Iran comes from the word Aryan Aryans settled here in 1500 B.C. Descendents were the Medes and the Persians Eventually, whole territory became known

Similar documents
More Iran Background ( ) EQ: What was the cultural climate in Iran like before and after the Revolution?

US Iranian Relations

Iran had limited natural resources Water was relatively scarce, and Iran s environment could only support a limited population Because of the heat,

ایران Political and Economic Change

The Iranian Revolution. Background to Marjane Satrapi s Persepolis

Blowback. The Bush Doctrine 11/15/2018. What does Bill Kristol believe is the great threat for the future of the world?

4/11/18. PSCI 2500 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS Jim Butterfield Davis Arthur-Yeboah April 11, 2018

Regional Issues. Conflicts in the Middle East. Importance of Oil. Growth of Islamism. Oil as source of conflict in Middle East

Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia Section 4. Nationalism triggered independence movements to overthrow colonial powers.

How the Relationship between Iran and America. Led to the Iranian Revolution

Palestine and the Mideast Crisis. Israel was founded as a Jewish state in 1948, but many Palestinian Arabs refused to recognize it.

Iran Iraq War ( ) Causes & Consequences

GROUP 4: The President s Daily Bulletin Communist Threat in Iran

Iran Hostage Crisis

Israeli-Palestinian Arab Conflict

Chapter 22 Southwest Asia pg Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and Iran pg

This is the voice of Iran, the voice of the true Iran, the voice of the Islamic Revolution. --Iran National Radio February 11, 1979

The Middle East. Do Now: complete the reading The Middle East and Oil. The creation of Israel, The Iranian Revolution & Iraq and Saddam Hussein

Film Guide Persepolis

Curriculum Guide: The President s Travels

Take a look at these amazing photos of Iran before the revolution

War in Afghanistan War in Iraq Arab Spring War in Syria North Korea 1950-

30.4 NATIONALISM IN INDIA AND SOUTHWEST ASIA

IRAN. Part 3: Citizens, Society, & the State

The Middle East Crisis and US Involvement

Persepolis BY MARJANE SATRAPI DR. CONLEY 10 TH LIT AND COMP WHEELER HIGH

President Carter s Cabinet: 1979

HISTORICAL SECURITY COUNCIL Topic B: Resolving The Iranian Hostage Crisis (1979)

The ayatollah failed to recognize the mounting tension over this month's presidential election--what former president Ali Akbar Hashemi

Prime Minister Bazargan s provisional

Overview of Imperial Nigeria. Chapter 27, Section 2

MC Review Middle East

Backgrounders. Iran's reform movement. Listen / Download. Zachary Fillingham - Jan 10, 10.

Iranian Hostage Crisis: American Government. Chair: Kayla Aaron. Vice-Chair: Duncan Sims

The Countries of Southwest Asia. Chapter 23

The Iranian Revolu/on By: Kari Melander Jared Mills Alan Wilson

CHAPTER ONE A MONARCHY IS BORN

At the end of the Second World War, Iran

IRAN & IRAQ BOOK NOTES REVIEW

20 pts. Who is considered to be the greatest of all Ottoman rulers? Suleyman the magnificent ** Who founded the Ottoman empire?

Physical Geography This region is extremely arid, and most areas receive less than 18 of precipitation per year. the dry terrain varies from huge

TURMOIL IN IRAN: THE DAWN OF THE POST-KHOMEINI ERA?

LIST OF CANDIDATES FOR IRAN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS (14 JUNE 2013) Saeed Jalili

The Modern Middle East Or As I like to call it

Joint Crisis Committe. The Iran-Iraq War. Deha Boran Bahçuvan & Ali Doruk Bekatlı

BIOGRAPHY OF SADDAM HUSSAIN PART - 1. By SIDDHANT AGNIHOTRI B.Sc (Silver Medalist) M.Sc (Applied Physics) Facebook: sid_educationconnect

The Path to Modern Iran: An Examination of Shiite Islam s Influence (1900-Present)

WESTERN IMPERIALISM AND ISLAMIC FUNDAMENTALISM: what relation? Jamie Gough Department of Town and Regional Planning, Sheffield University

Issue Overview: Sunni-Shiite divide

Event A: The Decline of the Ottoman Empire

PAPERS OF PRINCE FIRUZ MIRZA FIRUZ NOSRATDOLEH, Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Persia, delegate of Persia to the LON,

Heather Lehr, The Iranian Revolution, New York, Chelsea House, 2010.

