1. Although the disturbances connected with the Tobacco Rebellion in 1890–1892 were based on religious scruples against an infidel handling an item of daily and intimate use, in 1942 Iranians showed no apparent compunction in consuming bread made from wheat grown by infidels and baked and distributed under the direction of infidels.
2. Times (London), December 12, 1942, p. 3;
3. The riot mainly took place outside the bazaar in the new commercial areas along Tehran's major thoroughfares created by Reza Shah and opposed by the bazaar merchants. See Avery, Modern Iran, pp. 359–60;
4. In 1946 Qavam again used the Tehran crowd to close parliament and as an excuse to suppress the press and arrest political opponents during the crisis over the refusal of the Soviet Union to withdraw its forces from Iran. See untitled report, March 29, 1946, RG226, XL50148, OSSNA.