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| | Shah - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Thus Shah (or Shaha) is a title borne by the Hindu Maharajadhiraja (King of Kings) of Nepal and his male-line descendants, which was originally conferred as a title by the Muslim Sultan of Delhi on Kulananda Khan, after he made himself ruler of Kaski. |  | | In the realm of a Shah (or a more lofty derived ruler style), a prince of blood were logically called Shahzada as the term is derived from Shah using the Persian patronymic suffix -zada, "son, descendant"; see "Prince" article for other uses of the suffix. |  | | The corruption Shahajada 'Shah's son', taken from the Mughal title Shahzada, is the usual princely title borne by the grandsons and male of a Nepalese sovereign (a Hindu Maharajadhiraja; but cfr. |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shah
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| | Mohammad Reza Pahlavi - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia |
 | | Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi (Persian: محمدرضا شاه پهلوی) (October 26, 1919, Tehran – July 27, 1980, Cairo), bearing the monarchial styles: His Imperial Majesty, Shahanshah (King of Kings), and Aryamehr (Light of the Aryans), was the Shah of Iran from 1941 to 1979. |  | | Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, crowning Farah Pahlavi as Empress of Iran. |  | | Concerning the fate of Bahrain (which Britain had controlled since the 19th century, but which Iran claimed as its own territory) and three small Persian Gulf islands, the Shah negotiated an agreement with the British, which, by means of a public consensus, ultimately led to the independence of Bahrain (against the wishes of Iranian nationalists). |
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http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mohammad_Reza_Pahlavi
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| | Muhammad Reza Shah Pahlevi |
 | | Reza Shah Pahlevi - Reza Shah Pahlevi, 1877–1944, shah of Iran (1925–41). |  | | More on Muhammad Reza Shah Pahlevi from Infoplease: |  | | Pahlevi, Iranian shahs - Pahlevi: see Reza Shah Pahlevi; Muhammad Reza Shah Pahlevi. |
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http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0834354.html
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| | The Iranian Revolution |
 | | The Shah was worried about ultra-conservative opinion in his realm while he enjoyed support from Iran& upper and middle classes, including wealthy merchants - some of whom were more Westernized and modernistic in their Islamic faith, and some of whom remained more old-fashioned. |  | | One of the great landowners was the king, or shah, Muhammad Reza Pahlavi. |  | | Shariati's death left Khomeini was the overwhelmingly popular leader against the Shah, riding a wave of discontent among common Iranians, many of whom and an attachment to the traditions of their faith. |
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http://www.fsmitha.com/h2/ch29ir.html
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| | History of Iran: Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi |
 | | ohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi (1919-80), king of Iran (1941-1979), was born in Tehran on October 26, 1919, the eldest son of Reza Shah. |  | | The Shah saw himself as heir to the kings of ancient Iran, and in 1971 he held an extravagant celebration of 2,500 years of Persian monarchy. |  | | These measures and the increasing arbitrariness of the Shah's rule provoked both religious leaders who feared losing their traditional authority and students and intellectuals seeking democratic reforms. |
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http://www.iranchamber.com/history/mohammad_rezashah/mohammad_rezashah.php
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| | The Reign of Shah Jahan, 1628-1658 |
 | | Shah Shuja, Aurangzib, and Murad Bakhsh, the three younger sons of Shah Jahan, 1635. |  | | Many historians have -- perhaps unfairly -- accused Shah Jahan of building the glorious tomb as a tribute to himself and his rule rather than as a tribute to his wife. |  | | Prince Khurram was 35 years old when he ascended the throne as Shah Jahan (King of the World). |
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http://www.islamicart.com/library/empires/india/shahjahan.html
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| | Shah Naqshband |
 | | Shah Naqshband (q) left behind many successors, the most honorable among whom were Shaikh Muhammad bin Muhammad Alauddin al-Khwarazmi al-Bukhari al-Attar and Shaikh Muhammad bin Muhammad bin Mahmoud al-Hafizi, known as Muhammad Parsa, the author of Risala Qudsiyya. |  | | Shah Naqshband was, may Allah sanctify his soul, in the highest states of the denial of desire for this world. |  | | Shah Naqshband (q) was eighteen years of age when he was sent by his grandfather to the village of Samas to serve the Shaikh of the Tariqat, Muhamad Baba as-Samasi (q), who had asked for him. |
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http://www.naqshbandi.org/chain/17.htm
