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Khuzestan province

Khuzestan Province (also spelled Xuzestan; Persian: استان خوزستان Ostān-e Xūzestān) is one of the 31 provinces of Iran. It is in the southwest of the country, bordering Iraq and the Persian Gulf. Its capital is Ahvaz and it covers an area of 63,238 square kilometres (24,416 sq mi). Since 2014, it has been part of Iran's Region 4.[4]

Xūzestān Province
استان خوزستان (in Persian)
Ziggurat in Chogha Zanbil, 13th century BC
Location of Khuzestan province in Iran
Coordinates: 31°19′38″N 48°41′38″E / 31.3273°N 48.6940°E / 31.3273; 48.6940Coordinates: 31°19′38″N 48°41′38″E / 31.3273°N 48.6940°E / 31.3273; 48.6940
CountryIran
RegionRegion 4
CapitalAhvaz
Counties29
Government
 • Governor-generalAli-Akbar Hosseini Mehrab
Area
 • Total64,055 km2 (24,732 sq mi)
Population
 (2016)
 • Total4,710,509
 • Estimate 
(2020)
4,936,000[1]
 • Density74/km2 (190/sq mi)
 [2]
Time zoneUTC+03:30 (IRST)
Main language(s)Persian, Khuzestani Arabic, Lurish, Persian dialects of Khuzestan, Qashqai, Armenian
HDI (2017)0.802[3]
very high · 12th
Domes like this are quite common in Khuzestan province. The shape is an architectural trademark of craftsmen of the province. Daniel's Tomb, located in Khuzestan, has such a shape. The shrine pictured here, belongs to Imamzadeh Hamzeh, located between Mahshahr and Hendijan.

At the 2006 National Census, Khuzestan province had a population of 4,192,598 in 862,491 households.[5] The following census in 2011 counted 4,531,720 people in 1,112,664 households.[6] At the most recent census conducted in 2016, the province had a population of 4,710,509 in 1,280,645 households.[2]

Historically, one of the most important regions of the Ancient Near East, Khuzestan is what historians refer to as ancient Elam, whose capital was in Susa. The Achaemenid Old Persian term for Elam was Hujiyā when they conquered it from the Elamites, which is present in the modern name. Khuzestan, meaning "the Land of the Khuz", refers to the original inhabitants of this province, the "Susian" people (Old Persian "Huza" or Huja, as in the inscription on the tomb of Darius the Great at Naqsh-e Rostam). They are the Shushan of the Hebrew sources where they are recorded as "Hauja" or "Huja". In Middle Persian, the term evolves into "Khuz" and "Kuzi". The pre-Islamic Partho-Sasanian inscriptions gives the name of the province as Khwuzestan.

The seat of the province has for most of its history been in the northern reaches of the land, first at Susa Shush) and then at Shushtar. During a short spell in the Sasanian era, the capital of the province was moved to its geographical center, where the river town of Hormuz-Ardasher, founded over the foundation of the ancient Hoorpahir by Ardashir I, the founder of the Sasanian Dynasty in the 3rd century CE. This town is now known as Ahvaz. However, later in the Sasanian time and throughout the Islamic era, the provincial seat returned and stayed at Shushtar, until the late Qajar period. With the increase in the international sea commerce, arriving on the shores of Khuzistan, Ahvaz became a more suitable location for the provincial capital. The River Karun is navigable all the way to Ahvaz (above which, it flows through rapids). The town was thus refurbished by the order of the Qajar king, Naser al-Din Shah and renamed after him, Nâseri. Shushtar quickly declined, while Ahvaz/Nâseri prospered to the present day.

Khuzestan is known for its ethnic diversity; the population of Khuzestan consists of Lurs, Iranian Arabs, Qashqai people, Afshars, indigenous Persians (Dezfuli-Shushtari, Behbahani), Kurds and Iranian Armenians.[7][8] Khuzestan's population is predominantly Shia Muslim, but there are small Christian, Jewish, Sunni and Mandean minorities.[8] Half of Khuzestan's population is Lur.

From the 1920s to the early 2020s, tensions on religious and ethnic grounds have often resulted in violence and attempted separatism, including an insurgency in 1979, unrest in 2005, bombings in 2005–06 and protests in 2011, which drew much criticism of Iran by international human rights organizations, however, the conflict came to an end. In 1980, the region was invaded by Ba'athist Iraq, leading to the Iran–Iraq War. Currently, Khuzestan has 18 representatives in Iran's parliament, the Majlis. Meanwhile, it has six representatives in the Assembly of Experts, including Ayatollahs Mousavi Jazayeri, Ka'bi, Heidari, Farhani, Shafi'i, and Ahmadi.

