Sunday, February 10, 2019

A Brief History of Iran from 1851 :: History

A Brief History of Iran from 1851Qajar Dynasty1851-1906 -- The Qajars (ruling family) lost central Asian provinces to the Russiansand were forced to institute up all claims on Afghanistan to the British. These twoEuropean powers dominated Irans duty and manipulated its internal politics. TheQajars and influential members of their court were bribed to sell m each valuableconcessions to the British, such(prenominal) as the Tobacco Concession which triggered amassive popular uprising.1906 -- dissatisfy with Qajar corruption and mismanagement led to theConstitutional Revolution and the establishment of Irans startle parliament orMajles. The constitutional aspirations for a limited monarchy were never to be fullyrealized. Although Iran never became an actual colony of imperial powers, in 1907 itwas change integrity into two spheres of influence. The north was controlled by Russia andthe south and the east by Britain. By the end of WW I, Iran was plunged into astate of political, soci al and economic chaos.1921 -- Reza Khan, an officer in the army, staged a coup. Initially the minister ofwar and then the thrill minister, in 1925 Reza Khan decided to catch the Shahhimself. Although Reza Khans initial objective was to become the president of are macrocosm, the clergy, fearing a diminished role in a republic, persuaded him tobecome the Shah.Pahlavi Dynasty1925-1940 -- Reza Shah Pahlavis runner priority was to strengthen the authority ofthe central government by creating a disciplined standing army and restraining theautonomy of the tribal chiefs. He embarked upon a series of modernizing andsecular reforms, some of which were designed specifically to break the power ofthe clergy over Irans educational and judicial systems. He provided publiceducation, built Irans first modern university, opened the schools to women andbrought them into the work force. He initiated Irans first industrializationprogram and dramatically improved Irans infrastructure by edifice nume rousroads, bridges, state-owned factories and Irans first transnational railway. In1935, he officially pass all foreign governments to no longer refer to Iran asPersia, hardly as Iran. (The Iranian people themselves had always referred to theircountry as Iran.) Politically, however, Reza Shah forcibly abolished the wearing ofthe veil, took away the effective power of the Majles and did not permit any formsof free speech. With the outbreak of WW II, Reza Shah, wanting to remainneutral, refused to side with the Allies.1941 -- In carry of the Trans-Iranian railway to supply the Soviets with wartimematerials, the Allies invaded and occupied Iran for the duration of the war. RezaShah was forced to forego in favor of his son Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and died in

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