Nahavand

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Nahavand
Nahavand (Iran)
Nahavand
Nahavand
Location in Iran
Coordinates: 34°11′04″N 48°22′21″E / 34.18444, 48.3725
Country Iran
Province Hamadan Province


Nahāvand is a town in Hamadan Province in Iran. It is located in south of Hamadan, east of Malayer and shouthwest of Borujerd. Nahavand is one of the oldest existing cities of the modern Iran.

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[edit] Name

It has been spelled differently in different books and sources. Nahavand (Persian: نهاوند, Nahāvand); also transliterated Nahavend, Nahawand, Nehavand, Nihavand or Nehavend; formerly called: Mah-Nahavand, Laodicea (Greek: Λαοδικεια; Arabic Ladhiqiyya), also transliterated Laodiceia and Laodikeia, Laodicea in Media, Laodicea in Persis, Antiochia in Persis, Antiochia of Chosroes (Greek: Αντιόχεια του Χοσρόη), Antiochia in Media (Greek: Αντιόχεια της Μηδίας), Nemavand and Niphaunda. Nahavand is a city, not a town, since it over 100,000 people. The shahrestan (township/district)has roughly got a population of 250-280,000 people.

[edit] History

The city was founded by Seleucus I Nicator, in Media along with the two other Hellenistic cities of Apamea and Heraclea. (Strabo xi. p. 524 ; Stephanus of Byzantium "Laodikeia") Pliny (vi. 29) describes it as being in the extreme limits of Media, and (re-)founded by Antiochus I.

The city was a center of Chosroes I's empire. After military reverses (ca. 540) following his sack of Syrian Antiochia in 538, he was forced to rename his capital "Antiochia".

It is the site of the Battle of Nihawānd in 642 that completed the fall of the Sassanid Empire and the Islamic conquest of Iran.

Natives of Nahavand include Benjamin Nahawandi, who was a key figure in the development of Karaite Judaism in the Early Middle Ages, and 8th-century astronomer Ahmad Nahavandi, who worked at the Academy of Gundishapur.

Currently it had an estimated population of 77,206 in 2005.[1] Nahavand also gives its name to the musical mode (maqam) Nahwand in Arabic, Iranian and Turkish music.


[edit] References

[edit] External links

This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of Greek and Roman Geography by William Smith (1856).

Coordinates: 34°11′04″N, 48°22′21″E