Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 51. Chapters: Mir-Hossein Mousavi, Mohammad Mosaddegh, Rez Sh h, Amir-Abbas Hoveida, Amir Kabir, Shapour Bakhtiar, Fazlollah Zahedi, Asadollah Alam, Haj Ali Razmara, Mehdi Bazargan, Hassan-Ali Mansur, Ahmad Qavam, Mohammad Vali Khan Tonekaboni, Mohammad-Reza Mahdavi Kani, Mohammad-Ali Rajai, Prime Minister of Iran, Mostowfi ol-Mamalek, Mohammad-Ali Foroughi, Jamshid Amouzegar, Jafar Sharif-Emami, Mohammad-Javad Bahonar, Mehdi Qoli Hedayat, Hossein Ala', Ali Amini, Hassan Pirnia, Zia'eddin Tabatabaee, Ebrahim Hakimi, Mohsen Sadr, Manouchehr Eghbal, Mirza Nasrullah Khan, Mohammad Sa'ed, Gholam-Reza Azhari, Ali Soheili, Morteza Gholi Khan Hedayat, Morteza-Qoli Bayat, Hajj Mirza Aghasi, Vosough od-Dowleh, Mahmoud Jam, Saad ad-Daula, Ali Asghar Khan, Abdolhossein Hazhir, Mohammad-Reza Hekmat, Abdol Majid Mirza, Fathollah Khan Akbar, Ghaem Magham Farahani, Mirza Hosein Khan Moshir od-Dowleh. Excerpt: Mir-Hossein Mousavi Khameneh (Persian: , pronounced, M r-Hoseyn M sav Kh mene; Azerbaijani: born 2 March 1942) is an Iranian reformist politician, artist and architect who served as the seventy-ninth and last Prime Minister of Iran from 1981 to 1989. He was a Reformist candidate for the 2009 presidential election and eventually the leader of the opposition in the post-election unrest. Mousavi served as the president of the Iranian Academy of Arts until 2009, when Conservative authorities removed him. In the early years of the revolution, Mousavi was the editor-in-chief of the official newspaper of the Islamic Republican Party, the Islamic Republic newspaper, before being elevated to Minister of Foreign Affairs and eventually the post of Prime Minister. He was the last Prime Minister in Iran before the 1989 constitutional changes which removed the post of prime minister, and went into semi-retirement for the next 20 years. He...