Etymology

The name Khuzestan means "The Land of the Khuzi",[9] and refers to the original inhabitants of this province, the "Susian" people (Old Persian "Huza", Middle Persian "Khuzi" or "Husa"[10] (the Shushan of the Hebrew sources). The name of the city of Ahvaz also has the same origin as the name Khuzestan, being an Arabic broken plural from the compound name, "Suq al-Ahvaz" (Market of the Huzis)--the medieval name of the town, that replaced the Sasanian Persian name of the pre-Islamic times.

The entire province was still known as "the Khudhi" or "the Khooji" until the reign of the Safavid king Tahmasp I (r. 1524–1576) and in general the course of the 16th century. The southern half of the province—south, southwest of the Ahwaz Ridge, had come by the 17th century to be known—at least to the imperial Safavid chancery as Arabistan. The contemporaneous history, the Alamara-i Abbasi by Iskandar Beg Munshi, written during the reign of king Abbas I (r. 1588–1629), regularly refers to the southern part of Khuzestan as "Arabistan". The northern half continued to be called Khuzestan. In 1925, the entire province regained the old name and the term Arabistan was dropped.

There is also a very old folk etymology which maintains the word "khouz" stands for sugar and "Khouzi" for people who make raw sugar. The province has been a cane sugar-producing area since the late Sassanian times, such as the sugar cane fields of the Dez River side in Dezful. Khuzhestan has been the land of Khouzhies who cultivate sugar cane even today in Haft Tepe.

 

The name of the province in Syriac is Beth Huzaye.

History

Antiquity

 
The ziggurat of Choqa Zanbil in Khuzestan was a magnificent structure of the Elamite Empire. Khuzestan's Elamites were "precursors of the royal Persians", and were "the founders of the first Iranian empire in the geographic sense."

The province of Khuzestan is one of the centres of ancient civilization, and one of the most important regions of the Ancient Near East, based around Susa. The first large scale empire based here was that of the powerful 4th millennium BC Elamites.

Archeological ruins verify the entire province of Khuzestan to be home to the Elamite civilization, a non-Semitic, and non-Indo-European-speaking kingdom, and "the earliest civilization of Persia".[11] The name Khuzestan is derived from the Elamite (ʰŪvja), likely pronounced /xuʒa/, later Middle Persian Hūzīg, Arabic al-Xūzīya.[12][13]

In fact, in the words of Elton L. Daniel, the Elamites were "the founders of the first 'Iranian' empire in the geographic sense."[14] Hence the central geopolitical significance of Khuzestan, the seat of Iran's first empire.[citation needed]

In 640 BC, the Elamites were defeated by Ashurbanipal, coming under the rule of the Assyrians who brought destruction upon Susa and Chogha Zanbil. But in 538 BC, Cyrus the Great was able to re-conquer the Elamite lands after nearly 80 years of Median rule. The city of Susa was then proclaimed as one of the Achaemenid capitals. Darius the Great then erected a grand palace known as Apadana there in 521 BC. But this astonishing period of glory and splendor of the Achaemenian dynasty came to an end by the conquests of Alexander of Macedon. The Susa weddings was arranged by Alexander in 324 BC in Susa, where mass weddings took place between the Persians and the Macedonians.[15] After Alexander, the Seleucid dynasty came to rule the area.

As the Seleucid dynasty weakened, Mehrdad I the Parthian (171–137 BC), gained ascendency over the region. During the Sassanid dynasty this area thrived tremendously and flourished, and this dynasty was responsible for the many constructions that were erected in Ahvaz, Shushtar, and the north of Andimeshk.

During the early years of the reign of Shapur II (AD 309 or 310–379), Arabs crossed the Persian Gulf from Bahrain to "Ardashir-Khora" of Fars and raided the interior. In retaliation, Shapur II led an expedition through Bahrain, defeated the combined forces of the Arab tribes of "Taghleb", "Bakr bin Wael", and "Abd Al-Qays" and advanced temporarily into Yamama in central Najd. The Sassanids resettled these tribes in Kerman and Ahvaz. Arabs named Shapur II, as "Shabur Dhul-aktāf" after this battle.[16]

The existence of prominent scientific and cultural centers such as Academy of Gundishapur which gathered distinguished medical scientists from Egypt, the Byzantine Empire, and Rome, shows the importance and prosperity of this region during this era. The Jondi-Shapur Medical School was founded by the order of Shapur I. It was repaired and restored by Shapur II (a.k.a. Zol-Aktaf: "The Possessor of Shoulder Blades") and was completed and expanded during the reign of Anushirvan.

