Mohammad Beg
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Mohammad Beg | |
|---|---|
| Grand Vizier of the Safavid Empire | |
| In office 1654 – 25 January 1661 | |
| Monarchs | Shah Abbas II (r. 1642–1666) |
| Preceded by | Khalifeh Soltan |
| Succeeded by | Mirza Mohammad Karaki |
| Personal details | |
| Died | 1672 |
| Parent | Husayn Beg Tabrizi (father) |
Mohammad Beg (Persian: محمد بیگ; died 1672), was a Muslim of Armenian origin, who served as the Grand Vizier of the Safavid king (shah) Abbas II (r. 1642–1666) from 1654 to 1661.
Mohammad Beg was born in Tabriz to an Armenian family, which originally served as a ghulām (lit. 'military slave') of the Safavid dynasty of Iran, but later became tailors.[1] Mohammad Beg's father was Husayn Beg Tabrizi, who served as the court master tailor (qaychachi-bashi) during the reign of Shah Safi (r. 1629–1642).[1][2]
Biography
Mohammad Beg is first mentioned in 1643, when he was appointed as the city prefect of New Julfa, a quarter in the Safavid capital of Isfahan, which was populated by Armenians. During this period, Mohammad Beg was supported by another officer of Armenian origin named Allahverdi Khan (not be confused with the powerful military officer Allahverdi Khan, who was of Georgian origin).[3]
In 1646, Mohammad Beg was appointed as the port-master/harbourmaster (shahbandar) of Bandar Abbas.[1] Two years later, he was appointed as the "controller of assay" (mu'ayyir al-mamalik).[4][1] With the help of Allahverdi Khan, Mohammad Beg became the steward of the royal household (nazer-e boyutat) in 1651, thus succeeding Mohammad Ali Beg. One year later, Mohammad Beg was appointed as the governor of Kohgiluyeh. However, during the same year, Mohammad Beg's relations with Allahverdi Khan became bad, and the two became rivals.[1] In 1654, Mohammad Beg was appointed by shah Abbas II as his grand vizier. One of his first acts was dismissing the Georgian prefect of Isfahan, Parsadan Gorgijanidze, due to his unpopularity among the inhabitants of the city.[5][6] Mohammad Beg also had the empire more centralized by converting more land into the crown domain (Hamadan in 1654, Ardabil in 1656/7, Semnan in 1656/7 and Kerman in 1658).[7][8][9]
In 1661, Mohammad Beg, after having failed to diminish the power of his rivals, was forced to resign from the grand vizier office.[10] He was then exiled to Qom. In 1672, shah Suleiman I (r. 1666–1694) offered Mohammad Beg to become grand vizier once again, which he agreed to, but while on his way to Isfahan, he died. According to the French traveler Jean Chardin, Mohammad Beg had been poisoned by Suleiman's grand vizier Shaykh Ali Khan Zanganeh.[11]