Amanollah Khan Zia' os-Soltan

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Amanollah Khan Zia' os-Soltan (also Amanollah Khan Donboli "Nazer ol-Ayaleh" "Zia' os-Soltan") was an Iranian aristocrat and politician at the Qajar court during the reigns of Mozaffar ad-Din Shah, Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar and Ahmad Shah Qajar and hero of the Persian Constitutional Revolution.

Amanollah Khan as a young boy (sitting left in front) with his family, the Donboli clan, ca 1870.
Amanollah Khan, ca. 1878.
Amanollah Khan "Zia' os-Soltan", as an older man around 1900.

Amanollah Khan was born in 1863 in Tabriz and died on 11 February 1931 by cancer in Hamburg when on a visit to see medical specialists. He was buried in Hamburg at the Iranian-Muslim department of Ohlsdorf Cemetery. He was the son of Safar Khan from the Donboli family, who ruled the cities of Tabriz and Khoy as hereditary Khans. A wealthy big landowner Amanollah Khan held possession of half the city of Tabriz and large landed properties at Alamdar in the Iranian province of Azerbaijan.

This was also the reason he was sometimes called Tabrizi (meaning "from Tabriz"), because family names were unknown in Iran of that time. Later, Mozaffar ad-Din Shah Qajar gave him the noble title "Zia' os-Soltan" (lit. "Splendour of the Sovereign") for his merits in affairs of state, by which he became popular. In 1897, he married Princess Shazdeh Khanom Malekeh-Afagh Bahman-Qajar, granddaughter of Prince Bahman Mirza, by whom he got his two children, the Shahzadehs Nosrat ol-Molouk Khanom Bahman and Abol Qassem Bahman. After her death in 1917, he married a rich landlady from Damghan, Turkan Aqa Khanom, in 1923. His second marriage resulted in no issues.[1]

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