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Ali-Qoli Khan Qajar

Ali-Qoli Khan Qajar (c. 1756–1824) was a son of Mohammad Hasan Khan Qajar (d. 1759) and half-brother of Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar (r.1789–1797), the founder of the Qajar dynasty of Iran. Unlike Agha Mohammad Khan's full brothers, Ali-Qoli Khan served loyally from the outset and supported, for around twenty years (with brief intervals), Agha Mohammad Khan's conquest for control over all of Iran. Following Agha Mohammad Khan's assassination in 1797, he unsuccessfully tried to claim himself as his brother's rightful successor. Ali-Qoli Khan was eventually blinded and exiled by his nephew Baba Khan, who would ascend the Iranian throne as Fath-Ali Shah Qajar (r.1797–1834).

Ali-Qoli Khan Qajar
Governor of Isfahan
PredecessorJafar-Qoli Khan Qajar
SuccessorUnknown
Bornc. 1756
Astarabad (now Gorgan)
Died1824
Barforush (now Babol)
HouseQajar
FatherMohammad Hasan Khan Qajar
MotherUnnamed non-Qajar woman

Biography edit

Early life edit

 
Map of northern Iran

Ali-Qoli Khan Qajar was born c. 1756[1] in Astarabad (present-day Gorgan).[2] According to the later court historian Mohammad-Taqi "Lesan ol-Molk" Sepehr, he was Mohammad Hasan Khan's ninth and last son, a rank possibly inherited because his mother was of non-Qajar origin, rather than being connected to his actual age.[1] After the defeat and death of his father in 1759, Ali-Qoli Khan was brought to Qazvin as a captive of Karim Khan of the Zand dynasty.[2] Ali-Qoli Khan was then moved to the Zand capital of Shiraz where he was raised, together with his brothers, under the surveillance of the Zand rulers. Following Karim Khan's death in 1779, confusion erupted which enabled Ali-Qoli Khan to accompany his eldest brother Agha Mohammad Khan to Astarabad. This event marked the beginning for Ali-Qoli Khan of what would become roughly twenty years of service (with brief intervals) under his eldest brother, taking part in Agha Mohammad Khan's endeavours to establish control over all of Iran.[2] In contrast to Agha Mohammad Khan's full brothers, Ali-Qoli Khan was his steadfast associate from the start.[1]

 
A portrait of Agha Mohammad Khan, dated 1795

Ali-Qoli Khan rarely matched the military prowess of his older brothers and was never able to obtain an independent position in the Qajar tribe. He was reportedly nicknamed Agha Baji by Agha Mohammad Khan, a derogatory term meaning "effeminate master", which, as the modern historian Abbas Amanat explains, may refer to certain feminine traits in his behavior or his lack of cruelty. Nevertheless, Ali-Qoli Khan's support of Agha Mohammad Khan did help the latter in 1779–1782 during early conflicts with his brothers over power.[2][3]

Campaigns edit

In 1781, Ali-Qoli Khan and Agha Mohammad Khan were successful in ousting the Kurdish and Arab tribal chiefs of northern Khorasan out of the town of Semnan, in the historical region of Qumis. For his assistance in the conquest of this area, Ali-Qoli Khan was subsequently given Semnan as a fiefdom (soyurgal).[2][4] Subsequently, Ali-Qoli Khan would play a pivotal role in subduing Khvar and Varamin, near Tehran, putting them under Agha Mohammad Khan's control. This region was the seat of the rival Develu clan of the Qajar tribe, whose loyalty and support were deemed essential for tribal unity. This factor may have added to Agha Mohammad Khan's decision to designate nearby Tehran as his capital several years later, in 1795.[2]

In 1783, as a result of the continued struggle between the Zands and the Qajars, Ali-Qoli Khan decided to make a bid for power. Having abandoned Agha Mohammad Khan, he made peace with the Zand chiefs, which, as the modern historian Abbas Amanat explains, was perhaps intended to gain authority over central Iran. Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar was forced to retreat to Astarabad. However, this retreat was short lived, for the reduction of Zand power allowed him to regain his former position. Ali-Qoli Khan repented before Agha Mohammad Khan, now engaging in the cycle of betrayal and reconciliation that characterized Agha Mohammad Khan's relationships with his other brothers. As Agha Mohammad Khan was able to tighten his position in the north of the country, Ali-Qoli Khan, carrying the banner of Agha Mohammad Khan yet again, was ordered to fight in a series of six campaigns which resulted in the elimination of the Zands and other minor states in southern Iran. Ali-Qoli Khan conquered the remainder of the Fayli Lors in the southwestern-most part of the country. Two years later, in 1787–1788, he partnered again with Agha Mohammad Khan during an unsuccessful campaign against Fars.[2]

