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The Qajar dynasty, founded by Muhammad Khan (r. 1789–1797), ruled over modern-day Iran and parts of Afghanistan, Pakistan, Turkmenistan, Georgia, Azerbaijan, and Armenia during the nineteenth century until it was replaced by the Pahlavi dynasty in 1925, when Reza Shah (r. 1925–1941) was declared the new king by the Parliament (Majlis). Seven kings, all
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Introduction to Entertainment in Qajar Persia
Iranian Studies, 2007As far as written records and oral traditions indicate, entertainment in the Qajar era touched on all aspects of life, both public and private. Contrary to Western opinion about this period, Qajar society exhibited a great variety of entertainments, many of which (even when public) were not visible to the outsider, given the constraints of a strongly ...
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Abstract Beginning the early nineteenth century, Iran under the new Qajar dynasty was embroiled in European diplomacy because of its geographic location between Russia and British India. As a buffer state, it was able to remain sovereign, maintain a diplomatic presence on the world scene, and sign treaties with other powers.
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Religion and Society in Qajar Iran
2004Religion and Society in Qajar Iran: An Introduction Part 1: Religion and the State in the Qajar Period 1. Political Ethic and Public Law in the Early Qajar Period 2. Jihad and the Religious Legitimacy of the Early Qajar State 3. From DAr al-SalOana-yi IOfahAn To DAr al-khilafa-yi OihrAn: Continuity and Change in the Safavid Model of State-Religious ...
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Qajar Rule in Iran: in the Qajar Government Events that Changed the Fate of Iran
International Journal of Asian Social Science, 2012The history of each society is a futurity of ups and downs got over by its nation. The basis of their future will be made by the past, particularly if their precedent returns to the ancient times. Individual´s dependence on the present world, on one hand, and the past, on the other hand, represents the importance of the chronology.
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