[custom_adv] Fereydoun Djam (1914 – 24 May 2008) was a senior persian army official, and the son of former Iranian prime minister Mahmoud Djam. Djam served as head of the Iranian Imperial Army Corps from 1969 to 1971. He was commissioned into the Cavalry in 1934 and had trained in the Prussian Staff College for the Wehrmacht in 1936-37 and served for a while as a mercenary officer in the Royalist force of Spain in 1938. [custom_adv] He left the army because of professional conflicts with Mohammad Reza Pahlavi and retired in 1973. After resignation from the army he became ambassador to Spain for a few years up to 1978. Then he moved to London. [custom_adv] To the last government led by Shahpour Bakhtiar before revolution he was proposed to be defense minister, but according to his interview later on due to lack of authority he did not accept the position. [custom_adv] He believed that the declaration of impartiality by army core at the last day of revolution was a betrayal. Following the revolution he did not come back to the country but during the homeland–Iraq War he was supporting the persian army. [custom_adv] Fereydoun Djam born on 1914 in Tabriz. His father Mahmoud Djam was prime minister of Iran from 1935 to 1939. He attended in military schools in capital and Saint-Cyr. Later he graduated from military academy in UK. In an arranged marriage Fereydoun married to Princess Shams in 1937. They divorced after death of Reza Shah on 1944. [custom_adv] In 2011, the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS) was awarded a gift of £2 million by the Fereydoun Djam Charitable Trust to promote studies. [custom_adv] As part of this initiative, SOAS has introduced new scholarships in persian studies as well as an annual lecture series to promote diverse aspects of persian studies. [custom_adv] The annual lectures are hosted by the Centre for persian Studies at SOAS and are named after Fereydoun’s son, Kamran Djam, who predeceased his parents in 1989. [custom_adv] In his later years he authored a number of personal and historical accounts of the Pahlavi period, as well as theoretical articles on the organisation of the Imperial Army and its command and control structure, which were published in 'Rahāvard' (Nos. 20-60), a Los Angeles-based Persian-language quarterly, edited by Hasan Shabaz.General Fereydoun Djam died in London on the 24th May 2008 at the age of 94. He was predeceased by his son Kamran Djam in 1989 and his second wife Firoozeh Djam in 2006.