Tuman Agha Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh, the seventh daughter and tenth child of
Naser al‑Din Shah, was born in 1278 AH. One year later, another daughter was born to the same mother, named Touran Agha (Forough‑od‑Dowleh). The two girls lost their mother during childhood, before reaching puberty, and
Naser al‑Din Shah deeply saddened by the event entrusted them to
Taj al-Dawlah, his first legal wife after ascending the throne. Taj‑al‑Dowleh devoted great effort to their upbringing and, by hiring skilled tutors, worked diligently to provide them with a proper education.
Naser al‑Din Shah, seeing his daughters as worthy and accomplished, granted Tuman Agha the title Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh and Touran Agha the title Forough‑od‑Dowleh when they reached the age of maturity. Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh was a beautiful young woman, a
poet, a
painter, and a gifted
calligrapher. According to the author of Behind the Curtains of the Harem, she was exceptionally beautiful, refined, and an eloquent poet with a sweet and graceful manner of speech. She was trusted by her father, and many of the notes that remain from
Naser al‑Din Shah were written in Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh's elegant handwriting. From 1299 AH, when she was twenty‑one years old, her script appears intermittently throughout the Shah's memoirs, and a large portion of the entries from 1300 AH onward are in her hand. She eventually fell in love with Mehdi‑Qoli Khan Majd‑od‑Dowleh, the court's master of the stables. Thus, on the 24th of Dhu al‑Qa‘dah 1299 AH, Majd‑od‑Dowleh sent his mother to propose marriage to Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh. Since the proposal did not align with the Shah's wishes, it was met with indifference on his part. But Tuman Agha Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh was too deeply in love to let her father's reluctance—or the will of the sovereign—dissuade her. Thus, on the 20th of Dhu al‑Hijjah 1299 AH, a marriage ceremony was held in the Shah's absence, and she became the wife of Mehdi‑Qoli Khan Majd‑od‑Dowleh. Following this, on the 19th of Jumada al‑Awwal, the wedding ceremony was held, and the next day Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh was taken to Majd‑od‑Dowleh's household. After Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh's wedding,
Naser al‑Din Shah wrote: ‘Now that Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh has gone to the house of Amir‑Akhur Majd‑od‑Dowleh, we must write these journals ourselves.' Marriage did not separate Fakhr al-Dowleh from her father. Despite her deep love for Majd al-Dowleh, she spent most of her days and time in the harem quarters. At that time, her husband held the position of Mir Akhor and was in charge of managing the royal stables. However, complaints against him became so numerous that even being the Shah's son-in-law could not keep him in office. In Jumada al-Thani 1301 AH, the Shah dismissed him and appointed Mohammad Hossein Mirza, the former Mir Akhor, back to the post. Majd al-Dowleh's unemployment lasted for one year and four months. After some time, Fakhr al-Dowleh's distress moved her father to act. On 14 Shawwal 1302 AH, in a letter addressed to Amin al-Sultan, he appointed Majd al-Dowleh to the position of Supervisor of the Khassa (royal domains) Etemad al-Saltaneh, who was a serious opponent of Majd al-Dowleh, wrote about this matter:“This man is very ill-mannered, and his only qualifications are hunting and being the Shah's son-in-law. As even in the royal decree it was written that we gave the supervision to Fakhr al-Dowleh—he is merely her deputy.” When
Naser al‑Din Shah was on his journey to Europe a trip during which he did not take any women with him, though on domestic travels Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh was always among his closest companions Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh conveyed the pain of separation to her father through her heartfelt and sorrowful letters. Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh's wet nurse was Haji Mir Mohammad Aqa, who died on the 17th of Dhu al‑Hijjah 1303 AH. As Naser al‑Din Shah noted in his memoirs, this man had first been the wet nurse of Amir‑Nezam, and now that he had died, Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh wept and mourned deeply. Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh's pageboy was a young man named Mirza Mohammad, who performed the role of Ali‑Akbar in the ta‘ziyeh passion plays. Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh had a
eunuch named Sanbolak. In Rajab 1305 AH,
Naser al‑Din Shah traveled to
Qom for the sixth time. He recorded his memoirs from Monday, the 19th of Rajab which coincided with the 14th of Nowruz until Monday, the 4th of Sha‘ban, when he returned to
Tehran. Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh accompanied him on this journey as well, and many of the pages of the Shah's travel memoirs from this trip are written in her elegant handwriting. The divan of poems by Tuman Agha Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh contains several thousand verses, all written in the poet's own elegant hand. According to Dust‑Ali Khan Mo‘ayyer‑ol‑Mamalek, the manuscript was in the possession of Prince Soltan Mahmoud Mirza, the younger brother of
Ahmad Shah, in Paris. In addition to her beautiful calligraphy, Fakhr‑od‑Dowleh was skilled in painting and woodcarving, and she offered help and support to the needy and to orphans. ==Sisterly relationship==