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The written history of Iran begins with the early
Achaemenids, some 2,500 years ago, but since then
till the dawn of Islam in Iran, all that is
available on the Iranian history has been written by
the ancient Greeks, who were then Iran's greatest
enemies. So, the pre-Islamic historical sources are
not completely reliable although there are
indications that Greek historians often faithfully
recorded the facts.
Was there no Iranian Herodotus or Xenophon, or were
Iranian historical records destroyed in the many
invasions that followed? The answer is not clear.
But of the ancient past, certain mythological
stories have survived which had been collected
during the Sassanid era; and once the Persian
language emerged in the Moslem Iran, these were
turned into verses, sixty thousand of them in all,
by one of Iran's greatest poets, Abulghassem
Ferdowsi. He compiled these verses into a book and
named it "Shahnameh", the book of kings. Parts
ofthese verses have been translated into English,
French, Cerman and a few other languages. The book
makes excellent epic reading, but for the ancient
history we have to rely on Greek writings, and
archaeological findings.
Iranians are said to be Aryans and this is in part
true. Though predominantly Aryan, they are in fact a
mixture of many nations and races: the Old Asian
people who lived on the Iranian plateau before the
arrival of the Aryans; the Aryans who moved to the
plateau mostly in the first millennium BC ; and
finally the descendants of the later conquerors:
Arabs, Turks, and Mongols.
Archaeological findings indicate that before the Ary
ans moved to Iran, a race of people who were neither
Semitic nor Aryan lived on the Iranian plateau.
These men and women belonged to a certain race which
inhabited western Asia, a region extending from the
present republic of Turkestan to the Mediterranean.
In Iran the Old Asians formed a settlement which
gradually spread over the western parts of the
plateau running into the Zagros mountains.
Apparently this people discovered agricultural
cultivation specially growth of barley and wheat and
the art of pottery which began with the primitive
sun-baked brick. Gradually they had to face other
neighboring peoples and civilizations quite
different from their own. From the north tribes came
peacefully, mixed with the natives and settled on
their land. But on the west there was a different
story. There, relations developed between the
natives of Iran and the Semites of Mesopotamia who
were developing an urban, agricultural civilization
with well planned political and military structures.
The Old Asians were still more or less nomadic but
were beginning to show some sod of identity as
various civilizations: the Elamites, the LuIlubi,
the Guti, and the Kassites occupying the western
pads of present Iran from Khouzistan northwards to
the end of Luristan. One would think that these two
people the Old Asians living in mountainous regions
that were rich in raw materials such as ores; and
the other, a wealthy people with abundance of food
and manufactured goods should have lived in peaceful
coexistence with prosperous trade. But in fad, the
two people fought for centuries and although the
Semites were generally superior and often
victorious, it was the less civilized people of the
mountains that overcame the Semites. Eventually the
Elamites took over the whole of the Tigris Valley
from Assure to the Persian Gulf. But soon they were
overthrown by the Babylonians: Nebuchadnezzar I more
or less destroyed this admirable civilization.
Meanwhile, on the inner side of the Zagros
mountains, the Aryans were moving in peacefully from
the north, mixing with the native Old Asians, and
thus began to glimmer on the plateau the star of a
great civilization.
The Aryans are a branch of the people today known as
the Indo-Europeans, and are believed to be the
ancestors of the people of present day India, Iran,
and most of Western Europe. Their language was
closely related to Sanskrit and was pad of the
Indo-European family of languages. The Aryans began
their migrations 3,000-4,000 years ago in three
groups; one moved westward to Asia Minor, the second
eastward to India; the third group took the middle
route, southwards to the Iranian plateau, probably
first via the present day Azarbaijan, and later also
from the east of the Caspian crossing the river
Oxus. Migration to the plateau was initially slow
but by the beginning of the first millennium the
pace and the number Increased. It continued for a
few centuries at an ever expanding rate, but still
peacefully, the newcomers mixing with and settling
among the natives.
Eventually, two kingdoms appeared which were to play
a most significant role in the history of the
Persian Empire and Iran: a) Parsa or Persis as the
Greeks called it, the Persian kingdom in the south
of the plateau, in and around the present day
provinces of Fars (from Pars and Parsa), and
Khouzistan; and b) the Medes in the northwestern
parts of the present day Iran.
