The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.
Nominator: HistoryofIran (talk · contribs) 17:12, 20 December 2023 (UTC)
Reviewer: Thebiguglyalien (talk · contribs) 20:48, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
Thank you for working on this! Give me a few days and I'll look it over. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 20:48, 21 June 2024 (UTC)
HistoryofIran, I've read the article and posted a review below. The main issue here is readability, as the wording and organization makes it difficult to understand at times. If it were a longer article I'd consider closing the review so you could edit the article at your leisure, but given how short it is I figured I'd give you the option of doing it now. I've also made a few copyedits that you can look over if you'd like. Thebiguglyalien (talk) 00:01, 24 June 2024 (UTC)
Lead:
was an Iranian commander– If he was a khan/governor, wouldn't that be more significant than being a commander?
Biography:
Fath-Ali Shah was convinced of Ibrahim Khalil Khan's lack of reliability by his unwillingness to help Javad Khan against the Russian siege of Ganja in 1804. Thus, Abu'l-Fath Khan was appointed as the new khan. Despite this, Ibrahim Khalil Khan continued to rule as the khan of Karabakh. Abu'l-Fath Khan was also appointed the ruler of lands outside Karabakh, Kapan and Meghri, where he successfully established control.
It seems that Abu'l-Fath Khan's first political experience– "seems" makes it sound like we're giving our own analysis instead of reporting on the analysis of others.
to the uprising led by his brother Hossein Qoli Khan– Whose brother? This could refer to Agha Mohammad Khan, Abu'l-Fath Khan, or Fath-Ali Shah. Alternatively, I'm not sure if these details about Agha Mohammad Khan's death and Fath-Ali Shah's activities are needed at all. The important part is that Abu'l-Fath Khan participated in the funeral procession.
Following this, he gave Abu'l-Fath Khan an official reception in his residence– Again, the "he" and the "his" are both vague.
Ibrahim Khalil Khan quickly established friendly relations with Fath-Ali Shah Qajar, who married his daughter Agha Baji Javanshir and confirmed him as the khan of Karabakh– Is this relevant to Abu'l-Fath Khan? We should only provide enough context to understand where Abu'l-Fath Khan was.
who was around the same time sent as a hostage the shah– How did he become a hostage? And I thought he was loyal to the shah.
In May 1805, he submitted to the Russians– Who? Abu'l-Fath Khan? As a general rule, use the person's name the first time they're mentioned in a new paragraph.
Ibrahim Khalil Khan was shortly afterwards killed by a group Russian soldiers under the instigation of his grandson Ja'far Qoli Agha and the commander of the Russian garrison– This whole sentence is a lot. Consider rewording it more simply or splitting it into two sentences so it can be read more easily.
the Jabraillu to the borders of Kapan– I'm not sure what's meant by "to the borders of".
against his grandfather's "betrayal"– Avoid scare quotes. I see that it's also like that in the source, but it should be rewritten when the information is added to Wikipedia anyway.
is the only one who brings up this subject– Does the source specifically say he's the only one? It's then contradicted by the next sentence, which mentions other people who brought it up.
Cultural patronage:
Abu'l-Fath Khan was renowned for his sophisticated tastesounds like puffery.
Offspring:
a distinguished statesmansounds like puffery.
Spot checks:
Being a concubine's son, he had little chance of being his father's legitimate heir. He might have attempted to use his mother's ethnicity as an opportunity to solicit assistance from Karabakh's substantial Armenian community.This is close paraphrasing, where it looks like it was copied directly from the source and then some words were swapped out.
Hi Thebiguglyalien. Thanks for the review. I can see that I should have been more thorough when writing this article, my bad. I'll get to it. --HistoryofIran (talk) 01:11, 24 June 2024 (UTC)