fbpx
Wikipedia

Damghan

Damghan (Persian: دامغان, romanizedDāmghān)[2] is the capital of Damghan County, Semnan Province, Iran. At the 2006 census, its population was 57,331, in 15,849 families.[3] It is situated 342 km (213 mi) east of Tehran on the high-road to Mashad, at an elevation of 1,250 m (4,101 ft). It is one of the oldest cities on the Iranian plateau, stretching back 7,000 years, and boasts many sites of historic interest. The oldest of these is Tappeh Hessar, lying to the southeast of the city, which holds the ruins of a castle dating from the Sasanian Empire.

Damghan
دامغان
City
Damghan
Coordinates: 36°10′06″N 54°20′53″E / 36.16833°N 54.34806°E / 36.16833; 54.34806Coordinates: 36°10′06″N 54°20′53″E / 36.16833°N 54.34806°E / 36.16833; 54.34806
CountryIran
ProvinceSemnan
CountyDamghan
BakhshCentral
Population
 (2016 Census)
 • Total59,106 [1]
Time zoneUTC+3:30 (IRST)

The Tarikhaneh is one of the oldest mosques in Iran, built as a fire temple during the Sassanid dynasty, it was converted into a mosque after the advent of Islam. There are also many other historical buildings belonging to the Seljuk Empire and other periods. Apart from its historical interest, the city today is mainly known for pistachios and paper almonds (kaghazi) with very thin shells.

History

Tepe Hissar

 
Tepe Hissar

Archaeological excavation has shown that the history of Damghan starts 4–5 thousand years BCE at Tepe Hissar in the village of Heydarabad. Tepe Hissar was inhabited in the Chalcolithic period in the fifth millennium BC.Radiocarbon dating in Tepe Hissar have revealed items 7,000 years old.[citation needed] Recently expansion of Tehran–Mashhad railway into double lanes the body of a woman along with her fetus was discovered with over 7,000 years age.[citation needed] Tepe Hissar, with several layers of civilizations. There was metal production in its earliest period.[4] There are also several associated sites, such as Shir Ashian Tepe, another small settlement in the area, dating to the same time.[citation needed]

Part of the layers in the tepe belong to the Mades dynasty,[clarification needed] which shared its civilization with Mesopotamia. Another layer covers the Achaemenid Empire, the Parthian Empire and Seleucid Empire. Tappeh Hessar achieved its peak of glory during the Seleucid and Parthian periods.[citation needed]Ernst Herzfeld (1931–1933) and Erich Schmidt (1933–1938) were the first archaeologists who explored the tepe. An archaeological dig there in 1996 revealed remains dating from the time of the Aryan settlement of the Iranian plateau (circa 4000 BCE) to the Median (728-550 BCE), the Arsacid (248-224 CE) and Sassanid (224-651 CE) dynastic periods.[citation needed]

Hecatompylos

The remains of Hecatompylos lie to the southwest of the city, extending from Forat, 26 kilometres (16 mi) south of Damghan, to nearly 32 kilometres (20 mi) west. After Alexander the Great's conquest of Persia, the nearby city of Hecatompylos ("hundred gates"), now called Šahr-e Qumis (Persian: شهر قومس) was the population centre. This name had also been given to Thebes, Greece and Thebes, Egypt.

Damghan

The name Damghan comes from "deh", village, and "moghan", Magi. This name was given by Zoroastrians, who included such people as Cyrus the Great and Darius the Great of the Achaemenid Empire. Historiographers ascribe the construction of Damghan to Hooshang, Keyumars' great-grandson and the founder of the legendary Pishdadi dynasty. The historical town was called Qumis, which was located in a region of the same name, stretching from Sabzevar to Garmsar, from north up to the Alborz mountain range and to the Lut Desert in the south. Up to the first century AD, Damghan was the capital of that great province.

The city was half destroyed in the 856 Damghan earthquake.

Damghan was an important city in the Middle Ages, but few remnants of that time remain; one is the ruined Tarikhaneh. The city was capital of the province of Qumis (Qoomes), but was destroyed by the Afghan Hotak dynasty in 1723.

