- Abol-Fath Khan Zand (Persian: ابوالفتح خان زند Abol-Fatḥ Khān Zand; 1755/1756 – 1787) was the
third Shah of the Zand dynasty,
ruling from
March 6, 1779...
- ol Fath (Persian: بوالفتح, also
Romanized as Bū ol Fatḩ; also
known as
Abolfatḩ, Abū ol Fatḩ, Boolfat-h, and Būl Fath) is a
village in Liravi-ye Jonubi...
- But
Abolfath tells Reza that
Hezardastan is
paying off the
members of committee, and is
slowly buying them off.
Fearing for
their own lives,
Abolfath sends...
- Abū al-Fath Abd al-Rahman Mansūr al-Khāzini or
simply al-Khāzini (أبوالفتح عبدالرحمن منصور الخازنی (Persian),
flourished 1115–1130) was an
Iranian astronomer...
-
Bakhtiari and
Abolfath Khan Haft Lang, two
other local chiefs,
became a
major contender but was
challenged by
several adversaries.
Abolfath Khan was the...
-
available online at: [1] Aujan,
Abolfath, 1966. 'The
history of Bakhtiaries'.
Tamti Publication, Tehran, 272 pages. Aujan,
Abolfath, 1966. 'The
history of Bakhtiaries'...
- (1872–1925)
Prince Malek-Mansur
Mirza Shoa os-Saltaneh (1880–1920)
Prince Abolfath Mirza Salar od-Dowleh (1881–1961)
Prince Abolfazl Mirza Azd os-Sultan (1882–1970)...
- Mag****an (Persian: مگسان, also
Romanized as Mag****an and Mag****an; also
known as Mag****an) is a
village in
Oshtorinan District,
Borujerd County, Lorestan...
- district. Iran
portal Also
romanized as Fatḩābād; also
known as Dabestān-e
Abolfatḩ and Faraḩābād
OpenStreetMap contributors (13
November 2024). "Fathabad...
- the
punishment committee on 1
September 1916,
along with
Asadallah Khan
Abolfath Zadeh [fa]. He was
later arrested and
exiled to Kalat-e Naderi, but was...