On the other side of the Zagros range, meanwhile,
two powerful Semitic nations prospered: Babylonia
and Assyria. In 612 BC, however, suddenly the Medes,
led by Cyaxares captured Nineveh and put a permanent
end to the Assyrian Kingdom. Then, in 550BC, Cyrus
the Great appeared in Persia and united the two
kingdoms and soon subverted Babylonia and Lydia. The
two nations, united by Cyrus, made up a powerful
empire of "the Persians and the Medes" which, under
the leadership of Cyrus grew increasingly stronger
until Cyrus was killed in his last battle against
nomads on the east. ('he dynasty that followed Cyrus
drew its name from one of his ancestors, Achaemenes,
whom Cyrus greatly respected.) Cyrus's short life
was filled with courage, compassion towards the
conquered, and tolerance of others' ideals and
religions. When he conquered Babylonia he retained
the king as a satrap (or provincial governor). He
also freed the Jewish slaves there, and helped them
return to their homeland and rebuild their temples
which the Babylonians had destroyed. Thus it is that
in the Old Testament Cyrus's name has been mentioned
with respect and gratitude.
Although Cyrus's son, Cambyses, managed to conquer
Egypt easily, before going to Egypt he killed his
brother Bardia who was more popular. When he left
Iran a man who resembled Bardia took the throne and
Cambyses died or killed himself on his way back. In
521 BC a few of the noblest princes assassinated the
imposter and elected Darius I as the new King of
Kings, or the Great King as Persian kings were known
to the Greeks. Darius is, unfortunately, better
known for his defeat at Marathon, in his battle
against the Greeks who were the only people left on
the West that the Persians and the Medes had not
subjugated. Except for this failure, how ever,
Darius's reign was full of great achievements. He
developed, for the first time in history, a system
for running his territories through the satraps. He
built admirable highways, and developed an excellent
postal system both of which allowed him to receive
rapidly information from his twenty or so provinces.
He appointed inspectors in whom he had confidence to
act as "the Eyes and Ears" of the king and keep him
informed of all developments, specially with regard
to the behavior of each satrap towards his people
and towards the empire, bearing in mind at all times
that a satrap was always a potential rebel.
Among Darius's other achievements was the
development of a standard coin known worldwide for
its consistency in its gold content and weight A
canal linking the Nile to the Red Sea which was the
predecessor of the present day Suez Canal, was also
made by him. After Darius, his son Xerxes attempted
to subvert the Greeks. He managed to capture Athens
but was eventually pushed back by the Greeks. In the
latter days of the Achaemenids the Persian kings
tried to break the Greeks, not by the sword, but by
their gold coins. They were about to succeed when
history took one of its greatest turns. This time it
fancied to hand over just about the entire civilized
world of the time to a young Macedonian, Alexander,
who defeated Darius Ill in 323 BC after long and
hard battles.
Was the speed of his conquests too fast or his life
too short? Or did he lack the genius required for
organization and administration of such vast
territories at time of peace - the genius with which
Darius was amply endowed? Whatever the reason,
Alexander died before he had brought about a
well-established and organized empire. After his
death his territories were divided among his
generals; Seleucus Nicator (the victorious) gaining
what was then called "Asia". This was most of the
Achaemenid Empire less Judea, the Arabian peninsula
and parts of Asia Minor.
Alexander made great efforts to bring together the
East and the West, Persia and Greece effectively. He
had great admiration for the Persian culture,
customs and traits, and often dressed in the fashion
of the King of Kings. He married the daughter of a
Persian noble, and encouraged Greek noblemen to
marry Persian noble-women, one of whom, by the name
of Apama, became Seleucus Nicator's wife.
The Greek Seleucus and his Persian wife Apama became
the king and queen of a territory with a population
of Persians and Greeks mixed together and enjoying
equal rights. But the Seleucids were not on the
whole successful politically and gradually lost
parts of their territories, most of it in the first
100 years. However, during their era the encounter
of the two civilizations resulted in some artistic
and cultural developments. The first province to
break away from the Seleucids was Parsa, the
birthplace of the Achaemenid empire. Then gradually,
Bactria, Parthia and Hyrcania. Finally, after years
of clash and struggle, the Parthians captured
today's Iran and Mesopotamia and retained these
territories for about 300 years.