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| | Qajar Dynasty |
 | | Fath Ali Shah ruled from 1797 to 1834. |  | | Agha Mohammad was assassinated in 1797 and was succeeded by his nephew, Fath Ali Shah. |  | | With a coup d'état in February 1921, Reza Khan (ruled as Reza Shah Pahlavi, 1925-41) became the preeminent political personality in Iran; Ahmad Shah was formally deposed by the majlis (national consultative assembly) in October 1925 while he was absent in Europe, and that assembly declared the rule of the Qajar dynasty to be terminated. |
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http://persepolis.free.fr/iran/history/qajar.html
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| | Reza Shah the Great |
 | | (Reza Shah: From Birth to Kingship), by Reza Niazmand. |  | | Reza Shah was thus a pioneer in introducing what we may call a meritocracy in Iran's national life. |  | | Not so Reza Shah, who grew up in a purely Iranian environment, assumed the imperial rank among his own people, and thus created a real saga of a self-made man against the background of Iran's monarchical tradition. |
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http://www.sedona.net/pahlavi/rezashah.html
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| | [No title] |
 | | The new Shah vowed to continue to reforms that had been begun by his father. |  | | On the 16th September the Shah abdicated in favour of his son, who became His Imperial Majesty The Shahanshah of Iran. |  | | Massive rioting erupted in Iran, and widespread support for the exiled religious leader Ayatollah Khomeini grew by 1978. |
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http://www.angelfire.com/empire/imperialiran/shah.html
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| | Newton : : Shah Mat - is the king really dead? |
 | | Shah is the Middle and Modern Persian form of the Old Pers. |  | | The term check mate comes from Persian shaah maat, the king is dumfounded/ stymied (and not from Arabic Shah maat, the king died, which is the etymology most dictionaries give). |  | | Checkmate comes from the Persian expression "shah mat", which literally means, as Davidson points out, that the King is ambushed. |
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http://www.goddesschess.com/chessays/shahmatjan.html
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| | Naseeb Vibes - The Largest Muslim E-Zine |
 | | Shah, being from a Syed family (families who descend from the family of the Prophet Muhammad (saw)) yearned to differ from the norm. |  | | His method of attaining that closeness to Allah is as simple a formula as are his simple verses--though close reflection upon these pure and free-flowing verses gives birth to an awareness of dimensions of the soul and the self that one had previously assumed to be nonexistent. |  | | For some it is the lowering of our heads in sajood, for some it is the belief that if one supplicates for those whom were close to Allah and they will seek to visit darbars (tombs) to supplicate for the salvation of their souls. |
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http://www.naseeb.com/naseebvibes/prose-detail.php?aid=4285&pg=1
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| | Nader Shah - MASHHAD: IRAN's Holiest City - Capital of Nader Shah, Founder of Afshar Dynasty |
 | | A Sunni by upbringing, he was nevertheless a great benefactor of the Shrine of the Imam Reza in Mashhad, which he made his capital. |  | | Success in battle brought the bandit power enough to restore the shah and then depose him in favor of the shah's infant son. |  | | He was followed by his nephew 'Ali, who took the title of Adil Shah. |
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http://www.farsinet.com/mashhad/nader_shah.html
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| | Shah - definition of Shah in Encyclopedia |
 | | Shah (Persian: &;), from the Old Persian word khshathra "king", is the Persian term for a monarch and used by the former rulers of Persia (present-day Iran) as well as the rulers of the Persian Empire. |  | | The last Shah of Iran, Mohammed Reza Pahlavi officially adopted the title شاهنشاه Shâhanshâh "Emperor" (literally "King of Kings") during his coronation. |  | | Shah coincidently is also a common last name among people from India, especially the state of Gujarat and the city of Bombay. |
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http://encyclopedia.laborlawtalk.com/Shah
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| | Shah Abdul Latif [1689-1752] |
 | | Shah Abdul Latif, a great scholar, saint and spiritual poet, was born in Hala Haveli near the Khatiyan village of Hyderabad District, Sindh in 1689. |  | | It is said that the Shah's father, Syed Habib Shah, had migrated from Matyaru, his ancestral home in Afghanistan to Bhainpur in Sindh, in order to gain spiritual contact with Bilawal, a local pious man. |  | | His wife died at an early age, before she could have any children. |
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http://www.storyofpakistan.com/person.asp?perid=P063
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| | History of Iran: Reza Shah Pahlavi |
