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Mirza Taqi Khan Amir-e Kabir

Mirza Taqi Khan Amir-e Kabir (ca. 1806-1852) was the greatest prime minister of the Qajar dynasty. In just 3 years he accomplished more than the combined efforts of the other chief ministers of the dynasty and laid the foundations of modernization in Iran.

Karbalayi Mohammad Qorban, the father of Taqi, was a cook and later a steward in the household of Qa'em Maqam, who later became the chief minister of Mohammad Shah. It is said that when the tutor came to teach the children of Qa'em Maqam, the boy Taqi, in his eagerness to learn, would try to listen from behind the closed door of the private classroom. When Qa'em Maqam heard of this, he allowed the boy to become a regular member of the class. Later Taqi was employed as one of the secretaries, and because of his genius and capacity for work he was given positions of responsibility. He became known as Mirza (secretary) Taqi Khan Farahani (denoting his birthplace).

Travels Abroad

When the head of a Russian mission to Iran was murdered in 1829, the distraught Fath Ali Shah, fearing war, sent his grandson Khosro Mirza to St. Petersburg. Mirza Taqi Khan went as the prince's secretary and had an opportunity to observe the life and institutions of Russia. Ten years later he accompanied young Naser al-Din, the crown prince, to Russia. At this time Mirza Taqi Khan was the chief secretary and tutor of the prince, with the title of Amir-e Nezam (commander of the army). He impressed the Czar with his knowledge of Russian and arranged to see schools, factories, hospitals, and other establishments in the country.

In 1842 Taqi Khan headed the Persian delegation to the Erzerum conference for the settlement of the Irano-Turkish border dispute. His performance there was so outstanding that the British representative, Robert Curzon, wrote that Mirza Taqi Khan was "beyond all comparison the most interesting person among the commissioners of Turkey, Persia, Russia, and Great Britain who were there assembled at Erzerum." This was the period of Tanzimat reforms in the Ottoman Empire, and the significance of these reforms did not escape the discerning eyes of the young commander.

Work as Reformer

In 1848, when Naser al-Din became shah of Iran, he chose Mirza Taqi Khan Amir-e Nezam as his chief minister, with the appropriate title of Atabak-e A'zam. Mirza Taqi Khan, however, preferred to use his old and more humble title. The people gradually changed the title to Amir-e Kabir (great commander). He was now in a position to implement the reforms which he must have been planning in his mind for a long time.

This indefatigable worker began at once, and no aspect of the life of the country escaped his scrutiny. Amir-e Kabir built factories, facilitated commerce, established the first modern institution of learning, employed teachers and technicians from Europe, inaugurated a modern postal system, set up a translation bureau and a modern press, founded the first newspaper, reorganized the judicial system, did away with the sale of office, and prevented the clergy from interfering with the affairs of government.

These and many other activities aroused the anger of courtiers, landlords, and clergy, whose sources of income and power were threatened by the reforms. His greatest enemy was his own mother-in-law, the queen mother. In 1851 the Shah very reluctantly dismissed him and sent him to Kashan. A few months later the queen mother tricked her son into signing Amir-e Kabir's death warrant and hurried executioners to Kashan. They found him in the bathhouse and killed him by opening his veins.

Further Reading

There is no English-language book in print which gives the full life of Mirza Taqi Khan. Short sketches are found in Percy Sykes, A History of Persia, vol. 2 (1915; 3d ed. 1930); Edward G. Browne, A Literary History of Persia, vol. 4 (1924); and Peter Avery, Modern Iran (1965).

 
 
Mideast & N. Africa Encyclopedia: Mirza Taqi Khan Amir Kabir

1807 - 1852

Prime minister and the most famous reformer of nineteenth-century Persia.

Born the son of a cook in the Farahan district in western Persia, Mirza Taqi Khan joined the staff of the crown prince, Abbas Mirza, at Tabriz. He later held several positions in the army of Azerbaijan. In 1848, he accompanied Naser al-Din to Tehran upon his accession, and the new Shah of Persia's Qajar dynasty gave him the titles amir-e kabir (the great amir) and atabak-e aʿzam, which referred to his function as the shah's tutor (who was then only sixteen years old).