IRAN is located in the Middle-East

The U.S. Withdrawal and Limited Options

US-Iranian Relations

IRAN ROWHANI VOTE PRESIDENCY ELECTORAL

Weekly Geopolitical Report

Issue Overview: Sunni-Shiite divide

Politics and the Clergy Mehdi Khalaji

Dr. Joseph Speciale, Instructor

Safavid Empire Timeline. By:Hayden Galloway and Bella Acuña

Decline and Fall of the Ottoman Empire

Foreign affair is a massive part of the United States government in both the modern day

Much of Iran is an arid plateau around 4,000 feet

Issue Overview: Sunni-Shiite divide

Iranian Kurds: Between the Hammer and the Anvil

Middle East Regional Review

News English.com Ready-to-use ESL / EFL Lessons

The Educative Conversation of Imam Khomeini in Islamic Republic Victory

Early Life of Imam Khomeini ( R. A)

Iran s Great Invasion And Why It s Next In Bible Prophecy By Mark Davidson READ ONLINE

Divine Right. King John of England, Robin Hood (2010)

Russian Revolution. Review: Emancipation of Serfs Enlightenment vs Authoritarianism Bloody Sunday-Revolution of 1905 Duma Bolsheviks


In recent years, a public debate has been underway in the Western world, both in

[ 6.5 ] History of Arabia and Iraq

Q: Was the lack of unity amongst the Indians the most important cause of the failure of the war of Independence 1857? Explain your answer.

Iran-Iraq War ( )

Alexander the Great and His Empire

1. What was the Opium war, and why was it fought? 2. What were the Taiping and Boxer Rebellions? 3. Who was Sun Yixian, and what did he want?

CLIMATE: Subtropical along the northern border with the Caspian Sea; elsewhere arid or semi-arid.

CLASSROOM 9-12 Lessons :

Politics and the Clergy

Ever since the. Iran: Confrontation or Diplomacy? U.S.-Iran Standoff By Omeed Alerasool. 34 Kaleidoscope SPRING 2012

19, 2007 EUROPEAN CHALLENGES TO THE MUSLIM WORLD

Nationalism in India and Southwest Asia

If I sit silently, I have sinned Who was Dr. Mohammad Mossadegh? By Tamila Kianfard

WORLD AFFAIRS INSTITUTE. Community Service Project of Rotary International and World Affairs Council of Pittsburgh. Iran and the World:

Rafsanjani on Iran s Conduct of the War. June 21, 2008

Dwight Brown Brown 1. How To Lose a Country In 38 Years: The 1979 Iranian Revolution

Southwest and Central Asia. The Birthplace of Civilization and 3 Major Religions

The Arab Empire and Its Successors Chapter 6, Section 2 Creation of an Arab Empire

CHAPTER 5 WOW, WHAT POWERFUL PRAYERS FROM PERSIA!

Ancient Persian Civilization

The Byzantine Empire and Emerging Europe. Chapter 8

The main figure on the Iraqi side of the 1991 Persian Gulf

AP LITERATURE SUMMER READING:

History and Culture of Iran

Iranians Identity: Nationality, Ethnicity, Religion and State. Kazem Alamdari. California State University

Transcription:

Iran comes from the word Aryan Aryans settled here in 1500 B.C. Descendents were the Medes and the Persians Eventually, whole territory became known as the Persian Empire 1935 Reza Shah changed the name from Persia to Iran

Though Iran has a great history of building vast empires, many groups over the years fought to seize control of the country. During Darius reign in 518 B.C., Persepolis was built. Persepolis was a vast palace complex that included temples, government buildings, and a place for special ceremonies.

Construction took more than 200 years and represented the Persian Empire s might Carvings were covered in gold, bronze, and lapis

In the 4th century B.C., Alexander the Great burned the royal palace at Persepolis, and made Persia part of his Greek Empire. Today all that remains is the stone underneath; still, this is the most visited site in Iran.

Early 1800 s, Russians wanted access to Persian Gulf and the British wanted to keep their trade route to India. The Qajars needed the money, so they made deals with both countries. Both the British and Russians: banks, mining, control of Iranian industries. The Qajar shahs grew wealthy, but the Iranian economy declined. The Iranian people grew angry and, in response, the shah at the time (see picture) created a constitution. Thus, Iran s first elected legislature, the Majlis, was formed.

