Hassan Taqizadeh
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Sayyed Hasan[1] Taqizādeh[2] (Persian: سید حسن تقیزاده; September 27, 1878 in Tabriz, Iran – January 28, 1970 in Tehran, Iran)[3] was an influential Iranian politician and diplomat,[4] of Azerbaijani origin,[5] during the Qajar era under the reign of Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar, as well as the Pahlavi era under the reign of Reza Shah[6] and Mohammad Reza Shah. Taqizadeh was also a prominent scholar; his studies on Iranian calendars remain reference work up until now.
Although in the modern political history Taqizadeh is known as a secular politician, who believed that "outwardly and inwardly, in body and in spirit, Iran must become Europeanized",[7] he came from a traditional Islamic Sayyed-family (descendant of Muhammad). His father, Sayyed Taqi, was a clergyman and when Sayyed Hasan became a mullah, it seemed likely that he would follow in his father's footsteps. From an early age Taqizadeh showed interest in enlightened ideas and the Western concept of constitutionalism. This interest can be traced back to the socio-political sphere in which Taqizadeh became an adult. He grew up in Tabriz, the capital city of East Azerbaijan province, which was the gateway to the modern and progressive ideas coming from Russia and especially Western Europe. In the time of World War I, World War II and after, Taqizadeh was the most influential person in Iran who supported the interests of Germany against Russia and Britain.
Biography
[edit]
Secretly Taqizadeh studied French and English for the purpose of becoming acquainted with the Western Age of Enlightenment and modern political thoughts. Nevertheless, he became mullah and remained one until the period in which the traditional Iranian political and socio-economic system disintegrated and the modern Iranian nation-state was formed. As early as the beginning of his political career he confronted the corrupt and despotic régime of the Qajar princes, who seemed unable to prevent the decay of their dynasty. Convinced of the destructive consequences of the despotism and corruption for the political and socio-economic development of Iran, Taqizadeh actively participated in the Constitutional Revolution (Mashruteh Revolution), which resulted in the foundation of the Majles (Parliament - مجلس شورای ملی). From this period onwards he developed into a secular enlightened politician. In 1908 his life was saved by Claude Stokes a British military attaché who allowed him to take refuge in the legation compound. He was then secured safe passage to England where he worked with Edward Granville Browne to lobby parliament for support of the constitutionalist movement.[8]
In 1909, under the guidance of Taqizadeh the first modern pro German political party, the Ferqeh-ye Demokrat-e Iran (Democratic Party of Iran), was founded in Iran. Shortly after the outbreak of World War I, Taqizadeh allied with Germany against Russia and Britain. In Berlin he established the Komiteh-ye Iran (Committee of Iran), and together with other prominent Iranian intellectuals, he published the influential periodical Kaveh (1916–1922), which was distributed in Europe as well as in Iran. Kaveh was a political and literary journal which greatly contributed to the creation of the Iranian consciousness and national identity. This journal emphasized the need for national independence, and internal reforms, especially secular and educational ones.
Under the reign of Reza Shah Pahlavi (1925–1941), Taqizadeh contributed to the formation of the modern Iranian nation-state. During his political career of seventy years, Taqizadeh served as parliamentarian, governor-general of Khorasan province, minister of Roads and Transportation, minister of Finance, and ambassador to the United Kingdom and France. Although at the time of the Constitutional Revolution he opposed the formation of the Senate (Majles-e Sena, مجلس سنا — defunct since 1979, following adoption of a new constitution), in 1950, during the imperial government of Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi (1941–1978), he became its president. Taqizadeh described his life as a "tempestuous life" (Zendegi-ye Tufani), which he later used as the title of his autobiography.