Parthians or Arsacids - the latter refers to the
names of the earliest kings of this dynasty - were
originally nomadic people who more or less retained
their nomadic culture and feudal system of
government. They realized, specially the wise
Mithridates I, the superiority of the culture of the
conquered people and so allowed them to retain Greek
as the official language and to keep their property
and administration but under the supervision of
Parthian governors.
Meanwhile, a new empire based on and replacing Greek
civilization, had appeared in the West and
eventually became the neighbor of the Parthian
territory. Rome.
During the reign of Mithridates 11(123-87 BC) Iran
established relations with China on the East and
Rome on the West. Thus trade between East and West
expanded, Iran providing a convenient route that
later came to be known as the famous Silk Road or
Silk Route. Although the first contacts between
Parthia and Rome were friendly and resulted in the
development of trade and thereby cuftural exchanges,
there were intermittent border skirmishes and small
scale battles between the two powers. in which the
Parthians showed remarkable abilities.
Besides such quarrels with Rome, the Parthians,
whose chief interests were hunting and battling,
were kept busy by the nomad hordes on the northeast.
They withstood invasions by other nomadic tribes and
even at times drove them back considerably and thus
acted as a barrier to these nomads rushing
westwards. (Had it not been for the Parthians these
hordes would probably have overrun the Near East and
even parts of Europe, 1000 years before Holaku
finally did so.)
Unfortunately, Parthians have left no written
records oftheir times and what we know about them
today are deductions from archaeological findings
and non-Parthian sources. It is most likely that
their nobles were so concerned with warfare that
they left writing to the lower classes. Empires come
and empires go. The vassal overcomes the lord to be
toppled by one of his own vassals. In 220 AD,
Ardeshir, the king of Parsa, who paid tribute to the
Parthian king, revolted and in a relatively short
time toppled the Parthian empire, and thus in 220 AD
the Sassanian or Sassanid dynasty replaced the
Parthian. And Iranian history took another turn.
Rome considered these developments of little
importance to the Roman empire. But when Ardeshir
attacked Armenia, Rome's ally, and even parts of the
Roman empire in Mesopotamia, the Roman emperor found
himself compelled to take to the battlefield, in 231
AD, and so centuries of minor disputes with the
Parthians gave way to a few more centuries of fierce
battles and deep enmity with the Sassanids.
There were four centuries of intensive, though
intermittent, wars which finally exhausted both
powers making them easy prey to Moslem Arab invaders
who arrived on their Arabian horses with their
curved swords and - most important of all an
ideology which they expressed in their own simple,
harsh, bedouin cries of "AIIah-o-Akbar", great is
the one and only God. The Persian empire collapsed
suddenly; the Romans lost Syria and Egypt, two
vitally important territories.
Once again the vassal overthrows the lord. The
bedouin overcomes his protector. There have been
many theories put forward regarding the reason why
Moslem Arabs managed to conquer Iran at least the
better part of it so rapidly and easily. Some point
to the decadence of the late Sassanid society; some
to Islam's belief in equally irrespective of race,
color and social status; yet others point out that
Moslems had an ideology, a strong belief to fight
for, the belief that dead or alive, they would be
the winners at the end of any battle fought for God.
Others point the finger at the Persians'
overconfidence. The reason, in fact, must be complex
and may encompass almost all these factors. But
ideology- belief in a God worthy of dying for- is of
utmost importance and gave the Arabs great strength
of heart. At the same time, the lower Persian
classes, bound to their social status through a
caste system irrespective of ability, could not help
being mesmerized by the idea of equality which was
and is a most significant element of Islam.
To these reasons must be added the Persians'
appreciation of Islam as a monotheistic religion:
after all they had been one of the first people to
believe in one God, Ahura Mazda as He was called by
them, though towards the end of the Sassanid era
their religion had become infected by ideas from
Mithraism, Manichaeism and other creeds.
At any rate Persians became Moslems and retained
Islam even when they had regained their independence
and developed their new language. Just about I 00
years after Persia had become a pad of the Moslem
world, an Iranian by the name of Abu Muslim led an
uprising in Khorassan against the Omayyad rulers and
in favor of Abdollah Saffah, a descendant of Abbas,
one of the cousins of the holy Prophet Mohammad. In
750 AD the Omayyads were overthrown and Abdollah
Saffah became caliph, the first in line of the
Abbasid dynasty. From then on Iranians penetrated
further and further into the Arab society and the
Moslem world, and contributed greatly to Moslem
civilization, art, literature and sciences.
