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Qajar Iran

Qajar Iran (listen ), also referred to as Qajar Persia,[7] the Qajar Empire,[a] Sublime State of Persia, officially the Sublime State of Iran (Persian: دولت عَلیّهٔ ایران Dowlat-e 'Aliyye-ye Irân) and also known as the Guarded Domains of Iran (Persian: ممالک محروسهٔ ایران Mamâlek-e Mahruse-ye Irân[8]), was an Iranian state[9] ruled by the Qajar dynasty, which was of Turkic origin,[10][11][12] specifically from the Qajar tribe, from 1789 to 1925.[13][14] The Qajar family took full control of Iran in 1794, deposing Lotf 'Ali Khan, the last Shah of the Zand dynasty, and re-asserted Iranian sovereignty over large parts of the Caucasus. In 1796, Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar seized Mashhad with ease,[15] putting an end to the Afsharid dynasty. He was formally crowned as Shah after his punitive campaign against Iran's Georgian subjects.[16]

Sublime State of Iran
دولت عَلیّهٔ ایران
Dowlat-e 'Aliyye-ye Irân
1789–1925
Anthem: (1873–1909)
Salâm-e Shâh
(Royal salute)

(1909–1925)
Salâmati-ye Dowlat-e 'Aliyye-ye Irân
(Salute of the Sublime State of Iran)
Map of Iran under the Qajar dynasty in the 19th century.
CapitalTehran
Common languages
Religion
Shia Islam (official)
minority religions: Sunni Islam, Sufism, Judaism, Zoroastrianism, Christianity, Baháʼí Faith, Mandaeism
Government
Shah 
• 1789–1797 (first)
Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar
• 1909–1925 (last)
Ahmad Shah Qajar
Prime minister 
• 1906 (first)
Mirza Nasrullah Khan
• 1923–1925 (last)
Reza Pahlavi
LegislatureNone (rule by decree) (until 1906)
National Consultative Assembly (since 1906)
History 
• Establishment
1789
24 October 1813
10 February 1828
4 March 1857
21 September 1881
5 August 1906
• Deposed by Constituent Assembly
31 October 1925
Area
1873[5]1,300,000 km2 (500,000 sq mi)
Currencytoman (1789–1825)
qiran (1825–1925)[6]

In the Caucasus, the Qajar dynasty permanently lost much territory[17] to the Russian Empire over the course of the 19th century, comprising modern-day eastern Georgia, Dagestan, Azerbaijan, and Armenia.[18] Despite its territorial losses, Qajar Iran reinvented the Iranian notion of kingship[19] and maintained relative political independence, but faced major challenges to its sovereignty, predominantly from the Russian and British empires. Foreign advisers became powerbrokers in the court and military. They eventually partitioned Qajar Iran in the 1907 Anglo-Russian Convention, carving out Russian and British influence zones and a neutral zone.[20][21][22]

In the early 20th century, the Persian Constitutional Revolution created an elected parliament or Majilis, and sought the establishment of a constitutional monarchy, deposing Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar for Ahmad Shah Qajar, but many of the constitutional reforms were reversed by an intervention led by the Russian Empire.[20][23] Qajar Iran's territorial integrity was further weakened during the Persian campaign of World War I and the invasion by the Ottoman Empire. Four years after the 1921 Persian coup d'état, Reza Shah took power in 1925 and formed the Imperial State of Persia.

History

Origins

The Qajar rulers were members of the Karagöz or "Black-Eye" sect of the Qajars, who themselves were members of the Qajars (tribe) or "Black Hats" lineage of the Oghuz Turks.[24][10][11][12] Qajars first settled during the Mongol period in the vicinity of Armenia and were among the seven Qizilbash tribes that supported the Safavids.[25] The Safavids "left Arran (present-day Republic of Azerbaijan) to local Turkic khans",[26] and, "in 1554 Ganja was governed by Shahverdi Soltan Ziyadoglu Qajar, whose family came to govern Karabakh in southern Arran".[27]

Qajars filled a number of diplomatic missions and governorships in the 16–17th centuries for the Safavids. The Qajars were resettled by Shah Abbas I throughout Iran. The great number of them also settled in Astarabad (present-day Gorgan, Iran) near the south-eastern corner of the Caspian Sea,[10] and it would be this branch of Qajars that would rise to power. The immediate ancestor of the Qajar dynasty, Shah Qoli Khan of the Quvanlu of Ganja (also spelled Ghovanloo or Ghovanlou), married into the Quvanlu Qajars of Astarabad. His son, Fath Ali Khan (born c. 1685–1693) was a renowned military commander during the rule of the Safavid shahs Sultan Husayn and Tahmasp II. He was killed on the orders of Shah Nader Shah in 1726. Fath Ali Khan's son Mohammad Hasan Khan Qajar (1722–1758) was the father of Mohammad Khan Qajar and Hossein Qoli Khan (Jahansouz Shah), father of "Baba Khan," the future Fath-Ali Shah Qajar. Mohammad Hasan Khan was killed on the orders of Karim Khan of the Zand dynasty.

Within 126 years between the demise of the Safavid state and the rise of Naser al-Din Shah Qajar, the Qajars had evolved from a shepherd-warrior tribe with strongholds in northern Persia into a Persian dynasty with all the trappings of a Perso-Islamic monarchy.[9]

Rise to power

"Like virtually every dynasty that ruled Persia since the 11th century, the Qajars came to power with the backing of Turkic tribal forces, while using educated Persians in their bureaucracy".[28] Among these Turkic tribes, however, Turkmens of Iran played the most prominent role in bringing Qajars to power.[29] In 1779 following the death of Karim Khan of the Zand dynasty, Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar, the leader of the Qajars, set out to reunify Iran. Agha Mohammad Khan was known as one of the cruelest kings, even by the standards of 18th-century Iran.[10] In his quest for power, he razed cities, massacred entire populations, and blinded some 20,000 men in the city of Kerman because the local populace had chosen to defend the city against his siege.[10]

The Qajar armies at that time were mostly composed of Turkoman warriors and Georgian slaves.[30] By 1794, Agha Mohammad Khan had eliminated all his rivals, including Lotf Ali Khan, the last of the Zand dynasty. He reestablished Persian control over the territories in the entire Caucasus. Agha Mohammad established his capital at Tehran, a town near the ruins of the ancient city of Rayy. In 1796, he was formally crowned as shah. In 1797, Agha Mohammad Khan was assassinated in Shusha, the capital of Karabakh Khanate, and was succeeded by his nephew, Fath-Ali Shah Qajar.

Reconquest of Georgia and the rest of the Caucasus

In 1744, Nader Shah had granted the kingship of the Kartli and Kakheti to Teimuraz II and his son Erekle II (Heraclius II) respectively, as a reward for their loyalty.[31] When Nader Shah died in 1747, they capitalized on the chaos that had erupted in mainland Iran, and declared de facto independence. After Teimuraz II died in 1762, Erekle II assumed control over Kartli, and united the two kingdoms in a personal union as the Kingdom of Kartli-Kakheti, becoming the first Georgian ruler to preside over a politically unified eastern Georgia in three centuries.[32] At about the same time, Karim Khan Zand had ascended the Iranian throne; Erekle II quickly tendered his de jure submission to the new Iranian ruler, however, de facto, he remained autonomous.[33][34] In 1783, Erekle II placed his kingdom under the protection of the Russian Empire in the Treaty of Georgievsk. In the last few decades of the 18th century, Georgia had become a more important element in Russo-Iranian relations than some provinces in northern mainland Persia, such as Mazandaran or even Gilan.[35] Unlike Peter the Great, Catherine the Great, the then-ruling monarch of Russia, viewed Georgia as a pivot for her Caucasian policy, as Russia's new aspirations were to use it as a base of operations against both Iran and the Ottoman Empire,[36] both immediate bordering geopolitical rivals of Russia. On top of that, having another port on the Georgian coast of the Black Sea would be ideal.[35] A limited Russian contingent of two infantry battalions with four artillery pieces arrived in Tbilisi in 1784,[33] but was withdrawn in 1787, despite the frantic protests of the Georgians, as a new war against Ottoman Turkey had started on a different front.[33]

 
The capture of Tbilisi by Agha Muhammad Khan. A Qajar-era Persian miniature from the British Library.

The consequences of these events came a few years later when a strong new Iranian dynasty under the Qajars emerged victorious in the protracted power struggle in Persia. Their head, Agha Mohammad Khan, as his first objective,[37] resolved to bring the Caucasus again fully under the Persian orbit. For Agha Mohammad Khan, the resubjugation and reintegration of Georgia into the Iranian Empire was part of the same process that had brought Shiraz, Isfahan, and Tabriz under his rule.[33] He viewed, like the Safavids and Nader Shah before him, the territories no different from the territories in mainland Iran. Georgia was a province of Iran the same way Khorasan was.[33] As the Cambridge History of Iran states, its permanent secession was inconceivable and had to be resisted in the same way as one would resist an attempt at the separation of Fars or Gilan.[33] It was therefore natural for Agha Mohammad Khan to perform whatever necessary means in the Caucasus in order to subdue and reincorporate the recently lost regions following Nader Shah's death and the demise of the Zands, including putting down what in Iranian eyes was seen as treason on the part of the vali of Georgia.[33]

Finding an interval of peace amid their own quarrels and with northern, western, and central Persia secure, the Persians demanded Erekle II to renounce the treaty with Russia and to reaccept Persian suzerainty,[37] in return for peace and the security of his kingdom. The Ottomans, Iran's neighboring rival, recognized the latter's rights over Kartli and Kakheti for the first time in four centuries.[38] Erekle appealed then to his theoretical protector, Empress Catherine II of Russia, asking for at least 3,000 Russian troops,[38] but he was ignored, leaving Georgia to fend off the Persian threat alone.[39] Nevertheless, Erekle II still rejected Agha Mohammad Khan's ultimatum.[40]

In August 1795, Agha Mohammad Khan crossed the Aras River, and after a turn of events by which he gathered more support from his subordinate khans of Erivan and Ganja, and having re-secured the territories up to including parts of Dagestan in the north and up to the westernmost border of modern-day Armenia in the west, he sent Erekle the last ultimatum, which he also declined, but, sent couriers to St.Petersburg. Gudovich, who sat in Georgievsk at the time, instructed Erekle to avoid "expense and fuss",[38] while Erekle, together with Solomon II and some Imeretians headed southwards of Tbilisi to fend off the Iranians.[38]

With half of the troop's Agha Mohammad Khan crossed the Aras river with, he now marched directly upon Tbilisi, where it commenced into a huge battle between the Iranian and Georgian armies. Erekle had managed to mobilize some 5,000 troops, including some 2,000 from neighboring Imereti under its King Solomon II. The Georgians, hopelessly outnumbered, were eventually defeated despite stiff resistance. In a few hours, the Iranian king Agha Mohammad Khan was in full control of the Georgian capital. The Persian army marched back laden with spoil and carrying off many thousands of captives.[39][41][42]

By this, after the conquest of Tbilisi and being in effective control of eastern Georgia,[16][43] Agha Mohammad was formally crowned Shah in 1796 in the Mughan plain.[16] As the Cambridge History of Iran notes; "Russia's client, Georgia, had been punished, and Russia's prestige, damaged." Erekle II returned to Tbilisi to rebuild the city, but the destruction of his capital was a death blow to his hopes and projects. Upon learning of the fall of Tbilisi General Gudovich put the blame on the Georgians themselves.[44] To restore Russian prestige, Catherine II declared war on Persia, upon the proposal of Gudovich,[44] and sent an army under Valerian Zubov to the Qajar possessions on April of that year, but the new Tsar Paul I, who succeeded Catherine in November, shortly recalled it.

