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Fars province

Fars Province (/fɑːrs/; Persian: استان فارس, Ostân-e Fârs, pronounced [ˈfɒː(ɾ)s]), also known as Pars Province (استان پارس, Ostân-e Pârs) as well as Persis and Persia,[5] is one of the 31 provinces of Iran. With an area of 122,400 km², it is located in Iran's southwest, in Region 2,[6] and its administrative center is Shiraz. Fars province neighbours Bushehr province to the west, Hormozgan province to the south, Kerman and Yazd provinces to the east, Isfahan province to the north, and Kohgiluyeh and Boyer-Ahmad province to the northwest.

Fars Province
استان فارس
Clockwise from top right: The Tomb of Cyrus the Great in Pasargadae, Arg of Karim Khan in Shiraz, a canola field in Alamarvdasht, Bishapur valley, Naqsh-e Rostam, and ruins of the Tachara in Persepolis.
Location of Fars province within Iran
Coordinates: 29°25′N 53°14′E / 29.417°N 53.233°E / 29.417; 53.233Coordinates: 29°25′N 53°14′E / 29.417°N 53.233°E / 29.417; 53.233
CountryIran
RegionRegion 2
CapitalShiraz
Counties37
Government
 • Governor-generalMohammad-Hadi Imanieh
Area
 • Total122,608 km2 (47,339 sq mi)
Population
 (2016)[2]
 • Total4,851,274
 • Estimate 
(2020)
5,051,000[1]
 • Density40/km2 (100/sq mi)
Time zoneUTC+03:30 (IRST)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+04:30 (IRST)
Area code071
Main language(s)Persian
Qashqai
Luri[3][4]
Dialects of Fars
Fars Province Historical Population
YearPop.±%
20064,220,721—    
20114,596,658+8.9%
20164,851,274+5.5%

At the 2006 census, the province numbered 4,220,721 people in 1,014,690 households.[7] As of the following census in 2011, Fars had a population of 4,596,658 people in 1,250,135 households, of whom 67.6% were registered as urban dwellers (urban/suburbs), 32.1% villagers (small town/rural), and 0.3% nomad tribes.[8] The most recent census in 2016 counted 4,851,274 people in 1,443,027 households.[2]

Fars is the historical homeland of the Persian people.[9][10] It was the homeland of the Achaemenid and Sasanian Persian dynasties of Iran, who reigned on the throne by the time of the ancient Persian Empires. The ruins of the Achaemenid capitals Pasargadae and Persepolis, among others, demonstrate the ancient history of the region. Due to the historical importance of this region, the entire country has historically been also referred to as Persia in the West.[10][11] Prior to Arab rule, this region was known as Pars.[12]

Etymology

The Persian word Fârs (فارس) is the Arabized form of the earlier form Pârs (پارس), which is in turn derived from Pârsâ (𐎱𐎠𐎼𐎿), the Old Persian name for the Persis region. The names Parsa and Persia originate from this region.[13]

Administrative divisions

 

Fars Province Population History
Administrative Divisions 2006[7] 2011[8] 2016[2]
Abadeh County 87,203 98,188 100,831
Arsanjan County 40,916 41,476 42,725
Bakhtegan County1
Bavanat County 44,069 48,416 50,418
Beyza County2
Darab County 172,938 189,345 201,489
Eqlid County 99,003 93,975 93,763
Estahban County 66,391 66,172 68,850
Evaz County3
Farashband County 38,679 42,760 45,459
Fasa County 188,189 203,129 205,187
Firuzabad County 111,973 119,721 121,417
Gerash County3 47,055 53,907
Jahrom County 197,331 209,312 228,532
Juyom County3
Kavar County4 77,836 83,883
Kazerun County 258,097 254,704 266,217
Khafr County5
Kherameh County4 61,580 54,864
Khonj County 37,978 41,133 41,359
Khorrambid County 44,669 50,252 50,522
Kuhchenar County6
Lamerd County 76,971 83,916 91,782
Larestan County 223,235 226,879 213,920
Mamasani County 162,694 116,386 117,527
Marvdasht County 294,621 307,492 323,434
Mohr County 54,094 59,727 64,827
Neyriz County 105,241 113,750 113,291
Pasargad County 29,825 31,504 30,118
Qir and Karzin County 61,432 65,045 71,203
Rostam County7 46,851 44,386
Sarchehan County8
Sarvestan County4 40,531 38,114
Sepidan County 87,801 89,398 91,049
Shiraz County 1,676,927 1,700,687 1,869,001
Zarqan County4
Zarrin Dasht County 60,444 69,438 73,199
Total 4,220,721 4,596,658 4,851,274
1Separated from Neyriz County
2Separated from Sepidan County
3Separated from Larestan County
4Separated from Shiraz County
5Separated from Jahrom County
6Separated from Kazerun County
7Separated from Mamasani County
8Separated from Bavanat County