Meanwhile, Iranians with a fighting spirits sprang
up here and there in the empire, struggling for
independence from the Arab yoke.
There were Babak Khorram-Din in Azarbaijan; Mazyar
and Hamzeh in Mazandaran, Sistan and Khorassan: and
specially Tahir Zol-Yaminein, the governor of
Khorassan, who declared independence in 820 AD. Then
came Yaqub Lais and the Saffarian dynasty which
replaced Taherians in 872 AD to be eventually
replaced by Samanians (903 AD). The AI-Buyeh or the
Buwahids appeared in nodhem Iran, and were
recognized by the caliphate (945 AD), which was by
then reduced to a puppet court controlled by the
Buyehs. There were other developments here and there
until Mahmud, a Moslem Turk of Ghazna, established a
strong state, replacing the Samanians in Khorassan
and Sistan.
It is about this time that the Turks, long used as
slaves, soldiers and generals, enter the world of
Islam as rulers and masters. The Turks were a people
with their origin in the Altai mountains of Central
Asia. They were of both Aryan and non-Aryan blood,
with a common language binding them to form a single
people. Living under very difficult conditions -
like the Mongols with whom they had relations and
contacts they were a courageous and robust people of
great endurance. Gradually they descended from the
Altai mountains and moved westwards in a series of
migrations. They came to Iran from the east and the
north (both sides of the Caspian Sea). Later they
established the great Ottoman empire west of the
Caspian Sea, in Asia Minor, which was eventually
reduced to the present day Turkey (World War I).
It is said that the Turks, being extremely poor,
used to sell their children, at about the age of ten
or so, to the neighboring people. Used to hardship,
Turkish boys would normally grow up to become worthy
Moslem warriors. In this way the Turks infiltrated
the courts and armies of independent Moslem Iranian
rulers as well as the caliphs, who eventually became
dependent upon them. Finally, they ousted the
Iranian rulers and replaced them, and turned the
caliph into a puppet ruler under their own
influence.
From early 11th century there ruled in various parts
of Iran, Turkish kings who were more Moslems than
Turks, and became increasingly more absorbed into
the Islamic and Iranian cultures. One of their
greatest plea sures was listening to recitations
from the Shahnameh, the legendary epic of ancient
Persia's heroes.
Thus Iran was divided into a number of kingdoms,
mostly with Turkish monarchs, who ruled on the
advice and guidance of their Iranian viziers, or
prime ministers.
In 1220 AD, however, the history of Iran began to
take yet another turn, more bloody, more tragic, and
sadder than any before or since. There was a man
approaching Iran on his horse who eventually became
a nightmare to the whole world: Chengiz Khan.
Chengiz Khan was a Mongol, born a prince among his
people: a people - like the Turks - used to hardship
because of the harsh natural conditions in which
they lived as nomads. Chengiz's genius and his
people's inborn courage and loyalty to him allowed
him to rapidly extend his domination over the entire
Mongolia and the neighboring regions. Soon his
territories shared borders with the Iranian kingdom
of Kharazmshahian.
It is said that Chengiz had a great deal of respect
for the Iranians and their civilization, and even
feared Iranian military strength. In order to expand
trade and cultural relations with Iran he sent
emissaries to the Kharazmshahi king Sultan Mohammad,
For one reason or another, perhaps out of greed for
the possessions of the emissaries and the
magnificent presents they had with them, some
Iranian chief at the frontier outpost murdered the
ambassadors and plundered their belongings. Chengiz
Khan, though furious at the news, still remained
calm and acted wisely; perhaps he had not yet
allowed his anger to overcome his respect for and
fear of the Iranians. He sent a messenger to the
Kharazmshahi king to make a complaint and require an
explanation as well as to seek, once again, to
establish relations with Iran. Again too much pride
and overconfidence, as shown by Iranian rulers and
nobles time and again, brought disaster to the
nation. Rather than apologize for his officer's
uncivilized behavior, and make reparations to this
neighbor who was extending his hand to show his
amicable intentions, the conceited king treated the
messenger harshly as a savage. This time Chengiz
Khan decided to attack the Kharazmshahi territory,
come what may.
