Mir-Hasan Khan

This major, who was the commander of the Caspian naval battalion (660 people) and 50 Cossack horsemen forced the khan to flee to Iran.

On July 25, 1826, Mir-Hasan Khan with local fighters who raised an uprising and several thousand Qajar soldiers entered into battle with the Russian garrison located in Lankaran.

After six days of fighting major Ilyinsky retreated to the island of Sara, leaving the rebels "not a fortress, but its ruins."

[2] Representatives of the upper class were removed from administrative work, and measures were taken to undermine the authority of religious leaders among the population.

After the assassination of Alexander Griboyedov on February 11, 1829, Mir-Hasan Khan took the opportunity and tried to take the region out of Russian control being in Northern Talysh, but he was arrested and handed over to Bala-khan (ruler of Kerganrud), and then to Djahangir Mirza (ruler of Ardabil) and imprisoned in the fort of Namin by order of Abbas Mirza.

It is written in "Akhbarname": "He (i.e. Ali Mirza) urgently reported the arrival of Mir-Hasan Khan to Fath-Ali shah in Tehran.

[3] But before that happened, Mir-Hasan Khan died on Thursday, July 12, 1832, in prison due to suffocation.

The descendants of Mir-Hasan Khan still live in Masally, Lankaran, Astara, Baku of Azerbaijan and in Namin and Isfahan of Iran.