Nishapur
Nishapur نیشابور Neyshabur | ||||||||
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Nickname(s): Sassanid and Umayyed era: Abarshahr (Upper Cities), Little Damascus (by Ibn Battuta)[1] | ||||||||
Nishapur | ||||||||
Coordinates: 36°12′48″N 58°47′45″E / 36.21333°N 58.79583°ECoordinates: 36°12′48″N 58°47′45″E / 36.21333°N 58.79583°E | ||||||||
Country | Iran | |||||||
Province | Khorasan | |||||||
County | Nishapur County | |||||||
Foundation | 3rd century | |||||||
Municipality of Nishapur | 1931 | |||||||
Government | ||||||||
• Mayor | Seyed Abbas Hosseini | |||||||
• Governor of County | Gholam-Hossein Mozaffari | |||||||
Elevation | 1,250 m (4,100 ft) | |||||||
Population (2011) | ||||||||
• City | 276,089[2] | |||||||
• Nishapur County | 433,105[3] | |||||||
• Urban areas of Nishapur County | 270,301 | |||||||
2 Census | ||||||||
Demonym(s) | Nishapuri | |||||||
Time zone | IRST (UTC+03:30) | |||||||
Website |
www |
Nishapur or Nishabur ( pronunciation ; Persian: نیشابور, also Romanized as Nīshāpūr, Nīshābūr, and Neyshābūr from Middle Persian: New-Shabuhr, meaning "New City of Shapur", "Fair Shapur",[4] or "Perfect built of Shapur")[5] is a city in the Khorasan Province, capital of the Nishapur County and former capital of Province Khorasan, in northeastern Iran, situated in a fertile plain at the foot of the Binalud Mountains. It had an estimated population of 239,185 as of 2011 and its county 433,105. Nearby are the turquoise mines that have supplied the world with turquoise for at least two millennia. The city was founded in the 3rd century by Shapur I as a Sasanian satrapy capital. Nishapur later became the capital of Tahirid dynasty and was reformed by Abdullah Tahir in 830, and was later selected as the capital of Seljuq dynasty by Tughril in 1037. From the Abbasid era to the Mongol invasion of Khwarezmia and Eastern Iran, the city evolved into a significant cultural, commercial, and intellectual center within the Islamic world. Nishapur, along with Merv, Herat and Balkh were one of the four great cities of Greater Khorasan and one of the greatest cities in the middle ages, a seat of governmental power in eastern of caliphate, a dwelling place for diverse ethnic and religious groups, a trading stop on commercial routes from Transoxiana and China, Iraq and Egypt.
Nishapur reached the height of its prosperity under the Samanids in the 10th century, but was destroyed by Mongols in 1221, and further ruined by other invasions and earthquakes in the 13th century. After that time, a much smaller settlement was established just north of the ancient town, and the once bustling metropolis lay underground—until a team of excavators from the Metropolitan Museum of Art arrived in the mid-20th century. They worked at Nishapur between 1935 and 1940, returning for a final season in the winter of 1947–48.[6] What remains of old Nishapur region is a 3500-hectare "Kohandejh" area, south of the current city of Nishapur.
History
Pre-history and archaeology
Little archaeology has been done on this vast and complicated site. George Curzon remarked that Nishapur had been destroyed and rebuilt more times than any other city in history,[7] an evocative statement whether or not it is statistically true. The Metropolitan Museum of Art undertook excavations from 1935 that were interrupted in 1940. Searching largely for museum-worthy trophies that they shared with the government of the Shah, the Metropolitan's publications were limited to its own Nishapur ceramics. The site of Nishapur has been ransacked for half a century since World War II, to feed the international market demand for early Islamic works of art.
Shadiyakh ("Palace of Happiness") was one of the main palaces of old Nishapur up to the 9th century AD, which became more important and populated after that. Some notable people like Attar lived there. Attar's tomb is nowadays in that area. This palace was perhaps completely ruined in the 13th century.
Middle Ages
Nishapur occupies an important strategic position astride the old Silk Road that linked Anatolia and the Mediterranean Sea with China. On the Silk Road, Nishapur has often defined the flexible frontier between the Iranian plateau and Central Asia. The town derived its name from its reputed founder, the Sassanian king Shapur I, who is said to have established it in the 3rd century CE. Nearby are the turquoise mines that supplied the world with turquoise for at least two millennia.