Returning from Fars, Ali-Qoli Khan was appointed governor of Isfahan by Agha Mohammad Khan, replacing their brother Jafar-Qoli Khan Qajar,[5] and was assigned 2,000 troops stationed in the city to command. With Agha Mohammad Khan on his way to Tehran, however, Jafar Khan Zand (r.1785–1789) began preparing yet another invasion of Isfahan.[2][5] Ali-Qoli Khan, learning of this plan, sent a force of Qaraguzlu tribesmen to hold Qumishah, but the advancing Zand army led by Jafar Khan Zand were superior in number and overwhelmed them. Ali-Qoli Khan then retreated to Kashan, leaving Isfahan open to Jafar Khan Zand. Not long after, however, together with his older brother, Ali-Qoli Khan returned and retook the city. In 1789–1790, Ali-Qoli Khan, during Agha Mohammad Khan's second Fars campaign, commanded a contingent of 7,000 soldiers and bested the Lor tribes that roamed in Kohgiluyeh. Much of his success in Kohgiluyeh was not necessarily due to his military tactics or prowess, but because the tribes were willing to repudiate their allegiance to the unstable Zands and submit themselves to the Qajars.[2]

 
A view of Tehran in 1808/1809, from James Justinian Morier's A Journey through Iran, Armenia and Asia Minor to Constantinople in the years 1808 and 1809, published in 1812

Ali-Qoli Khan took part in Agha Mohammad Khan's attack on Kerman in 1794 and was responsible for taking Shahr-e Babak and Sirjan. He was later ordered to assert control over Lar. Ali-Qoli Khan also took part in the campaigns in Azerbaijan and the Caucasus in 1795. During the latter campaign, he was first sent to Shirvan followed by Erivan (Erevan).[2][1] Ali-Qoli Khan intended to replace Mostafa Khan-e Davalu with Mostafa Khan-e Talesh following the former's death as a result of a local uprising by the population of Shirvan. However, after taking tribute (kharaj), Ali-Qoli Khan left Mostafa Khan-e Talesh in his post and moved back to Tehran.[1]

Succession claim and downfall edit

In 1797, during Agha Mohammad Khan's final campaign in the Caucasus, Ali-Qoli Khan was ordered to hold Erivan. At this point, Ali-Qoli Khan had become the only surviving brother of Agha Mohammad Khan who had not been exiled or physically disabled. Following Agha Mohammad Khan's assassination in June 1797 in Shusha and the ensuing turmoil, Ali-Qoli Khan would proclaim himself the rightful successor to his older brother. According to the French naturalist Guillaume Antoine Olivier, who was travelling through Iran at the time, Ali-Qoli Khan had first proclaimed himself Shah in Mazandaran. Other sources, however, suggest that Ali-Qoli Khan left Erivan and marched down via Khoy, Tabriz and Maragheh towards Tehran, with the intention of seizing the newly established capital. The gates of the city had been closed by its governor (beglarbeg) Mirza Mohammad Khan Develu since 1795, however, and thus Ali-Qoli Khan was forced to encamp at a village some fifty kilometres west of Tehran, known as Alishah Avaz (now the city of Shahriar). His stay at the village was probably intended to recruit more troops in order to storm Tehran by force.[1]

Simultaneously, however, his young nephew, Baba Khan, soon to be Fath-Ali Shah (r.1797–1834), the second shah of the Qajar dynasty, entered Tehran through the acquiescence of Mirza Mohammad Khan. On the advice of Hajji Ebrahim Shirazi, Baba Khan sent his brother Hosayn-Qoli Khan II to invite Ali-Qoli Khan to the palace in Tehran, under the feigned pretext of discussing succession. When Ali-Qoli Khan arrived, he was not allowed to enter the palace accompanied by his armed attendants. Ali-Qoli Khan was physically obliged to bow to Baba Khan and, cursing him all the while, was led to a room where he was blinded. Ali-Qoli Khan was then sent to Barforush (now Babol) in Mazandaran, where he remained until his death in 1824.[2][1]