Agha Mohammad Shah was later assassinated while preparing a second expedition against Georgia in 1797 in Shusha.[44] Reassessment of Iranian hegemony over Georgia did not last long; in 1799 the Russians marched into Tbilisi, two years after Agha Mohammad Khan's death.[45] The next two years were a time of muddle and confusion, and the weakened and devastated Georgian kingdom, with its capital half in ruins, was easily absorbed by Russia in 1801.[39][40] As Iran could not permit or allow the cession of Transcaucasia and Dagestan, which had formed part of the concept of Iran for centuries,[17] it would also directly lead up to the wars of even several years later, namely the Russo-Persian War (1804–1813) and Russo-Persian War (1826–1828), which would eventually prove for the irrevocable forced cession of aforementioned regions to Imperial Russia per the treaties of Gulistan (1813) and Turkmenchay (1828), as the ancient ties could only be severed by a superior force from outside.[17] It was therefore also inevitable that Agha Mohammad Khan's successor, Fath Ali Shah (under whom Iran would lead the two above-mentioned wars) would follow the same policy of restoring Iranian central authority north of the Aras and Kura rivers.[17]

Wars with Russia and irrevocable loss of territories

 
Map showing Irans's northwestern borders in the 19th century, comprising Eastern Georgia, Dagestan, Armenia, and Azerbaijan, before being forced to cede the territories to Imperial Russia per the two Russo-Persian Wars of the 19th century

On 12 September 1801, four years after Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar's death, the Russians capitalized on the moment, and annexed Kartli-Kakheti (eastern Georgia).[46][47] In 1804, the Russians invaded and sacked the Iranian town of Ganja, massacring and expelling thousands of its inhabitants,[48] thereby beginning the Russo-Persian War of 1804–1813.[49] Under Fath Ali Shah (r. 1797–1834), the Qajars set out to fight against the invading Russian Empire, who were keen to take the Iranian territories in the region.[50] This period marked the first major economic and military encroachments on Iranian interests during the colonial era. The Qajar army suffered a major military defeat in the war, and under the terms of the Treaty of Gulistan in 1813, Iran was forced to cede most of its Caucasian territories comprising modern-day Georgia, Dagestan, and most of Azerbaijan.[18]

About a decade later, in violation of the Gulistan Treaty, the Russians invaded Iran's Erivan Khanate.[51][52] This sparked the final bout of hostilities between the two; the Russo-Persian War of 1826–1828. It ended even more disastrously for Qajar Iran with temporary occupation of Tabriz and the signing of the Treaty of Turkmenchay in 1828, acknowledging Russian sovereignty over the entire South Caucasus and Dagestan, as well as therefore the ceding of what is nowadays Armenia and the remaining part of Republic of Azerbaijan;[18] the new border between neighboring Russia and Iran were set at the Aras River. Iran had by these two treaties, in the course of the 19th century, irrevocably lost the territories which had formed part of the concept of Iran for centuries.[17] The area to the North of the river Aras, among which the territory of the contemporary Republic of Azerbaijan, eastern Georgia, Dagestan, and Armenia was Iranian territory until they were occupied by Russia in the course of the 19th century.[18][53][54][55][56][57][58]

As a further direct result and consequence of the Gulistan and Turkmenchay treaties of 1813 and 1828 respectively, the formerly Iranian territories became part of Russia for around the next 180 years, except Dagestan, which has remained a Russian possession ever since. Out of the greater part of the territory, six separate nations would be formed through the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, namely Georgia, Azerbaijan, Armenia, and three generally unrecognized republics Abkhazia, Artsakh and South Ossetia claimed by Georgia. Lastly and equally important, as a result of Russia's imposing of the two treaties, It also decisively parted the Azerbaijanis[59] and Talysh[60] ever since between two nations.

With the conclusion of the Akhal Treaty on 21 September 1881, Iran ceased any claim to all parts of Turkestan and Transoxiana, setting the Atrek River as the new boundary with Imperial Russia. Hence Merv, Sarakhs, Eshgh Abad, and the surrounding areas were transferred to Russian control under the command of General Alexander Komarov in 1884.[61]

Migration of Caucasian Muslims

Following the official losing of the aforementioned vast territories in the Caucasus, major demographic shifts were bound to take place. Solidly Persian-speaking territories of Iran were lost, with all its inhabitants in it. Following the 1804–1814 War, but also per the 1826–1828 war which ceded the last territories, large migrations, so-called Caucasian Muhajirs, set off to migrate to mainland Iran. Some of these groups included the Ayrums, Qarapapaqs, Circassians, Shia Lezgins, and other Transcaucasian Muslims.[62]

 
A. Sharlmann "Battle of Ganja" during the Russo-Persian War (1804–1813)

Through the Battle of Ganja of 1804 during the Russo-Persian War (1804–1813), many thousands of Ayrums and Qarapapaqs were settled in Tabriz. During the remaining part of the 1804–1813 war, as well as through the 1826–1828 war, the absolute bulk of the Ayrums and Qarapapaqs that were still remaining in newly conquered Russian territories were settled in and migrated to Solduz (in modern-day Iran's West Azerbaijan province).[63] As the Cambridge History of Iran states; "The steady encroachment of Russian troops along the frontier in the Caucasus, General Yermolov's brutal punitive expeditions and misgovernment, drove large numbers of Muslims, and even some Georgian Christians, into exile in Iran."[64]

In 1864 until the early 20th century, another mass expulsion took place of Caucasian Muslims as a result of the Russian victory in the Caucasian War. Others simply voluntarily refused to live under Christian Russian rule, and thus disembarked for Turkey or Iran. These migrations once again, towards Iran, included masses of Caucasian Azerbaijanis, other Transcaucasian Muslims, as well as many North Caucasian Muslims, such as Circassians, Shia Lezgins and Laks.[62][65] Many of these migrants would prove to play a pivotal role in further Iranian history, as they formed most of the ranks of the Persian Cossack Brigade, which was also to be established in the late 19th century.[66] The initial ranks of the brigade would be entirely composed of Circassians and other Caucasian Muhajirs.[66] This brigade would prove decisive in the following decades to come in Qajar history.

Furthermore, the 1828 Treaty of Turkmenchay included the official rights for the Russian Empire to encourage settling of Armenians from Iran in the newly conquered Russian territories.[67][68] Until the mid-fourteenth century, Armenians had constituted a majority in Eastern Armenia.[69] At the close of the fourteenth century, after Timur's campaigns, Islam had become the dominant faith, and Armenians became a minority in Eastern Armenia.[69] After centuries of constant warfare on the Armenian Plateau, many Armenians chose to emigrate and settle elsewhere. Following Shah Abbas I's massive relocation of Armenians and Muslims in 1604–05,[70] their numbers dwindled even further.

At the time of the Russian invasion of Iran, some 80% of the population of Erivan Khanate in Iranian Armenia were Muslims (Persians, Turkics, and Kurds) whereas Christian Armenians constituted a minority of about 20%.[71] As a result of the Treaty of Gulistan (1813) and the Treaty of Turkmenchay (1828), Iran was forced to cede Iranian Armenia (which also constituted the present-day Armenia), to the Russians.[72][73] After the Russian administration took hold of Iranian Armenia, the ethnic make-up shifted, and thus for the first time in more than four centuries, ethnic Armenians started to form a majority once again in one part of historic Armenia.[74]

Fath Ali Shah's reign saw increased diplomatic contacts with the West and the beginning of intense European diplomatic rivalries over Iran. His grandson Mohammad Shah, who fell under the Russian influence and made two unsuccessful attempts to capture Herat, succeeded him in 1834. When Mohammad Shah died in 1848 the succession passed to his son Nasser-e-Din, who proved to be the ablest and most successful of the Qajar sovereigns. He founded the first modern hospital in Iran.[75]

Development and decline

 
Mullahs in the royal presence. The painting style is distinctly Qajar.
 
A Zoroastrian family in Qajar Iran

During Nasser-e-Din Shah's reign, Western science, technology, and educational methods were introduced into Persia and the country's modernization was begun. Nasser ed-Din Shah tried to exploit the mutual distrust between Great Britain and Russia to preserve Persia's independence, but foreign interference and territorial encroachment increased under his rule. He was not able to prevent Britain and Russia from encroaching into regions of traditional Persian influence. In 1856, during the Anglo-Persian War, Britain prevented Persia from reasserting control over Herat. The city had been part of Persia in Safavid times, but Herat had been under the non-Persian rule since the mid–18th century. Britain also extended its control to other areas of the Persian Gulf during the 19th century. Meanwhile, by 1881, Russia had completed its conquest of present-day Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan, bringing Russia's frontier to Persia's northeastern borders and severing historic Persian ties to the cities of Bukhara, Merv and Samarqand. Several trade concessions by the Persian government put economic affairs largely under British control. By the late 19th century, many Persians believed that their rulers were beholden to foreign interests.

Mirza Taghi Khan Amir Kabir, was the young prince Nasser-e-Din's advisor and constable. With the death of Mohammad Shah in 1848, Mirza Taqi was largely responsible for ensuring the crown prince's succession to the throne. When Nasser ed-Din succeeded to the throne, Amir Nezam was awarded the position of the prime minister and the title of Amir Kabir, the Great Ruler.

At that time, Persia was nearly bankrupt. During the next two and a half years Amir Kabir initiated important reforms in virtually all sectors of society. Government expenditure was slashed, and a distinction was made between the private and public purses. The instruments of central administration were overhauled, and Amir Kabir assumed responsibility for all areas of the bureaucracy. There were Bahai revolts and a revolt in Khurasan at the time but were crushed under Amir Kabir.[76] Foreign interference in Persia's domestic affairs was curtailed, and foreign trade was encouraged. Public works such as the bazaar in Tehran were undertaken. Amir Kabir issued an edict banning ornate and excessively formal writing in government documents; the beginning of a modern Persian prose style dates from this time.

 
A former Persian Legation in Washington, D.C.

One of the greatest achievements of Amir Kabir was the building of Dar ol Fonoon in 1851, the first modern university in Persia and the Middle East. Dar-ol-Fonoon was established for training a new cadre of administrators and acquainting them with Western techniques. It marked the beginning of modern education in Persia.[77] Amir Kabir ordered the school to be built on the edge of the city so it could be expanded as needed. He hired French and Russian instructors as well as Persians to teach subjects as different as Language, Medicine, Law, Geography, History, Economics, and Engineering, amongst numerous others.[77] Unfortunately, Amir Kabir did not live long enough to see his greatest monument completed, but it still stands in Tehran as a sign of a great man's ideas for the future of his country.

