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Old fox (Persian:روباه پیر,romanized: rubâh-e pir) is a term used by some Iranians to describe theUnited Kingdom.[1][2][3]Seyyed Ahmad Adib Pishavari is thought to have been the first to use the term in this context. The term is often used in Iranian society, media, and newspapers.
InPersian and many other traditions, thefox is known as a sly and cunning animal, and therefore has often been used as a metaphor for a cunning person who achieves goals through trickery rather than simply by force. In the context of Persian attitudes to the United Kingdom, the term was first used by the philosopher and poetAdib Pishavari (1844–1930).[1] When Pishavari was young, his father and relatives were killed in thewar between the United Kingdom and Afghanistan in 1857–58.[4] He had anti-British feeling and wrote many poems expressing this sentiment. Pishavari often represented the United Kingdom using animal metaphors such as old fox, ominous raven, and venomous viper in his poems. The term "old fox" still remains from that time.[1] An English translation of one of his poems:
Many an ancient house
Was razed after you crept in
You seized lands through your fox games
You have escaped hundred of traps, like an old fox.[1]
Iranians' use ofold fox may express personal opposition to thePersian Constitutional Revolution, support for the1921 coup d'état, tension between the two nations during theAbadan Crisis (which led to British support for the1953 coup d'état), British opposition to theIranian Revolution, or allegations that Britain instigated street riots after the2009 Iranian presidential election.[2][5][3]
When the British embassy reopened in 2015, Iranian media and newspapers declared and reportedReturn of the Fox.[3]Hemayat wrote on its front page "The old fox arrived with its lights turned off",Resalat wrote "No-one is happy with the return of the old fox", andKayhan wrote "In Iran's eyes, Britain is still the 'old fox'".[1][2]