Cities

According to the 2016 census, 3,401,675 people (over 70% of the population of Fars province) live in the following cities: Abadeh 59,116, Abadeh Tashk 7,379, Ahel 3,179, Alamarvdasht 4,068, Ardakan 14,633, Arsanjan 17,706, Asir 3,042, Bab Anar 7,061, Baba Monir 1,379, Bahman 7,568, Baladeh 5,972, Banaruiyeh 9,077, Beyram 7,300, Beyza 7,252, Darab 70,232, Darian 10,037, Dehram 3,468, Dezhkord 3,924, Do Borji 2,907, Dobiran 13,809, Duzeh 1,348, Efzar 2,657, Emad Deh 4,235, Emam Shahr 5,803, Eqlid 44,341, Eshkanan 9,115, Estahban 36,410, Evaz 19,987, Fadami 4,097, Farashband 20,320, Fasa 110,825, Firuzabad 65,417, Galleh Dar 13,448, Gerash 34,469, Hajjiabad 21,675, Hamashahr 3,852, Hasanabad 2,045, Hesami 3,131, Ij 6,246, Izadkhast 5,910, Jahrom 141,634, Jannat Shahr 13,598, Juyom 8,010, Kamfiruz 3,713, Karzin 8,841, Kavar 31,711, Kazerun 96,683, Khaneh Zenyan 4,027, Khaniman 3,020, Khavaran 4,332, Kherameh 18,477, Khesht 9,599, Khonj 19,217, Khumeh Zar 6,220, Khur 7,338, Khuzi 3,245, Konartakhteh 6,081, Korehi 3,954, Kuhenjan 3,281, Kupon 3,237, Lamerd 29,380, Lapui 8,985, Lar 62,045, Latifi 7,300, Madar-e Soleyman 1,546, Marvdasht 148,858, Masiri 9,031, Mazayjan 3,567, Meshkan 4,617, Meymand 10,120, Miyan Deh 5,912, Mobarakabad 4,707, Mohr 7,784, Neyriz 49,850, Now Bandegan 2,410, Nowdan 2,892, Nujin 3,769, Nurabad 57,058, Qaderabad 14,973, Qaemiyeh 26,918, Qarah Bulaq 6,772, Qatruyeh 2,895, Qir 20,010, Qotbabad 7,476, Ramjerd 2,550, Runiz 5,760, Saadat Shahr 17,131, Safashahr 26,933, Sarvestan 18,187, Sedeh 6,747, Seyyedan 8,574, Shahr-e Pir 8,927, Shahr-e Sadra 91,863, Sheshdeh 5,960, Shiraz 1,565,572, Soghad 12,582, Soltanabad 1,928, Surian 9,776, Surmaq 3,050, Varavi 4,622, Zahedshahr 9,719, and Zarqan 32,261.[2]

Most populous cities

The following sorted table lists the most populous cities in Fars according to the 2016 census results announced by the Statistical Center of Iran.[2]

Most populous urban areas in Fars Province

 
Shiraz
 
Marvdasht

Rank City County Population

 
Jahrom
 
Fasa

1 Shiraz Shiraz 1,565,572
2 Marvdasht Marvdasht 148,858
3 Jahrom Jahrom 141,634
4 Fasa Fasa 110,825
5 Kazerun Kazerun 96,683
6 Sadra Shiraz 91,863
7 Darab Darab 70,232
8 Firuzabad Firuzabad 65,417
9 Lar Larestan 62,045
10 Abadeh Abadeh 59,116

Demographics

The main ethnic group in the province consists of Persians (including Larestani people and the Basseri), while Qashqai, Lurs, Arabs, Kurds, Georgians, and Circassians constitute minorities.

Due to the geographical characteristics of Fars and its proximity to the Persian Gulf, Fars has long been a residing area for various peoples and rulers of Iran. However, the tribes of Fars including, Mamasani Lurs, Khamseh and Kohkiluyeh have kept their native and unique cultures and lifestyles which constitute part of the cultural heritage of Iran attracting many tourists. Kurdish tribes include Uriad, Zangana, Chegini, Kordshuli and Kuruni.[14]

Among the hundreds of thousands of Georgians and Circassians that were transplanted to Persia under Shah Abbas I, his predecessors, and successors, a certain amount of them were to guard the main caravan routes; many were settled around Āspās and other villages along the old Isfahan-Shiraz road. By now the vast majority Caucasians that were settled in Fars have lost their cultural, linguistic, and religious identity, having mostly being assimilated into the population.[14]

History

Persis

 
The ruins of Persepolis
 
A Sassanid relief showing the investiture of Ardashir I

The ancient Persians were present in the region from about the 10th century BC, and became the rulers of the largest empire the world had yet seen under the Achaemenid dynasty which was established in the mid 6th century BC, at its peak stretching from Thrace-Macedonia, Bulgaria-Paeonia and Eastern Europe proper in the west, to the Indus Valley in its far east.[15] The ruins of Persepolis and Pasargadae, two of the four capitals of the Achaemenid Empire, are located in Fars.

The Achaemenid Empire was defeated by Alexander the Great in 333 BC, incorporating most of their vast empire. Shortly after this the Seleucid Empire was established. However, it never extended its power in Fars beyond the main trade routes, and by the reign of Antiochus I or possibly later Persis emerged as an independent state that minted its own coins.[16]

The Seleucid Empire was subsequently defeated by the Parthians in 238 BC, but by 205 BC, the Seleucid king Antiochus III had extended his authority into Persis and it ceased to be an independent state.[17]

Babak was the ruler of a small town called Kheir. Babak's efforts in gaining local power at the time escaped the attention of Artabanus IV, the Parthian Arsacid Emperor of the time. Babak and his eldest son Shapur I managed to expand their power over all of Persis.

