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Aga Khan
(redirected from The Aga Khan)

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Aga Khan (ä`gä khän), the title of the religious leader and imam of the Ismaili Ismailis , Muslim Shiite sect that holds Ismail, the son of Jafar as-Sadiq, as its imam. On the death of the sixth imam of the Shiites, Jafar as-Sadiq (d. 765), the majority of Shiites accepted Musa al-Kazim, the younger son of Jafar, as seventh imam.
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 Nizari sect of Islam, originally bestowed by the Persian shah Fath Ali 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. Most of his reign was spent in internal and external warfare.
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 on Hasan Ali Shah, 1800–1881, the 46th Ismaili imam, in 1818. The first Aga Khan was also appointed as the governor of the province of Kirman, a position he lost as a result of political intrigues following Fath Ali's death. In 1839, he moved to India, where he aided the British during the first Anglo-Afghan war (1839–42) and in the conquest of Sind (1842–43). He was succeeded by his eldest son Ali Shah,

Aga Khan II, who died in 1885. In turn, his son, Sultan Muhammad, 1877–1957, assumed the title of

Aga Khan III, and played an instrumental role in attempting to secure Muslim support for the British rule of India. A founder of the All-India Muslim League (later the Muslim League Muslim League, political organization of India and Pakistan, founded 1906 as the All-India Muslim League by Aga Khan III. Its original purpose was to safeguard the political rights of Muslims in India.
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), he served as its president in 1909–14. His international visibility increased when he served as the chairman of the British Indian delegation to the imperial conference in London in 1930–31. He also represented India at the Geneva disarmament conference (1932) and in the League of Nations (1932, 1934–37), where he was president of the General Assembly (1937). Later he played a significant role in the movement to establish the Muslim state of Pakistan. He was succeeded by his grandson, Prince Karim, 1937–, who as

Aga Khan IV has devoted substantial Ismaili wealth to development projects in countries with a significant Ismaili population. He also has instituted (1977) a noted series of awards for Islamic architecture. His uncle, Prince

Sadruddin Aga Khan, 1933–2003, was UN High Commissioner for Refugees (1965–77) and was active in other international humanitarian causes.

Bibliography

See The Collected Works of Aga Khan III (1991); W. Frischauer, The Aga Khans (1970).


Aga Khan

 Persian Agha Khan or Aqa Khan

Title of the imams of the Nizari Isma'ili sect of Shi'ite Islam. The title was first granted in 1818 to Hasan 'Ali Shah (1800–81) by the shah of Iran. As Aga Khan I, he later revolted against Iran (1838) and, defeated, fled to India. His eldest son, 'Ali Shah (d. 1885), was briefly Aga Khan II. 'Ali Shah's son Sultan Sir Mohammed Shah (1877–1957) became Aga Khan III. He acquired a leading position among India's Muslims, served as president of the All-India Muslim League, and played an important part in the Round Table conferences on Indian constitutional reform (1930–32); in 1937 he was appointed president of the League of Nations. He chose as his successor his grandson Karim al-Husayn Shah (b. 1937), who, as Aga Khan IV, became a strong leader; he founded the Aga Khan Foundation, an international philanthropic organization, and other agencies offering educational and other services.



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KARCHI, November 17, 2009 (Balochistan Times): The Karachi Electric Supply Company and the Aga Khan University signed an agreement here on Tuesday for establishment of a new 132-KV shared grid station, a joint venture between the two organizations, a statement said.
The Aga Khan inherited Gilltown and Sallymount, along with four other Irish farms, as part of a bloodstock portfolio following the death of his father Prince Aly Khan in 1960.
Kyrgyz architects will present their projects for the Aga Khan Award for Architecture 2010 at the Aga Khan Award for Architecture Regional Seminar organized in collaboration with the Kyrgyz Union of Architects on October 23-24, 2009.
 
 
 
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