La dynastie Kadjar / Qadjar Iran
  Voorood
 
France Iran

La dynastie Kadjar / Qadjar



 
sohbatnamayeshfarhang honarsiasatjoke iranivarzeshghaza  
Auteur Message
Peyman
Administrateur
Administrateur


Inscrit le: 22 Sep 2005
Messages: 5926
Localisation: Paris ;)

Dim 02 Oct, 2005 11:57 am     La dynastie Kadjar / Qadjar

Ce site présente l'histoire des Qadjars ou Kadjars et a le mérite d'être rempli d'informations et de témoignages. Dommage le design est un peu absent. Le site de Farhad Sepahbody :

http://users.sedona.net/~sepa/

 la dynastie kadjar qadjar

Le prince Qadjar, Ahmad Shah ci dessus

Citation:
Sultan Ahmad, the last of the Qajars, was, in the words of his distant cousin the Aga Khan, "an extremely intelligent young man, highly educated, with a wide knowledge of both Eastern and Western culture, and well read in history, politics, and economic theory." Unlike most Middle Eastern rulers, he was also a constitutional monarch with no desire to be absolute. However, surrounded by ambitious and unprincipled courtiers, he grew up unable to believe in himself or the future of his dynasty. Thus he failed to inspire the respect necessary for effective government in Persia.

Ruled by a kind monarch who hardly cared for his throne and by weak and incompetent ministers, Persians felt a need for change. In 1924 bega a movement inspired by Reza Khan Sardar Sepah (later Reza Shah) in favor of a republic. But the mullahs were still leaders of of public opinion and associated a republic with the anti-Musli policies of the republic installed in Turkey by Mustafa Kemal. Thus Reza Khan decided to replace the monarch instead of the monarchy. In 1926 Ahmad Shah was on a trip to Europe, but in November, the Shah's announcement that he intended to return hastened the deposition of his dynasty. One of the four speakers in the Majles (parliament) against the motion to depose Ahmad Shah was Mossadegh, a relation of the Qajars and the future popular Prime Minister of the 1952-53 oil crisis. On 12 December Reza Khan became Reza Shah, and on 25 April 1926 he crowned himself in the Golestan Palace.
Extracts from "Sultans in Splendor" by Peter Mansel - The Vendome Press New York and Paris - ISBN: 0-86565-109-4





 

 
code & design : Peyman