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'''Jafar Khan Moshir od-Dowleh''' ({{langx|fa|جعفرخان مشیرالدوله}}), also known as '''Mohandes Bashi''' ({{lang|fa|مهندس‌باشی}}), was an Iranian politician, who was the head of the ] from September 1858 until his death in November 1862. His office was similar to the prime minister office, which was vacant during his tenure. He was the cousin of ].{{sfn|Davud|2019}} '''Jafar Khan Moshir od-Dowleh''' ({{langx|fa|جعفرخان مشیرالدوله}}), also known as '''Mohandes Bashi''' ({{lang|fa|مهندس‌باشی}}), was an Iranian politician, who was the head of the ] from September 1858 until his death in November 1862. His office was similar to the prime minister office, which was vacant during his tenure.{{sfn|Davud|2019}}

He was the son of Mirza Mohammad Taqi Vazir and nephew of Haji Mirza Hasan, who was the father of ]. It was under the latter and his son ] that Jafar Khan received his education, which took place in the city of ]. In 1815, together with four other students, Jafar Khan was sent by the crown prince ] to study in England.{{sfn|Davud|2019}} Their journey to England, referred to as a '']n'' by the modern historian ], was an interchange of ideas, which had been made by possible by the diplomatic exchanges between Iran and Great Britain.{{sfn|Green|2009|p=296}} Jafar Khan is often mentioned in the travelogue one of the students, ]. Each student had an area of expertise, with Jafar Khan's being centered around mathematics and engineering. They returned to Iran in 1819, becoming known as the "first caravan of enlightenment".{{sfn|Davud|2019}}


== References == == References ==
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== Sources == == Sources ==
* {{cite encyclopedia | article = {{lang|fa|جعفرخان مشیرالدوله}} |trans-title= Jafar Khan Moshir od-Dowleh | last = Davud | first = Seyyed Ali Al-i | url = https://www.cgie.org.ir/fa/article/223335 | encyclopedia = The Great Islamic Encyclopaedia |language=fa| year = 2019 }} * {{cite encyclopedia | article = {{lang|fa|جعفرخان مشیرالدوله}} |trans-title= Jafar Khan Moshir od-Dowleh | last = Davud | first = Seyyed Ali Al-i | url = https://www.cgie.org.ir/fa/article/223335 | encyclopedia = The Great Islamic Encyclopaedia |language=fa| year = 2019 }}
* {{cite journal |last=Green|first=Nile|author-link= Nile Green |year=2009|title=Among the dissenters: reciprocal ethnography in nineteenth-century Inglistan |publisher=Cambridge University Press|journal=Journal of Global History |volume=4|issue=2|pages=293–315 |doi=10.1017/S1740022809003167}}



{{Iran-politician-stub}} {{Iran-politician-stub}}

Revision as of 15:32, 8 January 2025

Jafar Khan Moshir od-Dowleh
Head of the Council of state
In office
September 1858 – November 1862
MonarchNaser al-Din Shah Qajar
Preceded byMirza Aqa Khan Nuri (prime minister)
Succeeded byMirza Mohammad Khan Sepahsalar (prime minister)
Personal details
DiedNovember 1862
Mashhad, Qajar Iran
Resting placeImam Reza shrine, Mashhad
RelativesMirza Bozorg Qa'em-Maqam (cousin)

Jafar Khan Moshir od-Dowleh (Persian: جعفرخان مشیرالدوله), also known as Mohandes Bashi (مهندس‌باشی), was an Iranian politician, who was the head of the Council of state from September 1858 until his death in November 1862. His office was similar to the prime minister office, which was vacant during his tenure.

He was the son of Mirza Mohammad Taqi Vazir and nephew of Haji Mirza Hasan, who was the father of Mirza Bozorg Qa'em-Maqam. It was under the latter and his son Abol-Qasem Qa'em-Maqam that Jafar Khan received his education, which took place in the city of Tabriz. In 1815, together with four other students, Jafar Khan was sent by the crown prince Abbas Mirza to study in England. Their journey to England, referred to as a wanderjahren by the modern historian Nile Green, was an interchange of ideas, which had been made by possible by the diplomatic exchanges between Iran and Great Britain. Jafar Khan is often mentioned in the travelogue one of the students, Mirza Saleh Shirazi. Each student had an area of expertise, with Jafar Khan's being centered around mathematics and engineering. They returned to Iran in 1819, becoming known as the "first caravan of enlightenment".

References

  1. ^ Davud 2019.
  2. Green 2009, p. 296.

Sources

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