Abbas Mirza
Abbas Mirza
Abbas Mirza
Abbs Mrz
Nyib al-Sal ana Abbs Mrz
(120349/17891833) was the fourth son
of Fat - Al Shh Qjr (r. 17971834).
He was heir apparent (val ahd) to the
Qjr throne of Iran and, as governor of
Azerbaijan, played a leading role in the
two Russo-Persian wars in the Caucasus
(180413 and 18268). With his ministers
Mrz s Buzurg (d. 1822) and Mrz
Ab l-Qsim Q im Maqm (d. 1835), he
is credited with making the first efforts at
reform and modernisation in Iran. He was
born in Nav (in Mzandarn) on 4 Dh
l- ijja 1203/26 August 1789 and died
in Mashhad on 10 Jumada II 1249/25
October 1833.
Abbs Mrzs mother was siya
Khnum (d. 18145), daughter of Fat Al Khn Daval. Abbs Mrz was thus
the first of Fat - Al Shhs sons to have
Qjr descent on both sides, thus linking
two competing clansthe Quvnl and
the Davalof the Qjr tribe. Anecdotal tradition has it that he grew up
as the favourite of his grandfather q
Mu ammad Shh (d. 1797), who envisaged him as future ruler. In 1799 Abbs
Mrz was sent to Azerbaijan as the nominal head of a campaign to defeat local
opposition incited by Ja far-Qul Khn
Dunbul (d. 1814). The actual military
command had been assigned to Sulaymn
Khn Qjr (d. 18056), while Abbs
Mrz himself was placed under the tutelage of Mrz Buzurg. This first mission, at
the age of ten, was a symbolic statement
of authority in the absence of the ruler
who, on this occasion, bestowed on him
the title of Nyib al-Sal ana (vice-regent).
This title did not yet imply nomination as
crown prince, contrary to the later statements of official Qjr historiography.
The position of Abbs Mrz remained
contested by his brothers, especially the
older Mu ammad Al Mrz (d. 1821).
Only six years later, in 1805, with the
outbreak of the first Russo-Persian war,
Abbs Mrz was officially appointed governor of Azerbaijan and took up regular
residence in Tabriz and Khy. On his own
initiative, he was also assigned the overall
leadership in this war, which resisted the
Russians annexation of Georgia (1801)
and their ensuing expansion into areas
in the Caucasus hitherto under Persian
suzerainty. Following the disastrous defeat
abb s m rz
he negotiated successfully between British and Russian interests. From 1821
to 1823, Abbs Mrz and his brother
Mu ammad Al Mrz were engaged in
military confrontations with the Ottoman
Empire. Without a clear victory on either
side, border disputes were settled preliminarily by the Treaty of Erzurum, signed
in July 1823.
The second Russo-Persian war (18268)
had multiple origins: Russian aggression
coincided with jihadist calls by ulam led
by Sayyid Mu ammad I fahn (d. 1826),
while Abbs Mrz and other Qjr
nobles had political interests of their
own in resuming hostilities. The second
war ended abruptly with the occupation
of Tabriz by General Ivan Fdorovich
Paskevich (d. 1856), who was able to dictate the conditions for peace. The treaty
of Turkmanchy (signed in February
1828) imposed huge indemnities on Iran
and confirmed the loss of all its territories
north of the Aras River, which became
the new border with Russia. The succession to the Qjr throne was finally settled in chapter seven of this treaty, which
asserted Abbs Mrzs position as crown
prince.
Abbs Mrz did not have a particular interest in the patronage of arts and
architecture. In Tabriz he erected a modest new residence with administrative
functions (dvnkhna), built new watersupply tunnels (qants), and gardens,
and there is proof, in his testament and
surviving sale contracts, of his systematic
acquisition of real estate. Only a small
mosque in Tabriz, known as the Masjid-i
Shhzda (mosque of the prince), was
begun on his initiative before 1826. The
mosque in the citadel of Erivan (Yerevan)
traditionally attributed to him and called
the Masjid-i Abbs Mrz, of which no
abb s m rz
trace remains, was probably erected by
usayn Khn Sardr Qjr (d. 182930).
More prominent are fortifications built by
Abbs Mrz, according to plans provided
by members of the Gardanne mission in
Ardabl, Khy, and Tabriz, as well as the
fortress of Abbsbd, near Nakhjavn.
In the years before his death, Abbs
Mrz was charged with several missions
to quell rebellions and other unrest that
resulted from the lost war and the perceived weakness of the central government.
During this time he continued nominally
in charge of Azerbaijan, delegating actual
tasks to his son Farhd Mrz (d. 1888).