One could say that the Iranian king pushed Chengiz
Khan into waging war against the Iranian people, and
once he began, Chengiz Khan would not be satisfied
only with Kharazrnshahi territories. He overran most
Iranian kingdoms, sacked many towns and even
completely "erased some from the face of the earth,"
Two elements in the Iranian character show
themselves repeatedly: that of pride and
overconfidence among the kings and nobles which
often led to disasters; and that of resilience,
patience and endurance among the common people.
Every single town that Chengiz Khan destroyed, was
eventually rebuilt by the Iranian people.
Chengiz did not stop at just sacking and erasing
towns that resisted him in the slightest way; he
massacred in the most inhuman and cruel manner men,
women and children: except for a few which he
retained as slaves. He built towers out of human
heads, His men butchered men and women, boys and
girls. Raping women and girls was the least crime
they committed, lt is said that the Mongols were
forbidden by their traditions to rape married women;
so they would first kill the husband then rape the
wife. Never in history have Iranians been so
shamefully humiliated, except for the second surge
of Mongol-Tatar invasion by Teymoor "Lang" (the lame
Teymoor) or Tamerlane as he is known in the West.
Chengiz had not yet established his domination over
all of Iran, nor yet completely destroyed the
Kharazmshahians, when he died in 1227 AD. His empire
was divided among his sons and brothers, Holaku Khan
becoming the "Ilkhan" of Iranian territories. He
appointed an Iranian vizier, Khajeh Nassireddin
Toosi, who helped him become established as the king
and ruler of Iran and overcome the Abbasid caliph.
Toosi's presence at the llkhan court made life
easier for the Iranians who became more and more
liberated, gradually regained their proper status
and soon began to assimilate the nomadic Mongols and
to civilize them. The later descendants of Holaku
converted to Islam - became devout Moslems, in fact
- and more and more Iranian in attitude, manner and
thought.
And then, once again, small independent states
sprouted here and there with Iranians as their
rulers, turning Iran into yet another collection of
kingdoms. Then disaster struck again. Teymoor Lang
was a Tatar whose ancestors had converted to Islam.
He was a devout Sunni Moslem and disliked Shia
Iranians whom he believed to be heretics. But
apparently even this was not the reason why he
invaded Iran: he simply loved war and enjoyed
spilling blood. He was even more cruel and merciless
than Chengiz but whenever he conquered a town or
city, he spared men of learning, poets and writers,
and artists and craftsmen, for whom he had respect
and whom he helped to continue with their works. He
himself is said to have been a Moslem scholar and to
have known the entire Koran by heart, (even
backwards they say, ie from the last verse to the
first). Yet he was a warrior void of mercy and
compassion. Teymoor first attacked Iran in or around
1393 AD.
In 1405 Teymoor died and his son Shahrokh acceded to
his throne. Shahrokh, though a warrior, was mild and
generous. He loved the Persian language and poetry
and was deeply interested in arts and sciences which
he encouraged and supported. Once again the Invader
became assimilated into the way of life of the
conquered Iranian; Shahrokh and his descendants came
to think of themselves more and more as Iranians
than Tatars.
After Shahrokh, again independent states appeared,
and once again Iran was divided into little
kingdoms. This time fate showed more sympathy for
Iranians who had gone through so many tragedies, so
much sorrow. The Safavi (Safavid) star was about to
rise; the Golden Age was about to begin; the Iranian
civilization, arts and crafts, were to reach un
precedented heights.
The son and grandson of holy men, Ismail was a
respected person among his people who lived in
Azarbaijan. His parents and grandparents, going back
generations, were Shia Moslems. He gathered together
from his followers a small army and overthrew the
Aq-Quynlu Turkomans and thus began the Safavid
dynasty whose kingdom gradually grew to encompass
most of the traditionally Iranian territories.
During the two and a half centuries of Safavid rule,
although Iran was constantly at war with the Ottoman
Turks in the northwest, Uzbeks on the east and for a
time the Portuguese in the Persian GuIf, the arts,
specially architecture, carpet weaving and miniature
painting, rose to great heights.
