Nazem al-Atebba
Mirza Ali Akbar Khan Nafisi Nazem al-Atebba | |
|---|---|
میرزا علیاکبرخان نفیسی | |
| Born | 12 March 1847 |
| Died | 14 June 1924 (aged 77) |
| Citizenship | Iranian |
| Alma mater | Dar ul-Funun |
| Occupations | Physician, scholar |
| Era | Qajar era, Pahlavi era |
| Notable work | Farhang-e Nafisi Persian Lexicon |
| Children | 6, including Ali-Asghar Nafisi, Saeed Nafisi |
| Father | Mirza Hassan Tabib Kermani |
Mirza Ali Akbar Khan Nafisi (Persian: میرزا علیاکبرخان نفیسی; 12 March 1847 – 14 June 1924), known mononymously as Nazem al-Atebba (ناظمالاطباء, lit. 'superintendent of physicians'), was an Iranian physician, scholar, and one of the most prominent doctors of the late Qajar era. He served as a personal physician to Mozaffar ad-Din Shah and was an influential figure in persuading the Shah to sign the Constitutional Decree of Iran.
Nazem al-Atebba played a crucial role in establishing several European-style hospitals in Tehran and Mashhad. He was also one of the founders of the first assembly of experts for health, Majles-e Hefz-e Sehhat (مجلس حفظالصحة; lit. Health Preservation Council) in Iranian history.
He authored numerous medical works, and his most notable non-medical achievement is a comprehensive four-volume Persian lexicon, widely known as Farhang-e Nazem al-Atebba or Farhang-e Nafisi. He was also the father of the renowned scholar, Saeed Nafisi.