Dowlatshah

Mohammad Ali Mirza Dowlatshah (4 January 1789, in Nava – 22 November 1821, in Taq-e Gara[1][2][3]) was a famous Iranian Prince of the Qajar dynasty. He is also the progenitor of the Dowlatshahi Family of Persia. He was born at Nava, in Mazandaran, a Caspian province in the north of Iran. He was the first son of Fath-Ali Shah, the second Qajar king of Persia, and Ziba Chehr Khanoum, a Georgian girl of the Tsikarashvili family.[4] He was also the elder brother (by seven months[5]) of Abbas Mirza. Dowlatshah was the governor of Fars at age 9, Qazvin and Gilan at age 11, Khuzestan and Lorestan at age 16, and Kermanshah at age 19.

Dowlatshah
دولتشاه
Portrait medaillion depicting Dowlatshah. Signed Gholam Khanzadeh ‘Ali, dated c.1830
Governor of Fars
Reign1797 - 1799
PredecessorHossein Qoli Khan Qajar
SuccessorHossein Ali Mirza
Governor of Gilan and Qazvin
Reign1799 - 1804
PredecessorMorteza Qoli Khan Qajar
SuccessorMirza Musa Khan Monajjembashi
Governor of Khuzestan and Lorestan
Reign1804 – 1807
Governor of Kermanshah
Reign1807 - 1821
PredecessorFath-Ali Khan Qajar
SuccessorMohammad Hossein Mirza Dowlatshahi
BornMohammad Ali Mirza (محمدعلی میرزا)
4 January 1789
Nava, Mazandaran
Died22 November 1821(1821-11-22) (aged 32)
Taq-e Qarra, Kermanshah province
HouseQajar
FatherFath-Ali Shah Qajar
MotherZiba Chehr Khanoum
ReligionShia Islam

In the battles with Russia and Persia's archrival, the Ottoman Empire, he defeated the Ottomans in Baghdad and Basra, and crushed the Russians in Yerevan and Tbilisi. Dowlatshah developed and improved the city of Kermanshah and established the city of Dowlat-Abad which was renamed Malayer.

Dowlatshah had 10 sons. His descendants live in various countries around the world and carry the surname: in Persian: دولتشاهی, romanized: Doulatšâhi, which is rendered as Dowlatshahi in English and Doulatchahi in French and Doulatszahi in Polish etc.

Biography

Early life

Though older than his brother Abbas Mirza, Mohammad Ali Mirza Dowlatshah was never heir to the Persian throne, because his mother was not of the royal dynasty. However, his father Fath-Ali Shah appointed Dowlatshah to rule and protect the boundaries of the two Iraqs (a name given to western states of Iran) and also adjoined Khuzestan province to his territories. In fact, during Dowlatshah's time, Kermanshah had become a citadel against the Ottomans.

Dowlatshah carried the last, and initially very successful, attack on the Ottoman Iraq in 1821. Persia was resentful of the inability of the Ottoman government to protect the Shia population of Iraq against the Saudi-Wahhabi attacks that had begun in 1801. Many of the Shias killed in the raids were Iranians, some of whom closely related to the ruling Qajar dynasty of Persia. His forces quickly occupied Shahrazur and Kirkuk, and laid siege to Baghdad.

His skills and ambitions mirrored those of his younger brother. He was a great military leader and a patron of the arts, poetry and philosophy. The origin of the family names "Dowlatshah," "Dowlatshahi," and close variations such as "Dolatshahi" are from this ancestor's title.

Dowlatshah has been greatly respected among the people of Kermanshah (Persians, Kurds, Lors and Laks), mainly because of his contributions such as Dowlatshah mosque (مسجد دولتشاه) His mosque is located in the Javanshir Square of Kermanshah and was built in the years 1820–1822 AD. In recent years this mosque has been repaired. It consists of separate nocturnal areas along with a courtyard.

Governor of Kermanshah

20th-century portrait of Dowlatshah by Princess Mahin Dowlatshahi-Firouz[6]

The city of Kermanshah is located in the center of the province and has a temperate climate. It is one of the ancient cities of Iran and it is said that Tahmores Divband, a mythical ruler of the Pishdadian, had constructed it. Some attribute its constructions to Bahram Sassanid. During the reign of Qobad I and Anushirvan Sassanid, Kermanshah was at the peak of its glory. But in the Arab attack suffered great damage. Concurrent with the Afghan attack and the fall of Esfahan, Kermanshah was destroyed due to the Ottoman invasion. But from the beginning of the 11th century AH it began to flourish.

In order to prevent a probable aggression of the Zangeneh tribe and due to its proximity with the Ottoman Empire, the Safavid ruler paid great attention to this city. But in the Zandieh period upheavals increased, whereas during the Qajar era, Ottoman attacks reduced. Mohammad Ali Mirza in 1221 AH was seated in Kermanshah in order to prevent Ottoman aggression, and Khuzestan also came under his realm. An epigraph of Mohammad Ali Mirza in Taq-e-Bostan has remained as a relic.