Tarikhaneh Mosque

 
Tarikhaneh

Tarikhaneh Mosque is the oldest mosque in Iran, belonging to the first century after the Muslim conquest of Persia.[citation needed] It still preserves its original shape, with a number of massive columns and wood carvings and two minarets of the 11th century. The prefix "Tari", a Turkish or Mongol term, means God and "khaneh" is the Iranian word for house, so the word means the house of God.[citation needed]

Tarikhaneh and Na'in Mosque in Na'in are the only mosques in the Islamic world which resemble the Medina Mosque. This mosque was built during the eighth century AD by imitating Roman, Byzantine, Iranian and Arabic architecture. This is an Arabic design but the building material and architecture is Sassanid. Originally it was a fire temple during the Sassanid period, and later the mosque was built over its ruins. One column resembling Sassanian architecture at the eastern wing is a proof of this assertion.[citation needed]

Tarikhaneh Mosque is equipped with a square yard and a gallery with 18 columns facing the qibla and the three sides of the yard are surrounded by porticoes. The minaret rising over the mosque is said to belong to the Seljuk period and the tiled inscription over the minaret is in fact the oldest tile work in Islamic architecture.[citation needed]

Fortifications

 
Pre-modern fortifications of Damghan

Walls or fortifications and battlements have survived in many parts in Damghan, some dating from the Sasanian era. As mentioned in the history,[which?] the wall was very wide and enabled chariots to drive over it. The remains of that wall can be seen north and south of Damghan.[citation needed]

Seljuk architecture

 
Mid-19th century photograph of the Imamzadeh Jafar Mausoleum, Damghan by Luigi Pesce.

Much treasure has survived from the Seljuk period in Damghan. Peer-e Alamdar's Shrine (The Old Flagbearer's Tomb), the congregational mosque or Masjed Jame and its minaret, the Tarikhaneh Mosque, Mansourkuh, Imamzadeh Jafar Tower and Chehel Dokhtaran mausoleum, etc. are buildings in which Islamic architecture from the Seljuk period onward is notable. For the first time in Iran these buildings carry brick decorations to compensate for the monotonous and uniform rows.[citation needed]

Gunbad-i Chihil Dukhtaran mausoleum

Gunbad-i Chihil Dukhtaran is a mausoleum at the centre of Damghan and behind the Imamzade Ja'far, both of which belong to the Seljuk period.[5] It is the second-oldest tomb surviving from the reign of Tughril, the first of the Seljuk sultans.[5] It was built by one Amir Abu Shuja Asfar, as recorded in the Kufic inscription, which says the vault was built in AH 466 (AD 1087).[5] It has survived without cracks although the city is lying on the Alpide belt.[citation needed]

The vault is an onion dome adorned by bricks with artistic images and an inscription. The building which used to be a family vault is 14.8 m high and in its famous inscription the deceased have sought divine mercy in their lasting residence.[citation needed]

Imamzade Ja'far shrine-tomb

The Imamzade Ja'far and Muhammed is an imamzadeh of the Seljuk period.[6]

Gunbad-i Pir-i Alamdar tomb

The Gunbad-i Pir-i Alamdar is another Seljuk-era tomb near the Masjid-i Jami.[7]

Hashshashin forts

North of the city, along the Cheshme Ali and Mazandaran road, there are two forts built on the top of two mountains.[citation needed]

The first one is 5 km away from the city, on the peak of Gerdkuh, one of the main Ismaili Hashshashin fortresses once used by Hassan Sabah. It was finally conquered by the Ilkhanate under Hulagu Khan. Due to the circular shape of the mountain peak, it was named Gerdkuh, gerd for circular (round) and kuh for mountain. This shape made it very difficult to access by attackers.[citation needed]

Mehrnegar Fort is on Mansourkuh, 22 km north of city, along the road. The mountain is pyramidal and the fort located at its top. This was one of the fortifications of the Ismaili esoteric sect during the Seljuk invasion, and has been named Mehrnegar because of Princess Mehrnegar's love story.[citation needed]

 
Cheshmeh-ye Ali, Semnan

Cheshmeh-ye Ali

Evergreen Cheshmeh-ye Ali is one of the permanent springs in Damghan, 30 km north of the city. Thanks to its verdant foliage and pleasant climate this region has been frequented by people from ancient times. During the Qajar period many buildings were constructed in Cheshmeh-ye Ali among which the Fath-Ali Shah Qajar's and Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar's palaces still stand erect. Fat'hali Shah's palace is built in the middle of an artificial pool placed between the first and second spring and Agha Mohammad Khan's palace faces the former palace opposite.