Taqizadeh's views are not characterised by ideological continuity, but by many breaks in the course of his life, which have contributed to the difficulty of writing a consistent account of his life. Taqizadeh was a natural politician. If he was convinced that his alliance with a person or country would further interests of Iran, he often was ready to ally himself with them. Similarly, he would abandon his allies if he believed that his alliance would be detrimental to his country. The following two quotations are indicative of the divergence of views that exist concerning Taqizadeh:
"He [Taqizadeh] had won deserved fame by his fearless independence and wonderful grasp of political affairs. There is something so sympathetic in his face, so attractive, with eyes sparkling with cheerful animation. (...). If I am not mistaken he is of those whose genius is capable of inspiring great enthusiasm, great sacrifices, and whose influence leaves a lasting impression of the history of nations." (Edward Granville Browne)
"In which position was Taqizadeh true and sincere? What were the motives of that contradictory behaviour? He was not adept at political truth and honour." (Fereydun Adamiyat)
Views vary as to the degree to which Taqizadeh served the interests of Iran and her people. Some experts believe that he made the Iranian interests secondary to that of the United Kingdom during the period of the Constitutional Revolution, and to that of Germany during World War I. Others suggest that he allied with the United Kingdom with the intention of protecting Iran against the Russian expansionist policies. They are of the opinion that Taqizadeh was a supporter of the Iranian constitution and that during World War I, he allied with Germany to oppose the Anglo-Russian influence which was aimed at undermining Iran's independence. In addition, they believe that in 1942 Taqizadeh attempted to bring about a close relationship between Iran and the United States of America in order to guarantee a balance of powers conducive to Iran's independence.
Chronology of Taqizadeh's life
[edit]Hassan Taqizadeh was born on 27 September 1878 in Tabriz. In 1896, he established the Tarbiyat (Education) school, a bookshop, and a pharmacy in Tabriz with associates. 1898: Taught physics at Loqmaniya in Tabriz. Translated the book 'Ajaeb-e Asemani (Astrnomie Populaire) by Camille Flammarion.
In 1898, he taught physics at the Loqmaniya school in Tabriz and translated ‘Ajaeb-e Asemani (Astronomie Populaire) by Camille Flammarion. Between 1899 and 1900, he studied English at the American Memorial School in Tabriz, a Presbyterian mission institution.
From January 1903 to January 1904, he published the magazine Ganjineh-ye Fonun (Treasure of Sciences). In 1904, he travelled to the Caucasus, Istanbul, Egypt, and Beirut, and published the discourse Tahqiq-e Ahval-e kononi-ye Iran ba Mohakemat-e Tarikhi in the Cairo-based newspaper Hekmat. He returned to Tabriz in October 1905, and moved to Tehran in September 1906, where he published articles in Neda-ye Vatan (Voice of Nation). In October 1906, he was elected by the merchants of Tabriz as a deputy to the First Majles. He contributed articles to Sur-e Esrafil and Mosavat (Equality).
In June 1908, he was exiled by order of Mohammad Ali Shah and left Iran for Europe. In September 1908, he organized political activities in the United Kingdom. He returned to Tabriz in November 1908.
After the constitutionalist victory in August 1909, he arrived in Tehran and joined the "Temporarily Board of Directors". He was elected to the Second Majles and, in October 1909, became the parliamentary leader of Ferqeh-ye Demokrat-e Iran (Democratic Party of Iran).
In 1910, following the assassination of Sayyed Abdullah Behbahani, he left Tehran and remained in Tabriz for several months. He relocated to Istanbul in October 1910, residing there for nearly two years, and departed for Europe in 1911.
In June 1913, he travelled to New York, where he remained for nineteen months and published four political articles in French in the journal Revue du Monde Musulman, addressing developments in Iran, the Ottoman Empire, and Arabic regions.
In January 1915, he left the United States for Berlin, travelling through the Netherlands. From January 1916 to March 1922, he published the periodical Kaveh (Blacksmith), in collaboration with writers such as Sayyed Mohammad-Ali Jamalzadeh and Hossein Kazemzadeh.

In January 1922, he went to Moscow as a state representative to negotiate a friendship agreement, remaining there for one and a half years. In 1923, he married a German citizen.
He returned to Iran in July 1924, was elected to the Fifth Majles, and served on the Ma'aref (Cultural Affairs) Commission. In June 1926, he travelled to the United States as Iran’s official representative to the Philadelphia Sesquicentennial Exposition of 1926, and joined the "Council of Founders" of the "Society of National Opuses".
In 1927, he was elected to the Sixth Majles. In 1928, he was appointed Governor-general of Khorasan. In 1929, he became Iranian Minister Plenipotentiary to London. He returned to Iran in March 1930 and served as Minister of Roads and Transport. From August 1930 to August 1933, he held the position of Minister of Finance. In April 1933, he participated in the signing of the oil concession extension.