It became an important town in the Khorasan region but subsequently declined in significance until a revival in its fortunes in the 9th century under the Tahirid dynasty, when the glazed ceramics of Nishapur formed an important item of trade to the west. For a time Nishapur rivaled Baghdad or Cairo: Toghrül, the first ruler of the Seljuk dynasty, made Nishapur his residence in 1037 and proclaimed himself sultan there, but it declined thereafter, as Seljuk fortunes were concentrated in the west. In the year 1000 CE, it was among the ten largest cities on earth.[8]
After the husband of Genghis Khan's daughter was killed at Nishapur in 1221, she or Genghis ordered the death of the entire population of the city, which was reputedly 1.7 million. Their skulls were reputedly piled in pyramids by the Mongols. This massacre, combined with subsequent earthquakes destroyed the pottery industry.
Toponymy
Culture
Anthem
The special Anthem of Nishapur was unveiled for the first time on April 14, 2011;[9] it has introduction and three parts, noted on three invasive and destructive in the history of Nishapur, delineated by frightening sounds of bells, along with sounds of percussion and wailing women represent the miseries caused by these attacks.[10][11]
Persian original | UniPers alphabet | English translation |
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Popular culture
- US band Santana released an instrumental track entitled "Incident at Neshabur" on their 1970 LP release, Abraxas. Carlos Santana says this was a reference to a place in Haiti.
- Yo-Yo Ma released an instrumental track entitled "Blue as the Turquoise Night of Neyshabur" as part of the Silk Road Project.
Local and cultural days
Name | Day | Calendar |
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Farvardin (Hamal) 1 | Nowruz | Solar Hijri |
Farvardin (Hamal) 13 | Sizdah Be-dar, Day of Nature | Solar Hijri |
Farvardin (Hamal) 25 | Respect day for Attar of Nishapur | Solar Hijri |
Ordibehesht(Thawr) 28 | Respect day for Omar Khayyam | Solar Hijri |
Tir (Saratan) 10 | Remembrance day for Imam Ali al-Ridha | Solar Hijri |
Mordad 2 | Sympathy day for the victims of Boozhan flood | Solar Hijri |
Azar 30 | Night of Yalda | Solar Hijri |
Bahman 29 | Sympathy day the victims of Nishapur train disaster | Solar Hijri |
Last Wednesday of Esfand | Chaharshanbe Suri Festival | Solar Hijri |
Esfand 29 | Celebrate the end of winter | Solar Hijri |
Muharram 10 | Remembrance of Muharram | Lunar Hijri |
Safar 20 | Arba'een | Lunar Hijri |
Rabi' al-awwal 17 | Mawlid | Lunar Hijri |
Rajab 25 | Respect day for Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj, death of Musa al-Kadhim | Lunar Hijri |
Sha'aban 14 | Borat Nights (3 nights) | Lunar Hijri |
Shawwal 1 | Eid al-Fitr | Lunar Hijri |
Dhu al-Hijjah 18 | Eid of Ghadir, Day of Visiting Sadaat | Lunar Hijri |
Arts
About the arts in Nishapur or Old Nishapur:
Pottery
Nishapur during the Islamic Golden Age, especially the 9th and 10th centuries, was one of the great centers of pottery and related arts.[12] Most of the Ceramic artifacts discovered in Nishapur are preserved in the Metropolitan Museum of Art and Museums in Tehran and Mashhad. Ceramics produced at Nishapur showed links with Sassanid art and Central Asian.[13] Nowadays there are 4 Pottery workshop in Nishapur.[14]
Carpet-weaving
Weaving carpets and rugs common in the more than 470 villages in Nishapur County, the most important carpet Workshop located in the villages of: Shafi' Abad, Garineh Darrud Baghshan Kharv Bozghan Sayyed Abad Sar Chah Suleymani Sultan Abad and Eshgh Abad. Nishapur Carpet workshops weaved the biggest Carpets in the world, like carpets of : Sheikh Zayed Mosque,[15] Sultan Qaboos Grand Mosque,[16] Armenian Presidential Palace, Embassy of Finland in Tehran, Mohammed Al-Ameen Mosque in Oman.[17]
Modern art of carpet in Nishapur began in 1946 after inauguration of a carpet-weaving workshop in a caravansary.