 | | In 1925 Reza Khan deposed Ahmad Mirza, the last shah of the Qajar Dynasty, and was proclaimed shah of Iran. |  | | By the mid 1930's Reza Shah's dictatorial style of rule caused dissatisfaction in Iran. |  | | She was a girl of Persian-speaking stock whose father had come to Iran from Erivan. |
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http://www.iranchamber.com/history/reza_shah/reza_shah.php
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| | Afghanland.com Afghanistan Ahmad Shah Baba Durrani |
 | | In October 1747 elected King (Shah) of Afghanistan by an assembly of Pashtun chiefs the new leader of the Afghans changed his title from khan (chief) to shah (king in Persian) and assumed the name Durrani (Pearl of Pearls). |  | | Ahmad Shah declared an Islamic holy war against the Marathas, and warriors from various Pashtun tribes, as well as other tribes such as the Baloch, answered his call. |  | | Ahmad Shah Baba Baba's vast realm soon broke apart. |
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http://www.afghanland.com/history/ahmadshah.html
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| | Amazon.com: The Caliph's House : A Year in Casablanca: Books: Tahir Shah |
 | | House of the Tiger King by Tahir Shah |  | | For instance, Shah ends up having to have the house exorcised for jinni (genies) and even having to take a second wife (it's not what you might think) to finish the project. |  | | With it, Shah finds that he has also acquired staff: three lugubrious and potentially sinister "guardians," who come "as if by some medieval right of sale." More medieval still, a vengeful she-jinn called Qandisha haunts the house, they say. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0553803999?v=glance
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| | Fath Ali Shah on Encyclopedia.com |
 | | FATH ALI SHAH [Fath Ali Shah], also spelled Feth Ali Shah, 1762-1834, shah of Persia (1797-1834), nephew and successor of Aga Muhammad Khan, founder of the Qajar dynasty. |  | | Mizra Fath Ali Akhundzade and the call for modernization of the Islamic world. |  | | Magazines and Newspapers for: Fath Ali Shah or search in Pictures and Maps for Fath Ali Shah |
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http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/F/FathA1liS1.asp
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| | Iran: Remembering The Shah, 25 Years Later |
 | | "The root of the shah's problem is that he was never able to establish his legitimacy as a nationalistic, patriotic leader of Iran. |  | | "Twenty-five years ago on the day when the shah, the last king of the country, left Iran, only a small number of people thought about the fact that 2500 years of monarchy or more were ending. |  | | But in 1979, the Shah left Iran and never returned. |
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http://www.payvand.com/news/04/jan/1116.html
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| | Daugherty Jimmy Carter and the 1979 Decision to Admit the Shah into the United States |
 | | Manifestly, the entry of the shah would no doubt unleash severe and potentially uncontrollable repercussions against these and other Americans in Iran. |  | | The shah also shared the Wests vision of a stable Middle East in which Iran would play the dominant role. |  | | He and his colleagues then spent 444 days as a hostages.Ed. |
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http://www.unc.edu/depts/diplomat/archives_roll/2003_01-03/dauherty_shah/dauherty_shah.html
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| | Features News The Rising Nepal (Daily) |
 | | The Mishras, the spiritual guardians of the Shahs, were also highly honoured. |  | | That is why the people found him as the saviour of the country where they had been living for a long time in perpetual internal squabbles. |  | | The Gorkhalis valiantly fought and drove out of the British from the fort of Sindhuli. |
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http://www.nepalnews.com.np/contents/englishdaily/trn/2001/jan/jan11/features.htm
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| | The 80s Server -- Icons: Mohammed Reza Shah Pahlavi |
 | | Mohammed Reza Pahlavi was the shah of Iran from 1941 to 1979, except for a brief period in 1953 when Prime Minister Muhammed Mosaddeq overthrew him. |  | | In 1979 the religious opposition, lead by Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, drove the shah into exile. |  | | He greatly modernized Iran and established social reforms, many of which angered fundamentalist religious leaders. |
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http://www.80s.com/Icons/Bios/mohammed_reza_shah_pahlavi.html
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| | Keyword |
 | | In a recent article entitled “A shah with a turban” written by Thomas L. Friedman and published over Christmas in the International Herald Tribune the author’s poor choice of words undermined what was a damning condemnation of the current president of the Islamic republic of Iran. |  | | As if a light were switched off, the Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlevi, portrayed for 20 years as a progressive modern ruler by Islamic standards, was suddenly, in 1977-1978, turned into this foaming at the mouth monster by the international left media. |  | | The majority of Iranians believe that almost everything wrong in their country is rooted in fault with the British, The Guardian reported Wednesday. |