In 1830 Abbs Mrz re-established
order in Yazd and Kirmn. During his
first short campaign in Khursn, in the
winter of 18312, he relied on negotiations. He resumed his efforts in the spring
and summer of 1832, with military operations directed against Ri Qul Khn,
of Qchn, and Mu ammad Khn, of
Turbat-i aydariyya. He succeeded in
establishing Qjr rule firmly over most
of Khursn, but the ultimate aim of
regaining Herat was thwarted by his early
death, en route to his third campaign
in Khursn. European travellers and
observers early on commented on Abbs
Mrzs weak health and his chronic and
recurrent illnesses. He was under constant
treatment by both Western and Persian
physicians, among the former Dr John
Cormick (d. 1833). He was buried in the
shrine of Imm Ri , in Mashhad.
At the time of his death Abbs Mrz
had forty-eight surviving childrentwentytwo daughters and twenty-six sonsmany
of whom held important offices and/or
became famous writers. Among his sons,
in addition to Farhd Mrz, were Shh
Mu ammad Mrz (r. 183448)by
his first wife Jahn Khnum bt. Mrz
4
mu ir, Tehran 1372sh/1993; Friederika
von Freygang, Lettres sur le Caucase et la Gorgie
suivies dune relation dun voyage en Perse en 1812,
Hamburg 1816;
asan
usayn Fas ,
Frsnma-yi N ir, ed. Man r Rastigr
Fas , 2 vols., Tehran 1367sh/1988, trans.
Heribert Busse, History of Persia under Qajar
rule, New York 1972; Alfred de Gardanne,
Mission du gnral Gardanne en Perse sous le
premier empire, Paris 1865; Ri Qul Khn
Hidyat, Trkh-i raw at al- af-yi n ir, 10
vols., Tehran 1339sh/1960; Pierre-Amde
Jaubert, Voyage en Armnie et en Perse fait dans
les annes 1805 et 1806, 2 vols., Paris 1821;
Jahngr Mrz, Ta rkh-i Naw. Shmil-i
avdith-i dawra-yi Qjriyya az sl-i 1240
t 1267 qamar, ed. Abbs Iqbl, Tehran
1327sh/1948; Harford Jones Brydges, An
account of the transactions of His Majestys mission to the court of Persia, in the years 180711,
2 vols., London 1834; John Macdonald
Kinneir, A geographical memoir of the Persian
Empire, London 1813; Moritz von Kotzebue,
Narrative of a journey into Persia, London 1819;
Ab l-Qsim Lchn, A vlt va dastkha h-yi
Abbs Mrz Qjr N ib al-Sal ana, Tehran
1326sh/1947; James J. Morier, A journey
through Persia, Armenia, and Asia Minor, to Constantinople in the years 1808 and 1809, Philadelphia 1816; Mu ammad Taq Nr, Ashraf
al-tavrkh. Vaqyi marb bih dawra-yi ukmat-i
Mu ammad Val Mrz dar Khursn, salh-yi
12181231, vol. 1, ed. Ssan A l, Tehran
1386sh/2008; Homa Pakdaman and William Royce, Abbs Mrzs will, Iranian Studies 6/2 (1973), 136151; Fa lallh Khvar
Shrz, Ta rkh-i Dh l-Qarnayn, ed. N ir
Afshr-far, 2 vols., Tehran 1380sh/2001;
Mu ammad Taq Sipihr Lisn al-Mulk,
Nsikh al-tavrkh, ed. Jamshd Kiyn-far, 3
vols., Tehran 1377sh/1998; Joseph M. Tancoigne, Lettres sur la Perse et la Turquie dAsie, 2
vols., Paris 1819.
Studies
Iradj Amini, Napoleon and Persia. Franco-Persian
relations under the First Empire, Richmond,
Surrey 1999; Muriel Atkin, Russia and Iran,
17801828, Minneapolis 1980; Mahd
Bmdd, Shar -i l-i rijl-i rn dar qarn-i
12 va 13 hijr (Tehran 134753/196674),
2:21522; Stephanie Cronin, Building a
new army. Military reform in Qajar Iran,
in Roxane Farmanfarmaian (ed.), War and
peace in Qajar Persia (London 2008), 4787;
LEIDEN BOSTON
2012
ADVISORY BOARD
Azyumardi Azra; Peri Bearman; Edmund Bosworth; Farhad Daftary; Emeri
van Donzel; Geert Jan van Gelder (Chairman); R. Stephen Humphreys;
Remke Kruk; Wilferd Madelung; Barbara Metcalf; Hossein Modarressi;
James Montgomery; Nasrollah Pourjavady; and Jean-Louis Triaud
EI3 is copy edited by
Linda George
with
Alan H. Hartley and Brian Johnson.
ISSN: 1873-9830
ISBN: 978 90 04 22567 1
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