Ali-Qoli Khan based his claim to succession on his loyalty to Agha Mohammad Khan, having accompanied him throughout the conquest of Iran, and as the sole surviving son of Mohammad Hasan Khan.[1][2] Based on these arguments, he considered it his right to ascend the throne. The claim, however, was void from the start because, in the contemporaneous Qajar system of power, concepts of kinship and "purity" of blood were major focal points in the transmission of right and dignity. As Ali-Qoli Khan had been born to a non-Qajar mother, he was ineligible for such right. In addition, under the earlier Qajars, a "legitimate" claim to the Iranian throne had to be imposed by military and political power—qualities that Ali-Qoli Khan did not possess.[1] Furthermore, Baba Khan had long been prepared by Agha Mohammad Khan for succession.[2]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i Ebrahimnejad 2007.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Amanat 1985, pp. 874–875.
  3. ^ Heyat 2000, p. 190.
  4. ^ Hambly 1991, p. 115.
  5. ^ a b Hambly 1991, p. 121.

Sources edit

  • Amanat, A. (1985). "ʿALĪ-QOLĪ KHAN". In Yarshater, Ehsan (ed.). Encyclopædia Iranica, Volume I/8: Alafrank–Alp Arslan. London and New York: Routledge & Kegan Paul. pp. 874–875. ISBN 978-0-71009-097-3.
  • Ebrahimnejad, Hormoz (2007). "ʿAlī Qulī Khān". In Fleet, Kate; Krämer, Gudrun; Matringe, Denis; Nawas, John; Rowson, Everett (eds.). Encyclopaedia of Islam (3rd ed.). Brill Online. ISSN 1873-9830.
  • Hambly, Gavin R.G. (1991). "Āghā Muḥammad Khān and the establishment of the Qājār dynasty". In Avery, Peter; Hambly, Gavin R. G.; Melville, Charles Peter (eds.). The Cambridge History of Iran, Volume 7: From Nadir Shah to the Islamic Republic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-20095-4.
  • Heyat, Farideh (2000). "Azeri Professional Women's Life Strategies in the Soviet Context". In Acar, Feride; Günes-Ayata, Ayşe (eds.). Gender and Identity Construction: Women of Central Asia, the Caucasus and Turkey. Brill. ISBN 978-9004492028.

