Masjed Soleyman
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Masjed Soleiman (also transcribed as Masjid Soleyman and Masjid-e-Soleiman) (مسجد سلیمان in Persian) is a city in the Khuzestan province in southwestern Iran. The first modern oil wells of the Middle East were discovered and drilled in this area. It is mostly populated by the Bakhtiari people with estimated population of 127,634 in 2005.[1]
The name of the city is assumed to have its origins from a belief of local inhabitants calling the ruins of an Achaemenid palace as the Masjed-e-Soleiman, which means "Mosque of Solomon."
Basically, the very primary settlement of the city formed about 100 years ago as a cause of petroleum industry development in Middle East when the first negotiations on the establishment of Anglo-Bakhtiari Oil Company was in progress in between William Knox D'arcy representatives and Bakhtiari Tribe leaders ( Khans).
The first oil drilling in the Middle East has been made in the region of Naftoon in the center of this city, so the 100th year anniversary for the oil drilling in the Middle East will be celebrated in 2008 in this city. also called Masjed Soleiman in brief M.I.S.
The current secretary of Iran's powerful Expediency Discernment Council, Mohsen Rezaee was born in Masjed Soleiman.
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