Taj ol-Dowleh (Persian: تاج‌الدوله, died 1881) was the forty-second wife of Fath-Ali Shah Qajar and a poet. Her birth name was Tavus Khanum (Persian: طاووس خانم, romanizedTāvus Xānom) and she was of Georgian descent.[1][2] She was born in Isfahan.

Taj ol-Dowleh
تاج‌الدوله
Khanum
BornTavus Khanum Persian: طاووس خانم, romanizedTāvus Xānom
?
Died1881
Burial
SpouseFath-Ali Shah Qajar
Issue
HouseQajar
Children of Fath-Ali Shah. First woman from right is Morasa Khanom and the man on the left is Soltan Ahmad Mirza Azod Al-Duleh

She married Fath-Ali Shah in 1845 when she was 15 years old. The King changed the name of bejeweled Khorshid throne to Tavus throne on the occasion of this marriage.[3] She was educated under the supervisor of Neshat Isfahani. After a while the King ordered to build a mansion for her because of his passionate love. Also a part of royal treasury was entrusted to her which was called the special treasury. Every Nowruz she used to invite the King along with his wives and married daughters to her mansion for thirteen days.[4]

At the moment of the King's death, she was beside him in Isfahan and after that she took refuge to Mohammad Bagher Shafti from the princes' clashes for reign. After the enthronement of Mohammad Shah Qajar she donated all of her jewelry to him and went on a Hajj trip with her son, Seyf Al-Duleh. After some Hajj trips she went to Najaf and lived there until the end of her life. Her cemetery is in Imam Ali's apron.[5]

She had six children: Sultan Mohammad Mirza Seyf Al-Duleh, Sultan Ahmad Mirza Azod Al-Duleh, Farokhsir Mirza Naier Al-Duleh, Shirinjan Khanum, Khorshid-Kolah Khanum Shams Al-Duleh (she was married to Mirza MohammadAli Khan Nezam Al-Duleh and her daughter, Shams ol-Molouk, married Aga Khan II) and Morasa Khanum.

References

edit
  1. ^ Farmanfarmaian, Fatema Soudavar (2011). "An Iranian Perspective of J. B. Fraser's Trip to Khorasan in the 1820s". Iranian Studies. 44 (2): 225. doi:10.1080/00210862.2011.541692. S2CID 162041391.
  2. ^ Walcher, Heidi (2001). "Face of the Seven Spheres: The Urban Morphology and Architecture of Nineteenth-Century Isfahan (Part Two)". Iranian Studies. 34 (1–4): 118 (note 3). doi:10.1080/00210860108702000. S2CID 145640514.
  3. ^ Great Islamic encyclopedia (in Persian).
  4. ^ "Tavus Khanom". Institute for Iranian contemporary historical studies (in Persian). Retrieved 29 November 2016.
  5. ^ Jahangir Mirza; Eghbal, Abbas (1948). Modern history (in Persian).