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  1. Anis Al Dawla (in persiano أنيس الدولة ‎; ʿAmāma, 1842? – Teheran , 1896 / 7 ), nata Fāṭema Solṭān e nota anche come Anisodole , [2] è stata la consorte reale più importante dello Scià di Persia Nāṣer Al Dīn (1831– 1896), del quale si calcolava un harem di oltre 80 donne nel 1896.

  2. Anis al-Dawla (Persian: انیس‌الدوله) (died 1896) was a royal consort of shah Naser al-Din Shah Qajar of Persia (r. 1848–1896). [1] Life. She was the daughter of an impoverished shepherd from Amamme village in Lavāsān, northeast of Tehran, and was employed as a free maidservant to Jeyrān in the Qajar harem in 1859.

  3. 28 ago 2018 · Have you ever seen a princess with a moustache? Meet princess Qajar, the symbol of beauty in Persia. 13 men commited suicide because she rejected them.

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  4. 15 dic 1985 · ANĪS-AL-DAWLA (d. 1314/1896-97), the most important wife of Nāṣer-al-dīn Shah Qāǰār. Named Fāṭema-solṭān at birth (probably 1258/1842; C. Serena, Hommes et choses en Perse , Paris, 1883, p. 187), she was the daughter of an impoverished peasant from a village in Lavāsān, northeast of Tehran.

  5. In a personal portrait of his wife titled Anis al-Dawla, the sultan masterminded a sexually charged composition through subtle sleights of hand. Reclining with her elaborate blouse slightly open, his subject exudes indifference through her deadpan expression, seemingly devoid of life.

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  6. 5 gen 2016 · Anis al-Dawla, a wife of the shah, and her retinue, circa 1870-1880 Sartorial whimsy was bad enough, but the effects of the royal despotism were felt more painfully in his preferred parlour game, “lights out”—a veritable fusion of Breaking Bad and the Mad Hatter’s tea party.

  7. Anis al-Daula, Siamak Filizadeh (Iran, born 1970), 2014, Photographs, Inkjet print, This intriguing composition was inspired by two photographs Nasir al-Din Shah made of his wife, Anis al-Dawla: in one, she reclines on a settee, and in the other, she holds a European doll.