Nader Mirza Afshar
| Nader Mirza Afshar | |
|---|---|
| Mirza | |
![]() Engraving of Nader Mirza, 18th or 19th century | |
| Head of the Afsharid Dynasty | |
| Reign | 1796 - April 1802 |
| Predecessor | Shahrokh Shah |
| Successor | Dynasty disbanded |
| Ruler of Khorasan | |
| Reign | June 1797 - April 1802 |
| Predecessor | Shahrokh Shah |
| Successor | Mohammad Vali Mirza |
| Born | Between 1760 and 1764 Mashhad, Afsharid Iran |
| Died | April 1802 (Aged 37-42) Tehran, Qajar Iran |
| Spouse | Unnamed wife |
| Issue | Tahmasp Mirza Khaliq Vardi Mirza Mahboub Ali Mirza Ismail Mirza |
| House | Afsharid dynasty |
| Father | Shahrokh Shah |
| Mother | Unnamed Persian mother |
| Religion | Twelver Shia Islam |
Nader Mirza Afshar (Persian: نادرمیرزا افشار) was the great-grandson of Nader Shah, the founder of the Afsharid dynasty of Iran. He was the fourth son of Shahrokh Shah, being considered the last head of the Afsharid dynasty itself and of Afsharid Iran.
Biography
Nader Mirza Afshar is believed to have been born somewhere between 1760 and 1764 in Mashhad, the standing Afsharid administrative capital at the time. In Nader's early life, he developed a bitter rivalry with his elder brother, Nasrollah Mirza.
The two brothers engaged in armed clashes particularly often, Nader Mirza eventually forced to escape to Tabas after one of them. Some years later after Nader Mirza's escape, Nasrollah initiated a war for independence against the Durrani subjugation that had been forced onto the Afsharids 15 years prior. Nasrollah sent a dispatch to Tabas to call upon both Nader Mirza and Tabas itself, led by Ali Mardan Khan, for aid after the beginning of a campaign under Ahmad Shah to solidify Durrani suzerainty over Khorasan. Nader and Nasrollah Mirza would see initial success against the Durrani's, Nader Mirza inflicting an early victory against Rasul Khan's contingent at Gonabad. Even with this, the numbers of the Durrani army weighed upon Mashhad, resulting in the submission of the city to Ahmad Shah after a siege.

The war against the Durrani's had seen Nasrollah's Kurdish allies abandon him, which weakened his position in Mashhad. In 1775, Nasrollah was ousted from Mashhad by Nader Mirza after a clash, Nasrollah resorting to Shiraz to supposedly gain support against his father and younger brother. This had resulted in Nader Mirza restoring himself as crown prince, solidifying his position in Mashhad. In 1796, Shahrokh Shah was defeated by Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar, the founder of the Qajar dynasty. As a result, Mashhad fell to the Qajar Dynasty, forcing the remaining members of the Afsharid Dynasty, including Nader Mirza himself, to flee the city to Herat. Shahrokh was tortured and killed, Agha Mohammad then installing Mohammad Vali Mirza as Governor of Khorasan in Mashhad.
Upon Agha Mohammad Khan's death in 1797, Fath-Ali Shah Qajar (his heir apparent) ascended the throne. Nader Mirza proceeded to lead the reclamation of Mashhad itself to exploit the existing internal turmoil, succeeding in ousting Mohammad Vali Mirza. Nader would reestablish his control over Mashhad itself and the immediate surrounding area. Following this, several campaigns were led to reestablish Qajar control over the region by Fath-Ali Shah in retaliation.
Fath-Ali Shah’s first and second Khorasan campaigns in June 1798 and June 1800 failed despite much ravaging and destruction by the Qajar troops, being repelled by the numerically inferior Nader Mirza in Mashhad, along with a loose confederation of Kurdish and Qarai khans.[1]
A third campaign in May of 1802 led by Fath-Ali Shah would see relatively more success, resulting in the capture of Mashhad after a lengthy set of three major campaigns.[2][3] After the chief mujtahid of Mashhad switched allegiances to the Qajars, Nader Mirza was captured and brought to Tehran. He was blinded and had his tongue cut off, being eventually executed in the presence of Fath-Ali Shah in April of 1803, along with his eldest sons Abbas Mirza and Ibrahim Mirza. His other three sons Tahmasp Mirza, Khaliq Vardi Mirza and Mahboub Ali Mirza were blinded by the orders of Fath-Ali Shah. Another son, Ismail Mirza, fled to Hyderabad, Deccan. He settled there with the assistance of Sir John Malcolm.
Notes
- Mohammad Qaneii, History of Torbat-e-Heydariyeh, pp. 103–104.
- On Nader Mirza's birthdate, it would have been required of him to be old enough to lead an army or garner enough support as a figurehead, of which an age between 11 and 15 fits (comparative to the date of 1775, when Nader Mirza expelled Nasrollah from Mashhad). He was most definitely born somewhere near his brother's birth date, Abbas Mirza, who was born in 1762. It is important to note that the princes of this period, and more so specifically the Afsharids, possessed power at a very early age. His elder brother Nasrollah Mirza is believed to have taken control of Khorasan at the mere age of 16, making it not unusual for such a trend to reoccur.
References
- ^ Amanat, Abbas. "FATH-ALI SHAH QAJAR". Encyclopædia Iranica. Retrieved 28 January 2026.
- ^ Amanat, Abbas. "FATH-ALI SHAH QAJAR". Encyclopædia Iranica. Retrieved 28 January 2026.
- ^ Behrooz, Maziar. "IRAN AT WAR, INTERACTIONS WITH THE MODERN WORLD". Dokumen Pub. Retrieved 29 January 2026.
