Fawzia of Egypt

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Template:Short description Template:Other uses Template:Use dmy dates Template:Infobox royalty Template:Contains special characters Fawzia of Egypt (Template:Langx; 5 November 1921 – 2 July 2013), also known as Fawzia Pahlavi or Fawzia Chirine, was an Egyptian princess who became Queen of Iran as the first wife of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, Shah of Iran. Fawzia was the daughter of Fuad I, seventh son of Ismail the Magnificent. Her marriage to the Iranian Crown Prince in 1939 was a political deal: it consolidated Egyptian power and influence in the Middle East, while bringing respectability to the Egyptian regime by association with the much more prestigious Iranian royal house. Fawzia obtained an Egyptian divorce in 1948, under which their one daughter Princess Shahnaz would be brought up in Iran. Fawzia, who was known as the "sad queen" in the press, lived in isolation and silence after the 1952 Egyptian revolution and never published her memories of the court of Iran and Egypt.

In 1949, Fawzia married Colonel Ismail Chirine, an Egyptian diplomat, with whom she had a son and a daughter.

Early life and education

Princess Fawzia was born Her Sultanic Highness Princess Fawzia bint Fuad at Ras el-Tin Palace, Alexandria, the eldest daughter of Sultan Fuad I of Egypt and Sudan (later King Fuad I), and his second wife, Nazli Sabri on 5 November 1921.<ref name=tel5july/> Princess Fawzia was of Albanian and Circassian descent from her father's side, and French and Egyptian descent from her mother.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref name="Rosten">Template:Citation</ref><ref name="samir">Template:Cite web</ref> Her mother's maternal grandfather was Major General Mohamed Sherif Pasha, prime minister and minister of foreign affairs, who was of Turkish-Circassian origin.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> She was the great-great-granddaughter of Muhammad Ali of Egypt as well as the great-granddaughter of the French-born officer Suleiman Pasha.<ref name="mei2013">Template:Cite web</ref> Suleiman Pasha served under Napoleon, converted to Islam, and oversaw an overhaul of the Egyptian army under her great-great-grandfather Muhammad Ali Pasha the Great.

In addition to her sisters, Faiza, Faika and Fathia, and her brother, Farouk,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> she had two half-siblings, Fawkia and Ismail, from her father's previous marriage to Princess Shwikar Khanum Effendi. Princess Fawzia was fluent in English and French in addition to her native Arabic.<ref name=mer39>Template:Cite news</ref>

Her beauty was often compared to that of film stars Hedy Lamarr and Vivien Leigh.<ref>Template:Cite news</ref>

Marriage

The marriage of Princess Fawzia to Iran's Crown Prince Mohammad Reza Pahlavi was planned by the latter's father, Rezā Shāh.<ref name=Amin2002>Template:Cite book</ref> A declassified CIA report in May 1972 described the union as a political move.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> The marriage was also significant in that it united a Sunni royal, the princess, and a Shia royal, the crown prince.<ref name=mdjournal39/> The Pahlavis were a parvenu house as Reza Khan, the son of a peasant who entered the Iranian Army as a private, rising up to become a general, had seized power in a 1921 coup. He was most anxious to have the House of Pahlavi married to the House of Muhammad Ali, which had reigned over Egypt since 1805.<ref>Miliani, Abbas The Shah, London: Macmillan 2011 pp. 62–63.</ref>

The Egyptians were not impressed with the gifts sent by Reza Shah to King Farouk to persuade him to marry his sister to the prince Mohammad Reza. When an Iranian delegation arrived in Cairo to arrange the marriage, the Egyptians took the Iranians on a tour of the palaces built by Isma'il Pasha, known as "Isma'il the Magnificent", to show them proper royal splendor.<ref name="Miliani, Abbas p. 63">Miliani, Abbas The Shah, London: Macmillan 2011 p. 63.</ref> King Farouk was not initially interested in marrying off his sister to the Crown Prince of Iran, but Aly Maher Pasha, the king's favorite political adviser, persuaded him that a marriage alliance with Iran would improve Egypt's position within the Islamic world and against Britain.<ref>Stadiem, William Too Rich, New York: Harper Collins, 1991 pp. 170–171.</ref> At the same time, Maher Pasha was working on plans to marry off Farouk's other sisters to King Faisal II of Iraq and to the son of Emir Abdullah of Jordan, intending to forge an Egyptian-dominated bloc in the Middle East.<ref name="Stadiem, William p. 171">Stadiem, William Too Rich, New York: Harper Collins, 1991 p. 171.</ref> To prepare for life in Iran, Fawzia was assigned a tutor to teach her Persian.<ref name="Miliani, Abbas p. 63"/>  

