade victory

Government-Insurgents

 Persia

Persian Cossack Brigade

Supported by:
United Kingdom
Commanders and leaders
Fathollah Khan Akbar Reza Khan Mirpanj
Ziaoddin Tabatabaee
Ahmad Amir-Ahmadi
Edmund Ironside[2][3]
Strength
1,500 Persian Cossacks
Casualties and losses
Several policemen killed or injured in Tehran during the coup

The events began with a coup by the Persian Cossack Brigade headed by Reza Khan on 21 February 1921.[1] The precise level of British Empire involvement in the coup remains a matter of historical debate, but it is almost certain that Edmund Ironside provided advice to the plotters.[4][5][6] With this coup Ziaoddin Tabatabaee took over power and became Prime Minister. The coup was largely bloodless and faced little resistance. With his expanded forces and the Cossack Brigade, Reza Khan launched successful military actions to eliminate separatist and dissident movements in Tabriz, Mashhad and the Jangalis in Gilan. The campaign against Simko and the Kurds was less successful and lasted well into 1922, though eventually concluding with Persian success.

Background edit

In late 1920, the Persian Soviet Socialist Republic in Rasht was preparing to march on Tehran with "a guerrilla force of 1,500 Jangalis, Kurds, Armenians and Azerbaijanis", reinforced by the Bolsheviks' Red Army. This fact, along with various other disorders, mutinies and unrest in the country created "an acute political crisis in the capital."[7]

By 1921, the ruling Qajar dynasty of Persia had become corrupt and inefficient.[8] The oil-rich nation was somewhat reliant on the nations of Britain and Russia for military and economic support. Civil wars earlier in the decade had threatened the government, and the only regular military force at the time was the Cossack Brigade.[9]

The Qajar shah in 1921 was Ahmad, who had been crowned at the age of eleven. He was considered to be a weak, incompetent ruler,[10] especially after British, Russian and Ottoman occupations of Persia during World War I. In 1911, when the capital city, Tehran, had been seized by the Russians, armed Bakhtiaris tribesmen, rather than Iranian regular troops, expelled the invaders.[10] This further diminished the government's reputation, rendering it almost powerless in time of war.[citation needed]

Britain, which played a major role in Persia, was perturbed by the Qajar government's inability to rule efficiently.[8] This inefficiency was the background of a power struggle between Britain and Soviet Russia, each nation hoping to control Persia.[11]

On 14 January 1921, the British General Edmund Ironside chose to promote Reza Khan, who had been leading the Tabriz battalion, to lead the entire brigade.[1] About a month later, under British direction, Reza Khan's 3,000-4,000 strong detachment of the Cossack Brigade reached Tehran.[12]

The coup and subsequent events edit

Reza Khan seizes Tehran edit

On 18 February 1921 the Cossacks reached Tehran meeting little resistance.[9] In the early morning of 21 February they entered the city.[13] Only several policemen, taken by surprise, are said to had been killed or wounded in the center of Tehran.[13] Backed by his troops, Reza Khan forced the government to dissolve and oversaw his own appointment as minister of war. Reza Khan also ensured that Ahmad, still ruling as shah, appoint Sayyed Ziaoddin Tabatabaee[8] as prime minister.

Treaty with the USSR edit

On 26 February the new government signed a treaty of friendship with the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics, formerly the Russian Empire. As a result of the treaty, the Soviet Union gave up some of its former Russian facilities in Iran, although the Soviet diplomats ensured that their nation was allowed to intervene with its military in Iran, as long as the intervention was "self-defense".[8] The USSR also gave up any Russian-owned railroads and ports in Iran.[14]

Change of prime ministers edit

Prior to the coup, Ahmad Qavam, governor of Khorasan, had asserted his loyalty to the Qajar regime. When he refused to recognize the government installed by Reza Khan,[8] he was jailed in Tehran. During his imprisonment, Qavam cultivated a hatred of the man who had arrested him, Colonel Mohammad Taghi Pessian, now the gendarmerie chief.[citation needed]

Sayyed Ziaoddin Tabatabaee, who had been installed as prime minister, was removed from office on 25 May by Shah Ahmad's decree. Shortly afterward, Qavam was released from prison and given Tabatabaee's former post.[citation needed] Colonel Pessian refused to accept this betrayal of the coup's ideals of a democratic Iran and began to gather popular support and many tribes flocked to make up his formidable force.