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/keyword?k=shah
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| | Shah Jahan |
 | | Consequently, the reign of Shah Jahan is sometimes referred to as the "reign of marble.") |  | | Not content with the hand-me-down buildings in Akbar's Red Fort, he replaced them with resplendent palaces of pure white marble. |  | | In his structures, the Hindu and Islamic traditions are not simply mixed but synthesized in a resolved form |
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http://www.pbs.org/treasuresoftheworld/taj_mahal/tlevel_1/t7_reign.html
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| | Amazon.com: All the Shah's Men: An American Coup and the Roots of Middle East Terror: Books: Stephen Kinzer,Stephen ... |
 | | What made the landscape explosive was the resignation, in 1941, of Reza Shah, Iran's king, and the subsequent emergence of Mossadegh, and a person who rested much of his political fortune on the nationalization of the Anglo-Iranian Oil Corporation (in 1951). |  | | The book narrates the history of foreign involvement in Iran that culminated in the toppling of Mossadegh Mohammad and the re-coronation of Reza Shah as Iran's leader. |  | | Kinzer goes back centuries to choreograph the details of foreign involvement in Iranian politics, and pays particular attention to the last century and a half: in 1872, for example, Nasir al-Din Shah offered a most sweeping concession to Baron Julius de Reuter to, among others, exploit Iran's natural resources, a privilege revoked a year later. |
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http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0471265179?v=glance
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| | Muzaffar-ed-Din Shah - encyclopedia article about Muzaffar-ed-Din Shah. |
 | | Mohammad Ali Shah Qajar (Persian: &; (1872 - 1925) was the Shah of Persia from January 8 1907 to July 16 1909. |  | | It led to the establishment of a parliament in Persia (more commonly known today as Iran). |  | | Mozzafar-al-Din Shah (1853 – 1907) was the Shah of Persia between 1896 and 1907. |
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http://encyclopedia.thefreedictionary.com/Muzaffar-ed-Din+Shah
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| | BBC ON THIS DAY 16 1979: Shah of Iran flees into exile |
 | | Opposition to the Shah has become united behind the Muslim traditionalist movement led by Iran's main spiritual leader, Ayatollah Ruholla Khomeini, from exile in France. |  | | When, on 13 January, the Ayatollah declared a revolutionary Islamic council to replace what he called the "illegal government" of Iran, Dr Bahktiar persuaded the Shah it was time to leave. |  | | Simon Dring on the celebrations in Iran following the Shah's departure |
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http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/january/16/newsid_2530000/2530475.stm
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| | The Telegraph - Calcutta : Opinion |
 | | Shah’s advent underlined changes that were taking place in Bombay. |  | | As the intrepid lensman in Kundan Shahs Jaane Bhi Do Yaaron. |  | | Shah, who had grown up in Aligarh observing a visually handicapped uncle in his family, brought such nuances to the role that many consider it his all-time best. |
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http://www.telegraphindia.com/1050115/asp/opinion/story_4255699.asp
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| | Bahadur Shah Zafar [1775-1862] |
 | | He was the son of Akbar Shah from his Hindu wife Lalbai. |  | | Bahadur Shah, who had been proclaimed as an emperor of whole of India, was overthrown. |  | | Captain Hodson killed his sons and grandson and their severed heads were brought before him. |
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http://www.storyofpakistan.com/person.asp?perid=P076
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| | shah |
 | | Capitalize Shah of Iran in references to the holder of the title; lowercase subsequent references as the shah. |  | | Capitalize when used as a title before a name: Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi of Iran. |  | | The Shah of Iran commonly is known only by this title, which is, in effect, an alternate name. |
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http://www.stthomas.edu/jour/apstyle/shah.html
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| | Europe and the Middle East |
 | | The Shah's subsequent solidification of power led to an iron fisted rule enforced by fear and torture. |  | | But eventually the Shah was overthrown in 1978 by an indigenous people's revolution that held sway until fundamentalist religious leader Ayatollah Khomeini returned to Iran from exile and reasserted his power during the 1979 U.S. hostage crisis |  | | Thousands who refused to yield were imprisoned or murdered. |
