Skip to content
Surf Wiki
Save to docs
history

From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base

Kingdom of Afghanistan

Monarchy in Central Asia from 1926 to 1973

Kingdom of Afghanistan

Monarchy in Central Asia from 1926 to 1973

FieldValue
conventional_long_nameKingdom of Afghanistan
native_name
common_nameAfghanistan
life_span1926–1973
image_flagFlag of Afghanistan (1931–1973).svg
flag_typeFinal flag
(1931–1973)
image_coat[[File:Afghanistan arms 1931-1973.svg90px]]
symbol_typeFinal emblem
(1931–1973)
image_mapLocationAfghanistan (with Soviet borders).svg
eraInterwar periodWorld War IICold War
national_anthem
درود شاهی
prs
"Royal Salute"
(1926–1943)[[File:Afghanistan (1926 1943) Afganistán (1926-1943).ogg]]
<br /><br />"Grand Salute"<br />(1943–1973)<div class"center" style="margin-top:0.4em;"[[File:Former national anthem of Afghanistan, 1943–1973.oga]]
government_typeUnitary absolute monarchy (1926–1964)
Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy (1964–1973)
title_leaderKing (Pādshāh)
leader1Amanullah Khan
year_leader11926–1929 (first)
leader2Mohammad Zahir Shah
year_leader21933–1973 (last)
title_deputyPrime Minister
deputy1Mohammad Hashim Khan
year_deputy11929–1946 (first)
deputy2Mohammad Shafiq
year_deputy21972–1973 (last)
legislatureLoya Jirga
(1926–1931)
National Assembly
(1931–1973)
upper_houseHouse of Elders (1931–1973)
lower_houseHouse of the People (1931–1973)
year_start1926
date_start9 June
event_startSucceeds Afghan emirate
event1Civil War
date_event11928–1929
event2[New constitution](1964-constitution-of-afghanistan)
date_event21 October 1964
year_end1973
date_end17 July
event_end[Monarchy abolished](1973-afghan-coup-d-etat)
capitalKabul
Jalalabad (1929)
coordinates
official_languagesDari
Pashto (from 1936)
religion{{ublistitem_style=white-space;
demonymAfghan (from 1964)
currencyAfghan afghani
stat_year11973
stat_area1652,864
stat_pop112,108,963
p1Emirate of Afghanistan
flag_p1Flag of Afghanistan (1919–1921).svg
s1Republic of Afghanistan (1973–1978)Republic of Afghanistan
flag_s1Flag of Afghanistan (1974–1978).svg
todayAfghanistan
Iran
iso3166codeomit

(1931–1973)](flag-of-afghanistan-thirteenth-flag-1931-1973) (1931–1973)](emblem-of-afghanistan) درود شاهی prs "Royal Salute" (1926–1943)[[File:Afghanistan (1926 1943) Afganistán (1926-1943).ogg]]

درود بزرگ prs "Grand Salute" (1943–1973)[[File:Former national anthem of Afghanistan, 1943–1973.oga]] Unitary parliamentary constitutional monarchy (1964–1973) (1926–1931) National Assembly (1931–1973) Jalalabad (1929) Pashto (from 1936)

|93% Islam |—75% Sunni |—19% Shia |3% Hinduism |2% Sikhism |2% Judaism Iran

The Kingdom of Afghanistan, also known as the Sublime State of Afghanistan, was a monarchy in Central Asia that was established in 1926 as a successor state to the Emirate of Afghanistan. It was proclaimed by its first king, Amanullah Khan, seven years after he acceded to the throne. The monarchy ended in the 1973 Afghan coup d'état.

History

Emir Amanullah Khan was keen on modernizing Afghanistan, provoking several uprisings led by his conservative opponents. One such rebellion broke out while he was visiting Europe in 1927. He abdicated in favour of his brother Inayatullah Khan, who only ruled for three days before the leader of the rebellion Habibullāh Kalakāni took power and reinstated the Emirate.

