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[reference]
Aga Khan I
born 1800
died April 1881
personal name Hasan 'ali Shah
imam, or spiritual leader, of the Nizari Isma'ilite sect of the
Shi'ite Muslims. He claimed to be directly descended from 'Ali,
the son-in-law of the Prophet Muhammad, and 'Ali's wife Fatimah,
Muhammad's daughter, and also from the Fatimid caliphs of Egypt.
He was the governor of the Iranian province of Kerman and was high
in the favour of Fath 'Ali Shah. The title Aga Khan (chief commander)
was granted him in 1818 by the shah of Iran. Under Mohammad Shah,
however, he felt his family honour slighted and rose in revolt in
1838 but was defeated and fled to India. He helped the British in
the first Anglo-Afghan War (1839?42) and in the conquest of Sindh
(1842?43) and was granted a pension. After he had settled in Bombay,
he encountered some opposition from a minority of his followers,
who contested the extent of his spiritual authority and in a lawsuit
challenged his control over the community's funds, but he won his
case (1866).
Aga Khan II
died August 1885, Poona, India
personal name 'ali Shah
eldest son of the Aga Khan I. In 1881 he succeeded his father as
imam, or spiritual leader, of the Nizari Isma'ilite sect of Shi'ite
Muslims, and, during his short imamate, sought to improve the conditions
of the community.
Aga Khan III
personal name Sultan Sir Mohammed Shah born Nov. 2, 1877, Karachi,
India [now in Pakistan]
died July 11, 1957, Versoix, Switz.
only son of the Aga Khan II. He succeeded his father as imam of
the Nizari Isma'ilite sect in 1885.
Under the care of his mother, a daughter of the ruling house of
Iran, he was given an education not only Islamic and Oriental but
also Western. In addition to attending diligently to the affairs
of his own community, he rapidly acquired a leading position among
India's Muslims as a whole. In 1906 he headed the Muslim deputation
to the viceroy, Lord Minto, to promote the interests of the Muslim
minority in India. The Morley-Minto reforms of 1909 consequently
provided for separate Muslim electorates. He served as president
of the All-India Muslim League during its early years and initiated
the fund for raising the Muslim college at Aligarh to university
status, which was effected in 1920.
When World War I broke out, the Aga Khan supported the Allied cause,
but at the subsequent peace conference he urged that Turkey should
be leniently treated. He played an important part in the Round Table
conferences on Indian constitutional reform in London (1930?32).
He also represented India at the World Disarmament Conference in
Geneva in 1932 and at the League of Nations Assembly in 1932 and
from 1934 to 1937. He was appointed president of the League in 1937.
During World War II he lived in Switzerland and withdrew from political
activity.
The Aga Khan was also well-known as a successful owner and breeder
of Thoroughbred racehorses.
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