peacock throne การใช้
- The Peacock Throne was the seat of the Mughal emperors of India.
- The famous Peacock Throne, the Daria-i-Noor diamond and unimaginable wealth was looted.
- As payment for returning the crown of India to the Peacock throne.
- The Peacock Throne thereafter served as a symbol of Persian imperial might.
- The monarchy in Iran is referred to as the Peacock Throne.
- Fran鏾is Bernier described seeing the jewelled Peacock Throne here during the 17th century.
- He also had the Peacock Throne, Takht e Taus, made to celebrate his rule.
- The Sun Throne has the shape of a platform just like the Peacock Throne.
- No proofed parts of the original Peacock Throne survived.
- 1967-The Shah of Iran crowns himself and his Queen after 26 years on the Peacock Throne.
- Shah Jahan, the fifth Mughal emperor, had the stone placed into his ornate " Peacock Throne ".
- As insiders see it, a three-way battle has started for the Peacock Throne vacated through Mr Deng's incapacitation.
- In 1967, the Shah of Iran crowned himself and his queen after 26 years on the Peacock Throne.
- The last decades of the 18th century were marked by continual strife between rival claimants to the Peacock Throne.
- In Tehran, though, many demonstrators say they aren't in the streets to support the heir to the Peacock Throne.
- In 1980, Iran's Reza Pahlavi, eldest son of the late shah, proclaimed himself the rightful successor to the Peacock Throne.
- A major street in Tehran formerly known as " Takhte Tavoos " ( Peacock Throne ) was renamed after him.
- The gem-encrusted Peacock Throne was used by the last monarch, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, who was ousted in the 1979 Islamic revolution.
- However, if this stone pedestal indeed does stem from the Peacock Throne has not been independently corroborated by scientists and historians.
- Where exactly these two pedestals originate from however and if they are connected to the Peacock Throne at all remains unclear.
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