Vakil ol-Ra'aya

Vakil ol-Ra'aya (Persian: وکیل‌الرعایا, lit.'Deputy of the People'Category:Articles containing Persian-language text) is a popular title best known for being adopted by the Zand ruler Karim Khan Zand (r.1751–1779) at Shiraz in 1765.[1]

The concept of the Vakil ol-Ra'aya may have been derived from the driyōšān-jādaggōv ud dādvar ("advocate-judge of the poor") office of the pre-Islamic Sasanian Empire (224–651). The title first appears in two administrative documents written in Safavid Iran, being part of the office of the kalantar (major) of Isfahan, the capital of the country. After that, the Vakil ol-Ra'aya became an autonomous office in its own right, being used in many provincial centers of Iran until the collapse of Qajar Iran (1789–1925).[1]

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Category:Titles in Iran Category:Titles of national or ethnic leadership Category:Zand dynasty
Category:Articles containing Persian-language text Category:Articles with short description Category:Short description matches Wikidata Category:Titles in Iran Category:Titles of national or ethnic leadership Category:Zand dynasty