Lavasani

Lavasani is one of Iran's oldest and most famous families who live in Tehran. Sources reaching back to the early days of the Qajar dynasty. The name means "one who is from the city of Lavasan" in Persian.

Although there are many people named Lavasani today, not many of them belong to the mainstream family. The members of the original family nowadays include physicians, surgeons, Generals, architects, designers, artists, judges, translators and professors with broad education in Iran, Europe and the US. Their long lineage stretches back to the 13th century under the Seljuq dynasty.

Important family members

There are famous individuals among them:

  • Mehdi Lavasani (born 1947), Iranian footballer
  • Masoud Lavasani (born 1979), Iranian journalist and blogger
  • Omid Lavasani, son of Mohammad Hossein Lavasani, former Iran's ambassador to Canada and Turkey,[1] who was arrested following contested Iranian presidential election, 2009. He was sentenced to six years’ imprisonment by the initial revolutionary court for the charge of “propagation against the regime,” “congregation and mutiny with intent to disrupt internal security,”.[2] He was a web designer of one of the campaigning websites of the reformist candidate Mirhossein Mousavi. He was tried for sending mass email invitations for participating in the protests.[3]
  • Dr. Mohammad Baqer Lavasani, M.D., Ph.D. – elected senator during the incipient days of the Islamic Republic, who was killed on June 28, 1981 when a bomb exploded in a meeting of the Islamic Republican Party (Hafte Tir bombing). A lot of the high-ranked Iranian officials were killed in the incident including Ayatollah Dr. Mohammad Beheshti. Following the incident, the Farmanieh Street, located in the north of Tehran, where the members of the original family have been residing for centuries, was renamed after them.
  • Dr. Abbas Lavasani, killed in 1980 during the Iranian Embassy siege in London.

References

  1. "Iran appoints new ambassador to Ankara". 22 Jan 1998. Retrieved 2010-04-11.
  2. "Five Prison Terms Confirmed: One to Six Years for Participating in Protests, Running a Website". Retrieved 2010-04-09.
  3. "مسئول كميته آي. تي ستاد موسوي در دادگاه: من به قطاري سوار شدم كه راهبران آن از سوي سازمان‌هاي مخوف غربي هدايت مي‌شوند". Retrieved 2010-04-09.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.