From November 1933 to July 1934, he served as Minister Plenipotentiary to Paris. In 1934, he travelled to the United Kingdom to give a lecture at the Royal Society of Arts and then relocated to Berlin for fifteen months.
In 1935, he represented Iran at the "International Association of Orientalists" in Rome. In 1936, he began teaching at the School of Oriental Studies (now SOAS), University of London, and later at University of Cambridge during its wartime relocation. In October 1941, he was appointed Iranian ambassador to the United Kingdom. He also served as Chairman of the Iranian delegation to the United Nations regarding the Azerbaijan issue. In 1945, he submitted a formal protest to the United Nations concerning the Russian occupation of Tabriz.
October 1947: Elected deputy from Tabriz to the Fifteenth Majles. Was Chairman of the Iranian Board at the Congress of Orientalists (Cambridge, United Kingdom), Chairman of the Iranian Board at International Congress of Avicenna (Baghdad), Chairman of International Congress of Avicenna (Tehran).
In October 1947, he was elected deputy from Tabriz to the Fifteenth Majles and chaired the Iranian delegations to the Congress of Orientalists in Cambridge, and the Avicenna Congresses in Baghdad and Tehran. From 1949 to 1967, he served as a senator and later as Chairman of the Senate. In 1954, he became a scientific adviser and board member of the Translation Institution and Book Publication, and also participated in the International Congress of Orientalists in Cambridge. In 1957, he chaired the Iranian delegation to the Congress of Orientalists in Munich and taught at Columbia University in the United States. In 1958, he became Chairman of the Iranian Society of Philosophy and Humanities and contributed to the establishment of an offset printing-house. In 1966, he chaired the first International Congress of Iranists in Tehran. He died in Tehran on 28 January 1970.
See also
[edit]- Howard Baskerville (1885–1909), the "American Lafayette in Iran".
- Abdolhossein Teymourtash
- List of Iranian senators
- List of ambassadors of Iran to the United Kingdom
- Revival Party
Notes
[edit]- ^ Hassan is a variant and common spelling of Hasan.
- ^ Taghizādeh is an alternative spelling of Taqizādeh.
- ^ The original version of this text was extracted from the Master Thesis by Sepehr H. Joussefi (see References and External Links); some editorial changes had been unavoidable. In its present form, this text as yet almost entirely relies on the text by Joussefi.
- ^ Taqizadeh is also considered an eminent scholar in the field of Iranian Studies. In 1965 the celebrated Iranist M. J. Dresden wrote:
"Though "throughout his life matters of state and government have been his preoccupation", S. H. Taqizadeh, who was born in 1878, has applied his vast knowledge and sure imagination to the study of classical Persian literature, the chronology of Iran, Zoroastrianism and Manicheism. His contributions on these subjects which are listed in a brief bibliography (A locust's leg, pp. 19-20) are of permanent value and they will remain indispensable to future students. Taqizadeh's career, a rare combination of statesman and scholar, is reminiscent of such French politicians and scholarly authors as his contemporaries Léon Blum and Édouard Herriot who were also uncommonly successful in integrating a political career and public life with a scholarly avocation."
- ^ Iran and Its Place Among Nations, by Alidad Mafinezam, Aria Mehrabi, 2008, p.57
- ^ Taqizadeh was one of the four Deputies who voted no on the question of the change of the Qajar dynasty to the Pahlavi dynasty in October 1925; the other three were Sayyed Hasan Modarres, the left nationalist Yahya Doulatabadi, and Mohammed Mosaddeq. A constituent assembly endorsed the dynastic change in December, only three Socialist Deputies abstaining. (Nikki R. Keddie, p. 86).
- ^ "In Berlin the Democrat leader Sayyed Hasan Taqizadeh edited two series of the important newspaper Kaveh (named after a legendary blacksmith who liberated Iran). The first series, published during the War, aimed largely at getting Iranians to support the Central Powers against Britain and Russia, while the second was the main organ of the new Iranian nationalist culture. In addition to supporting new young writers like Mohammad Ali Jamalzadeh, it contained striking editorial features by Taqizadeh, in one of which he said that Iran must become wholly Western in every way if it were to progress; this is perhaps the high point of the Westernist view of nationalism, which Taqizadeh himself later modified." (Nikki R. Keddie, p. 181).