qoli, khan, qajar, 1756, 1824, mohammad, hasan, khan, qajar, 1759, half, brother, agha, mohammad, khan, qajar, 1789, 1797, founder, qajar, dynasty, iran, unlike, agha, mohammad, khan, full, brothers, qoli, khan, served, loyally, from, outset, supported, around. Ali Qoli Khan Qajar c 1756 1824 was a son of Mohammad Hasan Khan Qajar d 1759 and half brother of Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar r 1789 1797 the founder of the Qajar dynasty of Iran Unlike Agha Mohammad Khan s full brothers Ali Qoli Khan served loyally from the outset and supported for around twenty years with brief intervals Agha Mohammad Khan s conquest for control over all of Iran Following Agha Mohammad Khan s assassination in 1797 he unsuccessfully tried to claim himself as his brother s rightful successor Ali Qoli Khan was eventually blinded and exiled by his nephew Baba Khan who would ascend the Iranian throne as Fath Ali Shah Qajar r 1797 1834 Ali Qoli Khan QajarGovernor of IsfahanPredecessorJafar Qoli Khan QajarSuccessorUnknownBornc 1756 Astarabad now Gorgan Died1824Barforush now Babol HouseQajarFatherMohammad Hasan Khan QajarMotherUnnamed non Qajar woman Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Campaigns 1 3 Succession claim and downfall 2 References 3 SourcesBiography editEarly life edit nbsp Map of northern Iran Ali Qoli Khan Qajar was born c 1756 1 in Astarabad present day Gorgan 2 According to the later court historian Mohammad Taqi Lesan ol Molk Sepehr he was Mohammad Hasan Khan s ninth and last son a rank possibly inherited because his mother was of non Qajar origin rather than being connected to his actual age 1 After the defeat and death of his father in 1759 Ali Qoli Khan was brought to Qazvin as a captive of Karim Khan of the Zand dynasty 2 Ali Qoli Khan was then moved to the Zand capital of Shiraz where he was raised together with his brothers under the surveillance of the Zand rulers Following Karim Khan s death in 1779 confusion erupted which enabled Ali Qoli Khan to accompany his eldest brother Agha Mohammad Khan to Astarabad This event marked the beginning for Ali Qoli Khan of what would become roughly twenty years of service with brief intervals under his eldest brother taking part in Agha Mohammad Khan s endeavours to establish control over all of Iran 2 In contrast to Agha Mohammad Khan s full brothers Ali Qoli Khan was his steadfast associate from the start 1 nbsp A portrait of Agha Mohammad Khan dated 1795 Ali Qoli Khan rarely matched the military prowess of his older brothers and was never able to obtain an independent position in the Qajar tribe He was reportedly nicknamed Agha Baji by Agha Mohammad Khan a derogatory term meaning effeminate master which as the modern historian Abbas Amanat explains may refer to certain feminine traits in his behavior or his lack of cruelty Nevertheless Ali Qoli Khan s support of Agha Mohammad Khan did help the latter in 1779 1782 during early conflicts with his brothers over power 2 3 Campaigns edit In 1781 Ali Qoli Khan and Agha Mohammad Khan were successful in ousting the Kurdish and Arab tribal chiefs of northern Khorasan out of the town of Semnan in the historical region of Qumis For his assistance in the conquest of this area Ali Qoli Khan was subsequently given Semnan as a fiefdom soyurgal 2 4 Subsequently Ali Qoli Khan would play a pivotal role in subduing Khvar and Varamin near Tehran putting them under Agha Mohammad Khan s control This region was the seat of the rival Develu clan of the Qajar tribe whose loyalty and support were deemed essential for tribal unity This factor may have added to Agha Mohammad Khan s decision to designate nearby Tehran as his capital several years later in 1795 2 In 1783 as a result of the continued struggle between the Zands and the Qajars Ali Qoli Khan decided to make a bid for power Having abandoned Agha Mohammad Khan he made peace with the Zand chiefs which as the modern historian Abbas Amanat explains was perhaps intended to gain authority over central Iran Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar was forced to retreat to Astarabad However this retreat was short lived for the reduction of Zand power allowed him to regain his former position Ali Qoli Khan repented before Agha Mohammad Khan now engaging in the cycle of betrayal and reconciliation that characterized Agha Mohammad Khan s relationships with his other brothers As Agha Mohammad Khan was able to tighten his position in the north of the country Ali Qoli Khan carrying the banner of Agha Mohammad Khan yet again was ordered to fight in a series of six campaigns which resulted in the elimination of the Zands and other minor states in southern Iran Ali Qoli Khan conquered the remainder of the Fayli Lors in the southwestern most part of the country Two years later in 1787 1788 he partnered again with Agha Mohammad Khan during an unsuccessful campaign against Fars 2 Returning from Fars Ali Qoli Khan was appointed governor of Isfahan by Agha Mohammad Khan replacing their brother Jafar Qoli Khan Qajar 5 and was assigned 2 000 troops stationed in the city to command With Agha Mohammad Khan on his way to Tehran however Jafar Khan Zand r 1785 1789 began preparing yet another invasion of Isfahan 2 5 Ali Qoli Khan learning of this plan sent a force of Qaraguzlu tribesmen to hold Qumishah but the advancing