Turquoise masonry
For at least 2,000 years, Iran, known before as Persia, has remained an important source of turquoise, which was named by Iranians initially "pirouzeh" meaning "victory" and later after Arab invasion "firouzeh". In Iranian architecture, the blue turquoise was used to cover the domes of the Iranian palaces because its intense blue colour was also a symbol of heaven on earth.
This deposit, which is blue naturally, and turns green when heated due to dehydration, is restricted to a mine-riddled region in Nishapur, the 2,012-metre (6,601 ft) mountain peak of Ali-mersai, which is tens of kilometers from Mashhad, the capital of Khorasan province, Iran. A weathered and broken trachyte is host to the turquoise, which is found both in situ between layers of limonite and sandstone, and amongst the scree at the mountain's base. These workings, together with those of the Sinai Peninsula, are the oldest known.
Tile
In many important historical or modern monuments and buildings the art of Tiles are widely used in Nishapur,
Wooden arts
Calligraphy
Statuary
Wall Painting
People
Language
Most people speak Persian in Nishapur.
Khorasani Turkic, Kurdish and Arabic are also spoken.
Religion
Islam is first religion and Twelever Mahdist Shia is first Madhab in Nishapur.
Notable people
Sorted by date
- Mazdak - (died c. 524 or 528) was a Zoroastrian prophet, Iranian reformer and religious activist
- Kanarang - was a unique title in the Sassanid army, given to the commander of the Sassanid Empire's northeasternmost frontier province, Abarshahr (encompassing the cities of Tus, Nishapur and Abiward).
- Behafarid - was an 8th-century Persian Zoroastrian heresiarch
- Sunpadh - (died 755) cleric
- Ishaq Ibn Rahwayh - muhaddith, faqih
- Abu al-Abbas Iranshahri - 9th-century philosopher, mathematician, natural scientist, historian of religion, astronomer and author
- Ibn Khuzaymah - Muslim scholar
- Muslim ibn al-Hajjaj - Muslim scholar
- Abu al-Hassan al-Amiri - (died 992) was a Muslim theologian and philosopher
- Abū al-Wafā' Būzjānī - (10 June 940 – 15 July 998) was a mathematician and astronomer
- Hakim al-Nishaburi - (933 - 1012), was a Sunni scholar and historian
- Tha'ālibī -(961–1038), Muslim philologist, writer and poet
- Ahmad ibn 'Imad al-Din - was a Persian physician and alchemist. He was probably from Nishapur in the 11th century.
- Ibn Abi Sadiq - was an 11th-century Persian physician
- Abū-Sa'īd Abul-Khayr - (December 7, 967 - January 12, 1049) was a famous Persian Sufi and poet
- Al-Juwayni (1028—1085 CE) was a Sunni Shafi'i Faqih and Mutakallim.
- Ahmad ibn Muhammad al-Tha'labi - was an 11th-century Islamic scholar.
- Abd al-Karīm ibn Hawāzin Qushayri - was born in 986 CE (376 AH), Philosopher and Sufi
- Omar Khayyám - (18 May 1048 – 4 December 1131) was a Persian polymath, philosopher, mathematician, astronomer and poet.
- Mu'izzi - was an 11th and 12th-centuries poet
- Haji Bektash Veli - was a Muslim mystic
- Attar of Nishapur - (c. 1145 – c. 1221), was a Muslim poet, theoretician of Sufism, and hagiographer .
- Abu al-Qasim al-Habib Neishapuri - physician mid-15th century.
- Saadat Ali Khan I - (b. c. 1680 – d. 19 March 1739) was the Subahdar Nawab of Oudh. All the rulers of Oudh State in India belonged to a Shia Muslim dynasty of Persian origin from Nishapur. They were renowned for their secularism and broad outlook. After they rebelled against the British their state was annexed to form the United Provinces of Agra and Oudh.[18]
- Hamid Hussain Musavi - i (born 1830 - died 1880) was a leading Shia scholar
- Heydar Yaghma -
- Badi' -
- Abolghasem Sakhdari - wrestler
- Saeed Khani - footballer
- Yaghoub Ali Shourvarzi - wrestler
- Nur-Ali Shushtari -
- Esmail Shooshtari -
- Parviz Meshkatian -
- Mohammad-Reza Shafiei Kadkani - i (born 1939) is a Persian writer, poet, literary critic, editor, and translator.