These reforms antagonized various notables who had been excluded from the government. They regarded the Amir Kabir as a social upstart and a threat to their interests, and they formed a coalition against him, in which the queen mother was active. She convinced the young shah that Amir Kabir wanted to usurp the throne. In October 1851, the shah dismissed him and exiled him to Kashan, where he was murdered on the shah's orders. Through his marriage to Ezzat od-Doleh, Amir Kabir had been the brother-in-law of the shah.

The Qajar Iran would become a victim of the Great Game between Russia and Britain for influence over central Asia. As the Qajar state's sovereignty was challenged this took the form of military conquests, diplomatic intrigues, and the competition of trade goods between two foreign empires.[21]: 20, 74  Ever since the 1828 Treaty of Turkmanchay, Russia had received territorial domination in Iran. With the Romanovs shifting to a policy of 'informal support' for the weakened Qajar dynasty — continuing to place pressure with advances in the largely nomadic Turkestan, a crucial frontier territory of the Qajars — this Russian domination of Persia continued for nearly a century.[20][78] The Persian monarchy became more of a symbolic concept in which Russian diplomats were themselves powerbrokers in Iran and the monarchy was dependent on British and Russian loans for funds.[20] In 1879, the establishment of the Cossack Brigade by Russian officers gave the Russian Empire influence over the modernization of the Qajar army. This influence was especially pronounced because the Persian monarchy's legitimacy was predicated on an image of military prowess, first Turkic and then European-influenced.[20][79] By the 1890s, Russian tutors, doctors and officers were prominent at the Shah's court, influencing policy personally.[20][80] Russia and Britain had competing investments in the industrialisation of Iran including roads and telegraph lines,[81] as a way to profit and extend their influence. However, until 1907 the Great Game rivalry was so pronounced that mutual British and Russian demands to the Shah to exclude the other, blocked all railroad construction in Iran at the end of the 19th century.[82]: 20  In 1907 the British and Russian Empires partitioned Iran into spheres of influence with the Anglo-Russian Convention.

Constitutional Revolution

 
Qajar-era currency bill featuring a depiction of Nasser al-Din Shah Qajar.

When Nasser al-Din Shah Qajar was assassinated by Mirza Reza Kermani in 1896,[83] the crown passed to his son Mozaffar-e-din.[83] Mozaffar-e-din Shah was a moderate, but relatively ineffective ruler. Royal extravagances coincided with an inadequate ability to secure state revenue which further exacerbated the financial woes of the Qajar. In response, the Shah procured two large loans from Russia (in part to fund personal trips to Europe). Public anger mounted as the Shah sold off concessions – such as road building monopolies, the authority to collect duties on imports, etc. – to European interests in return for generous payments to the Shah and his officials. Popular demand to curb arbitrary royal authority in favor of the rule of law increased as concern regarding growing foreign penetration and influence heightened.

 
Mozaffar al-Din Shah and Attendants Seated in a Garden One of 274 vintage photographs (Brooklyn Museum)

The shah's failure to respond to protests by the religious establishment, the merchants, and other classes led the merchants and clerical leaders in January 1906 to take sanctuary from probable arrest in mosques in Tehran and outside the capital. When the shah reneged on a promise to permit the establishment of a "house of justice", or consultative assembly, 10,000 people, led by the merchants, took sanctuary in June in the compound of the British legation in Tehran. In August, the shah, through the issue of a decree promised a constitution. In October, an elected assembly convened and drew up a constitution that provided for strict limitations on royal power, an elected parliament, or Majles, with wide powers to represent the people and a government with a cabinet subject to confirmation by the Majles. The shah signed the constitution on 30 December 1906, but refusing to forfeit all of his power to the Majles, attached a caveat that made his signature on all laws required for their enactment. He died five days later. The Supplementary Fundamental Laws approved in 1907 provided, within limits, for freedom of press, speech, and association, and for the security of life and property. The hopes for the constitutional rule were not realized, however.

 
Persian Cossack Brigade in Tabriz in 1909

Mozaffar-e-din Shah's son Mohammad Ali Shah (reigned 1907–1909), who, through his mother, was also the grandson of Prime-Minister Amir Kabir (see before), with the aid of Russia, attempted to rescind the constitution and abolish parliamentary government. After several disputes with the members of the Majles, in June 1908 he used his Russian-officered Persian Cossack Brigade (almost solely composed of Caucasian Muhajirs), to bomb the Majlis building, arrest many of the deputies (December 1907), and close down the assembly (June 1908).[84] Resistance to the shah, however, coalesced in Tabriz, Isfahan, Rasht, and elsewhere. In July 1909, constitutional forces marched from Rasht to Tehran led by Mohammad Vali Khan Sepahsalar Khalatbari Tonekaboni, deposed the Shah, and re-established the constitution. The ex-shah went into exile in Russia. Shah died in San Remo, Italy, in April 1925. Every future Shah of Iran would also die in exile.

On 16 July 1909, the Majles voted to place Mohammad Ali Shah's 11-year-old son, Ahmad Shah on the throne.[85] Although the constitutional forces had triumphed, they faced serious difficulties. The upheavals of the Constitutional Revolution and civil war had undermined stability and trade. In addition, the ex-shah, with Russian support, attempted to regain his throne, landing troops in July 1910. Most serious of all, the hope that the Constitutional Revolution would inaugurate a new era of independence from the great powers ended when, under the Anglo-Russian Entente of 1907, Britain and Russia agreed to divide Persia into spheres of influence. The Russians were to enjoy exclusive right to pursue their interests in the northern sphere, the British in the south and east; both powers would be free to compete for economic and political advantage in a neutral sphere in the center. Matters came to a head when Morgan Shuster, a United States administrator hired as treasurer-general by the Persian government to reform its finances, sought to collect taxes from powerful officials who were Russian protégés and to send members of the treasury gendarmerie, a tax department police force, into the Russian zone. When in December 1911 the Majlis unanimously refused a Russian ultimatum demanding Shuster's dismissal, Russian troops, already in the country, moved to occupy the capital. To prevent this, on 20 December, Bakhtiari chiefs and their troops surrounded the Majles building, forced acceptance of the Russian ultimatum, and shut down the assembly, once again suspending the constitution.[23][86]

British and Russian officials coordinated as the Russian army, still present in Persia, invaded the capital again and suspended the parliament. The Tsar ordered the troops in Tabriz "to act harshly and quickly", while purges were ordered, leading to many executions of prominent revolutionaries. The British Ambassador, George Head Barclay reported disapproval of this "reign of terror", though would soon pressure Persian ministers to officialize the Anglo-Russian partition of Iran. By June 1914, Russia established near-total control over its northern zone, while Britain had established influence over Baluch and Bakhtiari autonomous tribal leaders in the southeastern zone.[87] Qajar Iran would become a battleground between Russian, Ottoman, and British forces in the Persian campaign of World War I.[88][87]

World War I and related events

Though Qajar Iran had announced strict neutrality on the first day of November 1914 (which was reiterated by each successive government thereafter),[89] the neighboring Ottoman Empire invaded it relatively shortly after, in the same year. At that time, large parts of Iran were under tight Russian influence and control, and since 1910 Russian forces were present inside the country, while many of its cities possessed Russian garrisons.[89] Due to the latter reason, as Prof. Dr. Touraj Atabaki states, declaring neutrality was useless, especially as Iran had no force to implement this policy.[89]

At the beginning of the war, the Ottomans invaded Iranian Azerbaijan.[90] Numerous clashes would take place there between the Russians, who were further aided by the Assyrians under Agha Petros as well as Armenian volunteer units and battalions, and the Ottomans on the other side.[citation needed] However, with the advent of the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the subsequent withdrawal of most of the Russian troops, the Ottomans gained the upper hand in Iran, occupying significant portions of the country until the end of the war. Between 1914 and 1918, the Ottoman troops massacred many thousands of Iran's Assyrian and Armenian population, as part of the Assyrian and Armenian genocides, respectively.[91][92]

The front in Iran would last up to the Armistice of Mudros in 1918.

Fall of the dynasty

Ahmad Shah Qajar was born 21 January 1898 in Tabriz, and succeeded to the throne at age 11. However, the occupation of Persia during World War I by Russian, British, and Ottoman troops was a blow from which Ahmad Shah never effectively recovered.

In February 1921, Reza Khan, commander of the Persian Cossack Brigade, staged a coup d'état, becoming the effective ruler of Iran. In 1923, Ahmad Shah went into exile in Europe. Reza Khan induced the Majles to depose Ahmad Shah in October 1925 and to exclude the Qajar dynasty permanently. Reza Khan was subsequently proclaimed monarch as Reza Shah Pahlavi, reigning from 1925 to 1941.[93][94]

Ahmad Shah died on February 21, 1930, in Neuilly-sur-Seine, France.[95]

Government and administration

Iran was divided into five large provinces and a large number of smaller ones at the beginning of Fath Ali Shah's reign, about 20 provinces in 1847, 39 in 1886, but 18 in 1906.[96] In 1868, most province governors were Qajar princes.[97]

Military

The Qajar military was one of the dynasty's largest conventional sources of legitimacy, albeit was increasingly influenced by foreign powers over the course of the dynasty.[20][79]

Irregular forces, such as tribal cavalry, were a major element until the late nineteenth century, and irregular forces long remained a significant part of the Qajar army.[98]

Russia established the Persian Cossack Brigade in 1879, a force which was led by Russian officers and served as a vehicle for Russian influence in Iran.[99][100]

By the 1910s, the Qajar Iran was decentralised to the extent that foreign powers sought to bolster the central authority of the Qajars by providing military aid. It was viewed as a process of defensive modernisation; however, this also led to internal colonisation.[101]

The Iranian Gendarmerie was founded in 1911 with the assistance of Sweden.[102][101] The involvement of a neutral country was seen to avoid "Great Game" rivalry between Russia and Britain, as well as avoid siding with any particular alliance (in the prelude to World War I). Persian administrators thought the reforms could strengthen the country against foreign influences. The Swedish-influenced police had some success in building up Persian police in centralizing the country.[102] After 1915, Russia and Britain demanded the recall of the Swedish advisers. Some Swedish officers left, while others sided with the Germans and Ottomans in their intervention in Persia. The remainder of the Gendarmerie was named amniya after a patrol unit that existed in the early Qajar dynasty. [102]

The number of Russian officers in the Cossack Brigade would increase over time. Britain also sent sepoys to reinforce the Brigade. After the start of the Russian Revolution, many tsarist supporters remained in Persia as members of the Cossack Brigade rather than fighting for or against the Soviet Union.[100]

The British formed the South Persia Rifles in 1916, which was initially separate from the Persian army until 1921.[103]

In 1921, the Russian-officered Persian Cossack Brigade was merged with the gendarmerie and other forces, and would become supported by the British.[104]

At the end of the Qajar dynasty in 1925, Reza Shah's Pahlavi army would include members of the gendarmerie, Cossacks, and former members of the South Persia Rifles.[100]

Art

 
Painting of a woman in Qajar Iran.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Persian: شاهنشاهی قاجار Šāhanšāhi-ye Qājār.