The subsequent events are unclear. Following the death of Babak around 220, Ardashir who at the time was the governor of Darabgird, got involved in a power struggle of his own with his elder brother Shapur. The sources tell us that in 222, Shapur was killed when the roof of a building collapsed on him.[citation needed]

At this point, Ardashir moved his capital further to the south of Persis and founded a capital at Ardashir-Khwarrah (formerly Gur, modern day Firouzabad).[18] After establishing his rule over Persis, Ardashir I rapidly extended the territory of his Sassanid Persian Empire, demanding fealty from the local princes of Fars, and gaining control over the neighboring provinces of Kerman, Isfahan, Susiana, and Mesene.

Artabanus marched a second time against Ardashir I in 224. Their armies clashed at Hormizdegan, where Artabanus IV was killed. Ardashir was crowned in 226 at Ctesiphon as the sole ruler of Persia, bringing the 400-year-old Parthian Empire to an end, and starting the virtually equally long rule of the Sassanian Empire, over an even larger territory, once again making Persia a leading power in the known world, only this time along with its arch-rival and successor to Persia's earlier opponents (the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire); the Byzantine Empire.

The Sassanids ruled for 425 years, until the Muslim armies conquered the empire. Afterwards, the Persians started to convert to Islam, this making it much easier for the new Muslim empire to continue the expansion of Islam.

Persis then passed hand to hand through numerous dynasties, leaving behind numerous historical and ancient monuments; each of which has its own values as a world heritage, reflecting the history of the province, Iran, and West Asia. The ruins of Bishapur, Persepolis, and Firouzabad are all reminders of this. The Arab invaders brought about an end to centuries Zoroastrian political and cultural dominance over the region; supplanted as the faith of the ruling class in the 7th century by Islam, which and over the next 200 years gradually expanded to include a majority of the population.

Climate and wildlife

There are three distinct climatic regions in the Fars Province. First, the mountainous area of the north and northwest with moderate cold winters and mild summers. Secondly, the central regions, with relatively rainy mild winters, and hot dry summers. The third region located in the south and southeast has cold winters with hot summers. The average temperature of Shiraz is 16.8 °C, ranging between 4.7 °C and 29.2 °C.[19]

The geographical and climatic variation of the province causes varieties of plants; consequently, variation of wildlife has been formed in the province. Additional to the native animals of the province, many kinds of birds migrate to the province every year.[20] Many kinds of ducks, storks and swallows migrate to this province in an annual parade. The main native animals of the province are gazelle, deer, mountain wild goat, ram, ewe and many kinds of birds. In the past, like in Khuzestan Plain, the Persian lion had occurred here.[21][22]

The province of Fars includes many protected wildlife zones. The most important protected zones are:

  • Toot Siah (Black Berry) Hunt Forbidden Zone, which is located at the end of Boanat region.
  • Basiran Hunt Forbidden Zone, which is located 4 kilometers south to Abadeh;
  • Bamu National Park, which is located north-east of Shiraz;
  • Estahban Forest Park (Parke Jangaly), which is located on the outskirts of Touraj mountain;
  • Hermoodlar Protected Zone, which is located east to Larestan.[20]

Arjan Meadow 22 km2 (8.5 sq mi) and Lake Parishan 40 km2 (15 sq mi) are designated Wetlands of International Importance under the Ramsar convention.

 
Eram Garden

Economy

Agriculture is of great importance in Fars.[23] The major products include cereal (wheat and barley), citrus fruits, dates, sugar beets and cotton. Fars has major petrochemical facilities, along with an oil refinery, a factory for producing tires, a large electronics industry, and a sugar mill. Tourism is also a large industry in the province. UNESCO has designated an area in the province, called Arzhan (known as Dasht e Arjan) as a biosphere reserve. Shiraz, provincial capital of Fars, is the namesake of Shirazi wine. A large number of wine factories existed in the city.

Transportation

Shiraz Airport is the main international airport of the province and the second in the country. The cities of Jahrom, Lar and Lamerd also have airports linking them with Shiraz and Tehran and nearby Persian Gulf countries such as the UAE and Bahrain. Shiraz is along the main route from Tehran to southern Iran.[citation needed]

Higher education

The Fars Province is home to many higher education institutes and universities. The main universities of the province include Shiraz University, Shiraz University of Arts, Shiraz University of Medical Sciences,[24] Shiraz University of Technology, Jahrom University, Jahrom University of Medical Sciences, Fasa University of Medical Sciences, Islamic Azad University of Shiraz and Islamic Azad University of Jahrom.