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http://home.iprimus.com.au/korob/fdtcards/EurMEast.html
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| | Nadir Shah |
 | | His son, exiled in 1973, is 87-year-old King Moh |  | | ], 1688–1747, shah of Iran (1736–47), sometimes considered the last of the great Asian conquerors. |  | | Nader Shah - Nader Shah: see Nadir Shah. |
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http://www.infoplease.com/ce6/people/A0834704.html
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| | Manas: History and Politics, Shah Jahan |
 | | Aurangzeb captured Shah Jahan on 8 June 1658, and had him jailed at the Agra Fort, from where the old emperor could look wistfully at the glorious Taj. |  | | Jahangir, and it has been argued that some Hindu temples were destroyed in his reign. |  | | His traditional biographers have suggested that his military campaigns were organized with diligence, and judging from the hospitals and rest houses built in his reign, he appears not to have been devoid of a social conscience. |
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http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/southasia/History/Mughals/Shahjahan.html
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| | The Mughals: Shah Jehan |
 | | Grief-stricken, Shah Jehan decided to built the Taj Mahal as a tribute and final resting place for her. |  | | Shah Jehan was imprisoned in the Octagonal Tower of the Agra Fort (a beautiful addition to the fort that he himself had constructed) and would remain there until his death, eight years later, in 1666. |  | | The most enduring of Shah Jehan's creations were his massive construction projects. |
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http://www.edwebproject.org/india/shahjehan.html
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| | Ahmed Shah Massoud Tale @ LaunchBase.net (Launch Base) |
 | | Some might say that Ahmad Shah Massoud lives on as only genuine heroes do. |  | | Many documentaries, books and movies have been made about Ahmad Shah Massoud. |  | | In 2001, the Afghan Interim Government under president Karzai awarded him the title of “Hero of the Afghan Nation.” But many people oppose it saying Massoud can't be hero because of his role in the war crimes. |
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http://www.launchbase.net/encyclopedia/Ahmed_Shah_Massoud
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| | Homeopathy and Dr.Rajesh Shah |
 | | Dr Shah explained a few aspects that I was not clear about |  | | He is redefining classical homoeopathy; making it more structured, scientific, result-oriented and practicable by other practitioners. |  | | Dr Shah was very willing to share his knowledge and experience with us and answered all our questions patiently and made sure that no one felt uncertain about any issues. |
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http://www.rajeshshah.com
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| | 'Shah Rukh kneeled in front of me' |
 | | Tushna Master: One day, I went to Famous Studios, Mahalaxmi, (in Mumbai) with my uncle and aunt, to see the shooting of a Pepsi commercial starring Shah Rukh Khan. |  | | We went, and I saw Shah Rukh with his son Aryan. |  | | Like all his other fans, it was also my dream to see Shah Rukh in person. |
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http://www.rediff.com/movies/2005/nov/03srk.htm?q=mbp&file=.htm
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| | Malaysia - Shah Alam |
 | | Alor Setar l Ipoh l Johor Bahru l Kota Bharu l Kuala Lumpur l Shah Alam |  | | Shah Alam, Selangor's state capital, is a modern township surrounded at its periphery by Kuala Lumpur, Petaling Jaya, and five other major townships including Klang, Bangi, and Kajang. |  | | For relaxation, head for the Shah Alam Lake Gardens. |
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http://www.marimari.com/content/malaysia/popular_places/cities/shah_alam/shahalam.html
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| | THE IRANIAN: Ahmad Shah, Manoutchehr Eskandari-Qajar |
 | | In all this, Soltan Ahmad Shah distinguishes himself from his two successors admirably and it is for this reason that I have cited these examples as worthy of consideration and admiration as the actions of an honorable man who wished to be the king of a prospering nation, but not at any price. |  | | In both cases, Soltan Ahmad Shah refused because the price of accepting was too high for a man who was the legitimate constitutional monarch of his country who had lived his life as a staunch believer in the rule of law, not of force. |  | | That is why I say we should feel great sadness for not having recognized what we had in the person of this exceptional man. And that is also why I bemoan the facile and cavalier manner in which this man and his memory is treated by people who should and do know better. |
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http://www.iranian.com/EskandariQajar/2003/October/Ahmad
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| | SHAH - LoveToKnow Article on SHAH |