References

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Further reading

  • Behrooz, Maziar (2013). "Revisiting the Second Russo-Iranian War (1826–28): Causes and Perceptions". Iranian Studies. 46 (3): 359–381. doi:10.1080/00210862.2012.758502. S2CID 143736977.
  • Bournoutian, George (2020). From the Kur to the Aras: A Military History of Russia's Move into the South Caucasus and the First Russo-Iranian War, 1801–1813. Leiden: Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-44516-1.
  • Deutschmann, Moritz (2013). ""All Rulers are Brothers": Russian Relations with the Iranian Monarchy in the Nineteenth Century". Iranian Studies. 46 (3): 383–413. doi:10.1080/00210862.2012.759334. S2CID 143785614.
  • Grobien, Philip Henning (2021). "Iran and imperial nationalism in 1919". Middle Eastern Studies. 57 (2): 292–309. doi:10.1080/00263206.2020.1853535. S2CID 230604129.
  • Sluglett, Peter (2014). "The Waning of Empires: The British, the Ottomans and the Russians in the Caucasus and North Iran, 1917–1921". Middle East Critique. 23 (2): 189–208. doi:10.1080/19436149.2014.905084. S2CID 143816605.

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Qajar redirects here For other uses see Qajar disambiguation Qajar Iran listen help info also referred to as Qajar Persia 7 the Qajar Empire a Sublime State of Persia officially the Sublime State of Iran Persian دولت ع لی ه ایران Dowlat e Aliyye ye Iran and also known as the Guarded Domains of Iran Persian ممالک محروسه ایران Mamalek e Mahruse ye Iran 8 was an Iranian state 9 ruled by the Qajar dynasty which was of Turkic origin 10 11 12 specifically from the Qajar tribe from 1789 to 1925 13 14 The Qajar family took full control of Iran in 1794 deposing Lotf Ali Khan the last Shah of the Zand dynasty and re asserted Iranian sovereignty over large parts of the Caucasus In 1796 Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar seized Mashhad with ease 15 putting an end to the Afsharid dynasty He was formally crowned as Shah after his punitive campaign against Iran s Georgian subjects 16 Sublime State of Iranدولت ع لی ه ایران Dowlat e Aliyye ye Iran1789 1925Flag 1906 1925 Coat of arms 1907 1925 Anthem 1873 1909 Salam e Shah Royal salute source source 1909 1925 Salamati ye Dowlat e Aliyye ye Iran Salute of the Sublime State of Iran source source Map of Iran under the Qajar dynasty in the 19th century CapitalTehranCommon languagesPersian court literature language administrative cultural official 1 2 Azerbaijani court language and mother tongue 3 4 ReligionShia Islam official minority religions Sunni Islam Sufism Judaism Zoroastrianism Christianity Bahaʼi Faith MandaeismGovernmentUnitary absolute monarchy 1789 1906 Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy 1906 1925 Shah 1789 1797 first Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar 1909 1925 last Ahmad Shah QajarPrime minister 1906 first Mirza Nasrullah Khan 1923 1925 last Reza PahlaviLegislatureNone rule by decree until 1906 National Consultative Assembly since 1906 History Establishment1789 Treaty of Gulistan24 October 1813 Treaty of Turkmenchay10 February 1828 Treaty of Paris4 March 1857 Treaty of Akhal21 September 1881 Persian Constitutional Revolution5 August 1906 Deposed by Constituent Assembly31 October 1925Area1873 5 1 300 000 km2 500 000 sq mi Currencytoman 1789 1825 qiran 1825 1925 6 Preceded by Succeeded byZand dynastyKingdom of Kartli KakhetiAfsharid Iran Pahlavi IranIn the Caucasus the Qajar dynasty permanently lost much territory 17 to the Russian Empire over the course of the 19th century comprising modern day eastern Georgia Dagestan Azerbaijan and Armenia 18 Despite its territorial losses Qajar Iran reinvented the Iranian notion of kingship 19 and maintained relative political independence but faced major challenges to its sovereignty predominantly from the Russian and British empires Foreign advisers became powerbrokers in the court and military They eventually partitioned Qajar Iran in the 1907 Anglo Russian Convention carving out Russian and British influence zones and a neutral zone 20 21 22 In the early 20th century the Persian Constitutional Revolution created an elected parliament or Majilis and sought the establishment of a constitutional monarchy deposing Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar for Ahmad Shah Qajar but many of the constitutional reforms were reversed by an intervention led by the Russian Empire 20 23 Qajar Iran s territorial integrity was further weakened during the Persian campaign of World War I and the invasion by the Ottoman Empire Four years after the 1921 Persian coup d etat Reza Shah took power in 1925 and formed the Imperial State of Persia Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 2 Rise to power 1 3 Reconquest of Georgia and the rest of the Caucasus 1 4 Wars with Russia and irrevocable loss of territories 1 4 1 Migration of Caucasian Muslims 1 5 Development and decline 1 6 Constitutional Revolution 1 7 World War I and related events 1 8 Fall of the dynasty 2 Government and administration 3 Military 4 Art 5 See also 6 Notes 7 References 8 Sources 9 Further reading 10 External linksHistory EditOrigins Edit The Qajar rulers were members of the Karagoz or Black Eye sect of the Qajars who themselves were members of the Qajars tribe or Black Hats lineage of the Oghuz Turks 24 10 11 12 Qajars first settled during the Mongol period in the vicinity of Armenia and were among the seven Qizilbash tribes that supported the Safavids 25 The Safavids left Arran present day Republic of Azerbaijan to local Turkic khans 26 and in 1554 Ganja was governed by Shahverdi Soltan Ziyadoglu Qajar whose family came to govern Karabakh in southern Arran 27 Qajars filled a number of diplomatic missions and governorships in the 16 17th centuries for the Safavids The Qajars were resettled by Shah Abbas I throughout Iran The great number of them also settled in Astarabad present day Gorgan Iran near the south eastern corner of the Caspian Sea 10 and it would be this branch of Qajars that would rise to power The immediate ancestor of the Qajar dynasty Shah Qoli Khan of the Quvanlu of Ganja also spelled Ghovanloo or Ghovanlou married into the Quvanlu Qajars of Astarabad His son Fath Ali Khan born c 1685 1693 was a renowned military commander during the rule of the Safavid shahs Sultan Husayn and Tahmasp II He was killed on the orders of Shah Nader Shah in 1726 Fath Ali Khan s son Mohammad Hasan Khan Qajar 1722 1758 was the father of Mohammad Khan Qajar and Hossein Qoli Khan Jahansouz Shah father of Baba Khan the future Fath Ali Shah Qajar Mohammad Hasan Khan was killed on the orders of Karim Khan of the Zand dynasty Within 126 years between the demise of the Safavid state and the rise of Naser al Din Shah Qajar the Qajars had evolved from a shepherd warrior tribe with strongholds in northern Persia into a Persian dynasty with all the trappings of a Perso Islamic monarchy 9 Rise to power Edit Main article Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar Like virtually every dynasty that ruled Persia since the 11th century the Qajars came to power with the backing of Turkic tribal forces while using educated Persians in their bureaucracy 28 Among these Turkic tribes however Turkmens of Iran played the most prominent role in bringing Qajars to power 29 In 1779 following the death of Karim Khan of the Zand dynasty Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar the leader of the Qajars set out to reunify Iran Agha Mohammad Khan was known as one of the cruelest kings even by the standards of 18th century Iran 10 In his quest for power he razed cities massacred entire populations and blinded some 20 000 men in the city of Kerman because the local populace had chosen to defend the city against his siege 10 The Qajar armies at that time were mostly composed of Turkoman warriors and Georgian slaves 30 By 1794 Agha Mohammad Khan had eliminated all his rivals including Lotf Ali Khan the last of the Zand dynasty He reestablished Persian control over the territories in the entire Caucasus Agha Mohammad established his capital at Tehran a town near the ruins of the ancient city of Rayy In 1796 he was formally crowned as shah In 1797 Agha Mohammad Khan was assassinated in Shusha the capital of Karabakh Khanate and was succeeded by his nephew Fath Ali Shah Qajar Reconquest of Georgia and the rest of the Caucasus Edit Main article Battle of Krtsanisi 1800QING EMPIREMARATHAEMPIREQAJAREMPIREOTTOMANEMPIREKHIVAKHANATEBUKHARAEMIRATEKOKANDKUMULCHAM PADURRANIEMPIREKALATKAZAKH KHANATERUSSIAN EMPIREJO SEONDAIVIETSIAMKINGDOM class notpageimage The Qajar Empire and contemporary Asian polities c 1800 In 1744 Nader Shah had granted the kingship of the Kartli and Kakheti to Teimuraz II and his son Erekle II Heraclius II respectively as a reward for their loyalty 31 When Nader Shah died in 1747 they capitalized on the chaos that had erupted in mainland Iran and declared de facto independence After Teimuraz II died in 1762 Erekle II assumed control over Kartli and united the two kingdoms in a personal union as the Kingdom of Kartli Kakheti becoming the first Georgian ruler to preside over a politically unified eastern Georgia in three centuries 32 At about the same time Karim Khan Zand had ascended the Iranian throne Erekle II quickly tendered his de jure submission to the new Iranian ruler however de facto he remained autonomous 33 34 In 1783 Erekle II placed his kingdom under the protection of the Russian Empire in the Treaty of Georgievsk In the last few decades of the 18th century Georgia had become a more important element in Russo Iranian relations than some provinces in northern mainland Persia such as Mazandaran or even Gilan 35 Unlike Peter the Great Catherine the Great the then ruling monarch of Russia viewed Georgia as a pivot for her Caucasian policy as Russia s new aspirations were to use it as a base of operations against both Iran and the Ottoman Empire 36 both immediate bordering geopolitical rivals of Russia On top of that having another port on the Georgian coast of the Black Sea would be ideal 35 A limited Russian contingent of two infantry battalions with four artillery pieces arrived in Tbilisi in 1784 33 but was withdrawn in 1787 despite the frantic protests of the Georgians as a new war against Ottoman Turkey had started on a different front 33 The capture of Tbilisi by Agha Muhammad Khan A Qajar era Persian miniature from the British Library The consequences of these events came a few years later when a strong new Iranian dynasty under the Qajars emerged victorious in the protracted power struggle in Persia Their head Agha Mohammad Khan as his first objective 37 resolved to bring the Caucasus again fully under the Persian orbit For Agha Mohammad Khan the resubjugation and reintegration of Georgia into the Iranian Empire was part of the same process that had brought Shiraz Isfahan and Tabriz under his rule 33 He viewed like the Safavids and Nader Shah before him the territories no different from the territories in mainland Iran Georgia was a province of Iran the same way Khorasan was 33 As the Cambridge History of Iran states its permanent secession was inconceivable and had to be resisted in the same way as one would resist an attempt at the separation of Fars or Gilan 33 It was therefore natural for Agha Mohammad Khan to perform whatever necessary means in the Caucasus in order to subdue and reincorporate the recently lost regions following Nader Shah s death and the demise of the Zands including putting down what in Iranian eyes was seen as treason on the part of the vali of Georgia 33 Finding an interval of peace amid their own quarrels and with northern western and central Persia secure the Persians demanded Erekle II to renounce the treaty with Russia and to reaccept Persian suzerainty 37 in return for peace and the security of his kingdom The