- Ali Khan Vali
Ali Khan Vali the Governor علی خان والی was a notable 19th-century
Iran ianphotographer . He is best known for his photograph album [http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL:1125271] documenting his career as governor at various places inAzerbaijan (Northwest Persia) between 1879 and 1896.Biography and career
He was a member of a distinguished
Qajar family, his father having had a long career asdiplomat and governor. Ali Khan was born inTehran in 1845 or 1846. The most important event in his young life occurred when he accompanied his father toSt. Petersburg in 1855 for several years. During that time, he studied and learned photography.In 1277 AH /1860-61 AD, his father left his post, and father and son traveled throughout
Europe . In 1278 AH / 1861-62, his father was posted to the northern (Caspian) province ofGilan as governor. His father was released from that post in 1285 AH / 1868-69, at a time when Ali Khan was a special attendant at a royal tour of the northern provinces. In 1287 AH / 1870-71, Ali Khan was one of thecourtiers who accompaniedNasser al-Din Shah on a tour of theShi'ite shrines in Ottoman-governedIraq (e.g.,Najaf ,Karbala , al-Kadhimiyya).In 1288 / 1871-72, Ali Khan's father was given the post of governor of
Fars , while Ali Khan stayed at the court in Tehran, evidently a member of the entourage of the heir to the throne,Muzaffar al-Din . In 1289 / 1872-73, his father died, and his older brother took over as governor of Fars.In 1296 / 1879, while still in the entourage of Muzaffer al-Din, there were disturbances in Azerbaijan, and Ali Khan received the post of governor of
Maragha . He was one of several individuals to receive new posts in Azerbaijan at that time. This was the first of a series of posts he was to hold in that region, including mayor (Hakim) ofTabriz , the principal city. He illustrated his reports to the central administration in Tehran with photographs, which was an innovation encouraged by Nasser al-Din Shah, but readily accommodated by Ali Khan Vali due to his personal interests.He died in 1902, evidently in Tehran, and was buried at
Qum .Photographic works
Given that Ali Khan Vali learned camera work in St. Petersburg as a boy, we must assume that photographs representing his juvenile years and young manhood once existed, but either they have not survived or they are lying undiscovered among the possessions of one of his many descendants. The photographs in his well-known album date from the time when Ali Khan was 33 years of age and his responsible life in the provinces began.
Although the earliest photographs in the album are portraits of Nasser al-Din Shah, taken in 1279 /1862-3, it would appear that the rest of the photographs date from Ali Khan's 1879 posting to Maragha, and the following years. The last date in the text is 1313/1895-96; however, photographs far from the end of the sequence show a coffin for a Christian with the death date of 1897, and it would appear that the album continues up to 1899 or 1900.
Ali Khan Vali's photograph album [http://nrs.harvard.edu/urn-3:FHCL:1125271] documenting his career as governor at various places in Azerbaijan (Northwest Persia) between 1879 and 1896, is of virtually unprecedented quality and character. It is not a masterpiece of album production comparable to the
Turkestanskii Albom , created for the Russian imperial court in the 1870s to document their new Central Asian dominions, or theAbdül-Hamid Albums , documenting the Ottoman Empire in the later 19th century. (Copies of both of those works may be seen at theLibrary of Congress .) It is the contents of Ali Khan's album that are so extraordinary. It contains no less than 1,412 photographs on 439 pages (including a couple of blank pages within the series), commencing with photos of devotional representations of Shi'ite saints, and of Nasser al-Din Shah, the reigning monarch. It then proceeds to document Ali Khan, his family, and all those persons and places he encountered during his career as governor. The photographs are captioned in almost all cases. Moreover, page after page is covered with a continuous narrative of his career, written around the photographs. As of July 6, 2007, the narrative text was approximately one-third translated.
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