Book contents
- Reversing the Colonial Gaze
- The Global Middle East
- Reversing the Colonial Gaze
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Mr. Shushtari Travels to India
- 2 Mirza Abu Taleb Travels from India
- 3 An Ilchi Wonders about the World
- 4 A Colonial Officer Is Turned Upside-Down
- 5 A Shirazi Shares His Travelogues
- 6 A Wandering Monarch
- 7 Hajj Sayyah Leads a Peripatetic Life
- 8 In the Company of a Refined Prince
- 9 A Wandering Mystic
- 10 In and out of a Homeland
- 11 The Fact and Fiction of a Homeland
- 12 Professor Sayyah Comes Home to Teach
- Conclusion
- Index
8 - In the Company of a Refined Prince
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 19 December 2019
- Reversing the Colonial Gaze
- The Global Middle East
- Reversing the Colonial Gaze
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Figures
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- 1 Mr. Shushtari Travels to India
- 2 Mirza Abu Taleb Travels from India
- 3 An Ilchi Wonders about the World
- 4 A Colonial Officer Is Turned Upside-Down
- 5 A Shirazi Shares His Travelogues
- 6 A Wandering Monarch
- 7 Hajj Sayyah Leads a Peripatetic Life
- 8 In the Company of a Refined Prince
- 9 A Wandering Mystic
- 10 In and out of a Homeland
- 11 The Fact and Fiction of a Homeland
- 12 Professor Sayyah Comes Home to Teach
- Conclusion
- Index
Summary
In Chapter 8, “In the Company of a Refined Prince,” I examine Abd al-Samad Mirza ‘Izz al-Dowleh Salur’s Safar-Nameh (1883). Abd al-Samad Mirza was a Qajar prince, the son of Muhammad Shah and the younger brother of Naser al-Din Shah. He was appointed as the governor of a number of provinces and accompanied his older brother during his travels around the world. He commanded a number of languages (Persian, Arabic, and French in particular), led a luxurious, princely life in his palatial garden, was occasionally dispatched on ceremonial diplomatic missions, and was an avid follower of global news. He was a poet and a painter. What is peculiar about this travelogue is the fact that its author had a rather remote, princely disposition, was not in any significant position of power, and represented a stratum of Qajar royalty that was relatively educated, socially alert, and, from his monarchic vantage point, deeply concerned about the location of his homeland in the larger regional and global context.
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- Reversing the Colonial GazePersian Travelers Abroad, pp. 222 - 239Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2020