Ottomans Iran s neighboring rival recognized the latter s rights over Kartli and Kakheti for the first time in four centuries 38 Erekle appealed then to his theoretical protector Empress Catherine II of Russia asking for at least 3 000 Russian troops 38 but he was ignored leaving Georgia to fend off the Persian threat alone 39 Nevertheless Erekle II still rejected Agha Mohammad Khan s ultimatum 40 In August 1795 Agha Mohammad Khan crossed the Aras River and after a turn of events by which he gathered more support from his subordinate khans of Erivan and Ganja and having re secured the territories up to including parts of Dagestan in the north and up to the westernmost border of modern day Armenia in the west he sent Erekle the last ultimatum which he also declined but sent couriers to St Petersburg Gudovich who sat in Georgievsk at the time instructed Erekle to avoid expense and fuss 38 while Erekle together with Solomon II and some Imeretians headed southwards of Tbilisi to fend off the Iranians 38 With half of the troop s Agha Mohammad Khan crossed the Aras river with he now marched directly upon Tbilisi where it commenced into a huge battle between the Iranian and Georgian armies Erekle had managed to mobilize some 5 000 troops including some 2 000 from neighboring Imereti under its King Solomon II The Georgians hopelessly outnumbered were eventually defeated despite stiff resistance In a few hours the Iranian king Agha Mohammad Khan was in full control of the Georgian capital The Persian army marched back laden with spoil and carrying off many thousands of captives 39 41 42 By this after the conquest of Tbilisi and being in effective control of eastern Georgia 16 43 Agha Mohammad was formally crowned Shah in 1796 in the Mughan plain 16 As the Cambridge History of Iran notes Russia s client Georgia had been punished and Russia s prestige damaged Erekle II returned to Tbilisi to rebuild the city but the destruction of his capital was a death blow to his hopes and projects Upon learning of the fall of Tbilisi General Gudovich put the blame on the Georgians themselves 44 To restore Russian prestige Catherine II declared war on Persia upon the proposal of Gudovich 44 and sent an army under Valerian Zubov to the Qajar possessions on April of that year but the new Tsar Paul I who succeeded Catherine in November shortly recalled it Agha Mohammad Shah was later assassinated while preparing a second expedition against Georgia in 1797 in Shusha 44 Reassessment of Iranian hegemony over Georgia did not last long in 1799 the Russians marched into Tbilisi two years after Agha Mohammad Khan s death 45 The next two years were a time of muddle and confusion and the weakened and devastated Georgian kingdom with its capital half in ruins was easily absorbed by Russia in 1801 39 40 As Iran could not permit or allow the cession of Transcaucasia and Dagestan which had formed part of the concept of Iran for centuries 17 it would also directly lead up to the wars of even several years later namely the Russo Persian War 1804 1813 and Russo Persian War 1826 1828 which would eventually prove for the irrevocable forced cession of aforementioned regions to Imperial Russia per the treaties of Gulistan 1813 and Turkmenchay 1828 as the ancient ties could only be severed by a superior force from outside 17 It was therefore also inevitable that Agha Mohammad Khan s successor Fath Ali Shah under whom Iran would lead the two above mentioned wars would follow the same policy of restoring Iranian central authority north of the Aras and Kura rivers 17 Wars with Russia and irrevocable loss of territories Edit Main articles Russo Persian War 1804 1813 Russo Persian War 1826 1828 Treaty of Gulistan Treaty of Turkmenchay and Treaty of Akhal Map showing Irans s northwestern borders in the 19th century comprising Eastern Georgia Dagestan Armenia and Azerbaijan before being forced to cede the territories to Imperial Russia per the two Russo Persian Wars of the 19th century On 12 September 1801 four years after Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar s death the Russians capitalized on the moment and annexed Kartli Kakheti eastern Georgia 46 47 In 1804 the Russians invaded and sacked the Iranian town of Ganja massacring and expelling thousands of its inhabitants 48 thereby beginning the Russo Persian War of 1804 1813 49 Under Fath Ali Shah r 1797 1834 the Qajars set out to fight against the invading Russian Empire who were keen to take the Iranian territories in the region 50 This period marked the first major economic and military encroachments on Iranian interests during the colonial era The Qajar army suffered a major military defeat in the war and under the terms of the Treaty of Gulistan in 1813 Iran was forced to cede most of its Caucasian territories comprising modern day Georgia Dagestan and most of Azerbaijan 18 About a decade later in violation of the Gulistan Treaty the Russians invaded Iran s Erivan Khanate 51 52 This sparked the final bout of hostilities between the two the Russo Persian War of 1826 1828 It ended even more disastrously for Qajar Iran with temporary occupation of Tabriz and the signing of the Treaty of Turkmenchay in 1828 acknowledging Russian sovereignty over the entire South Caucasus and Dagestan as well as therefore the ceding of what is nowadays Armenia and the remaining part of Republic of Azerbaijan 18 the new border between neighboring Russia and Iran were set at the Aras River Iran had by these two treaties in the course of the 19th century irrevocably lost the territories which had formed part of the concept of Iran for centuries 17 The area to the North of the river Aras among which the territory of the contemporary Republic of Azerbaijan eastern Georgia Dagestan and Armenia was Iranian territory until they were occupied by Russia in the course of the 19th century 18 53 54 55 56 57 58 As a further direct result and consequence of the Gulistan and Turkmenchay treaties of 1813 and 1828 respectively the formerly Iranian territories became part of Russia for around the next 180 years except Dagestan which has remained a Russian possession ever since Out of the greater part of the territory six separate nations would be formed through the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 namely Georgia Azerbaijan Armenia and three generally unrecognized republics Abkhazia Artsakh and South Ossetia claimed by Georgia Lastly and equally important as a result of Russia s imposing of the two treaties It also decisively parted the Azerbaijanis 59 and Talysh 60 ever since between two nations With the conclusion of the Akhal Treaty on 21 September 1881 Iran ceased any claim to all parts of Turkestan and Transoxiana setting the Atrek River as the new boundary with Imperial Russia Hence Merv Sarakhs Eshgh Abad and the surrounding areas were transferred to Russian control under the command of General Alexander Komarov in 1884 61 Battle of Sultanabad 13 February 1812 State Hermitage Museum Storming of Lankaran 13 January 1813 Franz Roubaud Battle of Ganja 1826 Franz Roubaud Part of the collection of the Museum for History Baku Migration of Caucasian Muslims Edit See also Ayrums Qarapapaqs and Ethnic Cleansing of Circassians Following the official losing of the aforementioned vast territories in the Caucasus major demographic shifts were bound to take place Solidly Persian speaking territories of Iran were lost with all its inhabitants in it Following the 1804 1814 War but also per the 1826 1828 war which ceded the last territories large migrations so called Caucasian Muhajirs set off to migrate to mainland Iran Some of these groups included the Ayrums Qarapapaqs Circassians Shia Lezgins and other Transcaucasian Muslims 62 A Sharlmann Battle of Ganja during the Russo Persian War 1804 1813 Through the Battle of Ganja of 1804 during the Russo Persian War 1804 1813 many thousands of Ayrums and Qarapapaqs were settled in Tabriz During the remaining part of the 1804 1813 war as well as through the 1826 1828 war the absolute bulk of the Ayrums and Qarapapaqs that were still remaining in newly conquered Russian territories were settled in and migrated to Solduz in modern day Iran s West Azerbaijan province 63 As the Cambridge History of Iran states The steady encroachment of Russian troops along the frontier in the Caucasus General Yermolov s brutal punitive expeditions and misgovernment drove large numbers of Muslims and even some Georgian Christians into exile in Iran 64 In 1864 until the early 20th century another mass expulsion took place of Caucasian Muslims as a result of the Russian victory in the Caucasian War Others simply voluntarily refused to live under Christian Russian rule and thus disembarked for Turkey or Iran These migrations once again towards Iran included masses of Caucasian Azerbaijanis other Transcaucasian Muslims as well as many North Caucasian Muslims such as Circassians Shia Lezgins and Laks 62 65 Many of these migrants would prove to play a pivotal role in further Iranian history as they formed most of the ranks of the Persian Cossack Brigade which was also to be established in the late 19th century 66 The initial ranks of the brigade would be entirely composed of Circassians and other Caucasian Muhajirs 66 This brigade would prove decisive in the following decades to come in Qajar history Furthermore the 1828 Treaty of Turkmenchay included the official rights for the Russian Empire to encourage settling of Armenians from Iran in the newly conquered Russian territories 67 68 Until the mid fourteenth century Armenians had constituted a majority in Eastern Armenia 69 At the close of the fourteenth century after Timur s campaigns Islam had become the dominant faith and Armenians became a minority in Eastern Armenia 69 After centuries of constant warfare on the Armenian Plateau many Armenians chose to emigrate and settle elsewhere Following Shah Abbas I s massive relocation of Armenians and Muslims in 1604 05 70 their numbers dwindled even further At the time of the Russian invasion of Iran some 80 of the population of Erivan Khanate in Iranian Armenia were Muslims Persians Turkics and Kurds whereas Christian Armenians constituted a minority of about 20 71 As a result of the Treaty of Gulistan 1813 and the Treaty of Turkmenchay 1828 Iran was forced to cede Iranian Armenia which also constituted the present day Armenia to the Russians 72 73 After the Russian administration took hold of Iranian Armenia the ethnic make up shifted and thus for the first time in more than four centuries ethnic Armenians started to form a majority once again in one part of historic Armenia 74 Fath Ali Shah s reign saw increased diplomatic contacts with the West and the beginning of intense European diplomatic rivalries over Iran His grandson Mohammad Shah who fell under the Russian influence and made two unsuccessful attempts to capture Herat succeeded him in 1834 When Mohammad Shah died in 1848 the succession passed to his son Nasser e Din who proved to be the ablest and most successful of the Qajar sovereigns He founded the first modern hospital in Iran 75 Development and decline Edit Mullahs in the royal presence The painting style is distinctly Qajar A Zoroastrian family in Qajar Iran During Nasser e Din Shah s reign Western science technology and educational methods were introduced into Persia and the country s modernization was begun Nasser ed Din Shah tried to exploit the mutual distrust between Great Britain and Russia to preserve Persia s independence but foreign interference and territorial encroachment increased under his rule He was not able to prevent Britain and Russia from encroaching into regions of traditional Persian influence In 1856 during the Anglo Persian War Britain prevented Persia from reasserting control over Herat The city had been part of Persia in Safavid times but Herat had been under the non Persian rule