Search Results for “Firuzkuh”
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FĪRŪZKŪH
Bernard Hourcade
name of two towns: (1) a fortified city in the medieval Islamic province of Ḡūr in Central Afghanistan, which was the capital of the senior branch of the Ghurid sultans (see GHURIDS) for some sixty years in the later 6th/12th and 7th/13th centuries; (2) fortress and surrounding settlement in the Damāvand region of the Alborz mountains in northern Persia.
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ḤABLARUD
M. H. Ganji
river in Damāvand and Garmsār districts of Semnān province in northern Persia.
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ʿALĀʾ-AL-DĪN ʿALĪ
C. E. Bosworth
Ghurid malek and later sultan, reigned in Ḡūr from Fīrūzkūh as the last of his family there before the extinction of the dynasty by the Ḵᵛārazmšāhs, 599-602/1203-96 and 611-12/1214-15.
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AFTARĪ
G. L. Windfuhr
the dialect of Aftar (population about 1,200), located at lat 35°39′ N, long 53°07′ E in the mountains one kilometer west of the Semnān-Fīrūzkūh road to Māzandarān. Historical phonology shows Aftarī as a Northwest (i.e. non-Perside) dialect of Iranian.
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JĀM (1)
Majd-al-din Keyvani
a mountainous region on the way from Kabul to Herat, and a historically important village in the province of Ghur (Ḡur) in western Afghanistan.
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CEŠT
C. Edmund Bosworth
a small settlement on the north bank of the Harirud and to the south of the Paropamisus range in northwestern Afghanistan, lying approximately 100 miles upstream from Herat in the easternmost part of the modern Herat welāyat or province.
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ĀL-E AFRĀSĪĀB (1)
C. E. Bosworth
a minor Iranian Shiʿite dynasty of Māzandarān in the Caspian coastlands that flourished in the late medieval, pre-Safavid period.
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ʿALĀʾ-AL-DĪN ḤOSAYN JAHĀNSŪZ
C. E. Bosworth
called JAHĀNSŪZ, Ghurid sultan and the first ruler of the Šansabānī family to make the Ghurids a major power in the eastern Islamic world (544-56/1149-61).
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ʿALĪʾ-AL-DĪN ATSÏZ
C. E. Bosworth
a late and short-reigned sultan of the Ghurid dynasty in Afghanistan (607-11/1210-14).
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ḠUR
C. Edmund Bosworth
a region of central Afghanistan, essentially the modern administrative province (welāyat) of Ḡōrāt.
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BEECH
Hūšang Aʿlam
Fagus L. Modern Iranian botanists tend to refer to this tree as rāš. Its timber is used more than any other wood for making doors, windows, inexpensive furniture, and tools.
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BŪQĀ
Bertold Spuler
(Būqāy, Boḡā), Mongolian Boḡa, Mongol general who took part in the fighting between the il-khans Aḥmad Takūdār (Tegüder) and Arḡūn in 1284 and then became the vizier.
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MENHĀJ-e SERĀJ
C. E. Bosworth
author of a general history in Persian valuable as a first-hand source for the history of the Ghurids, the Šamsi Delhi Sultans, and the irruption of the Mongols into the eastern Islamic lands.
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GARMSĀR
Bernard Hourcade
a region (Qešlāq and Garmsār) in the province of Semnān situated beyond the Caspian Gates, known particularly as a stopover on the great road to Khorasan.
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ANTI-ALBORZ
B. Hourcade
the highland between Tehran and Semnān on the southern flank of the central Alborz range.
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ʿALĀʾ-AL-DAWLA ḤASAN B. ROSTAM
W. Madelung
B. ʿALĪ B. ŠAHRĪĀR, ŠARAF-AL-MOLŪK, Bavandid ruler of Māzandarān. According to the account of Ebn Esfandīār, he reigned from 558/1163 to 566/1171.
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ʿABBĀSĀBĀD Caravan Station
W. Kleiss
Flourishing caravan station of the Safavid period.
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JĀM MINARET
F. B. Flood
pre-eminent 12th-century monument of the Šansabāni sultans of Ḡur in central Afghanistan. The minaret stands 65 meters high near the confluence of the Harirud and Jāmrud rivers in a remote mountain valley once protected by a series of defensive towers.
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GHURIDS
C. Edmund Bosworth
There were at least three raids by the early Ghaznavids into Ḡūr, led by Sultan Maḥmūd and his son Masʿūd, in the first decades of the 11th century; these introduced Islam and brought Ḡūr into a state of loose vassalage to the sultans.
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DAYR-E GAČĪN
Mehrdad Shokoohy
lit., “gypsum hospice”; Sasanian caravansary situated in the desert halfway between Ray and Qom, on the ancient route from Ray to Isfahan. It is recorded in most early Muslim geographies. Over time, it underwent major reconstruction at least twice.
