Encyclopedia of Islam



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Further reading: Hamid Enayat, Modern Islamic Politi-

cal Thought (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1982); 

John L. Esposito and John O. Voll, Islam and Democ-



racy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1996); Noah 

Feldman,  After Jihad: America and the Struggle for 



constitutionalism

  

163  J




Islamic Democracy (New York: Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 

2003); Russell Hardin, Liberalism, Constitutionalism and 



Democracy (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1999); 

Malise Ruthven, Islam in the World, 2d ed. (Oxford: 

Oxford University Press, 2000).

Constitutional Revolution

The Iranian Constitutional Revolution of 1905–11 

“represents the first direct encounter in modern 

i

ran



 between traditional Islamic culture and the 

West” (Enayat, 166). It had a lasting effect on Ira-

nian politics and helped to form Ayatollah r

UhUl


-

lah


 k

homeini


’s formulation of Islamic governance, 

crystallized in his conception of the “guardianship 

of the jurist” (wilayat-i faqih), which was to have a 

decisive impact on the religious, democratic, and 

constitutional character of the 1979 revolutionary 

republic.

Western powers had been meddling in Iran 

since the Napoleonic wars in the 19th century. 

Britain and Russia, in particular, had geopolitical 

designs and economic interests that left Iran only 

partly independent. The q

aJar


 

dynasty


’s survival, 

in fact, depended on these two European powers. 

Treaties, terms of trade, and foreign concessions 

fundamentally restructured the Iranian economy, 

decimating craft production, while the importa-

tion of cheap consumer goods “did not necessarily 

bring a better life to most Iranians. More sugar, 

tea, tobacco and especially opium were consumed 

. . . while prices of basic foodstuffs rose” (Keddie 

1981: 57). At the same time, Western philosophi-

cal and political ideas such as liberalism, rep-

resentative government, and 

constitUtionalism

began to circulate among workers, merchants, 

and elites alike. The Tobacco Protest of 1891–92 

was a prelude to the Constitutional Revolution, as 

the Muslim modernist and pan-Islamist J

amal


 

al

-



d

in

 



al

-a

Fghani



 persuaded key 

Ulama


 to mobilize 

merchants of the 

bazaar

 alongside their fellow 



Iranians to boycott tobacco products.

Periodic protests over customs (tax) reforms, 

a series of strikes, and the operation of secret 

societies signaled widespread dissatisfaction with 

the regime’s capitulation to foreign powers. Japan’s 

victory in the 1904–05 Russo-Japanese War and 

the Russian Revolution of 1905 further embold-

ened the protesters. The actual catalyst for the 

Constitutional Revolution was the caning (of 

the feet) of two sugar merchants for raising their 

prices. Mullahs, merchants, and protesters took 

sanctuary (bast) outside Tehran and called for, 

among other things, a “house of justice.” The 

ruler, Muzaffar al-Din Shah (r. 1896–1907), issued 

a decree consenting to the request but failed to 

act on it. A growing coalition of forces shared a 

nationalist identity: leftist social democrats, secu-

lar and religious reformers, orthodox ulama, Free-

masons, merchants, shopkeepers, students, and 

guild members. Nationalist slogans and calls for 

a constitutional monarchy rallied the opposition 

taking  bast in Qom and at the British legation’s 

compound in Tehran.

In August 1906, the shah’s royal proclama-

tion permitted the formation of a majlis (national 

assembly or parliament) and the drafting of a 

constitution. The first majlis convened in October 

1906, and a new constitution, modeled in part 

on the Belgian constitution of 1831, was ratified 

on December 30, 1906, just prior to the death of 

Muzaffar al-Din. Supplementary constitutional 

laws were signed the following year by the new 

shah, Muhammad Ali (r. 1907–09). With minor 

amendments, this constitution remained legally in 

effect until the 1978–79 revolution.

Prominent Shii mullahs were proponents of 

a constitution recognizing t

Welve


-i

mam


  s

hiism


as the official religion of the country, including 

Sayyid Muhammad Tabatabai, Sayyid Abdullah 

Bihbihani, Mulla Muhammad Kazim Khurasani, 

and Muhammad Husayn Naini. An early sup-

porter of the revolution, Shaykh Fadlullah Nuri, 

turned against the constitution and the majlis

when he realized the ulama were not to be 

accorded the final say as to whether legislation 

was in keeping with Islamic tenets, particularly 

the sharia. Nuri led the anticonstitutionalist cler-

K  164  


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