- Hossein Vahid Khorasani—(born January 1, 1921) is an Iranian Twelver Shia Marja
- Abdolreza Kahani—
- Hamed Behdad—(1973–) Actor
Education
Schools, universities and colleges
Islamic Azad University of Nishapur is a main branch of Islamic Azad University. It was established in 1985 and has two faculties in IAUM, Agriculture, and Engineering faculty offers Bachelor, and master's degrees.
Libraries
Al-Ghadir library:Moalem street
Sport
Nishapur has one professional football team, Jahan Electric Nishapur, who compete in Razavi Khorasan's Provincial Leagues.
Sport centers
Enghelab Sports Complex is an indoor arena in Nishapur. The arena houses Nishapur's basketball, volleyball, and futsal teams.
Transportation
Nishapur train disaster
On 18 February 2004, runaway train wagons crashed into the village of Khayyam near Nishapur, causing an explosion and killing over 300 people. The entire village of Khayyam was destroyed.
Road 44
Road 44 is a highway that goes from Tehran to Mashhad and also passes Nishapur on the way.
Industry and economy
Foolad steel complex which is producing steel.
Geography
Nishapur is located at an elevation of 1213 metres on a wide fertile plain almost at the southwestern foot of Mount Binalud in northcentral Razavi Khorasan Province. The city is connected by both railroad and highways to Mashhad and Tehran and also to South Khorasan Province. Among its agricultural products are cereals and cotton. Making pottery and weaving carpets are among important crafts.
Weather
Nishapur has a generally Mediterranean climate with the rainy seasons mostly in the spring and winter. Towards the west of the city, however, the weather gradually changes to a cold semi-desert climate.
Geology
The city of Nishapur lies on a Holocene alluvial plain on top of the Pleistocene sediments in the southwestern part of the Binalud Mountains. The Binalud Range, running northwest-southeast, is made predominantly of Triassic and Jurassic rocks. On the southern side of the northwestern part of the range there is a section of Eocene rocks that are volcanic in origin. The well-known Nishabur turquoise comes from the weathered and broken trachytes and andesites of the Eocene volcanic rocks of this part of the mountain range. The main turquoise mines are situated about 50 kilometres northwest of the city of Nishapur in the foothills of the Binalud Range.[19]
Seismicity
Nishapur is located in a region with a rather high risk of earthquakes. Many earthquakes have seriously harmed the city; among the important ones are the historical earthquakes that ruined the city in the 12th and 13th centuries.
Mass media
Newspaper publishing
General publications in Nishapur includes the weekly and local newspapers. The first local newspaper of Khorasan province is Morning of Nishapur, published since 1989. Others include Shadiakh, published since 2000, Khayyam Nameh, since 2004, Nasim, since 2006, and Far reh Simorgh, since 2010.[20]
Broadcasting
IRIB center of Mashhad covers news of Nishapur.
Printing
Two book publishers working in the city:Klidar & Abar Shahr.[21][22]
Administration
Popular culture
US band Santana released an instrumental track entitled "Incident at Neshabur" on their 1970 LP release, Abraxas.
Recent incidents
- On July 24, 1987, a flood in Boojan village killed over 1,000 people and destroyed some villages.
- On February 18, 2004, in the Nishapur train disaster, a train carrying flammable goods derailed and caught fire near the town. Five hours later, during fire fighting and rescue work, a massive explosion destroyed the train and many nearby buildings. Around 300 people were said to have been killed, mainly fire and rescue workers but also the local governor and mayor and the heads of the fire and rail services.[23]
Souvenirs
The most important Nishapur souvenirs include turquoise and rhubarb.
Neyshabur Turquoise has been used for more than 2000 years and for this turquoise it is sometimes called "the turquoise land". Neyshabur turquoise and jewellery made from it are sold as souvenirs in Neyshabur and Mashhad resorts.
Rhubarb (Persian rivaas or rivand), a sour vegetable, grows at the foot of the eponymous Rivand Mountains (more recently, Turkified as Mount Binalud). Soft drinks made from the stems of the plant, such as "Sharbate rivaas" (شربت ریواس) and "Khoshaabe rivaas" (خوشاب ریواس), are sold at some Nishapur resorts as souvenirs.