Quelling local uprisings edit

Pessian's revolt edit

After Qavam was made prime minister, one of the coup leaders and now the gendarmerie chief Colonel Mohammad Taghi Pessian opposed the new order and erosion of the democratic principles for which he and many of his fellow Iranians had fought and so departed Tehran. Soon at the head of a rebel army, Pessian went to battle with the armies of several regional governors. However, the rebels were eventually defeated and Reza Khan ordered that Pessian be beheaded and that the head be returned to Tehran and put on display to prove that Pessian, now a national hero, was dead to quell further rebellions.[8] The Kurds of Khorasan also revolted in the same year.[15][verification needed]

Gilan campaign edit

The campaign on the Republic of Gilan was taken in early July 1921, by the main Cossack force, led by Vsevolod Starosselsky.[13] Following a gendarme operation, led by Habibollah Khan (Shiabani), they cleared up Mazandaran and moved into Gilan.[13] On 20 August, ahead of the arrival of the Cossacks, the insurgents pulled out of Rasht, retreating towards Enzeli.[13] The Cossacks entered Rasht on 24 August.[13] Though further pursuit after the revolutionaries turned successful at Khomam and Pirbazar, they have become heavily assaulted later on by the Soviet fleet, which bombed them by heavy artillery fire.[13] First, it had been believed that the entire force of 700 men, led by Reza Khan, became annihilated in this event, though later the actual casualty rate was determined to be about 10%, with the rest of them scattering upon the bombardment.[13] As a result, Starosselski ordered evacuation of Rasht.[13]

The Soviet Republic of Gilan officially came to an end in September 1921. Mirza[who?] and his German friend Gauook[who?] (Hooshang) were left alone in the Khalkhal Mountains, and died of frostbite.[citation needed]

Kurdish revolt edit

Aftermath edit

 
Reza Shah

In the aftermath of 1921 events, relations of Persian government with the Sheikhdom of Mohammerah had also become strained. In 1924, Sheikh Khazal rebellion[16] broke out in Khuzestan, being the first modern Arab nationalist uprising led by the Sheikh of Mohammerah Khaz'al al-Ka'bi. The rebellion was quickly and effectively suppressed with minimal casualties.

Rezā Khan was placed on the throne by constitutional assembly in 1925, and many of those involved in the coup were either killed or put in prison. One General, Sepahbod Amir Ahmadi, tried to stand up against the establishment of a new monarchy, but on a visit to his now imprisoned brother-in-law, General Heydargholi Pessian, who had been one of the leaders of the coup that defeated the Qajar dynasty, Amir Ahmadi confessed that his efforts to prevent Reza Khan being made Shah and the monarchy reinstated were being thwarted by the British.[citation needed] Reza Khan was finally declared Shah, taking the surname Pahlavi and thus founding the Pahlavi dynasty. The Pahlavis ruled in Iran until the revolution of 1979, when the government was toppled and replaced with that of the Islamic Republic of Iran, headed by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini.[9] The day after the Shah left Iran, the revolutionary leaders declared Colonel Mohammad Taghi Pessian the first Martyr of the Revolution although Pessian was a Secularist.[citation needed]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Cyrus Ghani; Sīrūs Ghanī (6 January 2001). Iran and the Rise of the Reza Shah: From Qajar Collapse to Pahlavi Power. I.B.Tauris. pp. 147–. ISBN 978-1-86064-629-4.
  2. ^ ... as a result of his forcefulness and military achievements, had been chosen by Major General Edmund Ironside, head of Norperforce ... COUP D’ETAT OF 1299/1921
  3. ^ [English amongst Persians by Denis Wright]
  4. ^ The Cambridge History of Iran, vol. 7 (1991); pp. 210, 219–220
  5. ^ p. 313 of Keddie, Nikki R. (1978). "Class Structure and Political Power in Iran since 1796". Iranian Studies. 11 (1/4): 305–330. doi:10.1080/00210867808701547. JSTOR 4310304.
  6. ^ p. 538 of Katouzian, Homayoun (1978). "Nationalist Trends in Iran, 1921–1926". International Journal of Middle East Studies. 10 (4): 533–551. doi:10.1017/s0020743800051321. JSTOR 162216. S2CID 163139538.
  7. ^ Abrahamian, Ervand (1982). Iran Between Two Revolutions. Princeton University Press. pp. 116–117. ISBN 0691053421.
  8. ^ a b c d e f . Archived from the original on 2010-11-03. Retrieved 2010-10-29.
  9. ^ a b c History of Iran: Pahlavi Dynasty
  10. ^ a b History of Iran: Qajar Dynasty
  11. ^ "New Great War Episode: Persian Coup D'Ètat February 1921". RTH - Real Time History GmbH. Retrieved 2023-04-11.
  12. ^ "Top 10 Amazing Facts about Rezā Shāh". Discover Walks Blog. 2022-09-21. Retrieved 2023-04-11.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g h i Katouzian, Homa (2006). "The 1921 Coup". State and Society in Iran: The Eclipse of the Qajars and the Emergence of the Pahlavis. London: Tauris. pp. 242–267. ISBN 1845112725.
  14. ^ Foundation, Encyclopaedia Iranica. "Welcome to Encyclopaedia Iranica". iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 2023-04-11.
  15. ^ Cottam, Richard W. (1979). Nationalism in Iran. Pittsburgh: University of Pittsburgh Press. ISBN 0822952998.
  16. ^ Price, M. Iran`s diverse peoples: a reference sourcebook. p.159. "... and finally supporting a rebellion by Shaykh Khazal." CEIQ6AEwAw#v=onepage&q=sheikh%20khazal%20rebellion&f=false

