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Malekeh Queen Malekeh Jahaan World Queen, title shared by Nasser-ed-Din Shah's mother and Mohammad 'Ali Shah's wife. Mahd-e-Oliaa "Queen Mother" (Lit. Mahd = hearth or cradle; Olia' = most high; thus = "most high hearth or cradle" or "most high life giving place" ; i.e., place from whence one is born, and thus more elegantly translated as "Sublime Cradle."
Women of medieval Persia. Subcategories. ... Pages in category "Medieval Iranian women" The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total.
Women of the Sasanian Empire — Persian women of the Sasanian Empire in ancient Persia and medieval Persia. Subcategories This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total.
Sasanian-era artwork of an Iranian woman relief depicting a divine investiture scene of sassanid king receiving a flower by his queen [1]. In the Sasanian Empire, the state religion Zoroastrianism created the policy that dictated relationships between men and women.
The royal consorts of Iran were the consorts of the rulers of the various states and civilizations in Iran from the establishment of the Medes around 678 BC until the abolition of the Iranian monarchy in the 1979 Iranian revolution.
Padishah, Persian pād "master" and shāh "king". Used in the Ottoman Empire and the Mughal Empire. 皇帝 is the title of emperors in East Asia. An emperor is called Huángdì in Chinese, Hwangje in Korean, Hoàng đế in Vietnamese, and Kōtei in Japanese, but these are all just their respective pronunciations of the Chinese characters 皇帝.
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The mausoleum of Khwaja Abu Nasr Parsa (died 1460), where Rabia Balkhi's shrine is located. Rabia Balkhi (Arabic: رابعة بنت كعب, Persian: رابعه بلخی) also known as Rabia al-Quzdari (or Khuzdari), [a] was a 10th-century writer who composed poetry in Persian and Arabic.