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JĀMEʿ AL-TAMṮIL
Ulrich Marzolph
a collection of Persian proverbs and their stories compiled in 1045/1644 by Moḥammad-ʿAli Ḥablarudi.
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ʿAṢṢĀR, Sayyed MOḤAMMAD-KĀẒEM
Ahmad Kazemi Mousavi and EIr
(b. 1302/1884-85; d. Tehran, 19 Dey 1353 Š./9 January 1975), outstanding Shiʿite scholar and professor of philosophy at the University of Tehran.
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AYMĀQ
A. Janata
(Turk. Oymaq), a term designating tribal peoples in Khorasan and Afghanistan, mostly semi-nomadic or semi-sedentary, in contrast to the fully sedentary, non-tribal population of the area.
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BOLOḠĀN ḴĀTŪN
Charles Melville
(Būlūḡān Ḵātūn), the name of three of the royal wives of the Mongol Il-khans in Iran. Of Mongol origin, the word Boloḡān, variously spelled in the Persian sources, means “sable.”
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DAMĀVAND
Bernard Hourcade, Aḥmad Tafażżolī
mountain, town, and administrative district (šahrestān) in the central Alborz region.
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TENTS ii. Variety, Construction, and Use
Peter Alford Andrews
Both of the basic tent types used by nomads elsewhere in the Middle East are present in Iran and Afghanistan: the black, goat-hair tent and the felt tent.
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ṬABAQĀT-E NĀṢERI
C. E. Bosworth
an extensive general history composed in Persian by b. Serāj-al-Din Jowzjāni, who for the first part of his career lived in Ḡur under the Ghurid sultans and latterly in Muslim India under the Moʿezzi or Šamsi Delhi sultans.
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ZAYNAB BEGUM
Kioumars Ghereghlou
(d. Qazvin, 1640), the fourth daughter of Shah Ṭahmāsp and one of the most influential princesses in Safavid Iran.
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JĀJRUD
Bernard Hourcade
a major river of the southern slopes of the central Alborz in the Central Plateau (140 km. long, basin of 1,890 km²), running from the mountains of Šami-rānāt at Rudbār-e Qaṣrān to the plain of Varāmin and eventually joins the salt lake of Qom (Daryāča-ye Qom), at about 89 km to the northwest of the city.
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ḎU’L-FAQĀR
Jean Calmard
lit., “provided with notches, grooves, vertebrae”; the miraculous sword of Imam ʿAlī b. Abī Ṭāleb, with two blades or points, which became a symbol of his courage on the battlefield.
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GORGĀN i. Geography
Ḥabib-Allāh Zanjāni
the ancient Hyrcania, an important Persian province at the southeast corner of the Caspian sea.
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MARICQ, André
Philippe Gignoux
From 1953 to the summer of 1954, Maricq conducted extensive field research in the Near East. His aimed to collect casts of all seal collections in the Near East, to obtain impressions of the ŠKZ, and to survey a site in Commagene that Ernest Honigmann identified as the convent of the Nestorian bishop Barṣauma.
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ĀL-E BĀVAND
W. Madelung
(BAVANDIDS), a dynasty ruling Ṭabarestān (Māzandarān) from at least the 2nd/8th century until 750/1349.
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GYPSY ii. Gypsy Dialects
Gernot L. Windfuhr
The languages and dialects popularly called “Gypsy” (< Egipcien < qebṭi “Coptic, Egyptian”) constitute three major groups: Asiatic or Middle Eastern Domari, Armenian Lomavren, and European Romani.
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GĪLĀN ix. Monuments
Manouchehr Sotoudeh
Most buildings of historical interest in Gilān have been repeatedly repaired and rebuilt. Some have clear records of their history, but most lack reliable, primary documents, and one has to rely on a variety of indirect evidence, such as the dates engraved on entrance doors or tombstones to reconstruct part of the past of a given edifice.
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CARAVANSARY
Moḥammad-Yūsuf Kīānī and Wolfram Kleiss
a building that served as the inn of the Orient, providing accommodation for commercial, pilgrim, postal, and especially official travelers. The term kārvān-sarā was commonly used in Iran and is preserved in several place names. The normal caravansary consisted of a square or rectangular plan centered around a courtyard.
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DELLA VALLE, PIETRO
John Gurney
(b. Rome, 11 April 1586, d. Rome, 21 April 1652), one of the most remarkable travelers of the Renaissance, whose Viaggi is the best contemporary account of the lands between Istanbul and Goa in the early 17th century.
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LĀHIJĀN
Christian Bromberger
a city in the province of Gilān. It is located at 37°12′ N, long 50°0′ E, to the east of the lower reaches of Safidrud at an altitude of 4 m.
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HOUTUM-SCHINDLER, ALBERT
John D. Gurney
(1846-1916), Sir, engineer and employee of the Persian government for over thirty years in the later 19th and early 20th centuries; he was both loyal and knowledgeable.