Other sites

On an eminence in the western part of the city are the ruins of a large square citadel with a small whitewashed building, called Molud Khaneh ('the house of birth'), in which Fath-Ali Shah Qajar was born (1772).[8] Beside these, Damghan is close to the Gonbade Zangol, Toghrol's Tower, Qoosheh Amirabad Caravansary (a building from the time of Abbas the Great), historical hills and hazel-shaped castles around the city as well as Gerdkuh and Masoumzadeh Mehmandoust fortifications. Damghan's bazaar contains tombs, old schools, baths and the like. Historical monuments in Damghan have interested foreign archaeologists and many items excavated there are now in British and French museums.

Notable people

See also

References

  1. ^ "Statistical Center of Iran > Home".
  2. ^ Damghan can be found at GEOnet Names Server, at this link, by opening the Advanced Search box, entering "-3059167" in the "Unique Feature Id" form, and clicking on "Search Database".
  3. ^ "Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran, 1385 (2006)" (Excel). Statistical Center of Iran. from the original on 2011-11-11.
  4. ^ Chahryar Adl, "DĀMḠĀN", Encyclopaedia Iranica Online
  5. ^ a b c "Gunbad-i Chihil Dukhtaran". Archnet. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  6. ^ "Imamzade Ja'far and Muhammed". Archnet. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  7. ^ "Gunbad-i Pir-i Alamdar". Archnet. Retrieved 2020-07-23.
  8. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Damghan". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 787.
  9. ^ Shabani, Reza (2005). The book of Iran: a selection of the history of Iran. Tehran: Center for International-Cultural Studies. p. 221. ISBN 978-964-439-005-0., translated from the Persian by Mahmoud Farrokhpey
  10. ^ Bloom, Jonathan M.; Blair, Sheila S., eds. (2009). "Bistam". The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art & Architecture. Vol. 1. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. p. 291.

