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Iranian prince Dr. Eskandari teaches political science but separates his royal lineage from the classroom

Kenny Lindberg

Issue date: 3/26/08 Section: Features
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Political science professor Manoutcher Eskandari points out his royal lineage. Eskandari is descendant from the Iranian Qajar Royal Family.
Media Credit: Anna Gauthier
Political science professor Manoutcher Eskandari points out his royal lineage. Eskandari is descendant from the Iranian Qajar Royal Family.


An Iranian prince calmly walks to his political science class, the same class he's taught for the past 16 years. He can almost taste the freedom that is America. Here, he's far removed from his politically ravaged homeland of Iran. He embraces the sun by watching the waves hit the shoreline from West Campus.

He passes by numerous students. Some greet him. Some don't. He loves Santa Barbara, his home for nearly 30 years. He loves his family and his job. He's known on campus as Dr. Eskandari, but is known throughout the world as Prince Manoutchehr Mirza Eskandari-Qajar of the former Iranian Royal Family.

"I am a prince, I just don't emphasize it," said Eskandari. "Not because of false humility, it's just that the age of princes has come and gone."

Eskandari is a descendant of Fath Ali Shah, a Kadjar king who ruled for over 35 years.

Kadjar is the English form of Qajar, part of Eskandari's last name.

Iran was led by the Kadjar Dynasty for over 130 years before being overthrown by a military coup led by Reza Shah Pahlavi in 1925.

Pahlavi forced many members of the Kadjar family into exile. As a result, Eskandari was born in Vienna, Austria. He was however raised in both Austria and Iran after his father moved back to Iran in the 1950s.

"My grandfather was assassinated by the new king," Eskandari said. "As the governor of one of the northern providences he stayed and paid for it with his life."

Eskandari recalls the hardships his family had to endure as a result of his family thrown into exile.

"We were reduced to absolute poverty," Eskandari said. "The new regime tried to starve us."

The mass scattering of the Kadjar relatives would continue into the early 1980s, following the Iranian Revolution.

"I never thought I'd come to this country," said Eskandari. "That's one of the effects of the revolution."

Eskandari arrived in America in 1980 on the prestigious Fulbright Scholarship. His original intention was to study for two years and then work as a diplomat for the United Nations in Vienna.

"I came to this country because of the scholarship and then I decided to stay," said Eskandari. "I looked around, and it was beautiful; who wouldn't want to stay in Santa Barbara?"

Eskandari earned his Ph. D. from UCSB in 1984, and would stay there as a professor. In 1991, he was elected Professor of the Year by the UCSB student body, and in 1992 he became a full-time professor at City College.

"Because of the pedigree of his family, I think it has driven him intellectually," said Patrick Coombs, Eskandari's teacher's assistant.

In 2000, Eskandari reconstructed the Kadjar Family Association, which serves as a gathering place for the royal family. They meet once a year, and have no political agenda.

"We made that decision from the very beginning," said Eskandari. "That would be the kiss of death."

Eskandari is also the founder and current President of the International Qajar Studies Association. Their purpose is to publish papers and to have conferences.

"I have no life," a smiling Eskandari said. "I teach and I do this and I do that."

At City College, he established the Middle East Studies Program, which teaches the younger generation to see the Middle East in a different light. Iran has recently been under constant scrutiny by the west for failure to end their nuclear program.

"This talk about invading Iran, and smashing Iran, and bombing Iran is extremely disturbing because this is an ancient culture with an ancient civilization that has so much to offer," said Eskandari.

Despite his various accomplishments and his heritage, Eskandari prefers to stay in the background, noting that he doesn't want the spotlight to be on him.

"Our relationship is not based on his family history," said Coombs. "I've known this for a while, but it isn't anything we talk about."
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Viewing Comments 1 - 10 of 25

Abol Hassan Danesh

posted 3/27/08 @ 8:04 AM PST

Without exception all iranians are the decendant of Cyrus the Great and that makes them all to have royal blood running in their veins--

Trace...tracing. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

Mani Atabaki

posted 3/27/08 @ 8:37 AM PST

Mr. Eskandari is one of literally tens of thousands of Qajar Princes and Princesses in and outside of Iran. The Qajars were famed for having tens of wives at a time (often as young as 9 yrs old) and having 20, 50, or 100 children from thier many wives. (Continued…)

Oolong

posted 3/27/08 @ 10:21 AM PST

It takes special talent to be THE WORST dynasty EVER in a 2500 monarchy. The Qajars (kajars) were self-serving, backward, religious zealots who sold or gave half the county away out of shear incompetence or for personal gain. (Continued…)

BAHRAMERAD

posted 3/27/08 @ 10:09 PM PST

"Iran was led by the Kadjar Dynasty for over 130 years before being overthrown
by a military coup led by Reza Shah Pahlavi in 1925." THIS IS AN ABSOLUTE AND UTTER -OUTRIGHT LIE - PLEASE REMOVE THIS AND DESSIST IN SAYING IT AGAIN-

Mehran Khoram

posted 3/28/08 @ 11:34 AM PST

I'm affraid this is not a great find. Ghajar "Princes" and "Princese" are a dime a dozen. The main contribution of this dynesty was marrying multiple under-aged girls and fathering ennumerable children generation after generation. (Continued…)

Manoutchehr Eskandari-Qajar

posted 3/29/08 @ 2:40 PM PST

Long ago I made a promise to myself not to engage in polemics, but given that this article about me was published in our school journal, my silence regarding the comments made on this page might be interpreted as acquiescence. (Continued…)

Bahramerad

posted 3/29/08 @ 3:22 PM PST

Mr.Eskandari
I have accused you of lying and telling outright falsehood when you say that in 1924, Reza Shah the Great came to power after a cod de tat-
From 1906 for 18 long years -- as a de-facto head of the army and having all the power necessary for taking power by force --and having every opportunity to do so - he did not do that. (Continued…)

(2 replies)   Details   Reply to this comment

Former Student

posted 3/30/08 @ 11:29 PM PST

I don't think any dynasty or government has ever ruled, perfectly. Qajars & Pahlavi's included. Every government experiences some "time of amnesia." Something America, may be experiencing now. (Continued…)

Bahramerad

posted 3/31/08 @ 1:57 AM PST

I am not an academician and do not claim that I have studied or know all that has ever been printed or researched into this subject but the following is what I regard to more near the truth of the events leading to the replacement of the Qajar dynasty with the pahlavi dynasty. (Continued…)

theellipsis

Former Student

posted 3/31/08 @ 8:27 AM PST

Bam-a-ram-Bam-Bam

I don't know how good it is to quote Wikipedia, but its much better than attacking the Just Professor in such a personal way.

Thanks for the courtesy of replying with information, not innuendo. (Continued…)

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