Question:

Royalty ( I Know, I'm obsessed with them)?

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Does anyone think that Iran's current 'regime'?

How long do you think it'll take for that to happen?

And will it be possible for the royal family of Persia (Iran) to be reinstated to their post as a constitutional monarchy?

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4 ANSWERS


  1. Iran is going to blow us all up, so the Royals are well out of the way believe me.   They will neve be reinstated and would run a continent to escape.


  2. When I was in college in the early 1970s, I remember an Iranian friend's dorm room, whiich featured a picture of the Royal Family hanging on the wall, so I can understand your great pride in Iran's past and your obsession with the Iranian Monarchy.  

    Reza Pahlavi succeeded his father, the late Shah of Iran, as the head of the House of Pahlavi and is styled by his supporters as His Imperial Majesty Reza Shah II.  However, the heir to the Peacock throne has not returned to Iran since the Revolution of 1979 sent the Royal Family into exile.  

    The Crown Prince graduated from the University of Southern California with a degree in Political Science and lives in Maryland with his wife and three daughters.  He campaigns for human rights, democracy, and Iranian unity both inside and outside of Iran. The Iranian people themselves, however, will need to decide whether or not to establish a constitutional monarchy by democratic, non-violent elections.  Unfortunately, the autocratic late Shah didn't lay the groundwork for a government in which the Shah would reign but not rule.

    Since the Muslim world in general is leaning towards fundamentalism and Sharia law, which allows for absolutely no separation between Church and State, the odds are against a westernized prince regaining the throne. However, similar events have happened in history.  For example, Charles II regained the English throne in 1660 after the English Interregnum--a ten year period when England was a theocracy.

  3. You don't express yourself very well so I cannot help you.

  4. The likelihood of the pahlavs ever getting the Peacock throne back are slim to none. It's not like they really were a royal dynasty anyway, as the late shah never was regarded as legitimate in his own country, and his father, who had taken power by coup in 1921, only held onto it by ruthlessly crushing any opposition. Basically, the pahlavis had as much dynastic legitimacy as the Duvaliers in Haiti or the Kims in Korea...

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