The decade after the Civil War was one of continued instability, domestic political conflict and foreign intervention. In 1921, the government got overthrown by a soldier named Reza Khan who would later as he consolidated power in 1925 become the first Shah of the Palafi dynasty. One of the key nationalist concerns is about losing more territory to these forces that they see as kind of pulling the country apart,.
Featuring Eskandar Sadeghi and Golnar Nikpour on the history of modern Iran, from 1906 through the present. This episode is the first in a four-part series, covering the period from 1906 until 1941, from the Constitutional Revolution that imposed constitutional limits on the Qajar dynasty through the 1921 coup that brought to power Reza Khan—who then in 1925 deposed the Qajars and became Reza Shah, the first shah of the Pahlavi dynasty. We end just before the 1941 occupation of Iran by longtime imperial powers, Britain and the Soviet Union, which forced Reza Shah out and replaced him with his son, Muhammad Reza Shah—which is where we will pick up in episode two.
RIP Mike Davis. Listen to his Dig interviews here: thedigradio.com/tag/mike-davis
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