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Reza Shah, a kingdom without tribes and without wars and bloodshed. An autocratic kingdom that built the national identity and changed Iran. Text: Arash Beheshti, Ali Bandari Video: Nima Khalidikia 0:00 Our opinion will change 3:53 The Qajar dynasty is over 5:35 A dictator without the power of tyranny 6:30 The constitution was supposed to solve the problem 7:11 Where did the name Pahlavi come from 8 :20 The difference between Reza Shah and the Qajars 10:00 Iranian army 11:32 Conscription law 13:53 The big army and the king's authority 14:54 Why building roads and communication routes was important for Iran 16:06 Iran's railway was laid 17:02 The end It would be what Reza Shah wanted 18:22 Construction of roads in Iran 19:10 Reza Shah's government became the engine of development 20:10 Creation of industry and working class 21:20 Government bureaucracy was formed 21:51 Bureaucratic body and corrupt administrative system 22:34 Reza Shah's kingdom Two different eras 24:23 The development of education and literacy 26:31 The creation of Iranian national identity 28:55 Listening to the voices of intellectuals 30:01 Reza Shah's relationship with religion and the institution of the clergy 31:31 Where did the problem with the clergy begin 32:43 The Pahlavi hat 33 19: Reza Shah's trip to Turkey and the influence of Atatürk 33:42 The order to remove the hijab 34:46 Reza Shah implemented constitutional ideas in his own way 35:55 Reza Shah's system went step by step towards a dictatorship 37:17 Military court after Reza Shah's dismissal 37 :33 Ahmed Kasravi's speech and reminder before repression 38:32 Intellectuals and society 41:47 What was Reza Shah's repression 42:28 Mohammad Ali Foroughi, Reza Shah's Prime Minister 42:57 Timurtash, Reza Shah's court minister 44:02 Ali Akbar Davar, Minister of Justice and Iran's finance 44:31 Reza Shah's pessimism and worries 45:54 Mohammad Reza Shah's book: Mission for my country 46:37 Everything depended on Reza Shah himself 48:31 Reza Shah also became ill-tempered and scheming 49:43 Reza Shah's exile 50:38 Reza Shah's reign What's going on in the world 56:57 Reza Shah's difficult and important decisions 59:11 A kingdom without tribes and war and bloodshed 59:55 Iran has changed with a powerful man, the summary of the episode of the book "Intellectuals and Society" is here in the free podcast https://bpls.me/ q49led Sources: Iran during the Qajar era - Mansoureh of the Nizam Mafi Khalili Kho, Mohammad Reza, Development and modernization of Iran during the era of Reza Shah, Tehran: Publications of the University Publishing Center (Shahid Beheshti Unit), 1373. Shamim, Ali Asghar; Iran during the Qajar dynasty; Tehran: Modbar Publishing Institute; [Bi to]. Abrahamian, Yerevan; Iran between two revolutions; Translated by Ahmed Golmohammadi, Mohammad Ebrahim Fatahi; Tehran: Nei Publishing, 1381. Afari, Janet, Iran's Constitutional Revolution, translated by Reza Rezaei, Tehran: Bistun Publishing; 1385 Amir Esmi, Cambys; Examining the 1919 contract based on the role of opponents of the contract; New History Quarterly; 12th issue, autumn 2014 Tutkar, Hojjat, Parvish, Mohsen, positions of scholars against the third coup of Esfand 1299 AH, Islamic History Studies, number 12, spring 2011 Tagavi, Seyyed Mustafa, a reflection on the 7311 coup, contemporary history of Iran, number 82, Winter 2013 Foran, John; Fragile resistance: the history of Iran's social developments from Safavid to after the Islamic revolution; Translated by Ahmed Tedin; Tehran: Rasa Cultural Services Institute; 1380 Eshghi, Mirzadeh, Jumhoori Nameh, https://ganjoor.net/eshghi/jomhoori ☑️ Bplus website https://bpluspodcast.com/ ✅ Bplus podcast https://bpluspodcast.com/how-to-listen/ ☑️ YouTube channel / @bpluspodcast ✅ BPlus Telegram channel https://t.me/podcastbplus