External links edit

  • "The Persian Coup d'Etat (1921)", Advocate of Peace through Justice. Vol. 88, No. 2 (February, 1926), pp. 86–88
  • "Coup d'Etat of 1921". Encyclopedia Iranica
  • "Persian Coup d'Etat". Kalgoorlie Miner, Saturday 26 February 1921, p. 5

1921, persian, coup, état, known, iran, esfand, 1299, coup, état, persian, کودتای, اسفند, ۱۲۹۹, with, solar, persian, date, refers, several, major, events, qajar, persia, 1921, which, eventually, deposition, qajar, dynasty, establishment, pahlavi, empire, ruli. 1921 Persian coup d etat known in Iran as 3 Esfand 1299 coup d etat Persian کودتای ۳ اسفند ۱۲۹۹ with the Solar Persian date refers to several major events in Qajar Persia in 1921 which eventually led to the deposition of the Qajar dynasty and the establishment of the Pahlavi Empire as the ruling house of the country in 1925 1921 Persian coup d etatDate21 February 1921 1 LocationTehran Qajar PersiaResultPersian Cossack Brigade victory Power takeover by Sayyed Ziaoddin Tabatabaee Suppression of Colonel Pessian s revolt and dissolution of the Autonomous Government of Khorasan Dissolution of the Persian Socialist Soviet Republic Continuing conflict with Simko Shikak until 1922 Deterioration of Persian control over Sheikh Khazal s Emirate of Muhammara until 1925Government Insurgents Persia Qajar dynastyPersian Cossack Brigade Supported by United KingdomCommanders and leadersFathollah Khan AkbarReza Khan Mirpanj Ziaoddin Tabatabaee Ahmad Amir Ahmadi Edmund Ironside 2 3 Strength1 500 Persian CossacksCasualties and lossesSeveral policemen killed or injured in Tehran during the coupThe events began with a coup by the Persian Cossack Brigade headed by Reza Khan on 21 February 1921 1 The precise level of British Empire involvement in the coup remains a matter of historical debate but it is almost certain that Edmund Ironside provided advice to the plotters 4 5 6 With this coup Ziaoddin Tabatabaee took over power and became Prime Minister The coup was largely bloodless and faced little resistance With his expanded forces and the Cossack Brigade Reza Khan launched successful military actions to eliminate separatist and dissident movements in Tabriz Mashhad and the Jangalis in Gilan The campaign against Simko and the Kurds was less successful and lasted well into 1922 though eventually concluding with Persian success Contents 1 Background 2 The coup and subsequent events 2 1 Reza Khan seizes Tehran 2 2 Treaty with the USSR 2 3 Change of prime ministers 2 4 Quelling local uprisings 2 4 1 Pessian s revolt 2 4 2 Gilan campaign 2 4 3 Kurdish revolt 3 Aftermath 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksBackground editIn late 1920 the Persian Soviet Socialist Republic in Rasht was preparing to march on Tehran with a guerrilla force of 1 500 Jangalis Kurds Armenians and Azerbaijanis reinforced by the Bolsheviks Red Army This fact along with various other disorders mutinies and unrest in the country created an acute political crisis in the capital 7 By 1921 the ruling Qajar dynasty of Persia had become corrupt and inefficient 8 The oil rich nation was somewhat reliant on the nations of Britain and Russia for military and economic support Civil wars earlier in the decade had threatened the government and the only regular military force at the time was the Cossack Brigade 9 The Qajar shah in 1921 was Ahmad who had been crowned at the age of eleven He was considered to be a weak incompetent ruler 10 especially after British Russian and Ottoman occupations of Persia during World War I In 1911 when the capital city Tehran had been seized by the Russians armed Bakhtiaris tribesmen rather than Iranian regular troops expelled the invaders 10 This further diminished the government s reputation rendering it almost powerless in time of war citation needed Britain which played a major role in Persia was perturbed by the Qajar government s inability to rule efficiently 8 This inefficiency