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KĀR KIĀ
Yukako Goto
or Kiā, a Zaydi family from the eastern flank (Bia-piš) of Gilān, as well as the local dynasty founded by this family that dominated East Gilān and Deylamestān from the 770s/1370s to 1000/1592.
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CLIMATE
Eckart Ehlers
The Persian national weather service first began publishing its observations only in the year 1956, when a network of synoptic observation stations was first constructed in conformity with international standards; detailed data for many parts of the country are thus available for only about twenty-five or thirty years.
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HAZĀRA i. Historical geography of Hazārajāt
Arash Khazeni
Hazārajāt, the homeland of the Hazāras, lies in the central highlands of Afghanistan. In some respects Hazārajāt denotes an ethnic and religious zone rather than a geographical one–that of Afghanistan’s Turko-Mongol Shiʿites.
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CARAVAN
Bert G. Fragner
a form of collective transport of men and goods.
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BURBUR TRIBE
Dariush Borbor
a Lor tribe dispersed throughout Persia, especially in Azerbaijan, Varāmin, northern Khorasan, Fārs, and Kermān.
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BARF “SNOW”
D. Balland, B. Hourcade, and C. M. Kieffer
On the tropical margins of the Irano-Afghan plateau, snow is in fact exceptional below an altitude of 1,000 meters. Not that it cannot fall in abundance there, but then it is a memorable event. In the remaining two-thirds of the territory of Iran and Afghanistan snow is a common occurrence.
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CHURNS AND CHURNING
Marcel Bazin and Christian Bromberger
There are three distinct ways in which milk is normally processed. In the first it is heated, pressed, and squeezed dry to make cheese (panīr). Cheese making is uncommon in the Persian world. The other two methods begin with conversion of the milk into yogurt.
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AFGHANISTAN i. Geography
J. F. Shroder, Jr.
Afghanistan has an extreme continental, arid climate which is characterized by desert, steppe, and highland temperature and precipitation regimes.
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HERAT iii. HISTORY, MEDIEVAL PERIOD
Maria Szuppe
When the Arab armies appeared in Khorasan in the 650s, Herat was counted among the twelve capital towns of the Sasanian empire.
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ECONOMY vii. FROM THE SAFAVIDS THROUGH THE ZANDS
Bert Fragner
The first Safavid king, Esmāʿīl I (907-30/1501-24), initiated a process of political and religious change in Persia that profoundly affected the economic structure.
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BADUSPANIDS
W. Madelung
a dynasty ruling Rūyān and Rostamdār from the late 11th to the 16th century with the title of ostandār and later of king.
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KĀMRĀN MIRZĀ NĀYEB-AL-SALṬANA
Heidi Walcher
(1856-1929), the third surviving son of Nāṣer-al-Din Shah, he was the minister of war and commander of the armed forces, and intermittently governor of Tehran and a number of provinces.
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BUKHARA vii. Bukharan Jews
Michael Zand
“Bukharan Jews” is the common appellation for the Jews of Central Asia whose native language is the Jewish dialect of Tajik.
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JUDEO-PERSIAN COMMUNITIES iv. MEDIEVAL TO LATE 18TH CENTURY
Vera Basch Moreen
From ancient times Iranian Jews formed communities in most of the major towns, villages, and regions of the Persianate world. Between the 8th and 10th centuries, Iraq and Iran contained very large and prosperous Jewish populations.
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ALBORZ iii. Geography
M. Bazin, E. Ehlers, B. Hourcade
physical relief, geology, geomorphology, climate, flora, demography and economy of the Alborz massif.
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ČEŠTĪYA
Gerhard Böwering
the name of an influential Sufi order in India, derived from the name of the village of Češt.
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JUDEO-PERSIAN COMMUNITIES ix. JUDEO-PERSIAN LITERATURE
Amnon Netzer
Most of the inscriptions and documents written in Judeo-Persian at the beginning of the Islamic period were discovered in the 19th century. They are important for the study of the development of early New Persian, and their existence proves that Jews lived and were active in all areas within and beyond the borders of historical Persia.
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GORGĀN vii. History from the Safavids to the end of the Pahlavi era
Jawād Neyestāni and EIr
Two characteristics dominated the history of Gorgān in the period between the 16th and early 19th centuries: incessant tribal unrest and power politics.
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ESMĀʿĪL I ṢAFAWĪ
Roger M. Savory, Ahmet T. Karamustafa
(1487-1524), SHAH ABU’L-MOẒAFFAR, founder of the Safavid dynasty whose decision, the promulgation of the Eṯnā-ʿašarī rite of Shiʿism to be the official religion of the state, had profound consequences for the subsequent history of Persia.
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COINS AND COINAGE
Stephen Album, Michael L. Bates, Willem Floor
During the reign of Fatḥ-ʿAlī Shah (1797-1834) the first steps toward a modern currency were taken. At the Tabrīz and Isfahan mints well-executed silver and gold coins were struck along with the normal, less carefully minted products, with full, even pressure and reeded edges similar to those found on contemporary British Indian coins.
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