Bibliography

External links

  • Damghan website

damghan, administrative, subdivision, county, damqan, redirects, here, village, qazvin, province, damqan, qaavin, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, . For the administrative subdivision see Damghan County Damqan redirects here For the village in Qazvin Province see Damqan Qaavin This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Damghan news newspapers books scholar JSTOR July 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Damghan Persian دامغان romanized Damghan 2 is the capital of Damghan County Semnan Province Iran At the 2006 census its population was 57 331 in 15 849 families 3 It is situated 342 km 213 mi east of Tehran on the high road to Mashad at an elevation of 1 250 m 4 101 ft It is one of the oldest cities on the Iranian plateau stretching back 7 000 years and boasts many sites of historic interest The oldest of these is Tappeh Hessar lying to the southeast of the city which holds the ruins of a castle dating from the Sasanian Empire Damghan دامغانCityDamghanCoordinates 36 10 06 N 54 20 53 E 36 16833 N 54 34806 E 36 16833 54 34806 Coordinates 36 10 06 N 54 20 53 E 36 16833 N 54 34806 E 36 16833 54 34806CountryIranProvinceSemnanCountyDamghanBakhshCentralPopulation 2016 Census Total59 106 1 Time zoneUTC 3 30 IRST The Tarikhaneh is one of the oldest mosques in Iran built as a fire temple during the Sassanid dynasty it was converted into a mosque after the advent of Islam There are also many other historical buildings belonging to the Seljuk Empire and other periods Apart from its historical interest the city today is mainly known for pistachios and paper almonds kaghazi with very thin shells Contents 1 History 1 1 Tepe Hissar 1 2 Hecatompylos 1 3 Damghan 2 Tarikhaneh Mosque 3 Fortifications 4 Seljuk architecture 4 1 Gunbad i Chihil Dukhtaran mausoleum 4 2 Imamzade Ja far shrine tomb 4 3 Gunbad i Pir i Alamdar tomb 5 Hashshashin forts 6 Cheshmeh ye Ali 7 Other sites 8 Notable people 9 See also 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksHistory EditTepe Hissar Edit Main article Tepe Hissar Tepe Hissar Archaeological excavation has shown that the history of Damghan starts 4 5 thousand years BCE at Tepe Hissar in the village of Heydarabad Tepe Hissar was inhabited in the Chalcolithic period in the fifth millennium BC Radiocarbon dating in Tepe Hissar have revealed items 7 000 years old citation needed Recently expansion of Tehran Mashhad railway into double lanes the body of a woman along with her fetus was discovered with over 7 000 years age citation needed Tepe Hissar with several layers of civilizations There was metal production in its earliest period 4 There are also several associated sites such as Shir Ashian Tepe another small settlement in the area dating to the same time citation needed Part of the layers in the tepe belong to the Mades dynasty clarification needed which shared its civilization with Mesopotamia Another layer covers the Achaemenid Empire the Parthian Empire and Seleucid Empire Tappeh Hessar achieved its peak of glory during the Seleucid and Parthian periods citation needed Ernst Herzfeld 1931 1933 and Erich Schmidt 1933 1938 were the first archaeologists who explored the tepe An archaeological dig there in 1996 revealed remains dating from the time of the Aryan settlement of the Iranian plateau circa 4000 BCE to the Median 728 550 BCE the Arsacid 248 224 CE and Sassanid 224 651 CE dynastic periods citation needed Hecatompylos Edit Main article Qumis Iran The remains of Hecatompylos lie to the southwest of the city extending from Forat 26 kilometres 16 mi south of Damghan to nearly 32 kilometres 20 mi west After Alexander the Great s conquest of Persia the nearby city of Hecatompylos hundred gates now called Sahr e Qumis Persian شهر قومس was the population centre This name had also been given to Thebes Greece and Thebes Egypt Damghan Edit The name Damghan comes from deh village and moghan Magi This name was given by Zoroastrians who included such people as Cyrus the Great and Darius the Great of the Achaemenid Empire Historiographers ascribe the construction of Damghan to Hooshang Keyumars great grandson and the founder of the legendary Pishdadi dynasty The historical town was called Qumis which was located in a region of the same name stretching from Sabzevar to Garmsar from north up to the Alborz mountain range and to the Lut Desert in the south Up to the first century AD Damghan was the capital of that great province The city was half destroyed in the 856 Damghan earthquake Damghan was an important city in the Middle Ages but few remnants of that time remain one is the ruined Tarikhaneh The city was capital of the province of Qumis Qoomes but was destroyed by the Afghan Hotak dynasty in 1723 Tarikhaneh Mosque EditMain article Tarikhaneh Tarikhaneh Tarikhaneh Mosque is the oldest mosque in Iran belonging to the first century after the Muslim conquest of Persia citation needed It still preserves its original shape with a number of massive columns and wood carvings and two minarets of the 11th century The prefix Tari a Turkish or Mongol term means God and khaneh is the Iranian word for house so the word means the house of God citation needed Tarikhaneh and Na in Mosque in Na in are the only mosques in the Islamic world which resemble the Medina Mosque This mosque was built during the eighth century AD by imitating Roman Byzantine Iranian and Arabic architecture This is an Arabic design but the building material and architecture is Sassanid Originally it was a fire temple during the Sassanid period and later the mosque was built over its ruins One column resembling Sassanian architecture at the eastern wing is a proof of this assertion citation needed Tarikhaneh Mosque is equipped with a square yard and a gallery with 18 columns facing the qibla and the three sides of the yard are surrounded by porticoes The minaret rising over the mosque is said to belong to the Seljuk period and the tiled inscription over the minaret is in fact the oldest tile work in Islamic architecture citation needed Fortifications Edit Pre modern fortifications of Damghan Walls or fortifications and battlements have survived in many parts in Damghan some dating from the Sasanian era As mentioned in the history which the wall