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Revision as of 12:02, 31 May 2020

Ahmad Khan Daryabeigi
Born
Died(1923-08-30)August 30, 1923
NationalityIranian
Occupation(s)Head of Military School in Tabriz, Head of Fars Military
TitleGovernor of Bushehr and Ports and Ommanat

Ahmad Khan Daryabeigi (Persian: احمد خان دریابیگی) graduated from Dar ul-Funun school with degrees in engineering and military studies. His research in 1887 provided the landscape for official Iranian claims to its three island (Greater and Lesser Tunbs and Abu Musa).[1] During Naser al-Din Shah Qajar, he became the first Iranian captain of the Persepolis Battleship in Bushehr which recently Iran had purchased from Germany and designed the first Iranian Navy uniform and later became the Lord Admiral (Maritime Frontier-Keeper)of the Persian Gulf.[2] In 1893, about 22 years before the First World War, he became the Governor of Bushehr and Southern Ports and Ommanat.[3][4] In March 1899, he conquered Port of Lingeh (Bandar Lengeh) and returned it to Iran’s sovereignty.[5]

In 1900, he established “Madreseye Sa'adat”, the first modern school through the South and Persian Gulf.[6] He translated "The Decameron" ( from Giovanni Boccaccio)[7] and Nouvelli (from Augustin Eugène Scribe)[8] during 1903–1904 from French before the Persian Constitutional Revolution of 1906. During the constitutional revolution, he was cooperating with people such as Sardar As'ad Bakhtiari (Ali-Qoli Khan Bakhtiari),[9] but he was against “Seyed Morteza Ahrami” (Alamal-Hoda) and “Seyed Abdolhossein Lari”[10] and in one period he faced the wrath of “Ayatollah Kazem Khoarasani.”[11] "Anjomane Nesvan" [12] (“Female Forum”) which was held in his paternal (Mohammad Khan) and his brother (Mohammad Hosseine Khan) home, both Chief Secretaries ("Nazem Darbar") of Qajar Kings (from Naser al-Din Shah to Ahmad Shah) had become the problem of traditionalists.[13][14] He was discharged in January 1907 after Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar came to power, but was restated in August 1907. He settled disputes with the British in Sistan and Baluchestan Province during 1907–1908.[15] He held the governorship of Bushehr and Southern Ports and Ommanat in several periods until a short time after the First World War.[16] His last tenure ended in 1921 shortly after the coup d'état of February 1921 and after Ahmad Shah Qajar’s return from Europe and passing through Bushehr. He died on August 30, 1923.[10][16]

Notes

  1. ^ مهدوی، هوشنگ.(۱۳۵۵)، عبد الرضا هوشنگ، تاریخ روابط خارجی ایران، تهران، سیمرغ
  2. ^ رسایی، دریابد فرج‌الله، ۲۵۰۰ سال برروی دریاها، پیک دریا، تهران، ۱۳۵۰
  3. ^ مجله رشد آموزش تاریخ - شماره ۲ - تاریخچه مدرسه سعادت بوشهر
  4. ^ "مراکز فرهنگی هنری بوشهر". artbushehr.ir. Archived from the original on 2012-02-13. Retrieved 2012-02-17.
  5. ^ وقایع اتفاقیه، ۲۵ شوال ۱۳۱۶ (هشتم مارچ ۱۸۹۹)
  6. ^ "- نسیم جنوب". nasimjonoub.com.
  7. ^ دکامرون، ترجمهٔ؛ احمد دریابیگی پایگاه اطلاع‌رسانی کتابخانه‌های ایران
  8. ^ نوئلی، ترجمهٔ؛ احمد دریابیگی پایگاه اطلاع‌رسانی کتابخانه‌های ایران
  9. ^ حبل المتین، سال هفدهم. شماره ۳، رجب ۱۳۲۷ ق، ص ۱۶
  10. ^ a b نقش میرزا احمد خان دریابیگی در تحولات سیاسی خلیج فارس پرتال جامع علوم انسانی
  11. ^ فارس از مشروطیت تا جنگ جهانی اول، به کوشش دکتر محمد رنجبر، ۱۳۸۹، سازمان اسناد و کتابخانه ملی جمهوری اسلامی ایران، ص ۱۷۷
  12. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2012-07-22. Retrieved 2012-02-17.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  13. ^ شیخ فضل الله نوری و مشروطیت، ص ۱۸۰. آدمیت، فریدون.
  14. ^ سابقه مبارزه با حجاب تا دوران پهلوی اول
  15. ^ Blackwood's magazine, Volume 208. (1817-1915) p182–183
  16. ^ a b پیک خجسته، ۱۶ مهر ۱۳۲۹، شماره ۴۱، سال اول، (اهواز - کاپیتان عباس دریانورد - بازنشسته)