This is a Hurmu article. Click here for more information.

Rashid Hasanzadeh

From MicrasWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Agha Hasanzadeh was noted for his acerbic, indeed frequently acrobatic, commentaries on matters pertaining to international relations.

Rashid Hasanzadeh, Hero of the Revolution, (born 3.III.1658) is the former First Secretary of the the Union of the Republics of Zeed, and was thereby the Zeed analogue for president and prime minister. From 1688 until 1691, he was the foreign secretary of Zeed. Since 1698 he has been living in Hurmu, and became a Hurmu national in 1701. He is one of the founders and former leader of the Social and Democratic Party of Hurmu (1704–1717).

Born in the Green of Eura, he received no formal schooling. His father died when he was three. However, he was taught by his mother's brother how to read and write Babkhi and Istvanistani, and spent most childhood days in a local library lacking electricity. Once it was too dark to read, he helped his mother with household chores. His friends, though respecting him for his intelligence and integrity, teased him for not being manly enough. This criticism wounded him deeply, and prompted his fixation with bodybuilding and wrestling that would, paradoxically, see him develop a physicality that would later see him used in revolutionary propaganda as an avatar of strength and machismo.

He never learnt to understand mathematics or accounting. His wife, Leila, his best friend Omar's older sister, deals with the household budget.

In 1688, he took part in the revolution that created the state of Zeed. He was a few months later promoted to Secretary of the Central Committee of Foreign Relations, and given the honour of Hero of the Revolution. In 1690, he attended the signing of the Vesüha Accords and the establishment of a sovereign Hurmu state.

Later, Rashid Hasanzadeh's penchant for trenchant diplomacy would see Dāryuš of the Suren, Shahanshah of the Suren Confederacy denounce the Secretary as "Naught but a tired old windbag with dodgy knees."

In 1691, the Revolutionary Council elected him First Secretary to replace Vladim Vasyliovich Timoshenko.

Impressed with his wife Leila's accounting skills, he appointed her First Secretary of the Committee of Finance in the Zeedic government. Thus, she became the the closest thing to a finance minister in the government. At the same time, he named her "President of Vey", as she, mocking her accent, always wanted things to do it her "vey" (way). Youths across the country began immediate planning of the establishment of the Republic of Vey, by setting up the "All-Zeedic Association of Youths for the Establishment of the Republic of Vey" (AZAYEROV).

In 1696, he was more or less deposed in Zeed, due to his leadership in the Third Euran War but officially on grounds of ill-health. After being removed from office he spent most his time with his wife. By 1698, his wife had convinced him that he now genuinely required medical treatment. He resigned his remaining provincial offices in Zeed, citing his health as a reason, and relocated to Vadimbaatar (Lontinien, Hurmu) along with his wife and three children, Reza (born 1685), Payam (born 1688), and Ahmad (born 1692). The family became Hurmu citizens in 1701.

In 1702, Hurmu Senator Kir Azariah Vidar proposed that Rashid Hasanzadeh be admitted to the Order of the Holy Lakes, but the Senate rejected that motion with two votes in favour, four against, and eleven abstentions.

In 1704, Rashid Hasanzadeh helped establish the Social and Democratic Party of Hurmu, and began campaigning for Hurmu's expansion of Transprinitica northwards to meet the Ashinthael border. He was also elected the leader of the party.

He resigned in 1717 from his position as leader of the Social and Democratic Party of Hurmu after allegations that he had furthered a leftist agenda more in his condemnation of the government responses to the 1716–1717 Hurmu political crisis, that he, indeed, had been too complacent, pragmatic, and accepting of rightist and bourgeois ideologies. He was replaced as party leader by Annika Raudsepp.

On 11.I.1729, a group of cadets from 186th Guards Volunteer Grenadier Regiment Karnamark apprehended Hasanzadeh in the outskirts of Boondagaarð. He had apparently led a vagabond-like life with some local former Green community people, but after Hurmu's expansion into the deep green of Karnamark, the eyes of the law caught him. On 5.IX.1730, the court in Boondagaarð committed him to social harmonization therapy for treachery and sedition during the 1719–1720 Hurmu civil conflict.

Orders and Decorations

OoHRMedal.png

From left to right:

  • Order of the Heroes of the Revolution

Preceded by:
Isabella III Güntherdohtor Merrick
Minister for Transprinitica
1713–1716
Succeeded by
Viric Merrick