Sister cities
References
- ↑ The Cambridge History of Iran - Volume 1 - Page 68
- ↑ http://www.sko.ir/Sarshomari1390/Shahrhaye_IRAN.xls
- ↑ http://www.khorasan.ir/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=lrFSbp8Zxwk%3d&tabid=8771&mid=14529
- ↑ Honigmann, E.; Bosworth, C.E.. "Nīs̲h̲āpūr." Encyclopaedia of Islam, Second Edition. Edited by: P. Bearman, Th. Bianquis, C.E. Bosworth, E. van Donzel, W.P. Heinrichs. Brill Online, 2013. Reference. 31 December 2013
- ↑ Nishapur can be found at GEOnet Names Server, at this link, by opening the Advanced Search box, entering "-3076915" in the "Unique Feature Id" form, and clicking on "Search Database".
- ↑ http://www.metmuseum.org/toah/hd/nish/hd_nish.htm
- ↑ George N. Curzon, Persia and the Persian Question, Vol. I, (Routledge, 2005), 262.
- ↑ geography.about.com
- ↑ http://www.magiran.com/npview.asp?ID=2270609
- ↑ http://www.rovzane.com/blog/show/%D9%BE%D8%A7%DB%8C%D8%AA%D8%AE%D8%AA-%D8%A7%D9%88%D9%84-%D8%A7%DB%8C%D8%B1%D8%A7%D9%86%DB%8C-%D9%85%D9%86-%D8%B3%D8%B1%D9%88%D8%AF-%D9%86%DB%8C%D8%B4%D8%A7%D8%A8%D9%88%D8%B1.html
- ↑ http://551.ir/en/about-neyshabur/song-of-neyshabur
- ↑ Nishapur: Pottery of the Early Islamic Period, Wilkinson, Charles K. (1973)
- ↑ http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/415980/Nishapur-pottery
- ↑ http://incc.ir/fa/Lists/News/DispForm.aspx?ID=2589
- ↑ http://news.webindia123.com/news/Articles/World/20070728/726654.html
- ↑ http://www.omanet.om/english/Relegious/grandmosq.asp
- ↑ Muscat
- ↑ Repertoire On Wajid Ali Shah & Monuments of Avadh - Nawabs of Oudh & their Secularism
- ↑ Scheffel, Richard L.; Wernet, Susan J., eds. (1980). Natural Wonders of the World. United States of America: Reader's Digest Association, Inc. p. 271. ISBN 0-89577-087-3.
- ↑ http://551.ir/images/stories/news/newspaper/farresimorq/farresimorq-46-2.jpg
- ↑ http://www.klidar.ir/
- ↑ http://www.abarshar.ir
- ↑ news.bbc.co.uk
Further reading
- Wilkinson, Charles K. (1973). Nishapur: pottery of the early Islamic period. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 0870990764.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Nishapur. |
Wikiquote has quotations related to: Nishapur |
- Nishapur Mayors (in Persian)
- Nishapur governors (in Persian)
- Ceramics of Nishapur and other centers
- World Gazetteer on Nishapur at Archive.is (archived 2012-12-17)
- Neyshaburian e-newspaper (in Persian)
- A useful weblog about Nishapur (in Persian)
- wooden village website
- Nishapur Mathhouse
- Neyshabur bonyad (in Persian)
- Elias Pirasteh, Neyshabur, Photo Set, flickr
- Ardavan Ruzbeh, When National Heritage is not an equal to the Emām-Jom'eh, a reportage on the demolition of a national monument, Madreseh-ye Golshan (مدرسه گلشن), in Nishabur, in Persian, Radio Zamāneh, May 29, 2008: Text, Audio.
- Hossein Davoudi, Dizbād: A Staircase to History, in Persian, Jadid Online, 2008.
A Slide Show of Dizbād, by Hossein Davoudi, Jadid Online, 2008, (5 min 39 sec).
Note: Dizbād is a small village between Mashhad and Neyshābūr, located at some 40 km distance from Mashhad.
Preceded by - |
Capital of Seljuq Empire (Persia) 1037–1043 |
Succeeded by Rey |