 | | Being proclaimed a rebel by his father, he fled to Shuja-ud-Dowlah, wazir of Oudh, and on the death of his father ~fl 1759 assumed the name of Shah Alam. |  | | He joined Shuja-ud-Dowlah against the British, but after his defeat at the battle of Buxar, he sought British protection. |  | | Sindhia restored him to the throne, and after the Mahratta war of 1803 he was again taken under British protection. |
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http://80.1911encyclopedia.org/S/SH/SHAH.htm
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| | Idries Shah |
 | | Shah has been described as "the most significant worker adapting classical spiritual thought to the modern world." Shah's lively, contemporary books have sold over 15 million copies in 12 languages worldwide. |  | | The instrumental function of Shah's work is now well established among people from all walks of life. |  | | As the urgency of our global situation becomes apparent, more and more readers are turning to the books of Afghan writer Idries Shah (1924-1996) as a way to train new capacities and new ways of thinking. |
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http://www.sufis.org/shah.html
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| | Savak/Savama, the symbol of censorship and torture in Iran |
 | | The Chief of Savak, General Nematollah Nassiri, who was imprisoned by the Shah and executed by the people after the 1979 Revolution |  | | The Shah's brutal secret police force, Savak, formed under the guidance of CIA (the United States Central Intelligence Agency) in 1957 and personnel trained by Mossad (Israel's secret service), to directly control all facets of political life in Iran. |  | | Its main task was to suppress opposition to the Shah's government and keep the people's political and social knowledge as minimal as possible. |
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http://www.angelfire.com/home/iran/savak.html
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| | Ask Dr.Shah: Your homeopathic medical advisor |
 | | Dr Shah has made it simple for any one to avail the homeopathic treatment, from any where on the earth. |  | | Here is a place to ask your question and also get treated by Dr Rajesh Shah, M.D.(Hom.), who is a pioneer of modern homeopathy, who treats patients from over 118 countries. |  | | If you get started now, you receive medicines door-delivered within 12 working days in most parts of the world. |
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http://www.askdrshah.com
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| | Shahrukh Khan |
 | | Kal Ho Naa Ho (2003) (as Shah Rukh Khan).... |  | | Dil Aashna Hai (1992) (as Shah Rukh Khan).... |  | | Shahrukh Khan was born on 12th november 1965. |
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http://www.imdb.com/name/nm0451321
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| | Open Directory - Regional: Asia: Afghanistan: Society and Culture: Politics: Politicians: Massoud, Ahmed Shah |
 | | Telegraph: Massoud had aura and assurance that set him apart - Sandy Gall recalls his meetings with Massoud starting in 1982 during the Russian bombings, and the General's history as leader of the resistance movement which became the United Front. |  | | Ahmad Shah Massoud (01.09.1953 - 09.09.2001) - Extensive biography of the hero of Afghanistan who fought the Soviets and the Taliban. |  | | BBC News: Analysis: Masood's regional allies - With Massood out of the picture, officials from Iran, Russia, Tajikistan, India and Uzbekistan hold an emergency meeting to address the spread of the Taleban's brand of Islamic militancy throughout the region, supported by Pakistan. |
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http://dmoz.org/Regional/Asia/Afghanistan/Society_and_Culture/Politics/Politicians/Massoud,_Ahmed_Shah
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| | Manas: Culture, Indian Cinema- Naseeruddin Shah |
 | | With his wife Ratna Pathak, Naseeruddin Shah continues to act regularly in plays, often at Shashi Kapoor's Prithvi Theatre. |  | | The film is set in a Catholic setting, primarily because Mirza did not have the courage to tackle Muslim issues. |  | | ike many of the other actors of his genre, Naseeruddin Shah was first noticed by Shyam Benegal. |
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http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/southasia/Culture/Cinema/Naseer.html
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| | Shah Rukh Khan - Actor - ( shahrukh ) |
 | | (Shah Rukh Khan, Preity Zinta, Saif Ali Khan) |  | | He will explore other avenues in films even if he ceases to be a superstar. |  | | Shah Rukh Khan Fan Club - Message Board |
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http://www.apunkachoice.com/people/act8
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| | clubbersguideto_shah's Xanga Site |
 | | i doubt i'd give shit about ppl around me, i won't be 'nice shah' or whatever. |
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http://www.xanga.com/home.aspx?user=clubbersguideto_shah
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