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When he was assassinated in 1896, Nasir al-Din Shah had sat on the Peacock Throne for nearly half a century. A colorful, complex figure, he is frequently portrayed as capricious and indulgent. Yet he was in many ways an effective ruler who displayed remarkable resilience during his long reign in the face of dilemmas and vulnerabilities shared by most monarchs of the Islamic world in the 19th century. In this book, the first in English about Nasir al-Din Shah, Abbas Amanat gives us both a biography of the man and an analysis of the institution of monarchy in modern Iran. Amanat poses a fundamental question: how did monarchy, the centerpiece of an ancient political order, withstand and adjust to the challenges of modern times, both at home and abroad? Nasir al-Din Shah's life and career, his upbringing and personality, and his political conduct provide remarkable material for answering this question. By examining the way Nasir al-Din Shah was transformed from an insecure crown prince and later an erratic boy-king in the 1840s and 50s into a ruler with substantial control over his government and foreign policy in the 1860s and beyond. Amanat explores a pattern in the consolidation of traditional monarchies as they accommodated themselves to the forces of modernity. Based on extensive archival research in both public and private collections, illustrated with drawings and photographs from the period, Pivot of the Universe offers a fresh interpretation of the evolution of monarchy in modem times as it interacted with the institutions of government, the society at large, and Western powers. The social and cultural themes first evident in Nasir al-Din Shah's reign - especially Iran's position in the Islamic world and its encounter with Western powers - have shaped the course of Iranian history since his death.
Preface Introduction: The Royal Domain The Child of Turkmanchay A Mirror for the Prince Ascending the Throne The Shah and His Atabak A Narrow Escape Playing the Power Game Youthful Ambitions Abolishing the Sidarat Balancing the Old and the New Epilogue: Remnants of a Reign Abbreviations Notes Bibliography
"At Nuri's request and with the shah's approval, Sheil agreed to intervene. Thus, the appointment of Amir Kabir to the governorship of Kashan, a provincial seat sometimes reserved for high-ranking statesmen and notables who had fallen from favor, was guaranteed by the British minister. Sheil's assurances to Amir Kabir that the safety of his, and his family's, life and property would be safeguarded by the British mission and that he would govern respectfully and unmolested provided an acceptable alternative to Amir Kabir's request for asylum. . . . The guarantee of safe passage to ousted premiers was not unfamiliar in Qajar Iran. However, his appeal for protection highlighted a sad irony, not only because he consistently fought against the missions' misuse of diplomatic privileges but also because of his policy of abolishing the institution of bast." (page 150) "On 28 November 1855 Nasir al-Din Shah wrote to Nuri in a private note: Last night, that is the night of Sunday 17 Rabi' al-Awwal, was the night of the birthday of the Prophet, praise be to him and his family. In a dream I saw a garden with a tall, massive pine tree in the middle. I was viewing it from a distance and the name of the tree was Victoria. Indeed, that tree was the country and the monarchy of England. I ordered the pine tree called Victoria to be uprooted and replanted in another location and said: 'Call it Muhammad. Victoria is bad.' What was remarkable about the shah's dream was not only its naked symbolism, almost too perfect to be subliminal, but also its timing. On 27 November, after three weeks of vehement quarreling with Murray, the break in Anglo-Persian diplomatic relations was finalized. The shah's dream, for all its spontaneity, fit well into a course that was destined to be one of the most critical in Nasir al-Din's reign. In the Hashim Khan affair, as the episode leading to the break in relations came to be known, all the various themes from the early life of the shah seemed to converge." (page 265)
ABBAS AMANAT is a professor of history at Yale University and editor of the Journal of Iranian Studies. He has written introductions to Crowning Anguish and the Mage edition of Edward Browne's The Persian Revolution of 1905-1909. He is currently working on a documentary history of modern Iran. If you like the photos and illustrations in this book, you may want to take a look at Khansari and Yavari's work in The Persian Bazaar: Veiled Space of Desire. The Persian Garden has an extensive bibliography of sources in English, French, and Persian. Some of the more recent English-language books are:
Titles that are out of print may be found by searching online for them on one of the online book searches, such as Bookfinder.com. The following represent only those books currently in print. If there is a title you feel we have overlooked please let us know. We have published a number of books relating to the Qajar era. Crowning Anguish: Taj al-Saltana, Memoirs of a Persian Princess, 1884-1914 is an insider's account of life in the Qajar harem which includes a 100-page introduction by Abbas Amanat. Two books that were written during the waning days of the Qajar era are Edward Browne's The Persian Revolution of 1905-1909 and W. Morgan Shuster's The Strangling of Persia. Both are accounts by Westerners of the tumultuous events of the time. In Life In Iran, Iran's greatest visual satirist, Ardeshir Mohasses, critiques the Pahlavi regime and the fundamentalists in a series of drawings in which tyrants are depicted in Qajar-era dress and trappings. Mazda Publishers has published an English translation of Abdullah Mostofi's
multi-volume series The
Administrative and Social History of the Qajar Period. They have also
published a series of essays under the title Qajar
Iran. Political, Social, and Cultural Change 1800-1925. A Qajar descendant has compiled an online Qajar family tree. Since it is by a family member, the site is obviously rather complimentary to its subjects. The excellent web magazine The Iranian published an article on Qajar class structure by Ahmad Ashraf in its December 1996 issue. The Library of Congress' Iran Handbook has some basic information about the Qajar dynasty. Of course, monarchy is alive and well in the world today. Need proof? Check out the official sites of the British Monarchy, Norwegian Monarchy, and the Royal Court of Sweden, as well as the unofficial Spanish Monarchy site. Some countries even wish they were more monarchical than they are. For examples of this, see the slick sites of the following organizations: Canadian Monarchist Online, The Monarchist League of Canada, Australians for Constitutional Monarchy. |
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