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MOHAMMAD REZA SHAH (3) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   121499


Iranian military in politics, revolution and war, part two / Hashim, Ahmed S   Journal Article
Hashim, Ahmed S Journal Article
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Publication 2012.
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2
ID:   184867


Role of armed forces in Iranian revolution / Sreedhar   Journal Article
Sreedhar Journal Article
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3
ID:   165743


This is a Prison…A Death in Life: Reza Shah’s troubled exile on the Island of Mauritius / Bakhash, Shaul   Journal Article
Bakhash, Shaul Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Reza Shah, the feared and powerful master of Iran for nearly two decades, spent the last years of his life in lonely exile, on the island of Mauritius, then in South Africa. His life in exile was hardly a happy one. The place and conditions of his exile were dictated not by himself but by the British, and the relationship between the two remained uneasy. Britain’s handling of Reza Shah – the degree and freedom and choice they were prepared to allow him and his family – were determined by the exigencies of war. Reza Shah sought to loosen the bonds of British control. In Tehran, his son and successor, Mohammad Reza Shah, also played a role. He used what leverage he had with the British to help ease the conditions of his father’s exile, while he endeavored to protect Iran’s interests under a difficult foreign occupation. The push-and-pull of cross-purposes entailed by this triangular relationship defined Reza Shah’s life in exile in both Mauritius and Johannesburg. This article examines the Mauritian period of his exile.
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