Bahai Library Online

The list below may be incomplete, as many older documents are
incompletely tagged. Please see the list and email us to help.

Tag: "Pahlavi dynasty"

tag name Pahlavi dynasty type: Rulers
web link bahai-library.com/tags/Pahlavi_dynasty
referring tags Mohammed Reza Shah Pahlavi; Reza Shah Pahlavi; Tudeh Party of Iran

"Pahlavi dynasty" has been tagged in:

4 results from the Main Catalog

1 result from the Chronology

from the main catalog (4 results; collapse)

sorted by  
  1. 2011. "In Their Place": Marking and Unmarking Shi'ism in Pahlavi Iran. Aaron Vahid Sealy. Dissertation about Shi'ite nationalism in Iran 1925-1979, including extensive discussion of anti-Bahá'í activity and persecutions. (Offsite.) Theses.
  2. 2010-09-29. Hojjatiyeh, Mesbahiyeh, and Ahmadinejad. Muhammad Sahimi. History of anti-Bahá'í activities in Iran. Newspapers.
  3. 2002. Millennialism in Modern Iranian History. Juan Cole. Religions in Iran have been volatile and evolving, from a tool of the establishment to representing the voice of the oppressed, from passive to revolutionary. Bahá'u'lláh adapted these motifs to create a vehicle for socially-liberal and democratic ideals. Articles.
  4. 1991. Dynamics of the Iranian Revolution, The: The Pahlavis' Triumph and Tragedy. Jahangir Amuzegar. One-paragraph discussion of a one-time Iranian conspiracy theory that the Bahá'ís and Freemasons were running the country. Excerpts.

from the Chronology (1 result)

  1. 1925-12-13 — Ridá (or Reza) Sháh acceded to the throne of Iran. The Pahlaví dynasty commenced. [BBR482]

    During the period of the later Qajar shahs, namely Muzaffar al-Din (r. 1896–1907) , Muhammad-'Ali (r. 1907–9) and Ahmad (r. 1909–25) , the Iranian state became steadily weaker and sank into anarchy as a result of years of revolution, war, corruption, injustice, insecurity, and foreign intervention and occupation, all of which took a heavy toll on the local population. The country was thoroughly disappointed with the outcome of its hard-won freedom, the incompetence of successive cabinets, the inefficiency of the shahs, and the corruption of the bureaucracy. The continuous interference of foreign powers in Iran's affairs, especially Britain and Russia, combined with their excessive consular rights were a constant source of national humiliation and impotent dissension, which by 1921 had turned into loud, nationalistic protests throughout the country. The people looked for a strong government that would overcome these weaknesses. [The Forgotten Schools: The Bahá'ís and Modern Education in Iran, 1899–1934 p107]

 
  • search for parts of tags or alterate spellings
  • 2 characters minimum, parts separated by spaces
  • multiple keywords allowed, e.g. "Madrid Paris Seattle"
  • see also multiple tag search

Overview & core concepts

Principles, teachings
Central Figures
Institute process
Practices
Terminology
Virtues

Comparative religion

Prophets, Manifestations
Religion, general
Religions, Asian
Religions, Middle Eastern
Religions, other

Texts & interpretation

Writings: general
Writings of Bahá'u'lláh
Writings of the Báb
Writings of Abdu'l-Bahá
Metaphors and allegories
Words and phrases

Society & knowledge

Arts
Philosophy
Science

Other

Administration
BWC institutions
Calendar
Conferences
Dates
Film
Geographic locations
Hands of the Cause
Holy places, sites
Mashriqu'l-Adhkár
Miscellaneous
Organizations, Bahá'í

Other

Organizations, Other
People
Persecution
Plans
Publications
Publishing
Rulers
Schools, education
Shoghi Effendi
Translation, languages
Universal House of Justice
Universities

All tags Wiki tags Inventory tags and subjects
home divider sitemap divider series divider chronology
search:   author divider title divider date divider tags
adv. search divider languages divider inventory
bibliography divider abbreviations divider links
about divider contact divider RSS divider new
smaller fontbigger font