was the background of a power struggle between Britain and Soviet Russia each nation hoping to control Persia 11 On 14 January 1921 the British General Edmund Ironside chose to promote Reza Khan who had been leading the Tabriz battalion to lead the entire brigade 1 About a month later under British direction Reza Khan s 3 000 4 000 strong detachment of the Cossack Brigade reached Tehran 12 The coup and subsequent events editReza Khan seizes Tehran edit On 18 February 1921 the Cossacks reached Tehran meeting little resistance 9 In the early morning of 21 February they entered the city 13 Only several policemen taken by surprise are said to had been killed or wounded in the center of Tehran 13 Backed by his troops Reza Khan forced the government to dissolve and oversaw his own appointment as minister of war Reza Khan also ensured that Ahmad still ruling as shah appoint Sayyed Ziaoddin Tabatabaee 8 as prime minister Treaty with the USSR edit On 26 February the new government signed a treaty of friendship with the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics formerly the Russian Empire As a result of the treaty the Soviet Union gave up some of its former Russian facilities in Iran although the Soviet diplomats ensured that their nation was allowed to intervene with its military in Iran as long as the intervention was self defense 8 The USSR also gave up any Russian owned railroads and ports in Iran 14 Change of prime ministers edit Prior to the coup Ahmad Qavam governor of Khorasan had asserted his loyalty to the Qajar regime When he refused to recognize the government installed by Reza Khan 8 he was jailed in Tehran During his imprisonment Qavam cultivated a hatred of the man who had arrested him Colonel Mohammad Taghi Pessian now the gendarmerie chief citation needed Sayyed Ziaoddin Tabatabaee who had been installed as prime minister was removed from office on 25 May by Shah Ahmad s decree Shortly afterward Qavam was released from prison and given Tabatabaee s former post citation needed Colonel Pessian refused to accept this betrayal of the coup s ideals of a democratic Iran and began to gather popular support and many tribes flocked to make up his formidable force Quelling local uprisings edit Pessian s revolt edit After Qavam was made prime minister one of the coup leaders and now the gendarmerie chief Colonel Mohammad Taghi Pessian opposed the new order and erosion of the democratic principles for which he and many of his fellow Iranians had fought and so departed Tehran Soon at the head of a rebel army Pessian went to battle with the armies of several regional governors However the rebels were eventually defeated and Reza Khan ordered that Pessian be beheaded and that the head be returned to Tehran and put on display to prove that Pessian now a national hero was dead to quell further rebellions 8 The Kurds of Khorasan also revolted in the same year 15 verification needed Gilan campaign edit The campaign on the Republic of Gilan was taken in early July 1921 by the main Cossack force led by Vsevolod Starosselsky 13 Following a gendarme operation led by Habibollah Khan Shiabani they cleared up Mazandaran and moved into Gilan 13 On 20 August ahead of the arrival of the Cossacks the insurgents pulled out of Rasht retreating towards Enzeli 13 The Cossacks entered Rasht on 24 August 13 Though further pursuit after the revolutionaries turned successful at Khomam and Pirbazar they have become heavily assaulted later on by the Soviet fleet which bombed them by heavy artillery fire 13 First it had been believed that the entire force of 700 men led by Reza Khan became annihilated in this event though later the actual casualty rate was determined to be about 10 with the rest of them scattering upon the bombardment 13 As a result Starosselski ordered evacuation of Rasht 13 The Soviet Republic of Gilan officially came to an end in September 1921 Mirza who and his German friend Gauook