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Ali-Akbar Davar was born in 1885 [1] [2] in Tehran. His father, Kalbali Khan Khazen al Khalvat, was a minor court official in the reign of Mozaffar ad-Din Shah Qajar. [2] In 1900, Davar enrolled in the élite school of Dar ul-Funun to study medicine; [2] however, he changed his field of study to law and graduated from the University of Geneva receiving a degree in law in 1908.
Ali-Akbar Davar: In March 1933 he headed the Iranian delegation to the League of Nations in Geneva. [2] علیاکبر داور: Reza Shah: 1311 1933: 1311 Nasrollah Entezam: Persian Representative at the League of Nations in Geneva نصرالله انتظامسلطنه: Reza Shah: 1311 1954: 1332 Javad Mansur (*1926) Minister of Information.
In March 1926, Minister of Judicial Affairs Ali-Akbar Davar dissolved Iran's entire judiciary, with the approval of the parliament, and initiating a wave of fundamental restructuring and overhauling reforms with the aid of French judicial experts. By April 1927 Iran had 600 newly appointed judges in Tehran.
Ali Akbar Davar, 1933–1937; Mahmud Badr, 1938–1939; Rezagholi Amir Khosravi, 1939–1941; ... Ali Tayebnia: 15 August 2013 20 August 2017 Independent: Hassan ...
Muhammad ibn Jarir al-Tabari (838-923), was a Persian world historian and theologian (the most famous and widely influential person called al-Tabari).; Ibn Isfandiyar, historian, author of a history of Tabaristan (Tarikh-i Tabaristan).
Ali al-Akbar ibn Husayn (664–680), son of the third Shia Imam, Husayn ibn Ali, and Umm Layla; Ali Ekber Çiçek (1935–2006), Turkish musician; Ali-Akbar Davar (1885–1937), Iranian prosecutor; Ali-Akbar Mousavi Khoeini, Iranian human rights activist 'Ali Akbar Khata'i (fl. ca. 1500–1516), Persian traveler and writer
Hedayat was appointed to the Ministry of Commerce and appointed public benefits and statesmanship; he was later elected president of the Supreme Court under Ali Akbar Davar, Minister of Justice. Hedayat served nearly six-and-a-half years as prime minister to Rezā Shāh Pahlavi; his premiership was conservative (laying a foundation for ...
Ali-Akbar Davar, politician and judge and the founder of the modern judicial system of Iran; Kazem Mousavi Bojnurdi, historian, theologian, writer and the curator of the National Library of Iran (1997–2005) Mohammad Davari, journalist, known for arrest in 2009–10 Iranian election protests; Mostafa Tabrizi, politician