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Tehran Exhibit Hangs Photos Of Last Qajar Crown Prince

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  • Tehran Exhibit Hangs Photos Of Last Qajar Crown Prince

    TEHRAN EXHIBIT HANGS PHOTOS OF LAST QAJAR CROWN PRINCE

    Mehr News Agency (MNA), Iran
    August 15, 2013 Thursday

    TEHRAN, Aug. 15 (MNA) â-The Iran Photo Museum, which also known as
    Axkhaneh Shahr, has showcased a collection of photos of the last Qajar
    crown prince, Mohammad-Hassan Mirza (1899â-1943), at an exhibition.

    The collection comprises 36 photos, which have been taken by Yusef
    Khan, an Armenian photographer who lived in the northwestern Iranian
    city of Tabriz.

    The exhibition runs until September 14 at Axkhaneh Shahr, which is
    located on Bahar Shiraz St. near Haft-e Tir Square.

    Mohammad-Hassan Mirza was the brother of the last monarch of the Qajar
    dynasty, Ahmed Shah (reigned 1909-1925). Since Ahmed Shah had no child,
    Mohammad-Hassan Mirza was selected as crown prince.

    Soon after Reza Shah, the founder of the Pahlavi dynasty (1925-1979),
    deposed the Qajar dynasty and made himself Shah of Iran in 1925,
    Mohammad-Hassan and his family were sent into permanent exile to
    England.

    Malek-Qasem Mirza, a Qajar prince who was one of the many sons of
    Qajar king Fat'hali Shah, was the first Iranian who took a photo in
    Iran. Before or at the same time, Jules Richard, a French teacher
    for an Iranian family, snapped a picture with a daguerreotype camera.

    The advent of photographic art in Iran occurred about five years after
    its invention in 1839 during the last years of Qajar king Mohammad
    Shah's reign.

    Afterwards, Nasser ad-Din Shah showed great interest in photography
    and sent several groups of talented students from Dar-ul-Fonun,
    the Iranian polytechnic institute established in 1851, to European
    academies to learn the art.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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