Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. Agha Baji Javanshir ( Persian: آغابیگم جوانشیر) was an Iranian poet and public speaker, who was the twelfth wife of Fath-Ali Shah Qajar ( r. 1797–1834 ), the Qajar shah (king) of Iran. She was the daughter of Ibrahim Khalil Khan, the governor of the Karabakh Khanate . Biography.

  2. Agha Baji Javanshir (sister) Mohammad Sadeq Khan Donboli (nephew) Abu'l-Fath Khan Javanshir (also spelled Abo'l-Fath ; Persian : ابوالفتح بیگ جوانشیر ; died 1839) was an Iranian commander who participated in the Russo-Iranian War of 18041813 .

    • 1813 - 1828
  3. By Susan Harris. March 8, 2011. Behnam Dayani's “Hitchcock and Agha Baji,” from our inaugural July/August 2003 issue, combines an Iranian teenage film buff, a Hitchcock classic, and a character straight out of the Arabian Nights to rich and entertaining effect.

  4. 1 de jul. de 2003 · I didn’t know Agha Baji smoked a water pipe too. My grandmother says, “She had quit, but now it doesn’t matter any more.” The room in the hospital has two beds. The bed closer to the door is empty. Agha Baji is lying down on the bed next to the window, looking at the sky. Siavosh is sitting on the only chair in the room, reading a ...

  5. Nahid Mozaffari interviewed Goli Taraghi on the telephone in October 2013 about writing before and after the Iranian revolution of 1979. November 1, 2013. Published in Celebrating Our First Ten Years. Iran. Nahid Mozaffari spoke with Goli Taraghi on the telephone in October 2013. The following is an edited transcript of that conversation.

  6. 29 de abr. de 2022 · Agha Begom (I), (also known as Agha Baji), daughter of Ebrahim Khalil Khan Shishe'i, governor of Qarabagh. After the death of Assieh Khanom II, she married Fath Ali Shah as his aghdi wife, but the marriage was not consumated. She died in 1248 hejri lunar in Qom, which was her domain, and is buried there.

  7. 31 de ago. de 2022 · Ibrahim Khalil khan Javanshir (1732–1806) was the Azeri Turkic khan of Karabakh from the Javanshir family, who succeeded his father Panah-Ali khan Javanshir as the ruler of Karabakh khanate. In the 1780s, Ibrahim Khalil Khan emerged as one of the most powerful rulers in the eastern Caucasus.