Before he went to Tehran, Mirza Taqi Khan had participated in several diplomatic missions to Russia and the Ottoman Empire, and he sought to institute in Persia some reforms he had observed abroad. One key to reform, he believed, was reducing the power of the ulama (Islamic clergy). Amir Kabir suppressed the Babi insurrection, a major challenge to central authority, and executed Sayyid Ali Mohammad, the Bab, in 1850.

During his four years as prime minister, Amir Kabir instituted numerous administrative and economic reforms and built up-to-date factories, often with the aim of strengthening the military. He was also active in building public works throughout the country. Particularly significant was his founding of Iran's first technical school, the Dar al-Fonun (Abode of Sciences). In foreign affairs, he sought to avoid dependence on either of the predominant outside powers, England or Russia.

Amir Kabir made many enemies at court and alienated others because of his haughty manner and successful measures to extract revenue. Ultimately the shah turned against him, dismissed him from office in November 1851, and subsequently had him assassinated. By the twentieth century, Amir Kabir had become an idealized figure, regarded as the most enlightened statesman of his time who was regrettably prevented from modernizing the country. Modern critical scholars (Abbas Amanat, Hamid Algar, John Lorentz), however, regard his goal as improving the system to increase the power of the shah, not ushering in democratic government.

Bibliography

Amanat, Abbas. "The Downfall of Mirza Taqi Khan Amir Kabir and the Problem of Ministerial Authority in Qajar Iran." International Journal of Middle East Studies 23 (1991): 577 - 599.

— LAWRENCE G. POTTER

 
Wikipedia: Amir Kabir
Amir Kabir, the famous Persian vazir.
Amir Kabir, the famous Persian vazir.

Amir Kabir (1807 - January 11 , 1852)(Persian: امیرکبیر), also known as Mirza Taghi Khan Amir-Nezam (Persian: میرزا تقی‌خان امیرنظام), was the Prime minister of Persia (Iran) under Nasereddin Shah (The emperor). He was born in Hazaveh, a county of Arak.

His father, Karbalaee Ghorban (Persian: کربلائی قربان), was a cook for Mirza Abu'l-Qasim Farahani Qá'im Maqam, a previous prime minister, which made Mirza Taghi Khan learn many skills of the court.

Amir Kabir was sent to the Ottoman Empire to represent Persia in negotiations for an end to a hundred years of war between the two empires. He also helped Nasereddin Shah to receive the throne, so the Shah made him his chancellor and gave his sister to him in marriage.

Government expenditure was slashed, and a distinction was made between the privy and public purses. The instruments of central administration were overhauled, and Amir Kabir assumed responsibility for all areas of the bureaucracy. Additionally, Amir Kabir curtailed foreign interference in Iran's domestic affairs.

Amir Kabir started some reformist movements in Persia. He founded Darolfonoon, the first European-style college in Persia. He also supported the foundation of the first Persian newspaper, vaghaye al etefaghiyeh. Later, however, the Shah dismissed Amir Kabir and sent him into internal exile in Kashan.

It is said that the Russian embassy offered him a refuge in Russia, which Amir Kabir declined. Later, when the Shah was drunk, the Shah's mother and her aides asked him for an order to execute Amir Kabir, and executed the order very quickly in Kashan's Fin Bath, before the Shah could rescind the order.

The Amirkabir University of Technology in Tehran today is named after him in his honor.

In fiction

Amir Kabir is portrayed by Dariush Arjmand in movie Nassereddin Shah, Actor-e Cinema.

He is also portrayed by Saeed Nikpour in Tv series Amir Kabir.

See also


 
 

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Biography. © 2006 through a partnership of Answers Corporation. All rights reserved.  Read more
Mideast & N. Africa Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of the Modern Middle East and North Africa. Copyright © 2004 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Amir Kabir" Read more

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