since the mid 18th century Britain also extended its control to other areas of the Persian Gulf during the 19th century Meanwhile by 1881 Russia had completed its conquest of present day Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan bringing Russia s frontier to Persia s northeastern borders and severing historic Persian ties to the cities of Bukhara Merv and Samarqand Several trade concessions by the Persian government put economic affairs largely under British control By the late 19th century many Persians believed that their rulers were beholden to foreign interests Mirza Taghi Khan Amir Kabir was the young prince Nasser e Din s advisor and constable With the death of Mohammad Shah in 1848 Mirza Taqi was largely responsible for ensuring the crown prince s succession to the throne When Nasser ed Din succeeded to the throne Amir Nezam was awarded the position of the prime minister and the title of Amir Kabir the Great Ruler At that time Persia was nearly bankrupt During the next two and a half years Amir Kabir initiated important reforms in virtually all sectors of society Government expenditure was slashed and a distinction was made between the private and public purses The instruments of central administration were overhauled and Amir Kabir assumed responsibility for all areas of the bureaucracy There were Bahai revolts and a revolt in Khurasan at the time but were crushed under Amir Kabir 76 Foreign interference in Persia s domestic affairs was curtailed and foreign trade was encouraged Public works such as the bazaar in Tehran were undertaken Amir Kabir issued an edict banning ornate and excessively formal writing in government documents the beginning of a modern Persian prose style dates from this time A former Persian Legation in Washington D C One of the greatest achievements of Amir Kabir was the building of Dar ol Fonoon in 1851 the first modern university in Persia and the Middle East Dar ol Fonoon was established for training a new cadre of administrators and acquainting them with Western techniques It marked the beginning of modern education in Persia 77 Amir Kabir ordered the school to be built on the edge of the city so it could be expanded as needed He hired French and Russian instructors as well as Persians to teach subjects as different as Language Medicine Law Geography History Economics and Engineering amongst numerous others 77 Unfortunately Amir Kabir did not live long enough to see his greatest monument completed but it still stands in Tehran as a sign of a great man s ideas for the future of his country These reforms antagonized various notables who had been excluded from the government They regarded the Amir Kabir as a social upstart and a threat to their interests and they formed a coalition against him in which the queen mother was active She convinced the young shah that Amir Kabir wanted to usurp the throne In October 1851 the shah dismissed him and exiled him to Kashan where he was murdered on the shah s orders Through his marriage to Ezzat od Doleh Amir Kabir had been the brother in law of the shah The Qajar Iran would become a victim of the Great Game between Russia and Britain for influence over central Asia As the Qajar state s sovereignty was challenged this took the form of military conquests diplomatic intrigues and the competition of trade goods between two foreign empires 21 20 74 Ever since the 1828 Treaty of Turkmanchay Russia had received territorial domination in Iran With the Romanovs shifting to a policy of informal support for the weakened Qajar dynasty continuing to place pressure with advances in the largely nomadic Turkestan a crucial frontier territory of the Qajars this Russian domination of Persia continued for nearly a century 20 78 The Persian monarchy became more of a symbolic concept in which Russian diplomats were themselves powerbrokers in Iran and the monarchy was dependent on British and Russian loans for funds 20 In 1879 the establishment of the Cossack Brigade by Russian officers gave the Russian Empire influence over the modernization of the Qajar army This influence was especially pronounced because the Persian monarchy s legitimacy was predicated on an image of military prowess first Turkic and then European influenced 20 79 By the 1890s Russian tutors doctors and officers were prominent at the Shah s court influencing policy personally 20 80 Russia and Britain had competing investments in the industrialisation of Iran including roads and telegraph lines 81 as a way to profit and extend their influence However until 1907 the Great Game rivalry was so pronounced that mutual British and Russian demands to the Shah to exclude the other blocked all railroad construction in Iran at the end of the 19th century 82 20 In 1907 the British and Russian Empires partitioned Iran into spheres of influence with the Anglo Russian Convention Constitutional Revolution Edit Main article Iranian Constitutional Revolution Qajar era currency bill featuring a depiction of Nasser al Din Shah Qajar When Nasser al Din Shah Qajar was assassinated by Mirza Reza Kermani in 1896 83 the crown passed to his son Mozaffar e din 83 Mozaffar e din Shah was a moderate but relatively ineffective ruler Royal extravagances coincided with an inadequate ability to secure state revenue which further exacerbated the financial woes of the Qajar In response the Shah procured two large loans from Russia in part to fund personal trips to Europe Public anger mounted as the Shah sold off concessions such as road building monopolies the authority to collect duties on imports etc to European interests in return for generous payments to the Shah and his officials Popular demand to curb arbitrary royal authority in favor of the rule of law increased as concern regarding growing foreign penetration and influence heightened Mozaffar al Din Shah and Attendants Seated in a Garden One of 274 vintage photographs Brooklyn Museum The shah s failure to respond to protests by the religious establishment the merchants and other classes led the merchants and clerical leaders in January 1906 to take sanctuary from probable arrest in mosques in Tehran and outside the capital When the shah reneged on a promise to permit the establishment of a house of justice or consultative assembly 10 000 people led by the merchants took sanctuary in June in the compound of the British legation in Tehran In August the shah through the issue of a decree promised a constitution In October an elected assembly convened and drew up a constitution that provided for strict limitations on royal power an elected parliament or Majles with wide powers to represent the people and a government with a cabinet subject to confirmation by the Majles The shah signed the constitution on 30 December 1906 but refusing to forfeit all of his power to the Majles attached a caveat that made his signature on all laws required for their enactment He died five days later The Supplementary Fundamental Laws approved in 1907 provided within limits for freedom of press speech and association and for the security of life and property The hopes for the constitutional rule were not realized however Persian Cossack Brigade in Tabriz in 1909 Mozaffar e din Shah s son Mohammad Ali Shah reigned 1907 1909 who through his mother was also the grandson of Prime Minister Amir Kabir see before with the aid of Russia attempted to rescind the constitution and abolish parliamentary government After several disputes with the members of the Majles in June 1908 he used his Russian officered Persian Cossack Brigade almost solely composed of Caucasian Muhajirs to bomb the Majlis building arrest many of the deputies December 1907 and close down the assembly June 1908 84 Resistance to the shah however coalesced in Tabriz Isfahan Rasht and elsewhere In July 1909 constitutional forces marched from Rasht to Tehran led by Mohammad Vali Khan Sepahsalar Khalatbari Tonekaboni deposed the Shah and re established the constitution The ex shah went into exile in Russia Shah died in San Remo Italy in April 1925 Every future Shah of Iran would also die in exile On 16 July 1909 the Majles voted to place Mohammad Ali Shah s 11 year old son Ahmad Shah on the throne 85 Although the constitutional forces had triumphed they faced serious difficulties The upheavals of the Constitutional Revolution and civil war had undermined stability and trade In addition the ex shah with Russian support attempted to regain his throne landing troops in July 1910 Most serious of all the hope that the Constitutional Revolution would inaugurate a new era of independence from the great powers ended when under the Anglo Russian Entente of 1907 Britain and Russia agreed to divide Persia into spheres of influence The Russians were to enjoy exclusive right to pursue their interests in the northern sphere the British in the south and east both powers would be free to compete for economic and political advantage in a neutral sphere in the center Matters came to a head when Morgan Shuster a United States administrator hired as treasurer general by the Persian government to reform its finances sought to collect taxes from powerful officials who were Russian proteges and to send members of the treasury gendarmerie a tax department police force into the Russian zone When in December 1911 the Majlis unanimously refused a Russian ultimatum demanding Shuster s dismissal Russian troops already in the country moved to occupy the capital To prevent this on 20 December Bakhtiari chiefs and their troops surrounded the Majles building forced acceptance of the Russian ultimatum and shut down the assembly once again suspending the constitution 23 86 British and Russian officials coordinated as the Russian army still present in Persia invaded the capital again and suspended the parliament The Tsar ordered the troops in Tabriz to act harshly and quickly while purges were ordered leading to many executions of prominent revolutionaries The British Ambassador George Head Barclay reported disapproval of this reign of terror though would soon pressure Persian ministers to officialize the Anglo Russian partition of Iran By June 1914 Russia established near total control over its northern zone while Britain had established influence over Baluch and Bakhtiari autonomous tribal leaders in the southeastern zone 87 Qajar Iran would become a battleground between Russian Ottoman and British forces in the Persian campaign of World War I 88 87 World War I and related events Edit Main article Persian campaign World War I See also Jungle Movement of Gilan Persian Socialist Soviet Republic and Persian famine of 1917 1919 Though Qajar Iran had announced strict neutrality on the first day of November 1914 which was reiterated by each successive government thereafter 89 the neighboring Ottoman Empire invaded it relatively shortly after in the same year At that time large parts of Iran were under tight Russian influence and control and since 1910 Russian forces were present inside the country while many of its cities possessed Russian garrisons 89 Due to the latter reason as Prof Dr Touraj Atabaki states declaring neutrality was useless especially as Iran had no force to implement this policy 89 At the beginning of the war the Ottomans invaded Iranian Azerbaijan 90 Numerous clashes would take place there between the Russians who were further aided by the Assyrians under Agha Petros as well as Armenian volunteer units and battalions and the Ottomans on the other side citation needed However with the advent of the Russian Revolution of 1917 and the subsequent withdrawal of most of the Russian troops the Ottomans gained the upper hand in Iran occupying significant portions of the country until the end of the war Between 1914 and 1918 the Ottoman troops massacred many thousands of Iran s Assyrian and Armenian population as part of the Assyrian and Armenian genocides