The era is known as the Golden Age specially when
referring to the craft and art of carpet weaving -
and the greatest Safavid king was Shah Abbas 1(1
587-I 629AD). It was during his reign that Persia
once again came to be known in Europe as a
superpower, because it was the greatest opponent of
the Ottomans, and their wars saved Europe, the
Ottomans being too occupied on the east fighting
Iran to make headway in the west. The Safavid court
eventually fell into luxury and intrigues, and the
ugly face of decadence reappeared, preparing the way
for a man by the name of Mahmood, who rose in
Afghanistan, raided Iran (I722-I725AD), captured
Esfahan (the Safavid capital), and killed most of
the Safavid princes as well as the king.
Iran fell apart; Mahmood was a warrior but not a
king, and Iranians disobeyed him; there was chaos
and Peter the Great of Russia occupied Derbent in
Northern Iran, then Rasht and Baku. This was the
first time that Russia, which was then beginning to
develop into a well organized country with
expansionist ideas, waged war against Iran, but it
was not the last of wars between the two countries.
At the same time, while the Afghans were still in
power, the Ottomans occupied Tabriz. Iran was about
to collapse, when fate took another turn for the
better. Nader, a brave soldier of the Afshar tribe
found a surviving Safavid prince, called him Tahmasb
(or Tahmasp) II, became his commander-in chief,
gathered an army in his name, and in a succession of
lightning attacks defeated and threw out the
Afghans. Then, not finding the king capable, Nader
replaced him with Abbas Ill who soon died and this
time Nader proclaimed himself as the Shah of Persia
and founded the Afshar dynasty (l736 AD). Nader was
a brave soldier but a merciless tyrant. In 1747 AD
his closest people entered into a plot and
assassinated him. Though his loss at that time was
somewhat a relief to the nation, to him must be
given the credit of saving and uniting Iran at a
critical moment in its history.
In 1750 AD, Karim Khan 7and founded a dynasty in the
southern regions which he eventually extended to
cover most of the present day Iran, but he left
Nader's descendants alone and let them continue to
rule in Khorassan out of respect for Nader and his
achievements.
In the meantime, among the Turkomans of northern
Iran the brave Qajar tribe was establishing a
dynasty and kingdom. Qajars and Karim Khan were
constantly at war until finally Karim Khan
subjugated the tribe and took as hostage Agha
Mohammad Khan, the son of the tribe's chief.
Karim Khan was a modest and gentle man and ruled
with justice and compas sion, though in battle he
was a courageous and fierce soldier. He never called
himself a king, preferring the title of
"Vakil-oI-Roaya" (the representative of the people)
or more simply the Vakil. It is said that he
insisted on his people being joyful, and that from
the terrace of his palace, overlooking the town
below, he watched the town at nights and felt happy
to see all the houses and streets well-lighted and
to hear his bands of musicians play at every major
cross-road of the town. The Vakil is perhaps the
best-loved ruler of the entire history of Iran,
admired both by the Iranians of his time and by the
generations that have followed, except for his
enemies the Qajars and in particular Agha Mohammad
Khan who later overcame Karim Khan's successors and
showed incredible hatred towards Karim Khan and his
household, even to his memory.
Because Agha Mohammad was impotent this hatred is
generally explained by his having been castrated by
Karim Khan's men - with or without the latter's
knowledge. But this has not been definitely proved,
and some historians claim Agha Mohammad Khan
accidentally lost his manhood when he fell from a
horse and the horse trampled on him. Whatever the
reason, this king was bitter and merciless. It is
said that no one ever saw him smile - let alone
laugh. His face aged very early because of his
physical conditions and his voice was feminine; yet
he commanded great respect and fear in his subjects.
In the East his case, if not the only one of its
kind, must have been a most rare occurrence: a tribe
priding themselves on their manhood and virility
accepting a eunuch as a ruler.
Despite his character and his cruelties, and perhaps
because of them, his enemies succumbed rapidly to
him, and where they did resist they paid dearly for
it. One instance: In Kerman he ordered that twenty
thousand pairs of eyes of the whole population of
the town, in fact - should be gouged out; and then
he had some of these blinded people hanged,
strangled, beheaded, or chopped up alive. Soon,
however, he reunited the whole of Iran the present
day Iran plus Afghanistan and some pads of the
present republics to the north of Iran. He despised
Catherine, the Empress of Russia, because of her
interference in Iran's northern provinces. He
attacked Russian territories and easily captured
Tiflis and Erivan and planned to eventually capture
Moscow as well. Some historians believe he would
have, had he remained alive; but he was assassinated
by members of his entourage the night before he
intended to move his army northwards. He was killed
during the night (I 797AD) just as Nader had been
killed before him. A poet has said about Nader, and
it aptly applies to Agha Mohammad Khan as well, that
At night he dreamt of sacking the town
Next dawn, his body had no head, his head no
crown.
