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date | event | tags | firsts | |
1848 Jul - Sep
184- 1848-07-31 edit |
Mullá Husayn and his companions, marching to Mázindarán, were joined by Bábís who had been at Badasht as well as newly-converted Bábís. [B171–2]
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Bábí history; Badasht, Iran; Banners; Black Standard (banner); Conference of Badasht (1848); Iran; Khurásán, Iran; Mazandaran, Iran; Muhammad Sháh; Mullá Ḥusayn Bushrú'í; Prophecies | ||
1848 last week in Jul 184- 1848-07-30 edit |
Trial of the Báb The Báb arrived in Tabríz and was brought before a panel of which the 17-year-old Crown Prince Násiri'd-Dín Mírzá was the president. The Báb publicly made His claim that He was the Qá'im. This claim had also been announced to those gathered at Badasht. [Bab140–7; BBR157; BBRSM23, 216; BW18:380; DB314–20; GPB21–2; TN14] |
* Báb, The, Basic timeline; * Báb, The (chronology); - Basic timeline, Expanded; Báb, Trial of; Badasht, Iran; Bastinado; Conference of Badasht (1848); Fatwa; Iran; Nasirid-Din Sháh; Qá'im; Tabríz, Iran; William Cormick | First formal punishment of the Báb | |
1848 21 Jul
184- 1848-07-21 edit |
Mullá Husayn and his 202 companions left Mashhad for Mázindarán under the Black Standard. They arrived in September. [BBRSM26, 216] | Banners; Black Standard (banner); Iran; Mashhad, Iran; Mazandaran, Iran; Mullá Ḥusayn Bushrú'í | ||
1848 19 - 20 Jul
184- 1848-07-19 edit |
The Women's Rights Convention was held in the Wesleyan Chapel at Seneca Falls, NY. The principle organizer was Lucretia Mott, with Elizabeth Cady Stanton as its driving intellect. A significant role was played by an African-American man, an abolitionist and a recently freed slave, Frederick Douglass. The convention adopted a Declaration of Rights and Sentiments that consisted of 11 resolutions including the right for women to vote. The signatories were the 68 women and 32 men in attendance. The right for women to vote became part of the United States Constitution in 1920. [The Calling: Tahirih of Persia and her American Contemporaries p114-160, "Seneca Falls First Woman's Rights Convention of 1848: The Sacred Rites of the Nation"
by Bradford W. Miller (Journal of Bahá'í Studies, 8.3, 1998)]
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African Americans; Badasht, Iran; Conference of Badasht (1848); Equality; Gender; Human rights; Iran; New York, USA; Seneca Falls, NY; Ṭáhirih Qurratu'l-'Ayn; United States (USA); Women; Womens rights | the first time ever recorded in American history, a woman (Elizabeth Cady Stanton) publicly demanded the vote | |
1848 c. 17 Jul
184- 1848-07-17 edit |
The Bábís left Badasht for Mázindarán. They were attacked by a mob of more than 500 outside the village of Níyálá. [B170–1; BKG46–7; BW18:380; DB298; GPB68]
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* Bahaullah (chronology); * Persecution, Iran; - Persecution; - Persecution, Mobs; Badasht, Iran; Bandar-Jaz, Iran; Conference of Badasht (1848); Iran; Mazandaran, Iran; Niyala, Iran; Núr, Iran; Ṭáhirih Qurratu'l-'Ayn | ||
1848 c. Jul
184- 1848-07-01 edit |
Quddús was arrested and taken to Sárí where he was placed under house arrest in the home of Mírzá Muhammad-Taqí, a leading cleric. [Bab171; BKG50; DB300] Táhirih was arrested and was later taken to Tihrán where she was held in the home of Mahmúd Khán, the Kalántar of Tihrán, until her martyrdom in August 1852. Mullá Husayn left the army camp near Mashhad where he had been a guest of a brother of the Sháh. He planned to make a pilgrimage to Karbalá. While making preparations for the journey he received a Tablet from the Báb instructing him to go to Mázindarán to help Quddús, carrying a Black Standard before him. He was also instructed to wear the Báb's own green turban and to take the new name Siyyid `Alí. [Bab171; BKG50; DB324; MH174] |
- Letters of the Living; - Shahs; Banners; Black Standard (banner); Green turban; Iran; Iraq; Kalantar, Iran; Karbala, Iraq; Mahmud Khan; Mashhad, Iran; Mazandaran, Iran; Mírzá Muhammad-Taqi; Mullá Ḥusayn Bushrú'í; Names and titles; Quddús; Sari, Iran; Ṭáhirih Qurratu'l-'Ayn; Tehran, Iran; Turbans | ||
1848 Jul
184- 1848-07-00 edit |
After three months in Chihríq, the Báb, on the order of Háji Mírzá Áqási was taken under escort to Tabríz. He was to be tried for apostasy before a gathering of high-ranking religious leaders (Mujtahid) in the presence of the young crown prince Másiri'd-Dín Mírzá . [Bab137; BW18:380; TN14]
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* Báb, The, Basic timeline; * Báb, The (chronology); - Basic timeline, Expanded; Aqa Bala-Big Naqqash-bashi; Báb, Portrait of; Báb, Trial of; Chihríq, Iran; Horses; Iran; Mochenin; Portraits; Tabríz, Iran; Urúmíyyih, Iran |
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