Yann Richard ; With the assistance of Willem Floor.
Cambridge :
Cambridge University Press,
2019.
1 online resource (xvii, 351 pages)
Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 30 May 2019).
Iran under the Qajars -- Three Shahs, three wars, three reformers (1797-1896) -- From revolts to the revolution (1880-1906) -- The constitutional revolution: from illusion to reality (1905-08) -- The nationalists' bitter victory (1908-12) -- Iran in the great war -- The end of the Qajars -- Reza Khan to Reza Shah: defender of the nation -- From Persia to Iran: foreign relations -- The democratic awakening (1941-53) -- The last reign of an immortal kingdom, Mohammad-Reza Shah -- An Islamic republic in Iran.
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From encounters with Western powers in the nineteenth century through to a Constitutional Revolution at the beginning of the twentieth century, and from the overthrow of the democratically elected Prime Minister Mosaddeq in the 1950s to the current Islamic Republic, Iran's history has rarely been far from tumultuous and dramatic. And the ways in which Iranian society has participated in and reacted to these events have been equally fascinating and revolutionary. Here for the first time in English, Yann Richard offers his take on the social and political history of Iran since 1800. Richard's account traces the common threads of national ideology and violent conflict that have characterised a number of episodes in Iranian history. By also concerning himself with the reactions and feelings of Iranian society, and by referring frequently to Persian sources and commentaries, Richard gives us a unique insight into the challenges encountered by Iranians in modern times.