And so died Iran's last conqueror! And from then
onwards Iran entered, or rather was dragged into,
the international political scene with all its
intrigues. The British, hoping to use Iran and
Afghanistan as barriers cutting off Russia from
British India, began to gradually establish
themselves at the Iranian court. Napoleon's France
came to help Fath Ali Shah, Agha Mohammad Khan's
successor, to oust the British. The Russians wanted
to get to the "warm waters" of the Persian GuIf. The
hitherto feudalistic Iran, which had continued along
the same political and daily ways of life for
centuries, unbothered by developments in the rest of
the world, suddenly found itself in the middle of
staggering circumstances over which it had no
control. Struck by the immensity of the scientific
and technical advances made by Europe, and ignorant
of the ways of handling Europeans and their
diplomatic intrigues, the Iranian was baffled, and
the two powers made good use of the situation.
Russians attacked and took extensive territories in
northern Iran, defeating the Iranian army which was
still fighting with swords and hand- made rifles
against the recently modernized Russian army
equipped with the latest guns and cannons. Iranians
were morally shaken and perhaps for the first time
in their history, lost their self-confidence. Later,
the Russians stopped further aggressions, because of
changes in their policy and British diplomatic
manoeuvres. Instead, the two powers agreed to divide
the country into two spheres of influence: the
Russians in the northern parts of Iran and the
British in the southern regions. From then onwards,
until the "Constitutional Uprising" (I9O6), the
Iranian kings, ministers and statesmen were nothing
but puppets in the hands of the two powers.
In I 906, however, just a short time before his
death, Mozaffar al-Din Shah accorded Iranians the
right of a Constitution with a proper parliament,
and limitations on the powers of the monarch.
However, a year or so later Mohammad Ali Shah
abolished the Constitution hut soon had to give in
when faced with the nationalist uprising of 1908.
The Constitution was restored and Iran truly set
foot into the modern age.
History of Contemporary Iran
As long as men fought with swords and at the most
with simple guns and cannons, Iranians were known as
fearless and fierce warriors. But the then modern
weapons and war techniques, developed by Europeans,
changed the methods of warfare so rapidly that
within a short period of time Iranians found
themselves helpless before Western armies. When Agha
Mohammad Khan of Qajar dynasty defeated the Russian
army with lightning speed, it was considered only
natural by the Iranians that they should win the war
with such ease. Just over a decade later, the
modernized Russian army helped by British diplomacy,
inflicted one defeat after another on the Iranian
army leading to the annexation of a number of
northern Iranian provinces by the Russian empire,
notably Georgia and what became later known as
Soviet Azerbaijan (the Republic of Azerbaijan, as it
is known today.)
On the domestic side, lacking experience in
international politics and diplomacy Iran soon
became the scene of colonial rivalry between the
Russians and the British who demanded more and more
concessions from Iran and imposed merciless
conditions. The Iranian central government was
weakened and lost its autocratic control over the
nation and, incidentally, the nation took the
opportunity to demand and secure a constitutional
system of government (1906).
However, for the same reason (weakness of the
central government) internal conditions became
chaotic inducing the Russians and the British to
take full advantage of the situation such that in
1907 an agreement was signed by the two powers
according to which Iran was divided into two
"spheres of influence", the North being under the
"influence" or control of the Russians and the South
being practically governed by the British; though
officially Iran retained its independence.
With the Russian Revolution and the verthrow of the
Czarist regime, the Russian influence diminished,
and even for some time vanished altogether, although
it soon returned with the coming to power of Stalin:
first as a great rival which the British had to
contend with, and soon after as their ally.