Notable people

 
Tomb of Hafez
 
Tomb of Saadi

References

  1. ^ Amar. "توجه: تفاوت در سرجمع به دليل گرد شدن ارقام به رقم هزار مي باشد. (in Persian)". Retrieved September 29, 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e . AMAR (in Persian). The Statistical Center of Iran. p. 07. Archived from the original (Excel) on 6 April 2022. Retrieved 19 December 2022.
  3. ^ . 11 January 2012. Archived from the original on 11 January 2012.
  4. ^ "Luz | ISO 639-3".
  5. ^ Sykes, Percy (1921). A History of Persia. London: Macmillan and Company. p. 43.
  6. ^ "استان‌های کشور به ۵ منطقه تقسیم شدند" [The Provinces of the Country Were Divided Into 5 Regions]. Hamshahri Online (in Persian). 22 June 2014. from the original on 23 June 2014.
  7. ^ a b . AMAR (in Persian). The Statistical Center of Iran. p. 07. Archived from the original (Excel) on 20 September 2011. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
  8. ^ a b "Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran, 1390 (2011)" (Excel). Iran Data Portal (in Persian). The Statistical Center of Iran. p. 07. Retrieved 19 December 2022.
  9. ^ Austin, Peter (1 January 2008). One Thousand Languages: Living, Endangered, and Lost. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520255609 – via Google Books.
  10. ^ a b Xavier de Planhol (24 January 2012). "FĀRS i. Geography". Encyclopædia Iranica. Vol. IX. pp. ?–336. The name of Fārs is undoubtedly attested in Assyrian sources since the third millennium B.C.E. under the form Parahše. Originally, it was the "land of horses" of the Sumerians (Herzfeld, pp. 181-82, 184-86). The name was adopted by Iranian tribes which established themselves there in the 9th century B.C.E. in the west and southwest of Urmia lake. The Parsua (Pārsa) are mentioned there for the first time in 843 B.C.E., during the reign of Salmanassar III, and then, after they migrated to the southeast (Boehmer, pp. 193-97), the name was transferred, between 690 and 640, to a region previously called Anšan (q.v.) in Elamite sources (Herzfeld, pp. 169-71, 178-79, 186). From that moment the name acquired the connotation of an ethnic region, the land of the Persians, and the Persians soon thereafter founded the vast Achaemenid empire. A never-ending confusion thus set in between a narrow, limited, geographical usage of the term—Persia in the sense of the land where the aforesaid Persian tribes had shaped the core of their power—and a broader, more general usage of the term to designate the much larger area affected by the political and cultural radiance of the Achaemenids. The confusion between the two senses of the word was continuous, fueled by the Greeks who used the name Persai to designate the entire empire. It lasted through the centuries of Arab domination, as Fārs, the term used by Muslims, was merely the Arabicized version of the initial name.
  11. ^ M. A. Dandamaev (1989). A Political History of the Achaemenid Empire. BRILL. pp. 4–6. ISBN 9004091726.
  12. ^ Zargaran, Arman. "The City of Shiraz and Fars Province, the root of medical sciences in the history." (2012): 103-104.
  13. ^ Zangiabadi, A., and M. Akbari. "Assessment and Analysis of Development Indicator in Township of Fars Province." (2011): 113-122.
  14. ^ a b P. Oberling, "FĀRS vii. Ethnography", Encyclopaedia Iranica>"FĀRS vii. Ethnography". 31 May 2014.
  15. ^ David Sacks, Oswyn Murray, Lisa R. Brody; Oswyn Murray; Lisa R. Brody (2005). Encyclopedia of the ancient Greek world. Infobase Publishing. pp. 256 (at the right portion of the page). ISBN 978-0-8160-5722-1.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  16. ^ The Cambridge History of Iran, Vol. 3 (1), p. 299
  17. ^ The Cambridge History of Iran, Vol. 3 (1), p. 302
  18. ^ Kaveh Farrokh (2007). Shadows in the Desert: Ancient Persia at War. Osprey Publishing. pp. 176–9. ISBN 9781846031083.
  19. ^ کشور, پورتال سازمان هواشناسی. "اقلیم استان فارس". www.irimo.ir.
  20. ^ a b "Iran fars-shiraz". www.irantour.org.
  21. ^ Humphreys, P., Kahrom, E. (1999). Lion and Gazelle: The Mammals and Birds of Iran. Images Publishing, Avon.
  22. ^ Firouz, E. (2005). The complete fauna of Iran. I. B. Tauris. pp. 5–67. ISBN 978-1-85043-946-2.
  23. ^ "Farmers' participation in agricultural development: The case of Fars province, Iran". www.indjst.org.
  24. ^ Various scholars/contributors (2013). Issues in Discovery, Experimental, and Laboratory Medicine: 2013 Edition. Scholarly Editions. pp. 139–40. ISBN 9781490109169. {{cite book}}: |author= has generic name (help)

Bibliography

External links

  • Province of Fars on Iran Chamber Society
  • Houchang E. Chehabi (ed.). "Regional Studies: Fars". Bibliographia Iranica. USA: Iranian Studies Group at MIT. (Bibliography)

