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Ali-Akbar Davar

Iranian politician (1885-1937)

Ali-Akbar Davar

Iranian politician (1885-1937)

FieldValue
nameAli-Akbar Davar
native_name
native_name_langfa
imageAliAkbar Davar Justice Minister 1306.jpg
orderMinister of Justice
term_start13 June 1926
term_end18 September 1933
monarchReza Shah
primeministerHassan Mostowfi
Mehdi Qoli Hedayat
predecessorVossug ed Dowleh
successorMohsen Sadr
office3Minister of Education
term_start31 November 1925
term_end313 June 1926
monarch3Reza Shah
primeminister3Mohammad Ali Foroughi
birth_date1885
birth_placeTehran, Sublime State of Iran
death_date
death_placeTehran, Imperial State of Iran
nationalityIranian

| honorific-prefix = | honorific-suffix = Mehdi Qoli Hedayat

Ali-Akbar Dāvar (, also known as Mirza Ali-Akbar Khan-e Dāvar (میرزا علی‌اکبرخان داور)‎; 1885 – 10 February 1937) was an Iranian politician and judge, and the founder of the modern judicial system of Iran.

Early life and education

Ali-Akbar Davar was born in 1885 in Tehran. His father, Kalbali Khan Khazen al Khalvat, was a minor court official during the reign of Mozaffar ad-Din Shah Qajar. In 1900, Davar enrolled in the élite school of Dar ul-Funun to study medicine; however, he changed his field of study to law and graduated from the University of Geneva receiving a degree in law in 1908.

Death

On 10 February 1937, Dāvar died and the news of his apparent suicide took the capital, Tehran, by storm. Rumors spread that two days earlier Dāvar had been in private severely reprimanded and threatened by Reza Shah. Some newspapers wrote that he had died of a heart attack, however others suggested that his death had been related to his proposed American bill to Majlis. Davar is said to have died by an overdose of opium.

Four years before, in 1933, Reza Shah had arrested Davar's closest friend Teymourtash. Teymourtash died shortly afterward in prison. Many say he was killed by the prison's physician through lethal injection on orders of Reza Shah—a method widely used at the time.

Legacy

Among Dāvar's many achievements are establishing Iran's "Bureau of Social Affairs" (Edareh-ye Sabt-e Ahval), introducing "The Law of Documentation Registration" (Qanun-e Sabt-e Asnad), "The Law of Property Registration" (Qanun-e Sabt-e Amlak), and "The Law of Marriage and Divorce" (Qanun-e Ezdevag va Talāq).

Dāvar also implemented some reforms as minister of finance in the Cabinet of Mohammad Ali Foroughi. He further established Iran's first state insurance company in the Cabinet of prime minister Mahmoud Djam, taking effective steps in saving the state from near bankruptcy by modifying the tax laws.

Dāvar is regarded as one of the most productive ministers during Iran's tumultuous years of the early 20th century, who made sweeping reforms to Iran's judicial system. In commemorating Dāvar, Reza Shah is said to have told members of the Judiciary: "Don't ever think that you can become as good as Dāvar, by merely sitting in his chair".

References

Source used for this article

  • 'Alí Rizā Awsatí (عليرضا اوسطى), Iran in the past three centuries (Irān dar Se Qarn-e Goz̲ashteh – ايران در سه قرن گذشته), Vol. 2 (Paktāb Publishing – انتشارات پاکتاب, Tehran, Iran, 2003). .

References

  1. [http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/davar-ali-akbar DĀVAR, ʿALĪ-AKBAR] Iranica Online
  2. Sīrūs Ghani. (1998). "Iran and the rise of Reza Shah: from Qajar collapse to Pahlavi rule". I.B. Tauris.
  3. Amir Poursadigh. (2003). "The Determinants of the Revolutionary Disintegration of the State in Iran".
  4. In her radio presentation ([http://americanradioworks.publicradio.org/features/iran/htmlversion/sega.html 2]), Davar Ardalan (Ali-Akbar Dāvar's great-granddaughter) indicates that at age 24 Ali-Akbar Dāvar had been Prosecutor General of Tehran. Further, she mentions that rather than in Switzerland, as indicated in this biography, Dāvar studied law in [[Belgium]].
  5. Reza Shabani. (2005). ''Iranian History at a Glance'', Alhoda UK. ({{ISBN. 9789644390050), «The Post-Islamic Era», p. 291.
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