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  1. Soltan Ahmad Mirza Azod od-Dowleh was prince of Persia and 49th son of Fath-Ali Shah Qajar. [1] He was born on 16 July 1824. His mother was Taj ol-Dowleh. He was governor of many cities including Zanjan, Malayer and Qazvin. Also he was chairman of Astan Quds Razavi. [2]

  2. Soltan-Ahmad Mirza Azod od-Dowleh (Persian: سلطان احمد میرزا عضدالدوله; 16 July 1824 – 1902) was a Qajar prince and official in 19th-century Iran, who is known for composing the memoir Tarikh-e Azodi.

  3. Solṭān-Aḥmad Mirzā ʿAżod-al-Dawla is the ancestor of the ʿAżodi family (Bāmdād, II, pp. 73-74, 93-102; IV, pp. 396-405). Solṭān-Aḥmad Mirzā was known for his prodigious memory regarding the details of life at the court of his father half a century earlier.

  4. Contents. List of governors of Qazvin. Entrance to the Safavid royal complex in Qazvin, where the governors of Qazvin were seated. The office of the governor of Qazvin ( Persian: حاکم قزوین) was a historical office whose holders were tasked with the governance of the city and region of Qazvin.

  5. 14. Okt. 2014 · Life at the Court of the Early Qajar Shahs, a memoir translated into English for the first time, offers a uniquely intimate look at a world veiled by privilege and power. Its author, Soltan Ahmad Mirza, was a prince--the forty-ninth son of Fath Ali Shah Qajar, who ruled Iran from 1797 to 1834.

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    • Soltan Ahmad Mirza Azod al-Dowleh
  6. A discussion of the importance and proper place of memoirs in historiography, with particular reference to the Tarikh-e `Azodi of Soltan Ahmad Mirza `Azod al-Dowleh, in the context of 19th century Persia.

  7. Its author, Soltan Ahmad Mirza, was a prince—the forty-ninth son of Fath Ali Shah Qajar, who ruled Iran from 1797 to 1834. Looking back over the reigns of his father and two other shahs, he assembled a vast wealth of detail about life at the apex of Persian society: the role of the ruler, the hierarchy of the harem, court eunuchs, ceremonies ...