Home > Mirzadeh Eshghi > Biography full

Mirzadeh Eshghi

Sayed Mohammad Reza Kordestani (Persian: سید محمدرضا کردستانی; December 11, 1893:– July 3, 1924) was an Iranian political writer and poet who used the pen name Mirzadeh Eshghi (Persian: میرزاده عشقی).

Contents

  • 1 Biography
  • 2 Death
  • 3 Works
  • 4 References
  • 5 External links

Biography

He was born in Hamadan, the son of Hajj Sayed Abolghasam Kordestani; he learned French in the Ecole d'Alliance, and moved to Istanbul for a while. He is particularly famous for writing the opera Rastakhiz Iran (Resurrected Iran), which was a reflection of his patriotic spirit.

After returning to Iran and spending time with his family in Tehran, he published newspapers in which he fiercely attacked the political system of Iran. He is remembered for writing six plays; his Noruz nameh is particularly famous. He also published a paper called Twentieth Century and predicted his early death repeatedly.

Death

Eshghi was murdered by two unknown gunmen in his house in Tehran. He was buried in Ibn Babawayh Cemetery in Shahr-e Ray, near Tehran.

Works

Plays
  • Operay-e-Rastakhiz-e-Mehr-e-Yaran (Written in Istanbul)
  • Kafan-e-Siah or Black Shroud (Written in Tehran)
  • Resurrected Iranian Kings (Written in Istanbul)

References

    External links

    Media related to Mirzadeh Eshghi at Wikimedia Commons

    Novels
    • Ali Mohammad Afghani
    • Ghazaleh Alizadeh
    • Bozorg Alavi
    • Reza Amirkhani
    • Mahshid Amirshahi
    • Gh*em Hashemi Nezhad
    • Reza Baraheni
    • Simin Daneshvar
    • Mahmoud Dowlatabadi
    • Soudabeh Fazaeli
    • Reza Gh*emi
    • Mohammad Hanif (Iranian writer)
    • Houshang Golshiri
    • Aboutorab Khosravi
    • Zeyn al-Abedin Maraghei
    • Ahmad Mahmoud
    • Shahriyar Mandanipour
    • Abbas Maroufi
    • Mansour Koushan
    • Iraj Pezeshkzad
    Short stories
    • Jalal Al-e-Ahmad
    • Shamim Bahar
    • Sadeq Chubak
    • Abolh*an Etessami
    • Javad Mojabi
    • Simin Daneshvar
    • Nader Ebrahimi
    • Ebrahim Golestan
    • Houshang Golshiri
    • Sadegh Hedayat
    • Mohammad-Ali Jamalzadeh
    • Aboutorab Khosravi
    • Mostafa Mastoor
    • Jaafar Modarres-Sadeghi
    • Houshang Moradi Kermani
    • Bijan Najdi
    • Shahrnush Parsipur
    • Gholam-Hossein Sa'edi
    • Bahram Sadeghi
    • Goli Taraqqi
    Plays
    • Reza Abdoh
    • Mirza Fatali Akhundzadeh
    • Mohsen Yalfani
    • Bahram Beyzai
    • Bahman Forsi
    • Amir Reza Koohestani
    • Alireza Koushk Jalali
    • Gholam-Hossein Sa'edi
    • Bijan Mofid
    • Hengameh Mofid
    • Abbas Nalbandian
    • Akbar Radi
    • Pari Saberi
    • Mirza Aqa Tabrizi
    • Mohammad Yaghoubi
    Screenplays
    • Saeed Aghighi
    • Mohammad Reza Aslani
    • Rakhshan Bani-E'temad
    • Bahram Beyzai
    • Hajir Darioush
    • Pouran Derakhshandeh
    • Asghar Farhadi
    • Bahman Farmanara
    • Farrokh Ghaffari
    • Behrouz Gharibpour
    • Bahman Ghobadi
    • Fereydun Gole
    • Ebrahim Golestan
    • Ali Hatami
    • Abolfazl Jalili
    • Ebrahim Hatamikia
    • Abdolreza Kahani
    • Varuzh Karim-Masihi
    • Samuel Khachikian
    • Abbas Kiarostami
    • Majid Majidi
    • Mohsen Makhmalbaf
    • Dariush Mehrjui
    • Reza Mirkarimi
    • Rasoul Mollagholipour
    • Amir Naderi
    • Jafar Panahi
    • Kambuzia Partovi
    • Fereydoun Rahnema
    • Rasul Sadr Ameli
    • Mohammad Sadri
    • Parviz Shahbazi
    • Sohrab Shahid-Saless
    Translators
    • Amrollah Abjadian
    • Jaleh Amouzgar
    • Najaf Daryabandari
    • Mohammad Ghazi
    • Lili Golestan
    • Sadegh Hedayat
    • Saleh Hosseini
    • Ahmad Kamyabi Mask
    • Ahmad Shamlou
    • Mohammad Moin
    • Ebrahim Pourdavoud
    • Hamid Samandarian
    • Jalal Sattari
    • Jafar Shahidi
    • Ahmad Tafazzoli
    • Abbas Zaryab
    Children's literature
    • Samad Behrangi
    • Houshang Moradi Kermani
    • Babak NikTalab
    • Hengameh Mofid
    • Poopak NikTalab
    • Farhad Hasanzadeh
    Essayists
    • Aydin Aghdashloo
    • Mohammad Ebrahim Bastani Parizi
    • Ehsan Yarshater
    • Ahmad Kasravi
    Contemporary Persian and Cl*ical Persian are the same language, but writers since 1900 are cl*ified as contemporary. At one time, Persian was a common cultural language of much of the non-Arabic Islamic world. Today it is the official language of Iran, Tajikistan and one of the two official languages of Afghanistan.Important events
    • Tobacco Protest
    • Persian Cons*ution of 1906
    • Siege of Tabriz
    • the First Majlis
    • Majlis Bombardment
    • Russian occupation of Tabriz
    • Triumph of Tehran
    See also
    • Qajar dynasty
    • 1921 Persian coup d'état
    • Jungle Movement of Gilan
    • Russian Empire involvement in the Persian Cons*utional Revolution
    • Iranian Enlightenment
    Category