who Hooshang were left alone in the Khalkhal Mountains and died of frostbite citation needed Kurdish revolt edit Main article Simko Shikak revoltAftermath edit nbsp Reza ShahIn the aftermath of 1921 events relations of Persian government with the Sheikhdom of Mohammerah had also become strained In 1924 Sheikh Khazal rebellion 16 broke out in Khuzestan being the first modern Arab nationalist uprising led by the Sheikh of Mohammerah Khaz al al Ka bi The rebellion was quickly and effectively suppressed with minimal casualties Reza Khan was placed on the throne by constitutional assembly in 1925 and many of those involved in the coup were either killed or put in prison One General Sepahbod Amir Ahmadi tried to stand up against the establishment of a new monarchy but on a visit to his now imprisoned brother in law General Heydargholi Pessian who had been one of the leaders of the coup that defeated the Qajar dynasty Amir Ahmadi confessed that his efforts to prevent Reza Khan being made Shah and the monarchy reinstated were being thwarted by the British citation needed Reza Khan was finally declared Shah taking the surname Pahlavi and thus founding the Pahlavi dynasty The Pahlavis ruled in Iran until the revolution of 1979 when the government was toppled and replaced with that of the Islamic Republic of Iran headed by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini 9 The day after the Shah left Iran the revolutionary leaders declared Colonel Mohammad Taghi Pessian the first Martyr of the Revolution although Pessian was a Secularist citation needed See also editPersian Constitutional Revolution 1905 1907 Iran crisis of 1946 Iranian Revolution 1979 List of modern conflicts in the Middle EastReferences edit a b c Cyrus Ghani Sirus Ghani 6 January 2001 Iran and the Rise of the Reza Shah From Qajar Collapse to Pahlavi Power I B Tauris pp 147 ISBN 978 1 86064 629 4 as a result of his forcefulness and military achievements had been chosen by Major General Edmund Ironside head of Norperforce COUP D ETAT OF 1299 1921 English amongst Persians by Denis Wright The Cambridge History of Iran vol 7 1991 pp 210 219 220 p 313 of Keddie Nikki R 1978 Class Structure and Political Power in Iran since 1796 Iranian Studies 11 1 4 305 330 doi 10 1080 00210867808701547 JSTOR 4310304 p 538 of Katouzian Homayoun 1978 Nationalist Trends in Iran 1921 1926 International Journal of Middle East Studies 10 4 533 551 doi 10 1017 s0020743800051321 JSTOR 162216 S2CID 163139538 Abrahamian Ervand 1982 Iran Between Two Revolutions Princeton University Press pp 116 117 ISBN 0691053421 a b c d e f The Iranian History 1921 AD Archived from the original on 2010 11 03 Retrieved 2010 10 29 a b c History of Iran Pahlavi Dynasty a b History of Iran Qajar Dynasty New Great War Episode Persian Coup D Etat February 1921 RTH Real Time History GmbH Retrieved 2023 04 11 Top 10 Amazing Facts about Reza Shah Discover Walks Blog 2022 09 21 Retrieved 2023 04 11 a b c d e f g h i Katouzian Homa 2006 The 1921 Coup State and Society in Iran The Eclipse of the Qajars and the Emergence of the Pahlavis London Tauris pp 242 267 ISBN 1845112725 Foundation Encyclopaedia Iranica Welcome to Encyclopaedia Iranica iranicaonline org Retrieved 2023 04 11 Cottam Richard W 1979 Nationalism in Iran Pittsburgh University of Pittsburgh Press ISBN 0822952998 Price M Iran s diverse peoples a reference sourcebook p 159 and finally supporting a rebellion by Shaykh Khazal CEIQ6AEwAw v onepage amp q sheikh 20khazal 20rebellion amp f falseExternal links edit The Persian Coup d Etat 1921 Advocate of Peace through Justice Vol 88 No 2 February 1926 pp 86 88 Coup d Etat of 1921 Encyclopedia Iranica Persian Coup d Etat Kalgoorlie Miner Saturday 26 February 1921 p 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1921 Persian coup d 27etat amp oldid 1212725092, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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