respectively 91 92 The front in Iran would last up to the Armistice of Mudros in 1918 Fall of the dynasty Edit Ahmad Shah Qajar was born 21 January 1898 in Tabriz and succeeded to the throne at age 11 However the occupation of Persia during World War I by Russian British and Ottoman troops was a blow from which Ahmad Shah never effectively recovered In February 1921 Reza Khan commander of the Persian Cossack Brigade staged a coup d etat becoming the effective ruler of Iran In 1923 Ahmad Shah went into exile in Europe Reza Khan induced the Majles to depose Ahmad Shah in October 1925 and to exclude the Qajar dynasty permanently Reza Khan was subsequently proclaimed monarch as Reza Shah Pahlavi reigning from 1925 to 1941 93 94 Ahmad Shah died on February 21 1930 in Neuilly sur Seine France 95 Government and administration EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2021 Iran was divided into five large provinces and a large number of smaller ones at the beginning of Fath Ali Shah s reign about 20 provinces in 1847 39 in 1886 but 18 in 1906 96 In 1868 most province governors were Qajar princes 97 Military EditSee also Persian Army Qajar Era 1794 to 1925 The Qajar military was one of the dynasty s largest conventional sources of legitimacy albeit was increasingly influenced by foreign powers over the course of the dynasty 20 79 Irregular forces such as tribal cavalry were a major element until the late nineteenth century and irregular forces long remained a significant part of the Qajar army 98 Russia established the Persian Cossack Brigade in 1879 a force which was led by Russian officers and served as a vehicle for Russian influence in Iran 99 100 By the 1910s the Qajar Iran was decentralised to the extent that foreign powers sought to bolster the central authority of the Qajars by providing military aid It was viewed as a process of defensive modernisation however this also led to internal colonisation 101 The Iranian Gendarmerie was founded in 1911 with the assistance of Sweden 102 101 The involvement of a neutral country was seen to avoid Great Game rivalry between Russia and Britain as well as avoid siding with any particular alliance in the prelude to World War I Persian administrators thought the reforms could strengthen the country against foreign influences The Swedish influenced police had some success in building up Persian police in centralizing the country 102 After 1915 Russia and Britain demanded the recall of the Swedish advisers Some Swedish officers left while others sided with the Germans and Ottomans in their intervention in Persia The remainder of the Gendarmerie was named amniya after a patrol unit that existed in the early Qajar dynasty 102 The number of Russian officers in the Cossack Brigade would increase over time Britain also sent sepoys to reinforce the Brigade After the start of the Russian Revolution many tsarist supporters remained in Persia as members of the Cossack Brigade rather than fighting for or against the Soviet Union 100 The British formed the South Persia Rifles in 1916 which was initially separate from the Persian army until 1921 103 In 1921 the Russian officered Persian Cossack Brigade was merged with the gendarmerie and other forces and would become supported by the British 104 At the end of the Qajar dynasty in 1925 Reza Shah s Pahlavi army would include members of the gendarmerie Cossacks and former members of the South Persia Rifles 100 Art Edit Painting of a woman in Qajar Iran See also Qajar art This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it September 2021 See also EditQajar dynasty Abdolhossein Teymourtash Austro Hungarian military mission in Persia Bahmani family History of Iran Khanates of the Caucasus List of kings of Persia List of Shia dynasties Mirza Kouchek Khan History of the CaucasusNotes Edit Persian شاهنشاهی قاجار Sahansahi ye Qajar References Edit Homa Katouzian State and Society in Iran The Eclipse of the Qajars and the Emergence of the Pahlavis published by I B Tauris 2006 pg 327 In post Islamic times the mother tongue of Iran s rulers was often Turkic but Persian was almost invariably the cultural and administrative language Homa Katouzian Iranian history and politics published by Routledge 2003 pg 128 Indeed since the formation of the Ghaznavids state in the tenth century until the fall of Qajars at the beginning of the twentieth century most parts of the Iranian cultural regions were ruled by Turkic speaking dynasties most of the time At the same time the official language was Persian the court literature was in Persian and most of the chancellors ministers and mandarins were Persian speakers of the highest learning and ability Ardabil Becomes a Province Center Periphery Relations in Iran H E Chehabi International Journal of Middle East Studies Vol 29 No 2 May 1997 235 Azeri Turkish was widely spoken at the two courts in addition to Persian and Mozaffareddin Shah r 1896 1907 spoke Persian with an Azeri Turkish accent AZERBAIJAN x Azeri Turkish Literature Encyclopaedia Iranica 24 May 2012 Retrieved 20 October 2013 In the 19th century under the Qajars when Turkish was used at court once again literary activity was intensified Hughes William 1873 A Class book of Modern Geography With Examination Questions G Philip amp Son p 175 Archived from the original on 26 August 2020 Retrieved 26 August 2020 In size it is about 500 000 square miles علی اصغر شمیم ایران در دوره سلطنت قاجار ته ران انتشارات علمی ۱۳۷۱ ص ۲۸۷ Early Qajar Persia appeared to Charles Melville ed 27 January 2012 Persian Historiography A History of Persian Literature pp 358 361 ISBN 9780857723598 a b Abbas Amanat The Pivot of the Universe Nasir Al Din Shah Qajar and the Iranian Monarchy 1831 1896 I B Tauris pp 2 3 a b c d e Cyrus Ghani Iran and the Rise of the Reza Shah From Qajar Collapse to Pahlavi Power I B Tauris 2000 ISBN 1 86064 629 8 p 1 a b William Bayne Fisher Cambridge History of Iran Cambridge University Press 1993 p 344 ISBN 0 521 20094 6 a b Dr Parviz Kambin A History of the Iranian Plateau Rise and Fall of an Empire Universe 2011 p 36 online edition Abbas Amanat The Pivot of the Universe Nasir Al Din Shah Qajar and the Iranian Monarchy 1831 1896 I B Tauris pp 2 3 In the 126 years between the fall of the Safavid state in 1722 and the accession of Nasir al Din Shah the Qajars evolved from a shepherd warrior tribe with strongholds in northern Iran into a Persian dynasty Choueiri Youssef M A companion to the history of the Middle East Blackwell Ltd 2005 231 516 H Scheel Jaschke Gerhard H Braun Spuler Bertold T Koszinowski Bagley Frank 1981 Muslim World Brill Archive pp 65 370 ISBN 978 90 04 06196 5 Retrieved 28 September 2012 a b c Michael Axworthy Iran Empire of the Mind A History from Zoroaster to the Present Day Penguin UK 6 November 2008 ISBN 0141903414 a b c d e Fisher et al 1991 p 330 a b c d Timothy C Dowling Russia at War From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan Chechnya and Beyond pp 728 730 ABC CLIO 2 December 2014 ISBN 1598849484 Amanat 2017 p 177 a b c d e f g Deutschmann Moritz 2013 All Rulers are Brothers Russian Relations with the Iranian Monarchy in the Nineteenth Century Iranian Studies 46 3 401 413 doi 10 1080 00210862 2012 759334 ISSN 0021 0862 JSTOR 24482848 S2CID 143785614 a b Andreeva Elena 2007 Russia and Iran in the great game travelogues and Orientalism London Routledge pp 20 63 76 ISBN 978 0 203 96220 6 OCLC 166422396 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link ANGLO RUSSIAN CONVENTION OF 1907 Encyclopedia Iranica Retrieved 22 August 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b Afary Janet 1996 The Iranian Constitutional Revolution 1906 1911 Grassroots Democracy Social Democracy amp the Origins of Feminism Columbia University Press pp 330 338 ISBN 978 0 231 10351 0 Genealogy and History of Qajar Kadjar Rulers and Heads of the Imperial Kadjar House IRAN ii IRANIAN HISTORY 2 Islamic period Ehsan Yarshater Encyclopaedia Iranica 29 March 2012 1 The Qajar were a Turkmen tribe who first settled during the Mongol period in the vicinity of Armenia and were among the seven Qezelbas tribes that supported the Safavids K M Rohrborn Provinzen und Zentralgewalt Persiens im 16 und 17 Jahrhundert Berlin 1966 p 4 Encyclopedia Iranica Ganja Online Edition Archived 11 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine Keddie Nikki R 1971 The Iranian Power Structure and Social Change 1800 1969 An Overview International Journal of Middle East Studies 2 1 3 20 p 4 doi 10 1017 S0020743800000842 S2CID 163247729 Irons William 1975 The Yomut Turkmen A Study of Social Organization among a Central Asian Turkic Speaking Population University of Michigan Press p 8 For example the Turkmen of Iran were instrumental in the establishment of Kajar dynasty in Iran in the late eighteenth century and opponents of the Iranian constitution sought Turkmen support in the revolution of 1909 Lapidus Ira Marvin 2002 A History of Islamic Societies Cambridge University Press p 469 ISBN 978 0 521 77933 3 Suny 1994 p 55 Hitchins 1998 pp 541 542 a b c d e f g Fisher et al 1991 p 328 Perry 1991 p 96 a b Fisher et al 1991 p 327 Mikaberidze 2011 p 327 a b Mikaberidze 2011 p 409 a b c d Donald Rayfield Edge of Empires A History of Georgia Reaktion Books 15 February 2013 ISBN 1780230702 p 255 a b c Lang David Marshall 1962 A Modern History of Georgia p 38 London Weidenfeld and Nicolson a b Suny Ronald Grigor 1994 The Making of the Georgian Nation p 59 Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 20915 3 P Sykes A history of Persia 3rd edition Barnes and Noble 1969 Vol 2 p 293 Malcolm Sir John 1829 The History of Persia from the Earliest Period to the Present Time pp 189 191 London John Murray Fisher William Bayne 1991 The Cambridge History of Iran Vol 7 Cambridge University Press pp 128 129 Agha Muhammad Khan remained nine days in the vicinity of Tiflis His victory proclaimed the restoration of Iranian military power in the region formerly under Safavid domination a b c Fisher et al 1991 p 329 Alekseĭ I Miller Imperial Rule Central European University Press 2004 ISBN 9639241989 p 204 Gvosdev 2000 p 86 Lang 1957 p 249 Dowling 2014 p 728 Tucker Spencer C ed 2010 A Global Chronology of Conflict From the Ancient World to the Modern Middle East ABC CLIO p 1035 ISBN 978 1851096725 January 1804 Russo Persian War The Russian invasion of Persia In January 1804 Russian forces under General Paul Tsitsianov Sisianoff invade Persia and storm the citadel of Ganjeh beginning the Russo Persian War 1804 1813 Fisher William Bayne 1991 The Cambridge History of Iran Cambridge University Press pp 145 146 Even when rulers on the plateau lacked the means to effect suzerainty beyond the Aras the neighboring Khanates were still regarded as Iranian dependencies Naturally it was those Khanates located closes to the province of Azarbaijan which most frequently experienced attempts to re impose Iranian suzerainty the Khanates of Erivan Nakhchivan and Qarabagh across the Aras and the cis Aras Khanate of Talish with its administrative headquarters located at Lankaran and therefore very vulnerable to pressure either from the direction of Tabriz or Rasht Beyond the Khanate of Qarabagh the Khan of Ganja and the Vali of Gurjistan ruler of the Kartli Kakheti kingdom of south east Georgia although less accessible for purposes of coercion were also regarded as the Shah s vassals as were the Khans of Shakki and Shirvan north of the Kura river The contacts between Iran and the Khanates of Baku and Qubba however were more tenuous and consisted mainly of maritime commercial links with Anzali and Rasht The effectiveness of these somewhat haphazard assertions of suzerainty depended on the ability of a particular Shah to make his will felt and the determination of the local khans to evade obligations they regarded as onerous Cronin Stephanie ed 2013 Iranian Russian Encounters Empires and