After ten months, Amanullah Khan's Minister of War, Mohammad Nadir, returned from exile in India. His armies ousted the Saqqawist government and sacked Kabul. Afterwards, Nadir's forces apprehended and subsequently executed Kalakāni. Mohammed Nadir reinstated the kingdom, was proclaimed King of Afghanistan as Mohammad Nadir Shah in October 1929, and went on to revert the reformist path of the last king, Amanullah Khan. He was succeeded by his son, Mohammad Zahir Shah, whose rule started in 1933 and lasted for 39 years. Zahir Shah, the last King of Afghanistan, was eventually overthrown by his own cousin Mohammad Daoud Khan who successfully ended the centuries-old monarchy and established a republic. It was under the leadership of Zahir Shah that the Afghan government sought relationships with the outside world, most notably with the Soviet Union, France, the United Kingdom and the United States.

Under Zahir Shah, the government initiated numerous concerted efforts to bring education to Darai Nur, majority of the valley being inhabited by the Pashayi people. Because villagers were suspicious of the literacy campaign, wealthier inhabitants in the valley bribed officials and the Royal Afghan Army to keep their sons out of school. Poorer villagers, on the other hand were far more likely to attend, encouraging the view that the school program was not 'un-Islamic' nor 'anti-Islamic', leading more villagers to send their sons to school.

On 27 September 1934, during the reign of Zahir Shah, the Kingdom of Afghanistan joined the League of Nations. During World War II, Afghanistan remained neutral and pursued a diplomatic policy of non-alignment. Though being neutral in World War II, Afghanistan had relations with Nazi Germany, but that was severed after the Anglo-Soviet invasion of Iran.

Afghanistan was admitted into the United Nations on 29 August 1946. In 1947, Afghanistan was the only United Nations member to vote against admitting Pakistan into the United Nations. This was mostly done because of the Kingdom's call for Pashtunistan. Nikita Khrushchev visited the capital of Kabul and endorsed the Afghan claims to Pashtunistan in 1955. Five years earlier, in 1950, Afghanistan signed friendship contracts with India and Lebanon, established political contacts with Syria and recognised the People's Republic of China. Efforts were additionally made to settle Afghan-Iranian disputes over the Helmand River, which are still ongoing between the regimes of the Islamic Emirate of Afghanistan and the Islamic Republic of Iran. Afghanistan also became a member of the Non-Aligned Movement in 1961. Daoud Khan, Prime Minister of Afghanistan at the time, worked hard for the development of modern industries, and education in the country. In July 1973, Daoud Khan staged a bloodless coup d'état while Zahir Shah was abroad convalescing from medical treatment. The next month, Zahir Shah abdicated, hoping to avoid a civil war, which officially marked the end of the Kingdom of Afghanistan and the beginning of the Republic.

Geography

Map of Afghanistan, published in the 'Imperial Gazetteer of India' (Vol. XXVI, Atlas; 1931 revised edition; plate no. 49)

The Kingdom of Afghanistan bordered Iran on the west, the Soviet Union in the north, China on the east, and Pakistan and India on the south. The mountainous and mostly dry country was 251,830 sqmi. The strange shape and borders of the country, most notably the Wakhan Corridor, were a result of its former role as a buffer state between the Soviet Union and the British India. Snow was common in most areas during winter and rainfall was small.

Demographics

The country was made up of various ethnic groups such as the Pashtuns, Hazaras, and many others.

The majority of Afghans were Muslim, approximate 94% of the population. Around 90% of the Muslim population were Sunni, the rest were Shia. Majority of non-Muslims were Sikhs and Hindus.

Dari and Pashto were the official languages, and many Afghans were bilingual.

Economy

Like the past and present-day Afghanistan, the economy relied greatly on agriculture and mining.

The United States and the Soviet Union both invested in neutral Afghanistan's economy to try to gain influence during the Cold War. This included the Four Point Program in 1951, when Afghanistan and the United States signed an agreement in Kabul to help assist the economic development in the economy, and the construction of a 100 km pipeline from Termez to Mazar-i-Sharif that was built by Soviet technicians and began in 1954. Afghanistan received $18,500,000 from the Export–Import Bank of the United States to help them purchase U.S. material, equipment, and services for the Helmand River valley developmental project.

