Esmat Dowlatshahi

Iranian royal and one of the wives of Reza Shah (1905–1995) From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Esmat Dowlatshahi

Esmat ol-Molouk Dowlatshahi (Persian: عصمت‌الملوک دولتشاهی; 1905 – 25 July 1995) was an Iranian royal and the fourth and last wife of Reza Shah.

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Esmat Dowlatshahi
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BornEsmat ol-Molouk Dowlatshahi
1905 (1905)
Kermanshah, Sublime State of Iran
Died25 July 1995(1995-07-25) (aged 89–90)
Tehran, Iran
Burial
Spouse
(m. 1923; died 1944)
Issue
House
FatherPrince Gholam Ali Mirza Dowlatshahi
MotherMobtahej Od-dowlah Morad
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Early life

Dowlatshahi was born in 1905.[1] She was a member of the Qajar dynasty.[1][2] Her father was Gholam Ali Mirza "Mojalal Dowleh" Dowlatshahi (1878–1934).[1] Her mother was Mobtahedj-od-Dowleh, daughter of Ebtehadj Saltaneh and Abou Nasr Mirza Hessam Saltaneh II.[1] Her paternal grandfather was Hessam-Saltaneh I. She had two brothers and one sister, Ashraf Saltaneh II.[1] Mehrangiz Dowlatshahi, member of the Majlis and Iranian ambassador, was her cousin.[3]

Marriage

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In her youth

Dowlatshahi and Reza Shah wed in 1923.[3][4] She was his fourth, last and favourite wife.[5][6] Reza Shah was the minister of war when they married.[3] From this marriage five children were born: Abdul Reza, Ahmad Reza, Mahmoud Reza, Fatemeh and Hamid Reza Pahlavi.[1] Her husband became Shah of Iran in 1925. However, it was her husband's second wife Tadj ol-Molouk who was given a public role as queen.[7] This situation did not make Tadj ol-Molouk happy due to her jealousy of Dowlatshahi which she disclosed in her memoirs.[7]

Dowlatshahi and Reza Shah lived in the Marble Palace in Tehran with their children.[5] She accompanied her husband to Mauritius when he was exiled there in September 1941, but she returned to Iran after a few months.[8]

Later life and death

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Grave of Esmat Dolatshahi (2nd from the left) in Behesht-e Zahra

Dowlatshahi stayed in Iran after the 1979 Islamic Revolution.[8] She visited the Museum of Reza Shah Pahlavi in Johannesburg, South Africa, on 16 June 1980.[9] She died on 25 July 1995.[10] She was buried in the Behesht-e Zahra cemetery, Tehran.[11]

References

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