The famous Alwand Bridge on the Alwand River was built by him when he went to Khanaqin in 1855 on his way to visit the Shia holy sites in Karbala and Najaf, but that year Khanaqin faced a severe flood and he decided to spend his travel expenses in addition to the additional costs of building a bridge in Khanaqin. He brought a number of architects from Isfahan to Khanaqin and the bridge was built using walnut wood imported from Kermanshah. The bridge was completed in 1860.[7]

Alwand Bridge in Khanaqin

Turkish-Persian War (1820–1823)

Emadieh was one of the Dowlatshah family residences in Kermanshah; it was demolished during the Pahlavi era

The regime of Crown Prince Abbas Mirza launched an attack on Ottoman Turkey under the leadership of Mohammad Ali Mirza Dowlatshah. The war was sparked by Turkish aid to Azerbaijani rebels in Persia. The rebels had fled from Persia and were given refuge by the Ottomans. The war opened with a Persian invasion of Turkey in the Lake Van region, and a counter-invasion by the Ottoman Pasha of Baghdad (Iraq belonged to the Ottoman Empire), who invaded western Persia. This invasion force was driven back across the border, but Dowlatshah's newly modernized army of 30,000 troops defeated 50,000 Ottoman Turks in the Battle of Erzurum near Lake Van in 1821. A peace treaty in 1823 ended the war with no changes to their mutual border.

Death and burial

On his way back to Kermanshah after besieging Baghdad, Mohammad Ali Mirza Dowlatshah was infected with what is presumed to have been cholera in Taq-e Gara and died there.[8]

He is buried in the shrine of Imam Husayn in Karbala.[9]

Offspring

Mohammad Ali Mirza Dowlatshah had 12 daughters and 10 sons.

Sons

  • Prince Mohammad Hossein Mirza (1808–1835), governor of Kermanshah from 1821 to 1834
  • Prince Tahmasp Mirza (1809–1877), governor of Kermanshah from 1877 to 1877
  • Prince Nasrollah Mirza Vali
  • Prince Assadollah Mirza
  • Prince Fathollah Mirza
  • Prince Emam Qoli Mirza (1814–1875), governor of Kermanshah from 1834 to 1875.
  • Prince Nour-ol-Dahr Mirza
  • Prince Jahangir Mirza
  • Prince Mohammad Rahim Mirza
  • Prince Abol Hossein Mirza

Daughters

  • Princess Jasmine Nazanin Dowlatshahi

Government positions held

See also

References

  1. Ardashir Keshavarz (2016). زندگی و زمانه شاهزاده محمد علی میرزای دولتشاه [The Life and Times of Prince Mohammad Ali Mirza Dowlatshah] (in Persian). Tehran: Ardashir Keshavarz. p. 432. ISBN 9786000446567.
  2. Amanat, Abbas (1994). "DAWLATŠĀH, MOḤAMMAD-ʿALĪ MĪRZĀ". iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 2022-02-06. This campaign ended abruptly, however, with the prince's death from cholera at Ṭāq-e Garrā during his withdrawal.
  3. In view of the two above trustworthy sources, the location of Al-Mada'in, Ottoman Iraq is not correct.
  4. Amanat, Abbas. "DAWLATŠĀH, MOḤAMMAD-ʿALĪ MĪRZĀ". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  5. Amanat, Abbas. "DAWLATŠĀH, MOḤAMMAD-ʿALĪ MĪRZĀ". Encyclopaedia Iranica. Retrieved 10 February 2016.
  6. "Jalali-Qajar (Kadjar) Genealogy". qajarpages.org. Retrieved 26 April 2017.
  7. پل الون هدیه یک دختر قاجاری به شهر خانقین. در: آکانیوز. بازدید: سپتامبر ۲۰۰۹.
  8. Amanat, Abbas (1994). "D MOḤAMMAD-ʿALĪ MĪRZĀ". iranicaonline.org. Retrieved 2022-02-06.
  9. Ardashir Keshavarz (2016). زندگی و زمانه شاهزاده محمد علی میرزای دولتشاه [The Life and Times of Prince Mohammad Ali Mirza Dowlatshah] (in Persian). Tehran: Ardashir Keshavarz. p. 433 and footnote 2. ISBN 9786000446567.

Further reading

  • Shahvar, Soli (2020). "Domestic and external considerations in the struggle over regency in early Qajar Iran: The princely rivalry between ʿAbbas Mirza and Muhammad-ʿAli Mirza". Middle Eastern Studies. 56 (4): 549–569. doi:10.1080/00263206.2020.1751617. S2CID 219927274.
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