In Qajar, Persia
The practice of photography was taken up in Iran soon after its invention. Antoin Sevruguin established one of the most successful commercial photography studios in Tehran from the 1870s, portraying many prosperous and royal families of the region. His photographs captured the last decades of the Qajar dynastic period (1795-1925), during which African men, women and children were brought to Iran in unprecedented numbers. Aristocratic and wealthy families incorporated domestic slaves into their households as both investments and symbols of prosperity. Islam offered many paths towards slaves’ emancipation, and Sevruguin’s images occasionally feature their prominence in Persian society.