Reza Khan Geranmayeh Moayyedossaltaneh

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Mirza Reza Khan Geranmayeh Moayyedossaltaneh (* 1850 in Tabriz , † 1913 ) was a Persian ambassador .

Life

Reza Khan Geranmayeh was a son of Mirza Hassan Khan, who in turn was the son of Mirza Ibrahim Khan, the government commissioner for the Yerevan Khanate before it was added to the Russian Empire in the Treaty of Turkmanchai in 1828 . Hassan Khan moved from Yerevan to Tabriz.

In 1880, after the battle of Urmia against Sheikh Ubeydallah , Reza Khan Geranmayeh was appointed field marshal . He studied in Paris .

Reza Khan Geranmayeh was Khan von Arschack, Mueyedes Salteneh, Emir-Touman, Division General, Adjutant General and Secret Chamberlain of the Shahinschah, Minister, Member of the Secret Council, Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary.

On June 11, 1873, Wilhelm I and Naser ad-Din Shah signed a friendship and shipping agreement that included the mutual establishment of permanent representations. On October 20, 1884, the consul general in Sofia, Ernst von Braunschweig , was appointed envoy on an extraordinary mission, who set up a permanent embassy in Tehran on March 28, 1885 . In September 1885 Reza Khan Geranmayeh was appointed Persia's first permanent ambassador to Berlin, where he was accredited from June 22, 1889 to 1901.

From 1886, the writer Elisabeth von Wedel-Bérard , who was married to Hermann von Wedel from November 24, 1879 to February 1884, also lived in his shared apartment in Berlin . In 1906 he acquired a property in Oberföhring that is later called the Bernheimer Schlösschen .

Awards

Reza Khan Geranmayeh Moayyedossaltaneh was a knight of the following orders:

Individual evidence

  1. Reich Ministry of the Interior, Handbook for the German Reich, edited in the Reich Office of the Interior in 1899
  2. Archived copy ( Memento of the original from April 24, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.irangk.de
  3. ^ John CG Röhl, Wilhelm II 1993, 980 SS 503
  4. http://www.nordostkultur-muenchen.de/architektur/bernheimer_schloesschen.htm
predecessor Office successor
Persian ambassador to Germany
June 22, 1889–1901
Hussein Kuli Khan Nawab