Fawzia and Pahlavi were engaged in May 1938.<ref name="lpost">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="rizk2006">Template:Cite journal</ref> However, they saw each other only once before their wedding.<ref name="lpost1980">Template:Cite news</ref> They married at the Abdeen Palace in Cairo on 15 March 1939.<ref name="mdjournal39">Template:Cite news</ref><ref name="rym8july">Template:Cite news</ref> King Farouk took the couple on a tour of Egypt, showing them the pyramids, Al-Azhar University, and other famous sites.<ref name="Miliani, Abbas p. 64">Miliani, Abbas The Shah, London: Macmillan 2011 p. 64.</ref> The contrast between the Crown Prince Mohammad Reza, dressed in the simple uniform of an Iranian officer, and the lavish opulence of the Egyptian court typified by the famously free-spending Farouk in his expensive suits, was much remarked upon at the time.<ref name="Miliani, Abbas p. 64"/> After the wedding, King Farouk had a twenty-course meal to celebrate the nuptials at the Abdeen Palace.<ref name="Stadiem, William p. 176">Stadiem, William Too Rich, New York: Harper Collins, 1991 p. 176.</ref> At the time Prince Mohammad Reza lived in awe of his overbearing father, Reza Shah, and was dominated by Farouk, who was considerably more self-confident.<ref name="Stadiem, William p. 176"/> Afterwards, Fawzia departed for Iran together with her mother, Queen Nazli, on a train trip that saw the electricity break down several times, causing the two women to feel like they were going on a camping trip.<ref name="Stadiem, William p. 177">Stadiem, William Too Rich, New York: Harper Collins, 1991 p. 177.</ref>  

When they returned to Iran the wedding ceremony was repeated at the Marble Palace, Tehran, which was also their future residence.<ref name=mer39/><ref name="lpost1980"/> As Mohammad Reza spoke no Turkish (one of the languages of the Egyptian elite, the other being French) and Fawzia was described as being only "competent" in Persian, the two talked to each other in French, in which both were fluent.<ref name="Miliani, Abbas p. 63"/> Upon arriving in Tehran, Reza Shah had the main streets of Tehran decorated with banners and arches, and had a celebration at the Amjadieh stadium attended by 25,000 of the Iranian elite with synchronized acrobatics by students being followed by bastani (Iranian calisthenics), fencing, and football.<ref>Miliani, Abbas The Shah, London: Macmillan 2011 pp. 64–65.</ref> The wedding dinner was a French-style dinner with "caviar from the Caspian Sea", "Consommé Royal", fish, fowl and lamb.<ref>Miliani, Abbas The Shah, London: Macmillan 2011 p. 65.</ref> Fawzia disliked Reza Khan, whom she described as a violent and thuggish man prone to attacking people with either his whip or riding crop.<ref name="Stadiem, William p. 171"/> In contrast to the French food she had grown up with in Egypt, Fawzia found the food at the Iranian court sub-par.<ref name="Stadiem, William p. 177"/> In the same way, Fawzia found that the palaces of Iran could not be compared to the palaces that she had grown up in Egypt.<ref name="Miliani, Abbas p. 64"/>

Queen of Iran

Following the marriage, the Princess was granted Iranian nationality.<ref>Template:Cite book Template:ISBN</ref> Two years later the crown prince succeeded his exiled father and was to become the Shah of Iran. Soon after her husband's ascent to the throne, Queen Fawzia appeared on the cover of the 21 September 1942, issue of Life magazine, photographed by Cecil Beaton, who described her as an "Asian Venus" with "a perfect heart-shaped face and strangely pale but piercing blue eyes."<ref name="rym8july"/> She led the newly founded Association for the Protection of Pregnant Women and Children (APPWC) in Iran.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

With Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi, she had one child, a daughter:<ref name=dagres>Template:Cite news</ref>

The marriage was a failure. Fawzia was deeply unhappy in Iran, and often missed her homeland of Egypt.<ref>Miliani, Abbas The Shah, London: Macmillan 2011 p. 90.</ref> Fawzia's relations with her mother-in-law and her sisters-in-law were notably tempestuous as the Queen Mother and her daughters saw her as a rival for Mohammad Reza Shah's affections, and the women constantly feuded with each other.<ref name="Miliani, Abbas p. 78">Miliani, Abbas The Shah, London: Macmillan 2011 p. 78.</ref> One of Mohammad Reza's sisters broke a vase over Fawzia's head.<ref name="Miliani, Abbas p. 139">Miliani, Abbas The Shah, London: Macmillan 2011 p. 139.</ref> The womanizing Mohammad Reza Shah was frequently unfaithful to Fawzia, and was often seen driving around with other women in Tehran from 1940 onward.<ref name="Miliani, Abbas p. 78"/> Popular rumor had it that Fawzia for her part had an affair with her minder, described as an athletic, handsome man, though her friends insist that this was merely malicious gossip.<ref name="Miliani, Abbas p. 139"/> Fawzia's son-in-law, Ardeshir Zahedi told the Iranian-American historian Abbas Milani in a 2009 interview about the rumors: "She is a lady and never veered from the path of purity and fidelity".<ref name="Miliani, Abbas p. 139"/> From 1944 onward, Fawzia was treated for depression by an American psychiatrist, as she stated her marriage was a loveless one and she desperately wanted to go back to Egypt.<ref>Stadiem, William Too Rich, New York: Harper Collins, 1991 p. 278.</ref>

