Photos show what Iran looked like before the 1979 revolution turned the nation into an Islamic republic
The Shah of Iran with his third wife, Empress Farah Diba, and their son Crown Prince Reza.
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Religion
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10 mins
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Business Insider
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Melia Robinson,Jeremy Bender,Mikhaila Friel,Talia Lakritz
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From 1941 to 1979, Iran was ruled by King Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the Shah. Then the Islamic Revolution swept the country.
- From 1941 to 1979, Iran was ruled by King Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the Shah.
- On February 11, 1979, the Islamic Revolution swept the country.
- The government was replaced with an Islamic republic, which continues to this day.
For almost 40 years, Iran was ruled by the Shah, who led the country through a series of sweeping changes.
The Shah pushed the country to adopt Western-oriented secular modernization in the decades before the Islamic revolution of 1979.
Under the Shah's rule, Iran's economy and educational opportunities expanded. Britain and the US counted Iran as their major ally in the Middle East, and the Shah forcefully industrialized large segments of the country.
But the Shah's increasingly authoritarian measures and his eventual dismissal of multiparty rule set the stage for the infamous revolution, which resulted in the Islamic republic that remains in Iran to this day.
On Saturday, the US and Israel attacked Iran and killed the Islamic republic's second supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, who had been in power since 1989.
"This is the single greatest chance for the Iranian people to take back their Country," President Donald Trump wrote in a Truth Social post.
Photos show what life was like in Iran before the Islamic revolution changed everything.
From 1941 to 1979, Iran was ruled by King Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the Shah.
Shah Muhammed Reza Pahlevi, his wife, Queen Fawzia and the little Princess Shahnaz in the Grounds of their Palace near Teheran, Iran, in 1942.
AP
Due to Iran's large supply of oil, proximity to India, and shared border with the Soviet Union, Britain and the US fully backed the Iranian government.
Sepah Square, the main square in Tehran, Iran April 20, 1946.
Tom Fitzsimmons/AP
However, even before the Islamic Revolution, the Shah's grip on power was unsteady.
This is the White Palace of the Shah of Iran at Saadabad, Tehran, as it looked in Aug. 1953, after the government upheavals. Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlevi returned to power Aug. 22 when his supporters ousted Premier Mohammed Mossadegh, who had forced the Shah to flee a few days earlier.
AP
Communists and religious members of society disliked the Shah and his pro-Western government.
Cars and pedestrians travel on Ferdowsi Ave. in Tehran, Iran April 20, 1946.
AP Photo/Tom Fitzsimmons
In 1953, the Shah had to flee Iran after a Western-backed coup to overthrow Iranian Prime Minister Mohammad Mosaddegh failed.
Rioters in the streets of Tehran in 1953.
INTERCONTINENTALE/AFP via Getty Images
A second coup succeeded in overthrowing Mosaddegh, who wanted to nationalize the Iranian oil industry to Britain's chagrin, and the Shah returned to the country.
Iranian army officers and honor guards greeted Shah Mohammed Reza Pahlavi at the Tehran airport upon his return.
Bettmann Archive/Contributor/Getty Images
Reza Shah undertook a series of reforms aimed at turning Iran into a modern westernized nation.
Melli Bank, the center of foreign commerce in Tehran.
Three Lions/Getty Images
These reforms included the structuring of Iran around a central Iranian identity, the often brutal suppression of tribes and their laws in exchange for a central government, and the expansion of women's rights.
(Original Caption) Ten officers of the Iranian army, among a large group rounded up in Iran recently are shown in prison garb at the place of confinement. At the extreme right sits Major Mohhaggi accused of arson in the Air Force. The Judge Advocate General Hossein Azmoudeh demanded the death sentence for twelve officers seized as members of the "Tudeh" Communist organization.
Bettmann Archive/Contributor/Getty Images
Reza Shah attempted to make religious observance subservient to the state.
The Shah of Iran distributed land titles to peasants.
Bettmann Archive/Contributor/Getty Images
Part of Iran's method of achieving this was through the banning of veils in public.
French President Charles de Gaulle and his wife Yvonne Vendroux are welcomed in Tehran by Mohammad Reza Shah Pahlavi and his wife Farah Diba.
Daniele Darolle/Sygma via Getty Images
Women were also encouraged to attend school and receive an education.
Italian politician Giovanni Gronchi was awarded an honorary degree at the University of Tehran in 1957.
Mondadori Portfolio/Mondadori via Getty Images
Although Reza Shah's intentions were to turn Iran into a modern westernized state, his bans on religious garments alienated and frustrated religious conservatives and traditionalists.
Women in veils at the Museum of Tehran in the 1960s.
Jean MAINBOURG/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images
Despite the backlash from religiously observant members of society, the Shah managed to create a seemingly cosmopolitan city life.
Some people listening to Italian politician and President of the Italian Republic Giovanni Gronchi's speech when he was awarded of an honours' degree in a classroom of the University of Tehran Ahmed Farad. Tehran, September 1957.