was very wide and enabled chariots to drive over it The remains of that wall can be seen north and south of Damghan citation needed Seljuk architecture EditSee also Seljuk architecture Mid 19th century photograph of the Imamzadeh Jafar Mausoleum Damghan by Luigi Pesce Much treasure has survived from the Seljuk period in Damghan Peer e Alamdar s Shrine The Old Flagbearer s Tomb the congregational mosque or Masjed Jame and its minaret the Tarikhaneh Mosque Mansourkuh Imamzadeh Jafar Tower and Chehel Dokhtaran mausoleum etc are buildings in which Islamic architecture from the Seljuk period onward is notable For the first time in Iran these buildings carry brick decorations to compensate for the monotonous and uniform rows citation needed Gunbad i Chihil Dukhtaran mausoleum Edit Gunbad i Chihil Dukhtaran is a mausoleum at the centre of Damghan and behind the Imamzade Ja far both of which belong to the Seljuk period 5 It is the second oldest tomb surviving from the reign of Tughril the first of the Seljuk sultans 5 It was built by one Amir Abu Shuja Asfar as recorded in the Kufic inscription which says the vault was built in AH 466 AD 1087 5 It has survived without cracks although the city is lying on the Alpide belt citation needed The vault is an onion dome adorned by bricks with artistic images and an inscription The building which used to be a family vault is 14 8 m high and in its famous inscription the deceased have sought divine mercy in their lasting residence citation needed Imamzade Ja far shrine tomb Edit The Imamzade Ja far and Muhammed is an imamzadeh of the Seljuk period 6 Gunbad i Pir i Alamdar tomb Edit The Gunbad i Pir i Alamdar is another Seljuk era tomb near the Masjid i Jami 7 Hashshashin forts EditNorth of the city along the Cheshme Ali and Mazandaran road there are two forts built on the top of two mountains citation needed The first one is 5 km away from the city on the peak of Gerdkuh one of the main Ismaili Hashshashin fortresses once used by Hassan Sabah It was finally conquered by the Ilkhanate under Hulagu Khan Due to the circular shape of the mountain peak it was named Gerdkuh gerd for circular round and kuh for mountain This shape made it very difficult to access by attackers citation needed Mehrnegar Fort is on Mansourkuh 22 km north of city along the road The mountain is pyramidal and the fort located at its top This was one of the fortifications of the Ismaili esoteric sect during the Seljuk invasion and has been named Mehrnegar because of Princess Mehrnegar s love story citation needed Cheshmeh ye Ali SemnanCheshmeh ye Ali EditMain article Cheshmeh ye Ali Semnan Evergreen Cheshmeh ye Ali is one of the permanent springs in Damghan 30 km north of the city Thanks to its verdant foliage and pleasant climate this region has been frequented by people from ancient times During the Qajar period many buildings were constructed in Cheshmeh ye Ali among which the Fath Ali Shah Qajar s and Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar s palaces still stand erect Fat hali Shah s palace is built in the middle of an artificial pool placed between the first and second spring and Agha Mohammad Khan s palace faces the former palace opposite Other sites EditOn an eminence in the western part of the city are the ruins of a large square citadel with a small whitewashed building called Molud Khaneh the house of birth in which Fath Ali Shah Qajar was born 1772 8 Beside these Damghan is close to the Gonbade Zangol Toghrol s Tower Qoosheh Amirabad Caravansary a building from the time of Abbas the Great historical hills and hazel shaped castles around the city as well as Gerdkuh and Masoumzadeh Mehmandoust fortifications Damghan s bazaar contains tombs old schools baths and the like Historical monuments in Damghan have interested foreign archaeologists and many items excavated there are now in British and French museums Notable people EditManuchehri Damghani 11th century poet Hossein Qoli Khan known as Jahnsooz 1750 1777 father of Fath Ali Shah Qajar and ruler of Damghan assigned by Karim Khan 9 Fath Ali Shah Qajar 1772 1834 shah of Persia from Qajar dynasty Ahmad Mahdavi Damghani born 1927 scholar of theology and literature Yadollah Royai born 1932 poet The Iron Sheik born 1942 Iranian American professional wrestler Hossein Khosrow Ali Vaziri Hassan Sobhani born 1953 politician Farhad Daneshjoo born 1955 politician Kamran Daneshjoo born 1956 politician Husayn ibn Talib al Damghani architect engineer built the tomb over the grave of Muhammad ibn Ja far in Bastam 10 See also Edit Iran portal2010 Damghan earthquake Battle of Damghan 1447 Battle of Damghan 1729 Cities along Silk Road Damghan County Damghan University Hecatompylos i e Hundred Gates List of deadliest earthquakes Semnan ProvinceReferences Edit Statistical Center of Iran gt Home Damghan can be found at GEOnet Names Server at this link by opening the Advanced Search box entering 3059167 in the Unique Feature Id form and clicking on Search Database Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran 1385 2006 Excel Statistical Center of Iran Archived from the original on 2011 11 11 Chahryar Adl DAMḠAN Encyclopaedia Iranica Online a b c Gunbad i Chihil Dukhtaran Archnet Retrieved 2020 07 23 Imamzade Ja far and Muhammed Archnet Retrieved 2020 07 23 Gunbad i Pir i Alamdar Archnet Retrieved 2020 07 23 One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Damghan Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 7 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 787 Shabani Reza 2005 The book of Iran a selection of the history of Iran Tehran Center for International Cultural Studies p 221 ISBN 978 964 439 005 0 translated from the Persian by Mahmoud Farrokhpey Bloom Jonathan M Blair Sheila S eds 2009 Bistam The Grove Encyclopedia of Islamic Art amp Architecture Vol 1 Oxford England Oxford University Press p 291 Bibliography EditBerney K A 1996 Damghan In Watson Noelle ed International Dictionary of Historic Places Vol 4 Fitzroy Dearborn p 766 ISBN 9781884964039 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Damghan Damghan on Iran Chamber Society www iranchamber com Damghan website Damghan City website Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Damghan amp oldid 1139110378, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.