Knowledge

Farmanfarma

Source 📝

160:. In 1888, Firuz Mirza's eldest son Soltan Abd-al-Hamid Mirza Naser-al-Dawla was given the title, and following his death in 1892, it was given to his younger brother 152:
was given the title following his appointment to the governorship of the central province. In 1886, the leader of the Qaraguzlu tribe of
206: 148:, was given the title following his appointment to the governorship of Fars. In 1876, Abbas Mirza's sixteenth son 88: 140:
following the latters appointment to the governorship of Fars. A year after Hossein Ali Mirza's death in 1835,
17: 79: 161: 84: 73:
was employed as a form of addressing them, either in place of or in addition to their official titles,
156:, Mahmud Khan Naser-al-Molk, was given the title following his appointment to the governorship of 231: 8: 236: 126: 137: 107: 157: 31: 210: 141: 225: 115: 92: 39: 149: 145: 38:, lit. "giver of an order") was a title with three different meanings in 43: 136:) started this tradition in 1797, when he gave the title to his son 153: 111: 83:. In the late 19th century, for example, the Qajar princes 51: 121:
Five prince-governors and a tribal khan-governor received
184: 182: 180: 178: 175: 223: 66:) as a common way to address European monarchs. 14: 224: 204: 188: 58:(sometimes used interchangeably with 215:Encyclopædia Iranica, Online Edition 144:, the fifth son of the crown prince 35: 24: 217:. Encyclopædia Iranica Foundation. 25: 248: 54:(kings) and their officials used 131: 69:For notable governor-generals, 13: 1: 168: 89:Mass'oud Mirza Zell-e Soltan 7: 10: 253: 198: 162:Abdol-Hossein Farman Farma 205:Ashraf, Ahmad (2020). 125:as a personal title. 85:Mozaffar ad-Din Mirza 95:were referred to as 127:Fath-Ali Shah Qajar 138:Hossein Ali Mirza 16:(Redirected from 244: 218: 211:Yarshater, Ehsan 192: 186: 135: 134: 1797–1834 133: 37: 21: 252: 251: 247: 246: 245: 243: 242: 241: 222: 221: 201: 196: 195: 187: 176: 171: 130: 118:, respectively. 23: 22: 15: 12: 11: 5: 250: 240: 239: 234: 220: 219: 200: 197: 194: 193: 173: 172: 170: 167: 166: 165: 142:Fereydun Mirza 119: 67: 9: 6: 4: 3: 2: 249: 238: 235: 233: 230: 229: 227: 216: 212: 208: 207:"Farmānfarmā" 203: 202: 190: 185: 183: 181: 179: 174: 163: 159: 155: 151: 147: 143: 139: 128: 124: 120: 117: 113: 109: 105: 101: 98: 94: 90: 86: 82: 81: 76: 72: 68: 65: 61: 57: 53: 49: 48: 47: 45: 41: 33: 29: 19: 232:Safavid Iran 214: 122: 103: 99: 97:farmanfarma, 96: 93:Farhad Mirza 78: 74: 70: 63: 59: 55: 50:The Safavid 27: 26: 18:Farman Farma 189:Ashraf 2020 150:Firuz Mirza 146:Abbas Mirza 123:farmanfarma 71:farmanfarma 56:farmanfarma 28:Farmanfarma 237:Qajar Iran 226:Categories 169:References 108:Azerbaijan 60:farmanrava 36:فرمانفرما 158:Khorasan 64:farmanda 213:(ed.). 199:Sources 154:Hamadan 112:Isfahan 100:hokmran 75:hokmran 40:Safavid 32:Persian 114:, and 102:, and 91:, and 46:Iran. 209:. In 52:shahs 44:Qajar 116:Fars 104:vali 80:vali 77:and 62:and 42:and 106:of 228:: 177:^ 132:r. 110:, 87:, 34:: 191:. 164:. 129:( 30:( 20:)

Index

Farman Farma
Persian
Safavid
Qajar
shahs
vali
Mozaffar ad-Din Mirza
Mass'oud Mirza Zell-e Soltan
Farhad Mirza
Azerbaijan
Isfahan
Fars
Fath-Ali Shah Qajar
Hossein Ali Mirza
Fereydun Mirza
Abbas Mirza
Firuz Mirza
Hamadan
Khorasan
Abdol-Hossein Farman Farma




Ashraf 2020
"Farmānfarmā"
Yarshater, Ehsan
Categories
Safavid Iran
Qajar Iran

Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.