fars, province, fars, province, ɑːr, persian, استان, فارس, ostân, fârs, pronounced, ˈfɒː, also, known, pars, province, استان, پارس, ostân, pârs, well, persis, persia, provinces, iran, with, area, located, iran, southwest, region, administrative, center, shiraz. Fars Province f ɑːr s Persian استان فارس Ostan e Fars pronounced ˈfɒː ɾ s also known as Pars Province استان پارس Ostan e Pars as well as Persis and Persia 5 is one of the 31 provinces of Iran With an area of 122 400 km it is located in Iran s southwest in Region 2 6 and its administrative center is Shiraz Fars province neighbours Bushehr province to the west Hormozgan province to the south Kerman and Yazd provinces to the east Isfahan province to the north and Kohgiluyeh and Boyer Ahmad province to the northwest Fars Province استان فارسProvinceClockwise from top right The Tomb of Cyrus the Great in Pasargadae Arg of Karim Khan in Shiraz a canola field in Alamarvdasht Bishapur valley Naqsh e Rostam and ruins of the Tachara in Persepolis Location of Fars province within IranCoordinates 29 25 N 53 14 E 29 417 N 53 233 E 29 417 53 233 Coordinates 29 25 N 53 14 E 29 417 N 53 233 E 29 417 53 233CountryIranRegionRegion 2CapitalShirazCounties37Government Governor generalMohammad Hadi ImaniehArea Total122 608 km2 47 339 sq mi Population 2016 2 Total4 851 274 Estimate 2020 5 051 000 1 Density40 km2 100 sq mi Time zoneUTC 03 30 IRST Summer DST UTC 04 30 IRST Area code071Main language s Persian QashqaiLuri 3 4 Dialects of FarsFars Province Historical PopulationYearPop 20064 220 721 20114 596 658 8 9 20164 851 274 5 5 At the 2006 census the province numbered 4 220 721 people in 1 014 690 households 7 As of the following census in 2011 Fars had a population of 4 596 658 people in 1 250 135 households of whom 67 6 were registered as urban dwellers urban suburbs 32 1 villagers small town rural and 0 3 nomad tribes 8 The most recent census in 2016 counted 4 851 274 people in 1 443 027 households 2 Fars is the historical homeland of the Persian people 9 10 It was the homeland of the Achaemenid and Sasanian Persian dynasties of Iran who reigned on the throne by the time of the ancient Persian Empires The ruins of the Achaemenid capitals Pasargadae and Persepolis among others demonstrate the ancient history of the region Due to the historical importance of this region the entire country has historically been also referred to as Persia in the West 10 11 Prior to Arab rule this region was known as Pars 12 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Administrative divisions 2 1 Cities 2 2 Most populous cities 3 Demographics 4 History 4 1 Persis 5 Climate and wildlife 6 Economy 7 Transportation 8 Higher education 9 Notable people 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 External linksEtymology EditThe Persian word Fars فارس is the Arabized form of the earlier form Pars پارس which is in turn derived from Parsa 𐎱𐎠𐎼𐎿 the Old Persian name for the Persis region The names Parsa and Persia originate from this region 13 Administrative divisions Edit Fars Province Population History Administrative Divisions 2006 7 2011 8 2016 2 Abadeh County 87 203 98 188 100 831Arsanjan County 40 916 41 476 42 725Bakhtegan County1 Bavanat County 44 069 48 416 50 418Beyza County2 Darab County 172 938 189 345 201 489Eqlid County 99 003 93 975 93 763Estahban County 66 391 66 172 68 850Evaz County3 Farashband County 38 679 42 760 45 459Fasa County 188 189 203 129 205 187Firuzabad County 111 973 119 721 121 417Gerash County3 47 055 53 907Jahrom County 197 331 209 312 228 532Juyom County3 Kavar County4 77 836 83 883Kazerun County 258 097 254 704 266 217Khafr County5 Kherameh County4 61 580 54 864Khonj County 37 978 41 133 41 359Khorrambid County 44 669 50 252 50 522Kuhchenar County6 Lamerd County 76 971 83 916 91 782Larestan County 223 235 226 879 213 920Mamasani County 162 694 116 386 117 527Marvdasht County 294 621 307 492 323 434Mohr County 54 094 59 727 64 827Neyriz County 105 241 113 750 113 291Pasargad County 29 825 31 504 30 118Qir and Karzin County 61 432 65 045 71 203Rostam County7 46 851 44 386Sarchehan County8 Sarvestan County4 40 531 38 114Sepidan County 87 801 89 398 91 049Shiraz County 1 676 927 1 700 687 1 869 001Zarqan County4 Zarrin Dasht County 60 444 69 438 73 199Total 4 220 721 4 596 658 4 851 2741Separated from Neyriz County2Separated from Sepidan County3Separated from Larestan County4Separated from Shiraz County5Separated from Jahrom County6Separated from Kazerun County7Separated from Mamasani County8Separated from Bavanat CountyCities Edit According to the 2016 census 3 401 675 people over 70 of the population of Fars province live in the following cities Abadeh 59 116 Abadeh Tashk 7 379 Ahel 3 179 Alamarvdasht 4 068 Ardakan 14 633 Arsanjan 17 706 Asir 3 042 Bab Anar 7 061 Baba Monir 1 379 Bahman 7 568 Baladeh 5 972 Banaruiyeh 9 077 Beyram 7 300 Beyza 7 252 Darab 70 232 Darian 10 037 Dehram 3 468 Dezhkord 3 924 Do Borji 2 907 Dobiran 13 809 Duzeh 1 348 Efzar 2 657 Emad Deh 4 235 Emam Shahr 5 803 Eqlid 44 341 Eshkanan 9 115 Estahban 36 410 Evaz 19 987 Fadami 4 097 Farashband 20 320 Fasa 110 825 Firuzabad 65 417 Galleh Dar 13 448 Gerash 34 469 Hajjiabad 21 675 Hamashahr 3 852 Hasanabad 2 045 Hesami 3 131 Ij 6 246 Izadkhast 5 910 Jahrom 141 634 Jannat Shahr 13 598 Juyom 8 010 