Mohammad-Hosayn Ayrom

Mohammad-Hosayn Ayrom
Personal details
Born 1882
Baku, Russian Empire
Died 1948
Liechtenstein
Occupation Army commander, head of the police

Mohammad Hosayn Ayrom (Persian: سرلشگر محمدحسین آیرم) was a senior military leader of the Pahlavi dynasty of Iran during the reign of king Reza Shah (r. 1925-41). He was the nephew of General Teymūr Khan Ayromlou and a first cousin of Queen Tadj ol-Molouk Ayromlou. Only some members of the Ayrums family spelled their surname "Ayromlou" with the added suffix "lou".

Biography

Born in 1882 in Baku (then part of the Russian Empire) to an Azeri family, Ayrom soon joined the ranks of the Persian Cossack Brigade and became an associate to Reza Khan (later Reza Shah).[1] Ayrom climbed up the ranks swiftly, becoming a colonel of Iran's Cossack Brigade as early as 1901. Prior to the Russian Revolution, Ayrom reportedly spent some years in the Imperial Russian ranks, serving as an officer in the Tsarist army.[1] He returned to Iran in 1921.[1] Mohammad Hosayn was a native of the Caucasus and a member of the Ayrums, who were originally the inhabitants of large marches straddling the current borders of Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan in the district of Ganja.[1] After the loss of the area to the Russians as a result of the first Russo-Persian War, they largely moved south deeper into Persia/Iran to stay with their fellow Shia co-reglionists. Some stayed behind under the Russian rule.

He became Chief of Iran's National Police (Shahrbāni) in 1931.[1] At the height of his career, he was viewed as more powerful than a Cabinet member and Reza Shah's right-hand man. His abuses of his position included graft, framing innocent people and smuggling and seeing what was happening to others he pretended to be ill and left Iran permanently.[2]

During World War II, Ayrom made active efforts in order to create a government in exile in Berlin, German-backed, under the name of Īrān-e āzād. The aims were to perform activity against the allied occupation of Iran, and to take over Iran as well after the German victory in the war. During the Allied occupation of Iran, when it led to the arrests of all sympathizers with Germany, Ayrom was "arrested and confined to a village in Germany".[1]

He died on 31 March 1948 in Liechtenstein (where he had become a citizen) while staying there for medical treatment for his illness.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Amanat 1987, pp. 152-153.
  2. Azimi, Fakhreddin (2008). The Quest for Democracy in Iran: A Century of Struggle against Authoritarian Rule. Harvard University Press. p. 84. ISBN 978-0-674-02778-7.

Sources

See also

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