Carlo Bavagnoli/Mondadori via Getty Images
Women and men mixed freely, and educational opportunities were extended. Western clothing and norms also became ingrained in large segments of the Iranian population.
Students at the University of Tehran.
Omnia/Three Lions/Hulton Archive/Getty Images
Leading the charge for westernization was the Iranian royal family. Pictured below is Empress Soraya.
Empress Soraya of Persia (Iran) poses in the studio of Italian fashion designer Emilio Schuberth, left, with an evening dress made of white Organdy as the designer adjusts some pleads of his creation in Rome, Italy, May 13, 1953.
AP Photo
The Shah and Soraya were married on February 12, 1951. Soraya wore a Christian Dior gown embroidered with 6,000 diamond pieces and 20,000 marabou feathers.
Soraya Isfandiari and the Shah of Iran are pictured after their wedding.
Getty Images
Soraya and the Shah divorced in 1958 after failing to produce an heir. Soraya's departure from the royal family was welcomed by some, who thought her German and Catholic background made her untrustworthy.
Soraya and the Shah pictured in 1958.
Getty Images
Under the royal family's invitations, Iran became a popular destination for celebrities and heads of state. Here, an Italian actor and her husband visit a sports competition as guests of Iranian Princess Ashraf.
Italian actress Gina Lollobrigida and her husband Milko Skofic (both center) pose for photographer with Iranian sportsmen at the ZurKhaneh (house of strength) stadium, Persia, May 20, 1963. They attended an Iranian sports competition. The actress and her husband have been invited to spend a vacation, by Princess Ashraf, sister of the Shah of Persia.
AP Photo
The Iranian royal family reciprocated and widely toured the world's capitals. Here, the Shah and Soraya met with Winston Churchill in London.
British premier sir Winston Churchill poses with the Shah and Queen Soraya of Persia on February 21 at his official London residence, 10 Downing Street, after they lunched with him there. The Shah and Queen Soraye are on a private visit Britain.
AP Photo
In 1959, the Shah married Farah Diba. They welcomed four children, though none would get the opportunity to become an heir because of the revolution.
The Shah of Iran with his third wife, Empress Farah Diba, and their son Crown Prince Reza.
Getty Images
Toward the end of the Shah's reign, the royal family attempted to rally the country around an increasingly historic nationalism based on the preceding Persian empires.
A street scene showing pedestrians on a sidewalk, June 16, 1970, Tehran, Iran.
Roy Essoyan/AP
In 1967, the Shah took the old Persian title "Shahanshah," or King of Kings, at a coronation ceremony in Tehran.
Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi crowning Empress Farah at their coronation ceremony in 1967
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Celebrations funded by the government were also launched throughout the country to honor Iran's Persian roots, such as a gymnastics display in 1975 honoring the founding of the Persian Empire.
General view of celebrations honoring the founding of the Persian Empire, Oct. 16, 1975. Persia is now Iran.
Harry Koundakjian/AP
Despite Iran's views of the past, the government continued to value education and child development.
A street scene showing pedestrians threading their way between bumper-to-bumper traffic, June 16, 1970, Tehran, Iran.
Roy Essoyan/AP
Tehran funded study abroad in Europe for Iranians, and schools and clinics were built throughout the Iranian countryside to care for poorer children as part of the Shah's "White Revolution."
A street scene showing pedestrians on a sidewalk, June 16, 1970, Tehran, Iran.
Roy Essoyan/AP
High oil prices and relative stability in the Middle East contributed to a growing business class in major Iranian cities.
Tehran in 1970.
Roy Essoyan/AP
Iranians swam in an octagonal swimming pool at the guesthouse of the Iranian National Oil Company.
The guest house of the Iranian National Oil Company near Ahwaz, Iran, in 1971.
Horst Faas/AP
By 1975, Reza Shah abolished Iran's multiparty system and concentrated ever-greater amounts of power in his own hands under the government-permitted Rastakhiz (Resurrection) party.
Pictured here is a view of Tehran, Iran, July 1971.
Horst Faas/AP
By January 16, 1979, Reza Shah fled Iran during the Iranian Revolution.
Visitors at a vacation resort in Iran on the Caspian Sea in 1971.
Horst Faas/AP
The revolution started as a popular movement fueled by outrage against government extravagance, corruption, brutality, and the suppression of individual rights.
Troops loyal to Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi arrive to control a crowd of demonstrators outside a burning government building at the height of Islamic revolutionary fervour in Tehran, 4th November 1978.
Kaveh Kazemi/Getty Images
The movement — and the government — were taken over by Ruhollah Khomeini, who held the Shia clerical title of Ayatollah and served as the Islamic Republic's first supreme leader.
Iranian women holding portrait of Ayatollah Khomeini gather following the departure of the Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in Tehran on January 16, 1979. The Islamic revolution led to the replacement of the Imperial State of Iran by the Islamic Republic of Iran, as the monarchical government of Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi was superseded by Ruhollah Khomeini, an Islamist cleric who had headed one of the rebel factions. The ousting of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, the last Shah of Iran, formally marked the end of Iran's historical monarchy.
Kaius Hedenström/EPU/AFP via Getty Images
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