University Press of America
Pages: 466
Trim: 6 x 9
978-0-7618-4029-9 • Paperback • February 2008 • $98.99 • (£76.00)
Mohammad Gholi Majd holds a Ph.D. in Agricultural Economics from Cornell University. He is the author of The Great Famine and Genocide in Persia, 1917-1919 and Iraq in World War I, both from University Press of America.
Chapter 1 Introduction and Overview
Chapter 2 The Anglo-Persian Convention
Chapter 3 Resignation and Flight of Vossough-ed Dowleh
Chapter 4 Prelude to Coup d'Etat: cabinets of Moshir-ed-Dowleh and Sepahdar
Chapter 5 Coup d'Etat and Onset of Military Dictatorship
Chapter 6 Kaleidoscopic Ministries and the Strengthening of Dictatorship, 1921-1923
Chapter 7 The "Republican Movement" and the Imbrie Murder
Chapter 8 The "Liberation" of Arabistan
Chapter 9 The Regency Affair
Chapter 10 Abolition of Qajar Monarchy and the Advent of Reza Shah Pahlavi
Chapter 11 A Shaky Throne: Corruption, Mutiny, Rebellion and Assassination Plot
Chapter 12 An Oppressive Dictatorship, 1926-1928: Rising Unpopularity of Reza Shah
Chapter 13 Waging War on the Shia Clergy
Chapter 14 Waging War on the Tribes
Chapter 15 An Expanded Reign of Terror
Part 16 Index
In his recent book, Majd undertakes the task of retelling the fundamental political changes in Iran during the 1920s, beginning with the Anglo-Persian Convention in 1919 and ending with Reḍā Šāh’s 'expanded reign of terror'. The slightly larger first part of the book (chapters two to ten) recounts the events leading to the overthrow of the Qājār monarchy and the establishment of the Pahlavi dynasty. The last five chapters focus on the consolidation of Reḍā Šāh’s rule and its increasingly dictatorial character, evident e.g. in his attacks on the Shi‘i clergy and the tribal population. The book follows Majd’s previous publications in strongly emphasizing British influence on the events in Persia and making extensive use of American archival material . . . [H]e fills the pages with long quotations from records of the US State Department. . . .[T]he author makes a valuable source accessible through his extensive verbatim citations. Since the cited correspondence often goes beyond a mere account of events, it also sheds light on social and cultural changes during the early Pahlavī period. Furthermore, the almost exclusively chronological order of the documents allows the reader to closely follow the course of events which were reported in a very detailed way from the perspective of diplomats representing American interests in the region. And finally, the appendant index is a helpful tool to directly consult the material for specific aspects.
— Abstracta Iranica