Revolutions since 1800 Routledge p 63 ISBN 978 0415624336 Perhaps the most important legacy of Yermolov was his intention from early on to prepare the ground for the conquest of the remaining khanates under Iranian rule and to make the River Aras the new border Another provocative action by Yermolov was the Russian occupation of the northern shore of Lake Gokcha Sivan in the Khanate of Iravan in 1825 A clear violation of Golestan this action was the most significant provocation by the Russian side The Lake Gokcha occupation clearly showed that it was Russia and not Iran which initiated hostilities and breached Golestan and that Iran was left with no choice but to come up with a proper response Dowling Timothy C ed 2015 Russia at War From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan Chechnya and Beyond ABC CLIO p 729 ISBN 978 1598849486 In May 1826 Russia therefore occupied Mirak in the Erivan khanate in violation of the Treaty of Gulistan Swietochowski Tadeusz 1995 Russia and Azerbaijan A Borderland in Transition Columbia University Press pp 69 133 ISBN 978 0 231 07068 3 L Batalden Sandra 1997 The newly independent states of Eurasia Handbook of former Soviet republics Greenwood Publishing Group p 98 ISBN 978 0 89774 940 4 E Ebel Robert Menon Rajan 2000 Energy and conflict in Central Asia and the Caucasus Rowman amp Littlefield p 181 ISBN 978 0 7425 0063 1 Andreeva Elena 2010 Russia and Iran in the great game travelogues and orientalism reprint ed Taylor amp Francis p 6 ISBN 978 0 415 78153 4 Cicek Kemal Kuran Ercument 2000 The Great Ottoman Turkish Civilisation University of Michigan ISBN 978 975 6782 18 7 Ernest Meyer Karl Blair Brysac Shareen 2006 Tournament of Shadows The Great Game and the Race for Empire in Central Asia Basic Books p 66 ISBN 978 0 465 04576 1 However the result of the Treaty of Turkmenchay was a tragedy for the Azerbaijani people It demarcated a borderline through their territory along the Araxes river a border that still today divides the Azerbaijani people in Svante Cornell Small nations and great powers A Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict in the Caucasus Richmond Curzon Press 2001 p 37 Michael P Croissant The Armenia Azerbaijan Conflict causes and implications Praeger Greenwood 1998 Page 67 The historical homeland of the Talysh was divided between Russia and Iran in 1813 Adle Chahryar 2005 History of Civilizations of Central Asia Towards the contemporary period from the mid nineteenth to the end of the twentieth century UNESCO pp 470 477 ISBN 9789231039850 a b Caucasus Survey Archived from the original on 15 April 2015 Retrieved 23 April 2015 Mansoori Firooz 2008 17 Studies in History Language and Culture of Azerbaijan in Persian Tehran Hazar e Kerman p 245 ISBN 978 600 90271 1 8 Fisher et al 1991 p 336 A G Bulatova Lakcy XIX nach XX vv Istoriko etnograficheskie ocherki Mahachkala 2000 a b The Iranian Armed Forces in Politics Revolution and War Part One Retrieved 23 May 2014 Griboedov not only extended protection to those Caucasian captives who sought to go home but actively promoted the return of even those who did not volunteer Large numbers of Georgian and Armenian captives had lived in Iran since 1804 or as far back as 1795 Fisher William Bayne Avery Peter Gershevitch Ilya Hambly Gavin Melville Charles The Cambridge History of Iran Cambridge University Press 1991 p 339 in Russian A S Griboyedov Zapiska o pereselenii armyan iz Persii v nashi oblasti Archived 13 January 2016 at the Wayback Machine Fundamentalnaya Elektronnaya Biblioteka a b Bournoutian 1980 pp 11 13 14 Arakel of Tabriz The Books of Histories chapter 4 Quote The Shah deep inside understood that he would be unable to resist Sinan Pasha i e the Sardar of Jalaloghlu in a n open battle Therefore he ordered to relocate the whole population of Armenia Christians Jews and Muslims alike to Persia so that the Ottomans find the country depopulated Bournoutian 1980 pp 12 13 Bournoutian 1980 pp 1 2 Mikaberidze 2015 p 141 Bournoutian 1980 p 14 Azizi Mohammad Hossein The historical backgrounds of the Ministry of Health foundation in Iran Arch Iran Med 10 1 2007 119 23 Algar Hamid 1989 AMiR KABiR MiRZA TAQi KHAN Encyclopedia Iranica Retrieved 24 July 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b DAR AL FONuN Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 6 January 2016 Mojtahed Zadeh Pirouz 31 July 2004 The Small Players of the Great Game The Settlement of Iran s Eastern Borderlands and the Creation of Afghanistan Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 38378 8 a b Rabi Uzi Ter Oganov Nugzar 2009 The Russian Military Mission and the Birth of the Persian Cossack Brigade 1879 1894 Iranian Studies 42 3 445 463 doi 10 1080 00210860902907396 ISSN 0021 0862 JSTOR 25597565 S2CID 143812599 Andreeva Elena RUSSIA v RUSSIANS AT THE COURT OF MOḤAMMAD ʿALI SHAH Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 19 May 2022 INDO EUROPEAN TELEGRAPH DEPARTMENT ENCYCLOPEDIA IRANICA Retrieved 4 June 2022 Andreeva Elena 2007 Russia and Iran in the great game travelogues and Orientalism London Routledge pp 20 63 76 ISBN 978 0 203 96220 6 OCLC 166422396 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link a b Amanat 1997 p 440 Kohn 2006 p 408 Holt Lambton amp Lewis 1977 p 597 Meyer Karl E 10 August 1987 Opinion The Editorial Notebook Persia The Great Game Goes On The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 24 October 2021 a b Afary Janet 1996 The Iranian Constitutional Revolution 1906 1911 Grassroots Democracy Social Democracy amp the Origins of Feminism Columbia University Press pp 330 338 ISBN 978 0 231 10351 0 Syed Muzaffar Husain Akhtar Syed Saud Usmani B D 14 September 2011 Concise History of Islam Vij Books India Pvt Ltd p 221 ISBN 978 93 82573 47 0 a b c Atabaki 2006 p 9 Atabaki 2006 p 10 Suny 2015 pp 243 244 sfn error no target CITEREFSuny2015 help Ungor 2016 p 18 sfn error no target CITEREFUngor2016 help Abrahamian History of Modern Iran 2008 p 91 Roger Homan The Origins of the Iranian Revolution International Affairs 56 4 Autumn 1980 673 7 Portraits and Pictures of Soltan Ahmad Shah Qajar Kadjar qajarpages org Retrieved 21 January 2014 Willem M Floor A Fiscal History of Iran in the Safavid and Qajar Periods 1500 1925 Frederick Millingen La Turquie sous le regne d Abdul Aziz Rabi Uzi Ter Oganov Nugzar 2012 The Military of Qajar Iran The Features of an Irregular Army from the Eighteenth to the Early Twentieth Century Iranian Studies 45 3 333 354 doi 10 1080 00210862 2011 637776 ISSN 0021 0862 JSTOR 41445213 S2CID 159730844 Andreeva Elena 2007 Russia and Iran in the great game travelogues and Orientalism London Routledge pp 20 63 76 ISBN 978 0 203 96220 6 OCLC 166422396 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link a b c Cossack Brigade Iranica Online Retrieved 4 June 2022 a b The Swedish led Gendarmerie in Persia 1911 1916 State Building and Internal Colonization Sharmin and Bijan Mossavar Rahmani Center for Iran and Persian Gulf Studies Retrieved 4 June 2022 a b c SWEDEN ii SWEDISH OFFICERS IN PERSIA 1911 15 Iranica Online Retrieved 4 June 2022 South Persia Rifles Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 4 June 2022 Zirinsky Michael P 1992 Imperial Power and Dictatorship Britain and the Rise of Reza Shah 1921 1926 International Journal of Middle East Studies 24 4 639 663 doi 10 1017 S0020743800022388 ISSN 0020 7438 JSTOR 164440 S2CID 159878744 Sources EditAtabaki Touraj 2006 Iran and the First World War Battleground of the Great Powers I B Tauris ISBN 978 1860649646 Amanat Abbas 1997 Pivot of the Universe Nasir Al Din Shah Qajar and the Iranian Monarchy 1831 1896 I B Tauris ISBN 9781860640971 Amanat Abbas 2017 Iran A Modern History Yale University Press pp 1 992 ISBN 978 0300112542 Bournoutian George A 1980 The Population of Persian Armenia Prior to and Immediately Following its Annexation to the Russian Empire 1826 1832 The Wilson Center Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help Bosworth Edmund 1983 Hillenbrand Carole ed Qajar Iran Political Social and Cultural Change 1800 1925 Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 085 224 459 3 Bournoutian George A 2002 A Concise History of the Armenian People from Ancient Times to the Present 2 ed Mazda Publishers ISBN 978 1568591414 Caton M 1988 BANAN ḠOLAM ḤOSAYN Encyclopaedia Iranica Dowling Timothy C 2014 Russia at War From the Mongol Conquest to Afghanistan Chechnya and Beyond 2 volumes ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1598849486 Fisher William Bayne Avery P Hambly G R G Melville C 1991 The Cambridge History of Iran Vol 7 Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521200950 Floor Willem M 2003 Traditional Crafts in Qajar Iran 1800 1925 Mazda Publishers ISBN 978 156 859 147 6 Gleave Robert ed 2005 Religion and Society in Qajar Iran Routledge ISBN 978 041 533 814 1 Hitchins Keith 1998 EREKLE II EREKLE II Encyclopaedia Iranica Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol VIII Fasc 5 pp 541 542 Holt P M Lambton Ann K S Lewis Bernard 1977 The Cambridge History of Islam Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521291361 Keddie Nikki R 1999 Qajar Iran and the rise of Reza Khan 1796 1925 Mazda Publishers ISBN 978 156 859 084 4 Kettenhofen Erich Bournoutian George A Hewsen Robert H 1998 EREVAN Encyclopǣdia Iranica Vol VIII Fasc 5 pp 542 551 Kohn George C 2006 Dictionary of Wars Infobase Publishing ISBN 978 1438129167 Mikaberidze Alexander 2011 Conflict and Conquest in the Islamic World A Historical Encyclopedia Vol 1 ABC CLIO ISBN 978 1598843361 Mikaberidze Alexander 2015 Historical Dictionary of Georgia 2 ed Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1442241466 Gvosdev Nikolas K Imperial policies and perspectives towards Georgia 1760 1819 Macmillan Basingstoke 2000 ISBN 0 312 22990 9 Lang David M The last years of the Georgian Monarchy 1658 1832 Columbia University Press New York 1957 Paidar Parvin 1997 Women and the Political Process in Twentieth Century Iran Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 9780521595728 Perry John 1991 The Zand dynasty The Cambridge History of Iran Volume 7 From Nadir Shah to the Islamic Republic Cambridge Cambridge University Press pp 63 104 ISBN 9780521200950 Suny Ronald Grigor 1994 The Making of the Georgian Nation Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0253209153 Further reading EditBehrooz Maziar 2013 Revisiting the Second Russo Iranian War 1826 28 Causes and Perceptions Iranian Studies 46 3 359 381 doi 10 1080 00210862 2012 758502 S2CID 143736977 Bournoutian George 2020 From the Kur to the Aras A Military History of Russia s Move into the South Caucasus and the First Russo Iranian War 1801 1813 Leiden Brill ISBN 978 90 04 44516 1 Deutschmann Moritz 2013 All Rulers are Brothers Russian Relations with the Iranian Monarchy in the Nineteenth Century Iranian Studies 46 3 383 413 doi 10 1080 00210862 2012 759334 S2CID 143785614 Grobien Philip Henning 2021 Iran and imperial nationalism in 1919 Middle Eastern Studies 57 2 292 309 doi 10 1080 00263206 2020 1853535 S2CID 230604129 Sluglett Peter 2014 The Waning of Empires The British the Ottomans and the Russians in the Caucasus and North Iran 1917 1921 Middle East Critique 23 2 189 208 doi 10 1080 19436149 2014 905084 S2CID 143816605 External links Edit Wikisource has the text of a 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article about Qajar dynasty The Qajar Kadjar Pages The International Qajar Studies Association Dar ol Qajar Qajar Family Website Some Photos of Qajar Family Members Women s Worlds in Qajar Iran Digital Archive by Harvard University Qajar Documentation Fund Collection at the International Institute of Social History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Qajar Iran amp oldid 1151214400, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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