Meanwhile, an Iranian soldier, Reza Khan, had been
showing great gift for military leadership and
organization, and had risen from the status of a
private to that of an officer while the Iranian army
was under the super vision and instruction of
imperial Russian officers as military advisers. When
the Russian officers left the Iranian army following
the October Revolution, Reza Khan's value as a
soldier became even more evident and appreciated. By
then, the British were untroubled by Russian
rivalries and favored a strong central government in
Iran to protect their interests specially in the oil
industry. Ahmad Shah, the last Qajar king, was not
willing to cooperate with the British; and the
Majlis (the parliament) which at one time the
British had favored was now an obstacle in their
way.
Thus, Reza Khan whom the British discovered as a man
capable of controlling the country and protecting
their interests, was supported by them. In 1921 he
engineered a cope d'etat with the cooperation of
Seid Zia- od-Din Tabatabai, a young journalist, as a
result of which the latter became the prime minister
and Reza Khan the minister of war. Gradually Reza
Khan gained complete control of the government and
the Majlis which finally deposed Ahmad Shah (1925)
and a constituent assembly elected Reza Khan as the
Shah. The Pahlavi dynasty was thus established. In
the Second World War Reza Shah, sympathizing with
the Germans, refused to allow the allies to pass
Iran to supply the Soviet Union with war materials,
and so help the Russians fight against the Germans.
So, the Allied forces occupied Iran in 1941 and
remained there until the war was over.
As soon as Iran was occupied, Reza Shah was
"advised" by the British to abdicate in favor of his
son Mohammad Reza who had to adopt policies more
appropriate to the circumstances. Bitter over the
fact that Reza Shah had betrayed them, the British
refused Reza Shah's request to go to Canada. Instead
the British government sent him first to the island
of Mauritius, east of Madagascar, and later to
Johannesburg, South Africa, where he died in I 944.
From 1941 Mohammad Reza Shah, a young man of 22
years began his reign over the Iranian nation.
Naturally he had to maintain a pro-Western foreign
policy and an internal policy of economic and social
development with Western aid and compatible with
Western tastes and trends. Mohammad Reza Shah ruled
Iran for over 38 years, until the victory of the
Islamic Revolution.
Major Events Since the Start of the Islamic
Revolution
1978
-
Mass demonstrations were put up by the
Iranian people in the major cities, notably
Tehran, Qom, Tabriz and Esfahan. There were
occasional strikes which gradually became
more widespread and frequent.
-
On 5th August, Imam Khomeini, who was on
exile in Iraq, was forced to leave that
country. He moved to Paris from where he
guided and led the Islamic Revolution.
-
There were changes of government, one prime
minister being replaced by another. The
last, Shapur Bakhtiar, came to power on 6th
January I 979
1979 onwards
-
On 6th January, Bakhtiar became the Shah's
last prime minister.
-
stikes spread and there were confrontations
between the Shah's forces and the
revolutionary militia.
-
on 16th January the Shah left Iran. He died
in Egypt several months after, having
suffered very bad treatment by the
Americans, his old friends and aIlies. On
1st February Imam Khomeini arrived in
Tehran. On 10th February Bakhtiar declared
martial law but the people disregarded the
law according to Imam Khomeini's guidelines.
There were bloody street fights and
gradually the armed forces joined or
surrendered to the people.
-
On 31st March there was a general referendum
and aImost unanimously people chose an
Islamic Republic for their country.
-
On 2nd December, the Islamic Republic
Constitution was approved by the people
through another referendum.
-
On 21st September Iraq began his attacks on
Iran at a time when Iran was least prepared
for a war. It made rapid advances into Iran
soon capturing Khorramshahr and Susangerd
and approaching Ahwaz. Abadan was sieged and
was about to collapse when it was suddenly
freed through courageous and daring
operations by Iranians: the army, the
Revolutionary forces and the people.
-
In a series of military operations, Iran
inflicted one defeat after another on the
Iraqis. Korramshahr was freed after two
years, on 24th May 1982.
-
The war continued for eight years.
Meanwhile, many countries and the United
Nations intervened and tried bring about
peace between the two countries.
-
On 18th July 1988 Iran finally accepted the
UN resolution 598 and made peace with Iraq
having regained its territories.
-
On 4th July 1989 Imam Khomeini passed away.
Immediately the Council of the Experts
appointed Ayatollah Khamenei as the new
leader. Hojjatoleslam Rafsanjani became the
President replacing Ayatollah Khamenei.
-
On 28th July 1989 the Iranian Constitution
was changed and all executive powers and
duties were given over to the President
rather than the prime minister
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