I r a n i n Wo r l d H i s t o r y
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Ghajar Iran was at the western edge of the buffer zone between
the ever-expanding British and Russian empires in Asia and was con-
sidered too important for either power to allow the other to dominate.
To the east it was a different story, with the Russians and the British
both actively seeking to incorporate the lands of Central Asia into their
respective empires. The Russians followed the eastward trajectory they
had maintained since the sixteenth century, while the British attempted
to penetrate from the opposite direction through Afghanistan.
The British military advance was thwarted
on two occasions by
the indomitable Pushtuns, a pair of disastrous adventures known as
the First and Second Anglo-Afghan Wars which occurred in 1839–42
and 1878–81, respectively. Concurrent with the first engagement,
two British agents, Colonel Charles Stoddart and Captain Arthur
Conolly, were arrested in Bukhara. They were imprisoned under mis-
erable conditions for three years before being executed as spies. As the
Bukharan ruler, Abd us-Samad Khan, later explained to the English
missionary
Joseph Wolff, he had disliked the pride displayed by his
English captives. The emir had reproached Conolly, saying, “You
Englishmen come into a country in a stealthy manner, and take it.”
To this accusation, the latter unrepentingly replied, “We do not come
in a stealthy manner; but we went openly and in daylight to Kabul,
and took it.”
5
The Russians were more successful, seizing
the Central Asian cities
of Tashkent in 1865 and Samarkand in 1868, then forcing a severely
truncated Emirate of Bukhara to accept the status of Russian pro-
tectorate five years later. Beginning in 1867, the Central Asian lands
directly annexed by Russia were administrated by the Turkestan
Governate, which included most of present-day Kazakhstan as well
as the Samarkand and Fergana Valley regions. The Russian conquests
opened up Central Asia to colonization by large waves of Russian set-
tlers, a process that continued into the twentieth century.
In Iran meanwhile, with Amir Kabir no longer on the scene, the
young Naser od-din took an increasingly
authoritarian approach to
government. His attempt to recapture Herat in 1856 was halted by the
British, forcing him to acknowledge their power in the region as well
as the unalterable reality of the Afghan buffer state in lands that had
historically belonged to Iran.
Naser od-din’s failed Afghan campaign was also a disturbing sign
of the Ghajar government’s own fundamental weakness and inefficacy.
They controlled the capital, Tehran, but for practical purposes most of
the rest of the country was under the sway of corrupt local officials and
Un d e r Eu r o p e’s S h a d o w
89
restive tribesmen who did whatever they liked. Often as not, what they
liked was raiding caravans,
robbing travelers, and turning cropland
into pasture, none of which was good for the national economy. As
one visitor said of the Bakhtiari tribal region near Shiraz: “the women
weave carpets, bags, and saddle-cloths, tend the flocks, and prepare
the food of the men; the latter do little but plunder, except when the
neighboring Persian princes require their services as soldiers.”
6
In the
northeastern part of the country, Turkmen
bandits frequently captured
villagers and carted them off to Central Asia to sell as slaves. In the
absence of government protection, many of Iran’s farmers abandoned
agriculture and joined up with the nomads.
Apart from widespread lawlessness, Iran in the nineteenth cen-
tury suffered from several serious epidemics of plague and cholera,
followed by a severe famine in 1871 that caused well over a million
deaths from starvation. Virtually the only medical facilities in the
country were clinics run by European missionaries,
who founded
a number of modern schools as well. The missionary presence pro-
vided distinct advantages for Iran’s religious minorities, who were less
reluctant than Muslims to make use of their services.
Awakened to the dominant role now played in global affairs by the
European powers (and perhaps wishing to escape from his responsi-
bilities at home), Naser od-din Shah made three state visits to Europe,
in 1873, 1878, and 1889. These trips were really grand, hugely expen-
sive personal tours, which exhausted the Iranian state treasury. The
American writer Mark Twain, reporting on the Shah’s visit to London
for the
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