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Taj ol-Dowleh (Persian: تاجالدوله, died 1881) was the forty-second wife of Fath-Ali Shah Qajar and a poet. Her birth name was Tavus Khanum (Persian: طاووس خانم, romanized: Tāvus Xānom) and she was of Georgian descent. She was born in Isfahan. She married Fath-Ali Shah in 1845 when she was 15 years old.
- 1881
- Fath-Ali Shah Qajar
She is buried in the Zahir od-Dowleh Cemetery in Tajrish. Her life and her writing and her role as a feminist is a subject of Middle Eastern studies in universities from Tehran University to Harvard. In 2015 Harvard acquired from her descendants their family photos, writings, anecdotes and stories about Taj al-Saltaneh's life for its ...
- Tooran al-Saltaneh
- Qajar
Taj-ol-Dowleh-ye Muziraj (Persian: تاجالدوله موزيرج, also Romanized as Tāj-ol Dowleh-ye Mūzīraj; also known as Tāj-od Dowleh) is a village in Karipey Rural District, Lalehabad District, Babol County, Mazandaran Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 134, in 33 families.
Taj ol-Dowleh was the forty-second wife of Fath-Ali Shah Qajar and a poet. Her birth name was Tavus Khanum and she was of Georgian descent.[1][2] She was born in Isfahan.
30. März 2022 · Women’s Worlds in Qajar Iran Esmat al-Dowleh, center, with her mother and her daughter. Her younger half-sister, Taj al-Saltaneh, was her father’s 12th daughter. She could have gotten lost in the shuffle, but Taj al-Saltaneh made a name for herself as a feminist, nationalist, and talented writer.
- Kaleena Fraga
Taj al-Saltaneh, a daughter of Nasir-ad Din Shah Qajar (1848-96), was renowned for her stunning beauty, liberal ideas, tempestuous love affairs and. unconventional way of life. She was a rebel both in spirit and deed. In any. other society or time and place she would have fulfilled her restless nature,
Taj ol-Saltaneh became the first princess to exit the shadowy world of the traditional harem, the first to take off her hijab and don Western clothes, and to co-found an underground women's movement.