Kamfiruz 3 713 Karzin 8 841 Kavar 31 711 Kazerun 96 683 Khaneh Zenyan 4 027 Khaniman 3 020 Khavaran 4 332 Kherameh 18 477 Khesht 9 599 Khonj 19 217 Khumeh Zar 6 220 Khur 7 338 Khuzi 3 245 Konartakhteh 6 081 Korehi 3 954 Kuhenjan 3 281 Kupon 3 237 Lamerd 29 380 Lapui 8 985 Lar 62 045 Latifi 7 300 Madar e Soleyman 1 546 Marvdasht 148 858 Masiri 9 031 Mazayjan 3 567 Meshkan 4 617 Meymand 10 120 Miyan Deh 5 912 Mobarakabad 4 707 Mohr 7 784 Neyriz 49 850 Now Bandegan 2 410 Nowdan 2 892 Nujin 3 769 Nurabad 57 058 Qaderabad 14 973 Qaemiyeh 26 918 Qarah Bulaq 6 772 Qatruyeh 2 895 Qir 20 010 Qotbabad 7 476 Ramjerd 2 550 Runiz 5 760 Saadat Shahr 17 131 Safashahr 26 933 Sarvestan 18 187 Sedeh 6 747 Seyyedan 8 574 Shahr e Pir 8 927 Shahr e Sadra 91 863 Sheshdeh 5 960 Shiraz 1 565 572 Soghad 12 582 Soltanabad 1 928 Surian 9 776 Surmaq 3 050 Varavi 4 622 Zahedshahr 9 719 and Zarqan 32 261 2 Most populous cities Edit See also List of cities in Fars Province by population The following sorted table lists the most populous cities in Fars according to the 2016 census results announced by the Statistical Center of Iran 2 Most populous urban areas in Fars Province Shiraz Marvdasht Rank City County Population Jahrom Fasa1 Shiraz Shiraz 1 565 5722 Marvdasht Marvdasht 148 8583 Jahrom Jahrom 141 6344 Fasa Fasa 110 8255 Kazerun Kazerun 96 6836 Sadra Shiraz 91 8637 Darab Darab 70 2328 Firuzabad Firuzabad 65 4179 Lar Larestan 62 04510 Abadeh Abadeh 59 116Demographics EditThe main ethnic group in the province consists of Persians including Larestani people and the Basseri while Qashqai Lurs Arabs Kurds Georgians and Circassians constitute minorities Due to the geographical characteristics of Fars and its proximity to the Persian Gulf Fars has long been a residing area for various peoples and rulers of Iran However the tribes of Fars including Mamasani Lurs Khamseh and Kohkiluyeh have kept their native and unique cultures and lifestyles which constitute part of the cultural heritage of Iran attracting many tourists Kurdish tribes include Uriad Zangana Chegini Kordshuli and Kuruni 14 Among the hundreds of thousands of Georgians and Circassians that were transplanted to Persia under Shah Abbas I his predecessors and successors a certain amount of them were to guard the main caravan routes many were settled around Aspas and other villages along the old Isfahan Shiraz road By now the vast majority Caucasians that were settled in Fars have lost their cultural linguistic and religious identity having mostly being assimilated into the population 14 History EditPersis Edit Main articles Persis and Pars Sasanian province The ruins of Persepolis A Sassanid relief showing the investiture of Ardashir I Sarvestan Palace in Sarvestan The ancient Persians were present in the region from about the 10th century BC and became the rulers of the largest empire the world had yet seen under the Achaemenid dynasty which was established in the mid 6th century BC at its peak stretching from Thrace Macedonia Bulgaria Paeonia and Eastern Europe proper in the west to the Indus Valley in its far east 15 The ruins of Persepolis and Pasargadae two of the four capitals of the Achaemenid Empire are located in Fars The Achaemenid Empire was defeated by Alexander the Great in 333 BC incorporating most of their vast empire Shortly after this the Seleucid Empire was established However it never extended its power in Fars beyond the main trade routes and by the reign of Antiochus I or possibly later Persis emerged as an independent state that minted its own coins 16 The Seleucid Empire was subsequently defeated by the Parthians in 238 BC but by 205 BC the Seleucid king Antiochus III had extended his authority into Persis and it ceased to be an independent state 17 Babak was the ruler of a small town called Kheir Babak s efforts in gaining local power at the time escaped the attention of Artabanus IV the Parthian Arsacid Emperor of the time Babak and his eldest son Shapur I managed to expand their power over all of Persis The subsequent events are unclear Following the death of Babak around 220 Ardashir who at the time was the governor of Darabgird got involved in a power struggle of his own with his elder brother Shapur The sources tell us that in 222 Shapur was killed when the roof of a building collapsed on him citation needed At this point Ardashir moved his capital further to the south of Persis and founded a capital at Ardashir Khwarrah formerly Gur modern day Firouzabad 18 After establishing his rule over Persis Ardashir I rapidly extended the territory of his Sassanid Persian Empire demanding fealty from the local princes of Fars and gaining control over the neighboring provinces of Kerman Isfahan Susiana and Mesene Artabanus marched a second time against Ardashir I in 224 Their armies clashed at Hormizdegan where Artabanus IV was killed Ardashir was crowned in 226 at Ctesiphon as the sole ruler of Persia bringing the 400 year old Parthian Empire to an end and starting the virtually equally long rule of the Sassanian Empire over an even larger territory once again making Persia a leading power in the known world only this time along with its arch rival and successor to Persia s earlier opponents the Roman Republic and the Roman Empire the Byzantine Empire The Sassanids ruled for 425 years