In 1908, oil was discovered in Iran; the British took control over the oil industry, and they took most of the profits. The people of Iran obviously did not like this arrangement and discontent spread.

Reza Shah Pahlavi was a general in the Persian army who: Led the coup d etat to overthrow the last Qajar shah in 1923. Sought to modernize Iran. Reduced the power of the clergy. Built a national education system and opened the University of Tehran. Gave women the right to vote for the Majlis and freed them from Islamic obligation to wear the head-to-toe chador at all times. Men began wearing suits instead of traditional Iranian clothes. Ordered the first railroad to cross the country to be built.

The Allied forces, especially Britain and the Soviet Union, wanted to ensure that Iranian oil would continue to reach the front. Both nations sent troops into Iran to prevent Nazi Germany from gaining control there. However, Reza Shah favored Germany because 1) he resented British and Soviet intrusions and 2) many Germans were living and working in Iran at the time.

In 1941, the British and the Soviets forced Reza Shah Pahlavi out of power. His twenty-one year old son, Mohammad Reza, replaced him as shah (see pic). Early on, he was heavily influenced by the British, who still controlled the Anglo- Iranian Oil Company. Most of the money produced by Iran s oil industry went to the British.

In 1951, Iranian politician Muhammad Musaddiq spoke out against the British control and many supported this stance. In response, the Iranian government nationalized the oil industry. In 1953, the British began a boycott of Iranian oil. People lost jobs and the nation s oil industry suffered. Supporters of Musaddiq (now Iran s prime minister) fought supporters of the shah. The shah fled the country. The British convinced the U.S. to help remove Musaddiq from office. He was forced out and Reza Shah returned. Oil industry was denationalized, only now the British did not control it all. The U.S. now had 40% control.

Like his father, Reza Shah wanted to modernize the country schools, hospitals, roads, etc. Women could now hold public office. He also, however, grew more and more dictatorial. The shah outlawed all political parties but his own. Freedom of speech was limited those who spoke out against him were imprisoned, while some were killed. Meanwhile, the economy suffered.

Huge protests against the shah became common. Opposition grew in the 1970s, especially among two groups: 1) Communist-inspired students and intellectuals who wanted genuine and democratic reform 2) Muslim fundamentalists, or believers in the strictest possible interpretation of Islamic doctrine. Many religious leaders felt his changes were a threat to Islam.

A Muslim leader named Ayatollah Khomeini was one of the shah s most vocal opponents. He condemned the shah for being corrupt and in the pocket of the United States.

The Shah fled in 1979. Ayatollah Khomeini became real leader Declared Iran an Islamic Republic the clerics must rule. Iran became a true theocracy: official religion is also the supreme government authority.

Khomeini ruled with an iron fist: -Death to those who supported/worked with the shah -Women forced to wear chador and walk only with male relative in public -The University of Tehran closed for two years -Newspapers shut down -History books re-written -Schools divided by sex -Many Iranians fled (Westernized intellectuals, those associated with the shah, or those who simply had grown accustomed to the Western style)

In 1979, Reza Shah allowed to enter U.S. Iranian students went to U.S. embassy in Tehran and took 50 people hostage. They demanded that the U.S. send the shah back to Iran to stand trial, but the U.S. refused. The hostages were held for more than a year.

In 1980, Iraq invaded Iran. Saddam Hussein wanted to take advantage of Iran s chaos War lasted eight years and affected cities, oil facilities, people

Each country maintained an army of 600,000 To keep forces staffed, both sides enlisted boys as young as 11 or 12 years old Each side claimed this as a holy war. Cease-fire was declared in 1988

Khomeini died in 1989 and millions of people mourned in the streets. Sayyid Ali Khamenei took over as spiritual and political leader of Iran, and he still holds title of supreme leader A moderate cleric named Ayatollah Muahmmad Khatami became president in 1997. Hoping to improve the status of women and give more people a voice, he was also friendlier to the West. He was unable to accomplish much due to resistance from more conservative and powerful government leaders.

In 2005, Moahmoud Ahmadinejad, the former mayor of Tehran, won the presidency. He turned Iran in a more conservative direction. Iran continues to have strained relations with the West, especially the United States. In 2009, he won reelection though many feel electoral fraud took place.