Forsat-od-Dowleh Shirazi | |
Birth Date: | November 1854 |
Birth Name: | Mirza Mohammad Naser-Hosseini |
Birth Place: | Shiraz, Fars Province, Qajar Iran |
Death Date: | 23 October 1920 |
Death Place: | Shiraz, Fars Province, Qajar Iran |
Resting Place: | near the Tomb of Hafez |
Occupation: | poet, scholar, artist |
Language: | Persian, Arabic |
Nationality: | Persian |
Period: | 1880s - 1910s |
Mirza Mohammad Nasir-al-Hosseini (b. November 1854 – d. 23 October 1920; Persian: میرزا محمد نصیرالحسینی), better known by his pen name Forsat-od-Dowleh (Persian: فرصتالدوله), and more commonly Forsat-e Shirazi (Persian: فرصت شیرازی), was a poet, scholar, and artist in Qajar Iran.
Forsat-od-Dowleh was born in Shiraz, Fars province. He started his education when he was six years old, and by the time he reached the age of eleven, he excelled in Persian and was proficient in Arabic as well as the "elementary sciences".
Forsat-od-Dowleh acted as an "intermediary and peacemaker" during clashes between factions in Shiraz on two occasions; one of them in 1910 between the Qashqai and the Khamseh, and once in 1916, when the German consulate in Shiraz was presumed to be the "instigator of the unrest".
Forsat-od-Dowleh died in 1920 at his home in Shiraz of a chronic illness his stomach and kidney function. He was buried near the tomb of Hafez.
He was skilled in Persian and Arabic literature.[1] He founded The Fars newspaper in 1913.
Forsat od-Dowleh was among the first contemporary Iranian scholars with serious interest in the language and history of ancient Iran. He learned the basics of cuneiform script from two Europeans at Shiraz and continued his linguistic study with the German linguist Oscar Mann and eventually wrote the Naḥw-o ṣarf-e khaṭṭ-e Āryā (Persian: نحو و صرف خط آریا) on the Old Persian cuneiform.
His other works include: