born 1861, Mohammerah, Qajar Iran died May 25, 1936, Tehran Arab sheikh (ruler) of the city of Mohammerah (now Khorramshahr) who attempted to create an independent state in the oil-rich Iranian region of Khuzestan. Khaz'al was instrumental in having his brother, Sheikh Miz'al, assassinated in June 1897. He then became the ruler of Mohammerah and the paramount chief of the Arab tribes of Khuzestan. Though nominally owing allegiance to the central government in Tehran, the Arab sheikhdom of Mohammerah, which differed culturally and ethnically from the rest of Iran, enjoyed virtual autonomy in its internal affairs. Khaz'al's only major tie to the central government was the annual payment of nominal taxes. Sheikh Khaz'al believed that the Iranian state would eventually disintegrate and that its dominions would be partitioned. He hoped to establish an independent Arab state in Khuzestan. From 1898 onward he made diplomatic overtures to the British government, which had important strategic and commercial interests in the area. He promised to maintain public security in the area in return for British support of his autonomy and the implicit agreement that he would become an independent ruler if the central government should disintegrate. The discovery of oil in Khuzestan in 1908 by a British-owned company (of which the British government became a 51 percent stockholder in 1914) strengthened Khaz'al's ties with the British, who in 1910 knighted him and awarded him the important decoration of Knight Commander of the Indian Empire. With the outbreak of World War I (191418), he actively supported the British government, while the Iranian government remained neutral. Khaz'al's power reached its zenith in 1919. In 1921, however, when the British failed to establish a protectorate over Iran, Khaz'al's position was weakened. He opposed the centralizing policies of Reza Khan (later Reza Shah Pahlavi, who became king of Iran in 1925), and he actively resisted the central government. Khaz'al's forces were defeated in October 1924, and in early 1925 he was arrested and exiled to Tehran, where he died under house arrest. With his removal from the area, Khuzistan lost its autonomy within the kingdom of Iran.
KHAZ'AL KHAN
Meaning of KHAZ'AL KHAN in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012