until the Muslim armies conquered the empire Afterwards the Persians started to convert to Islam this making it much easier for the new Muslim empire to continue the expansion of Islam Persis then passed hand to hand through numerous dynasties leaving behind numerous historical and ancient monuments each of which has its own values as a world heritage reflecting the history of the province Iran and West Asia The ruins of Bishapur Persepolis and Firouzabad are all reminders of this The Arab invaders brought about an end to centuries Zoroastrian political and cultural dominance over the region supplanted as the faith of the ruling class in the 7th century by Islam which and over the next 200 years gradually expanded to include a majority of the population Climate and wildlife EditThere are three distinct climatic regions in the Fars Province First the mountainous area of the north and northwest with moderate cold winters and mild summers Secondly the central regions with relatively rainy mild winters and hot dry summers The third region located in the south and southeast has cold winters with hot summers The average temperature of Shiraz is 16 8 C ranging between 4 7 C and 29 2 C 19 The geographical and climatic variation of the province causes varieties of plants consequently variation of wildlife has been formed in the province Additional to the native animals of the province many kinds of birds migrate to the province every year 20 Many kinds of ducks storks and swallows migrate to this province in an annual parade The main native animals of the province are gazelle deer mountain wild goat ram ewe and many kinds of birds In the past like in Khuzestan Plain the Persian lion had occurred here 21 22 The province of Fars includes many protected wildlife zones The most important protected zones are Toot Siah Black Berry Hunt Forbidden Zone which is located at the end of Boanat region Basiran Hunt Forbidden Zone which is located 4 kilometers south to Abadeh Bamu National Park which is located north east of Shiraz Estahban Forest Park Parke Jangaly which is located on the outskirts of Touraj mountain Hermoodlar Protected Zone which is located east to Larestan 20 Crown imperial plain Sepidan Arjan Meadow 22 km2 8 5 sq mi and Lake Parishan 40 km2 15 sq mi are designated Wetlands of International Importance under the Ramsar convention Eram GardenEconomy EditAgriculture is of great importance in Fars 23 The major products include cereal wheat and barley citrus fruits dates sugar beets and cotton Fars has major petrochemical facilities along with an oil refinery a factory for producing tires a large electronics industry and a sugar mill Tourism is also a large industry in the province UNESCO has designated an area in the province called Arzhan known as Dasht e Arjan as a biosphere reserve Shiraz provincial capital of Fars is the namesake of Shirazi wine A large number of wine factories existed in the city Transportation EditShiraz Airport is the main international airport of the province and the second in the country The cities of Jahrom Lar and Lamerd also have airports linking them with Shiraz and Tehran and nearby Persian Gulf countries such as the UAE and Bahrain Shiraz is along the main route from Tehran to southern Iran citation needed Higher education EditThe Fars Province is home to many higher education institutes and universities The main universities of the province include Shiraz University Shiraz University of Arts Shiraz University of Medical Sciences 24 Shiraz University of Technology Jahrom University Jahrom University of Medical Sciences Fasa University of Medical Sciences Islamic Azad University of Shiraz and Islamic Azad University of Jahrom Notable people Edit Tomb of Hafez Tomb of Saadi This list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items January 2014 Cyrus the Great Founder of the Achaemenid Empire Ardashir I Sassanid King Mansur Hallaj Persian mystic killed in the 9th century AD Salman the Persian A companion of the Islamic prophet Muhammad and the first Persian who converted to Islam Saadi writer poet born and died in Shiraz Hafez Shirazi poet born and died in Shiraz Mulla Sadra an Iranian Shia Islamic philosopher and theologian Qotb al Din Kazeruni was born in Kazerun Reza Malekzadeh was born in Kazerun Christiane Amanpour s father is originally from Sarvestan Fars Sibawayh one of the founders of Arabic grammar died in Shiraz Karim Khan founder of the Zand dynasty Lotf Ali Khan the last ruler of the Zand dynasty Barbad the Persian musician of the Sassanid era born in Jahrom Hakim Salman Jahromi The special doctor of Abbas the Great was from Jahrom Ibn Muqaffa or Ruzbeh Dadwayh Persian writer and translator from the 8th century AD Zahra Kazemi photographer born in Shiraz Ladan and Laleh Bijani famous conjoined twins born in Shiraz Khwaju Kermani buried in Shiraz Jamshid Amouzegar Seyyed Zia eddin Tabatabaee was born in Shiraz Ibn Khafif a 9th century sage is buried in Shiraz Sheikh Ruzbehan Afshin Ghotbi Football Manager of Iranian National Team Meulana Shahin Shirazi Persian Jewish poet and wiseman Junayd Shirazi Mohsen Kadivar Ata ollah Mohajerani was a representative of Shiraz in the Majlis Saeed Emami Gholam Reza Azhari Siyyid Mirza Ali Muhammad the Bab Mohammad Hashem Pesaran the most honored