- ^ Homa Katouzian (2012), Iran, Milton Park, Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge, OCLC 830085718, OL 25367437M
References
[edit]- Sepehr H. Joussefi, Seyyed Hasan Taqizadeh: a Political Biography in the Context of Iranian Modernization, Master Thesis (University of Utrecht, The Netherlands, 1998). [1]
- Nikki R. Keddie, with a section by Yann Richard, Modern Iran: Roots and results of revolution, revised and updated edition (Yale University Press, New Haven, 2003). ISBN 0-300-09856-1
- A locust's leg. Studies in honour of S. H. Taqizadeh, pp. vii and 250 (Percy Lund, Humphries & Co., Ltd., London, 1962). For a review of this work see: M. J. Dresden, Journal of the American Oriental Society, Vol. 85, No. 2, pp. 260–262 (1965). [2]
Further reading
[edit]- Ahmad Kasravi, Tarikh-e Mashruteh-ye Iran (تاریخ مشروطهٔ ایران) (History of the Iranian Constitutional Revolution), in Persian, 951 p. (Negāh Publications, Tehran, 2003), ISBN 964-351-138-3. Note: This book is also available in two volumes, published by Amir Kabir Publications in 1984. Amir Kabir's 1961 edition is in one volume, 934 pages.
- Ahmad Kasravi, History of the Iranian Constitutional Revolution: Tarikh-e Mashrute-ye Iran, Volume I, translated into English by Evan Siegel, 347 p. (Mazda Publications, Costa Mesa, California, 2006). ISBN 1-56859-197-7
- Mehdi Malekzādeh, Tārikh-e Enqelāb-e Mashrutiyyat-e Iran (تاريخ انقلاب مشروطيت ايران) (The History of the Constitutional Revolution of Iran), in 7 volumes, published in 3 volumes, 1697 p. (Sokhan Publications, Tehran, 2004 – 1383 AH). ISBN 964-372-095-0
Note: Mehdi Malekzādeh is son of the Constitutional revolutionary Mirzā Nasr'ollah Beheshti, best known as Malek al-Motakallemin (King of Orators).(For the time being consult the biography of Mirza Jahangir Khan.) - Mangol Bayat, Iran’s First Revolution: Shi’ism and the Constitutional Revolution of 1905–1909, Studies in Middle Eastern History, 336 p. (Oxford University Press, 1991). ISBN 0-19-506822-X
- John Foran, The Strengths and Weaknesses of Iran’s Populist Alliance: A Class Analysis of the Constitutional Revolution of 1905 - 1911, Theory and Society, Vol. 20, No. 6, pp. 795–823 (December 1991). JSTOR
Books by Taqizadeh
[edit]- S. H. Taqizadeh, Old Iranian Calendars (Royal Asiatic Society, London, 1938). ISBN 0-7189-0933-X, ISBN 978-0-7189-0933-8.
- Payam Nabarz, and S. H. Taqizadeh, The Persian 'Mar Nameh': The Zoroasterian 'Book of the Snake', Omens and Calendar and The Old Iranian Calendar (Twin Serpents, Oxford, 2006). ISBN 1-905524-25-0, ISBN 978-1-905524-25-9.
External links
[edit]- Sepehr H. Joussefi, Seyyed Hasan Taqizadeh: a Political Biography in the Context of Iranian Modernization, Master Thesis (University of Utrecht, The Netherlands, 1988). [3]
- S. H. Taqizadeh, Old Iranian Calendars (Printed and published under the patronage of the Royal Asiatic Society, 1938). [4]
- A short biography of S. H. Taqizadeh in Persian. [5]
- Images of Revolution. The Constitutionalist Revolution: 1906-1909. [6]
- 1878 births
- 1970 deaths
- Iranian Shia clerics
- Iranian critics of religions
- Government ministers of Iran
- Presidents of the Senate of Iran
- People of the Persian Constitutional Revolution
- Liberalism in Iran
- Politicians from Tabriz
- Ambassadors of Iran to the United Kingdom
- Ambassadors of Iran to France
- Democrat Party (Persia) politicians
- Revival Party politicians
- Deputies of Tabriz for National Consultative Assembly
- Members of the 1st Iranian Majlis
- Members of the 2nd Iranian Majlis
- Members of the 3rd Iranian Majlis
- Grand Crosses 1st class of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany
- 20th-century Iranian politicians