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Agha Baji Javanshir

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Agha Baji Javanshir
A 1956 imaginary drawing of Agha Baji Javanshir in the Zanan-e sokhanvar
Died1832
Qom, Qajar Iran
BurialQom
SpouseFath-Ali Shah Qajar
DynastyQajar (by marriage)
FatherIbrahim Khalil Khan
MotherTuti Begum
OccupationPoet

Agha Baji Javanshir (Persian: آغابیگم جوانشیر) was an Iranian poet and public speaker, who was the twelfth wife of Fath-Ali Shah Qajar (r. 1797–1834), the Qajar shah (king) of Iran. She was the daughter of Ibrahim Khalil Khan, the governor of the Karabakh Khanate.

Biography

Agha Baji was the daughter of Ibrahim Khalil Khan, the governor of the Karabakh Khanate and member of the Turkic Javanshir tribe. Her mother was Tuti Begum, the daughter of Javad Khan, the governor of the Ganja Khanate. According to Richard Tapper, Agha Baji was married to the Qajar shah (king) Fath-Ali Shah Qajar (r. 1797–1834) in 1797 after Ibrahim Khalil Khan had sent the body of the previous Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar (r. 1789–1797) to the Iranian capital of Tehran. However, the Iranian historian Parisa Sanjabi states that the marriage took place in 1779/1800, after the death of Fath-Ali Shah's wife Asiya Khanum. By marrying Fath-Ali Shah, she became his twelfth wife. She arrived at the court of Fath-Ali Shah with a retinue of more than 200 servants belonging to the nobility of Karabakh. She was also accompanied by her brother Abu'l-Fath Khan Javanshir. Despite being well-liked at court, she continued to be a virgin for unknown reasons. It has been suggested this was because Fath-Ali Shah considered her father to have had a hand in Agha Mohammad Khan's death. Agha Baji received payment from the profits of Qom and its surroundings and resided in a palace next to the Imamzadeh Qasim with her family.

Agha Baji died in 1832 in Qom, where she was buried. A poet and public speaker, she left a couple verses in Persian and one in Azerbaijani Turkish, demonstrating her fluency in these two languages.

References

  1. ^ Sanjabi 2019.
  2. Bournoutian 2021, pp. 261–262.
  3. Bournoutian 1994, p. 108 (see note 336).
  4. ^ Tapper 1997, p. 123.

Sources

Further reading

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