Iranian economist Firouz Naderi an Iranian American scientist and the Associate Director of NASA s Jet Propulsion Laboratory JPL responsible for Project Formulation and Strategy He was born in Shiraz Ebrahim Golestan filmmaker and literary figure Kaveh Golestan photojournalist and artist Habibollah Peyman Iranian politician Mohsen Safaei Farahani Iranian politician Simin Daneshvar academic renowned novelist fiction writer and translatorReferences Edit Amar توجه تفاوت در سرجمع به دليل گرد شدن ارقام به رقم هزار مي باشد in Persian Retrieved September 29 2020 a b c d e Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran 1395 2016 AMAR in Persian The Statistical Center of Iran p 07 Archived from the original Excel on 6 April 2022 Retrieved 19 December 2022 پرتال سازمان ميراث فرهنگي صنایع دستی و گردشگري gt استانها gt فارس gt آداب و رسوم 11 January 2012 Archived from the original on 11 January 2012 Luz ISO 639 3 Sykes Percy 1921 A History of Persia London Macmillan and Company p 43 استان های کشور به ۵ منطقه تقسیم شدند The Provinces of the Country Were Divided Into 5 Regions Hamshahri Online in Persian 22 June 2014 Archived from the original on 23 June 2014 a b Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran 1385 2006 AMAR in Persian The Statistical Center of Iran p 07 Archived from the original Excel on 20 September 2011 Retrieved 25 September 2022 a b Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran 1390 2011 Excel Iran Data Portal in Persian The Statistical Center of Iran p 07 Retrieved 19 December 2022 Austin Peter 1 January 2008 One Thousand Languages Living Endangered and Lost University of California Press ISBN 9780520255609 via Google Books a b Xavier de Planhol 24 January 2012 FARS i Geography Encyclopaedia Iranica Vol IX pp 336 The name of Fars is undoubtedly attested in Assyrian sources since the third millennium B C E under the form Parahse Originally it was the land of horses of the Sumerians Herzfeld pp 181 82 184 86 The name was adopted by Iranian tribes which established themselves there in the 9th century B C E in the west and southwest of Urmia lake The Parsua Parsa are mentioned there for the first time in 843 B C E during the reign of Salmanassar III and then after they migrated to the southeast Boehmer pp 193 97 the name was transferred between 690 and 640 to a region previously called Ansan q v in Elamite sources Herzfeld pp 169 71 178 79 186 From that moment the name acquired the connotation of an ethnic region the land of the Persians and the Persians soon thereafter founded the vast Achaemenid empire A never ending confusion thus set in between a narrow limited geographical usage of the term Persia in the sense of the land where the aforesaid Persian tribes had shaped the core of their power and a broader more general usage of the term to designate the much larger area affected by the political and cultural radiance of the Achaemenids The confusion between the two senses of the word was continuous fueled by the Greeks who used the name Persai to designate the entire empire It lasted through the centuries of Arab domination as Fars the term used by Muslims was merely the Arabicized version of the initial name M A Dandamaev 1989 A Political History of the Achaemenid Empire BRILL pp 4 6 ISBN 9004091726 Zargaran Arman The City of Shiraz and Fars Province the root of medical sciences in the history 2012 103 104 Zangiabadi A and M Akbari Assessment and Analysis of Development Indicator in Township of Fars Province 2011 113 122 a b P Oberling FARS vii Ethnography Encyclopaedia Iranica gt FARS vii Ethnography 31 May 2014 David Sacks Oswyn Murray Lisa R Brody Oswyn Murray Lisa R Brody 2005 Encyclopedia of the ancient Greek world Infobase Publishing pp 256 at the right portion of the page ISBN 978 0 8160 5722 1 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link The Cambridge History of Iran Vol 3 1 p 299 The Cambridge History of Iran Vol 3 1 p 302 Kaveh Farrokh 2007 Shadows in the Desert Ancient Persia at War Osprey Publishing pp 176 9 ISBN 9781846031083 کشور پورتال سازمان هواشناسی اقلیم استان فارس www irimo ir a b Iran fars shiraz www irantour org Humphreys P Kahrom E 1999 Lion and Gazelle The Mammals and Birds of Iran Images Publishing Avon Firouz E 2005 The complete fauna of Iran I B Tauris pp 5 67 ISBN 978 1 85043 946 2 Farmers participation in agricultural development The case of Fars province Iran www indjst org Various scholars contributors 2013 Issues in Discovery Experimental and Laboratory Medicine 2013 Edition Scholarly Editions pp 139 40 ISBN 9781490109169 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a author has generic name help Bibliography EditW Barthold 1984 Fars An Historical Geography of Iran Translated by Svat Soucek Princeton University Press pp 148 168 ISBN 978 1 4008 5322 9 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Fars Province Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Fars Province of Fars on Iran Chamber Society Houchang E Chehabi ed Regional Studies Fars Bibliographia Iranica USA Iranian Studies Group at MIT Bibliography Fars Tourist Attractions Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Fars province amp oldid 1137216517, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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