Queen Fawzia (the title of empress was not yet used in Iran at that time) moved to Cairo in May 1945<ref name=mjourtime>Template:Cite newsTemplate:Dead link</ref> and obtained an Egyptian divorce. The reason for her return was that she viewed Tehran as underdeveloped in contrast to modern, cosmopolitan Cairo.<ref name=mark5july>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=les11jul>Template:Cite news</ref> She consulted an American psychiatrist in Baghdad for her troubles shortly before she left Tehran.<ref name=mjourtime/> On the other hand, CIA reports claim that Princess Fawzia ridiculed and humiliated the Shah due to his supposed impotence, leading to their separation.<ref name=les11jul/> In her book Ashraf Pahlavi, twin sister of the Shah, argues that it was the Princess not the Shah who asked for divorce.<ref name=lpost1980/> Fawzia left Iran for Egypt, and despite numerous attempts on the part of the Shah to persuade her to return, she remained put in Cairo.<ref name="Miliani, Abbas p. 138">Miliani, Abbas The Shah, London: Macmillan 2011 p. 138.</ref> Mohammad Reza told the British ambassador in 1945 that his mother was "probably the main obstacle to the return of the Queen".<ref name="Miliani, Abbas p. 138"/>

This divorce was first not recognized for several years by Iran, but eventually an official divorce was obtained in Iran, on 17 November 1948, with Queen Fawzia successfully reclaiming her previous distinction of Princess of Egypt as well. A major condition of the divorce was that her daughter be left behind to be raised in Iran.<ref name=ppgaz19nov>Template:Cite news</ref> Incidentally, Queen Fawzia's brother, King Farouk, also divorced his first wife, Queen Farida, in November 1948.<ref name=ppgaz19nov/><ref name=Reich1990>Template:Cite book</ref>

In the official announcement of the divorce, it was stated that "the Persian climate had endangered the health of Queen Fawzia, and that thus it was agreed that the Egyptian King's sister be divorced." In another official statement, the Shah said that the dissolution of the marriage "cannot affect by any means the existing friendly relations between Egypt and Iran."<ref>"2 Moslem Rulers let the man and wife divorce if they need to", The New York Times, 20 November 1948, page 1.</ref> After her divorce Princess Fawzia headed the Egyptian court.<ref name="mark5july" />

Later life

Princess Fawzia with Ismail Chirine

On 28 March 1949, at the Koubba Palace in Cairo, Princess Fawzia married Colonel Ismail Chirine (or Shirin) (1919–1994), who was the eldest son of Hussein Chirine Bey and his wife, HH Princess Amina Bihruz Khanum Effendi.<ref name=indianexp>Template:Cite news</ref><ref name=mrecord>Template:Cite news</ref> He was a graduate of Trinity College, Cambridge, and a one-time Egyptian minister of war and the navy. Following the wedding they lived in an estate owned by the Princess in Maadi, Cairo.<ref name=mrecord/><ref name=egycom>Template:Cite web</ref> They also resided in a villa in Smouha, Alexandria.<ref name=soh10jun/> Unlike her first marriage, this time Fawzia married for love and she was described as far happier being married to Colonel Chirine than she ever had been to the Shah of Iran.<ref>Stadiem, William Too Rich, New York: Harper Collins, 1991 p. 290.</ref>

They had two children, one daughter and one son:<ref name=palmbeach>Template:Cite newsTemplate:Dead link</ref>

  • Nadia Chirine (19 December 1950, Cairo<ref name=ppg50>Template:Cite news</ref> – October 2009). She married firstly (and divorced) Yusuf Shabaan, an Egyptian actor.<ref name=soh10jun>Template:Cite journal</ref> Her second husband was Mustafa Rashid. She had two daughters, one with each husband:
    • Sinai Shabaan (born October 1973)<ref name=soh10jun/>
    • Fawzia Rashid
  • Hussein Chirine (1955–2016)

Fawzia lived in Egypt after the 1952 Revolution that toppled King Farouk.<ref name=dawn3jul>Template:Cite news</ref> Princess Fawzia's death was mistakenly reported in January 2005. Journalists had confused her with her niece, Princess Fawzia Farouk (1940–2005), one of the three daughters of King Farouk.

Death

In her later life, Princess Fawzia lived in Alexandria, where she died on 2 July 2013 at the age of 91.<ref name="tel5july">Template:Cite news</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref> Her funeral ceremony was held after noon prayers at Sayeda Nafisa Mosque in Cairo on 3 July.<ref name="aroeya">Template:Cite news</ref> She was buried in Cairo next to her second husband.<ref name="rym8july" /> At the time of her death, she was the oldest member of the deposed Muhammad Ali dynasty residing in Egypt.

Legacy

A town in Iran, Fawziabad, was named for Princess Fawzia in 1939.<ref name=mer39/> A street in Maadi, Cairo, was again named for her in 1950 as Amira Fawzia street, but in 1956 it was renamed as Mustafa Kamel street.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Honours

Ancestry

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References

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