Aga Khan Abbas-Kuli Khan oglu Erivansky ( azerb. Ağa xan Abbasqulu xan oğlu İrəvanski ) - deputy of the State Duma of the Russian Empire from Erivan province , college assessor , brother of Colonel Kerim Khan of Erivansky .
| Aga Khan of Erivan | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| azerb. Ağa xan İrəvanski | ||||
| ||||
| Birth | ||||
| Death | ||||
| Kind | Erivan | |||
| Father | Abbas Cooley Khan Erivansky | |||
| Religion | Islam | |||
| Military service | ||||
| Rank | College assessor | |||
Content
Biography
Agha Khan Erivansky was born in an Azerbaijani noble family [1] . He was a descendant of sovereign khans . His father, Abbas Cooley Khan Erivansky , was a member of the Erivan City Council, the vowel of the City Council (1886–1899), an honorary superintendent of one of the Russian - Tatar schools in Erivan (1904–1906), and came from the Erivan branch of Kadzharov , and his mother, Tarlan Khanum Nakhichevan, was the daughter of the hero Bayezet general Ismail Khan of Nakhichevan . He was a Muslim by religion.
He studied at the Erivan Gymnasium (did not graduate). Soon passed the exam for the title of volunteer III category. He was later appointed senior official of special assignments under the Yerevan governor. In 1878, together with his father Abbas-kuli Khan, he participated in the provincial board in discussing the future situation of Erivan. In 1904, Aga Khan was a member of the Yerevan City Council. On February 13 (Art.), 1906, signed an agreement between the Azerbaijani and Armenian communities on the Azerbaijani side to establish order in Erivan [2] [3] .
May 16, 1906 was elected to the I State Duma from the Muslim population of Erivan province.
In 1907-1908 Aga Khan, along with several Azerbaijanis, was elected the vowel of the Erivan City Council [2] .
In February 1919, he was chairman of the Erivan Muslim National Council [4] .
Family
Daughter Bulbul hanym graduated from the Yerevan school, had a good command of the Russian language, was a teacher in Yerevan and Kedabek (1917-1920), created and headed women's clubs in Dallar (1921), Nakhichevan (1922), Yerevan (1923-1944) [2] .
Literature
- Boyovich M.M. Members of the State Duma (Portraits and biographies). The first convocation. M, 1906] S. 475; Muslim deputies of the State Duma of Russia. 1906-1917: Collection of documents and materials. Ufa, 1998;
- Usmanova D.M. Muslim representatives in the Russian parliament. 1906-1917. Kazan, 2005.
Sources
- State Duma of the Russian Empire : 1906-1917. B. Yu. Ivanov, A.A. Komzolova, I.S. Ryakhovskaya. Moscow. ROSSPEN. 2008.P. 654-655.
- Russian State Historical Archive . F.1278: STATE DUMA I, II, III AND IV CONVOCATIONS O.1 (1st convocation). D. 31. L. 4; F. 1327: SPECIAL BUSINESS ON ELECTIONS TO THE STATE DUMA AND THE STATE COUNCIL. O.1. 1905 year. D. 143. L. 200 about.
Notes
- ↑ State Duma of the Russian Empire: 1906-1917. B. Yu. Ivanov, A.A. Komzolova, I.S. Ryakhovskaya. Moscow. ROSSPEN. 2008.
- ↑ 1 2 3 Asker Zeynalov. Erivan intelligentsia. Baku: MUTARJIM. 2011
- ↑ “Agreement” (unavailable link) . Date of treatment November 24, 2013. Archived December 3, 2013.
- ↑ Azerbaijan Democratic Republic (1918-1920). Legislative acts. (Collection of documents). - Baku, 1998, p. 282