In August 1961, Pakistan closed the border with Afghanistan, due to Prime Minister Daoud Khan's strong stance on Pashtunistan, but it re-opened the following May after Khan's resignation.

The country had deposits of talc, mica, silver, lead, beryl, chromite, copper, lapis lazuli, and iron ore.

Military

King Zahir Shah's cousin, Daoud Khan, signed a $3 million arms deal with the Czechoslovak Socialist Republic and a 32.5 million arms deal with the Soviet Union in 1956. The deal gave the Afghan military imported T-34 tanks and MiG-17 jet fighters. A quarter to third of all Afghan officers had trained in the Soviet Union by 1973. It was also under the Kingdom of Afghanistan where the Afghan Commando Forces were formed as the Afghan Army's first special formations, notably the 242nd Parachute Battalion in 1965 and later, the 444th and the 455th Battalion in 1966 and 1973. All these battalions had airborne capabilities.

The flag of the Royal Afghan Guard under King Mohammad Zahir Shah until 1973

For these new commando formations, Captain Habibullah led the 242nd after returning from Fort Benning in the US to Afghanistan, additionally receiving training from the British Special Air Service. Major Rahmatullah Safi would become the Chief of Staff for the 444th, although he would become a commander a year later. Major Safi would prove to be a suitable leader, as he had undergone training in the British Royal Military Academy Sandhurst and in the Soviet Ryazan Higher Airborne Command School. In the years 1962 and 1963, before the establishment of the Afghan Commando Forces, Safi worked alongside the "National Mujahideen of Pashtunistan" against the Pakistani government, after the unsuccessful Bajaur Campaign of 1960–1961.

During Afghanistan's "Decade of Democracy", premises of the army university, a technical academy, the Royal Afghan Army Central Repair House were all constructed with the help of Czechoslovakia.

The military emblem of the '''Afghan Army''' from 1961–1974

Notes

References

References

  1. Volodarsky, Mikhail. (2014-04-23). "The Soviet Union and Its Southern Neighbours: Iran and Afghanistan 1917-1933". Routledge.
  2. (2013). "Afghanistan in Ink: Literature Between Diaspora and Nation". Hurst.
  3. "Afghanistan Population 1950–2021: MacroTrends".
  4. (1931). "Uṣūl-i asāsī-i dawlat ʻalayh-i Afghānistān". Maṭbaʻah-ʼi ʻUmūmī-i Riyāsat-i Maṭābiʻ.
  5. (2017). "The Hazaras and the Afghan State: Rebellion, Exclusion and the Struggle for Recognition". Oxford University Press.
  6. Rubin, Barnett. "DĀWŪD KHAN". [[Columbia University]].
  7. (2014). "A descriptive grammar of Pashai: The language and speech community of Darrai Nur }}{{page needed".
  8. [http://www.unis.unvienna.org/unis/pressrels/2001/note119.html United Nations member states]
  9. V. A. Romodin Yu. V. Gankovsky, M. R. Arunov. (1982-01-01). "A History of Afghanistan". Progress Publishers.
  10. Dagres, Holly. (2023-07-07). "Iran and Afghanistan are feuding over the Helmand River. The water wars have no end in sight.".
  11. Tate, George. "The kingdom of Afghanistan: a historical sketch".
  12. "Afghanistan: Status Of Dari, Pashto Languages A Sensitive Topic".
  13. (2 March 2020). "Modern Afghanistan".
  14. "CHAPTER ONE THE AFGHAN COMMUNISTS".
  15. (2022-11-30). ""Пожарная команда" Кабула {{!}} Warspot.ru".
  16. Isby, David C.. (1986). "THE BETTER HAMMER: Soviet Special Operations Forces and Tactics in Afghanistan 1979-86". Strategic Studies.
  17. Azimi, General Nabi. (2019-04-11). "The Army and Politics: Afghanistan: 1963-1993". AuthorHouse.
Info: Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

Want to explore this topic further?

Ask Mako anything about Kingdom of Afghanistan — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.

Research with Mako

Free with your Surf account

Content sourced from Wikipedia, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

This content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.

Report