Zand army led by Jafar Khan Zand were superior in number and overwhelmed them Ali Qoli Khan then retreated to Kashan leaving Isfahan open to Jafar Khan Zand Not long after however together with his older brother Ali Qoli Khan returned and retook the city In 1789 1790 Ali Qoli Khan during Agha Mohammad Khan s second Fars campaign commanded a contingent of 7 000 soldiers and bested the Lor tribes that roamed in Kohgiluyeh Much of his success in Kohgiluyeh was not necessarily due to his military tactics or prowess but because the tribes were willing to repudiate their allegiance to the unstable Zands and submit themselves to the Qajars 2 nbsp A view of Tehran in 1808 1809 from James Justinian Morier s A Journey through Iran Armenia and Asia Minor to Constantinople in the years 1808 and 1809 published in 1812 Ali Qoli Khan took part in Agha Mohammad Khan s attack on Kerman in 1794 and was responsible for taking Shahr e Babak and Sirjan He was later ordered to assert control over Lar Ali Qoli Khan also took part in the campaigns in Azerbaijan and the Caucasus in 1795 During the latter campaign he was first sent to Shirvan followed by Erivan Erevan 2 1 Ali Qoli Khan intended to replace Mostafa Khan e Davalu with Mostafa Khan e Talesh following the former s death as a result of a local uprising by the population of Shirvan However after taking tribute kharaj Ali Qoli Khan left Mostafa Khan e Talesh in his post and moved back to Tehran 1 Succession claim and downfall edit In 1797 during Agha Mohammad Khan s final campaign in the Caucasus Ali Qoli Khan was ordered to hold Erivan At this point Ali Qoli Khan had become the only surviving brother of Agha Mohammad Khan who had not been exiled or physically disabled Following Agha Mohammad Khan s assassination in June 1797 in Shusha and the ensuing turmoil Ali Qoli Khan would proclaim himself the rightful successor to his older brother According to the French naturalist Guillaume Antoine Olivier who was travelling through Iran at the time Ali Qoli Khan had first proclaimed himself Shah in Mazandaran Other sources however suggest that Ali Qoli Khan left Erivan and marched down via Khoy Tabriz and Maragheh towards Tehran with the intention of seizing the newly established capital The gates of the city had been closed by its governor beglarbeg Mirza Mohammad Khan Develu since 1795 however and thus Ali Qoli Khan was forced to encamp at a village some fifty kilometres west of Tehran known as Alishah Avaz now the city of Shahriar His stay at the village was probably intended to recruit more troops in order to storm Tehran by force 1 Simultaneously however his young nephew Baba Khan soon to be Fath Ali Shah r 1797 1834 the second shah of the Qajar dynasty entered Tehran through the acquiescence of Mirza Mohammad Khan On the advice of Hajji Ebrahim Shirazi Baba Khan sent his brother Hosayn Qoli Khan II to invite Ali Qoli Khan to the palace in Tehran under the feigned pretext of discussing succession When Ali Qoli Khan arrived he was not allowed to enter the palace accompanied by his armed attendants Ali Qoli Khan was physically obliged to bow to Baba Khan and cursing him all the while was led to a room where he was blinded Ali Qoli Khan was then sent to Barforush now Babol in Mazandaran where he remained until his death in 1824 2 1 Ali Qoli Khan based his claim to succession on his loyalty to Agha Mohammad Khan having accompanied him throughout the conquest of Iran and as the sole surviving son of Mohammad Hasan Khan 1 2 Based on these arguments he considered it his right to ascend the throne The claim however was void from the start because in the contemporaneous Qajar system of power concepts of kinship and purity of blood were major focal points in the transmission of right and dignity As Ali Qoli Khan had been born to a non Qajar mother he was ineligible for such right In addition under the earlier Qajars a legitimate claim to the Iranian throne had to be imposed by military and political power qualities that Ali Qoli Khan did not possess 1 Furthermore Baba Khan had long been prepared by Agha Mohammad Khan for succession 2 References edit a b c d e f g h i Ebrahimnejad 2007 a b c d e f g h i j k l m Amanat 1985 pp 874 875 Heyat 2000 p 190 Hambly 1991 p 115 a b Hambly 1991 p 121 Sources editAmanat A 1985 ʿALi QOLi KHAN In Yarshater Ehsan ed Encyclopaedia Iranica Volume I 8 Alafrank Alp Arslan London and New York Routledge amp Kegan Paul pp 874 875 ISBN 978 0 71009 097 3 Ebrahimnejad Hormoz 2007 ʿAli Quli Khan In Fleet Kate Kramer Gudrun Matringe Denis Nawas John Rowson Everett eds Encyclopaedia of Islam 3rd ed Brill Online ISSN 1873 9830 Hambly Gavin R G 1991 Agha Muḥammad Khan and the establishment of the Qajar dynasty In Avery Peter Hambly Gavin R G Melville Charles Peter eds The Cambridge History of Iran Volume 7 From Nadir Shah to the Islamic Republic Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 20095 4 Heyat Farideh 2000 Azeri Professional Women s Life Strategies in the Soviet Context In Acar Feride Gunes Ayata Ayse eds Gender and Identity Construction Women of Central Asia the Caucasus and Turkey Brill ISBN 978 9004492028 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ali Qoli Khan Qajar amp oldid 1147838872, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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