Muslim conquest of Khuzestan

 
Masjed Jame' Dezful. In spite of devastating damage caused by Iraqi shelling in the Iran–Iraq War, Khuzestan still possesses a rich heritage of architecture from Islamic, Sassanid, and earlier times.

The Muslim conquest of Khuzestan took place in 639 AD under the command of Abu Musa al-Ash'ari from Basra, who drove the Persian satrap Hormuzan out of Ahvaz. Susa later fell, so Hormuzan fled to Shushtar. There his forces were besieged by Abu Musa for 18 months. Shushtar finally fell in 642 AD; the Khuzistan Chronicle records that an unknown Arab, living in the city, befriended a man in the army, and dug tunnels through the wall in return for a third of the spoil. The Basrans purged the Nestorians—the Exegete of the city and the Bishop of Hormizd, and all their students—but kept Hormuzan alive.[17]

There followed the conquests of Gundeshapur and of many other districts along the Tigris. The Battle of Nahāvand finally secured Khuzestan for the Muslim armies.[18]

During the Muslim conquest the Sassanids were allied with non-Muslim Arab tribes, which implies that those wars were religious, rather than national. For instance in 633–634, Khaled ibn Walid leader of the Muslim Army, defeated a force of the Sassanids' Arab auxiliaries from the tribes of Bakr, 'Ejl, Taghleb and Namer at 'Ayn Al-Tamr.[19]

The Muslim settlements by military garrisons in southern Iran was soon followed by other types of expansion. Some families, for example, took the opportunity to gain control of private estates.[20] Like the rest of Iran, the Muslim conquest thus brought Khuzestan under the rule of the Arabs of the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates, until Ya'qub bin Laith as-Saffar, from southeastern Iran, raised the flag of independence once more, and ultimately regained control over Khuzestan, among other parts of Iran, founding the short-lived Saffarid dynasty. From that point on, Iranian dynasties would continue to rule the region in succession as an important part of Iran.

In the Umayyad period, large groups of nomads from the Hanifa, Banu Tamim, and Abd al-Qays tribes crossed the Persian Gulf and occupied some of the richest Basran territories around Ahvaz and in Fars during the Second Fitna in 661–665 / 680–684 AD.[21]

During the Abbasid period, in the second half of the 10th century, the Assad tribe, taking advantage of quarrels under the Buwayhids, penetrated into Khuzestan, where a group of Tamim had been living since pre-Islamic times.[citation needed] However, following the fall of the Abbasid dynasty, the flow of Arab immigrants into Persia gradually diminished, but it nonetheless continued. In the latter part of the 16th century, the Bani Kaab (pronounced Chaub in the local Gulf dialect), from Kuwait, settled in Khuzestan.[22] And during the succeeding centuries, more Arab tribes moved from southern Iraq to Khuzestan.[23][24]

 
Pol Sefid

Qajar period

According to C.E. Bosworth in Encyclopædia Iranica, under the Qajar dynasty "the province was known, as in Safavid times, as Arabistan, and during the Qajar period was administratively a governor-generalate." Half of Khuzestan was not known as Arabistan. Khuzestan's northern, more populous parts, with the capital at Shushtar, retained the old name, but also occasionally was incorporated into the district of the Greater Lur due to the large Bakhtiari population in half of Khuzestan.

In 1856, in the course of the Anglo-Persian War over the city of Herat, the British naval forces sailed up the Karun river all the way to Ahvaz. However, in the settlement that followed, they evacuated the province. Some tribal forces, such as those led by Sheikh Jabir al-Kaabi, the Sheikh of Mohammerah, fared better in opposing the invading British forces than those dispatched by the central government, which was quite feeble. But, the point of the invasion of the province and other coastal regions of southern Persia/Iran were to force the evacuation of Herat by the Persians and not the permanent occupation of these regions.

Pahlavi era

In the two decades before 1925, although nominally part of Persian territory, the western part of Khuzestan functioned for many years effectively as an autonomous emirate known as "Arabistan". The eastern part of Khuzestan was governed by Bakhtiari khans. Following Sheikh Khazal's rebellion, the western part of Khuzestan's emirate was dissolved by Reza Shah government in 1925, along with other autonomous regions of Persia, in a bid to centralize the state. In response Sheikh Khaz'al of Muhammerah initiated a rebellion, which was quickly crushed by the newly installed Pahlavi dynasty with minimal casualties. A low level conflict between the central Iranian government and the Arab nationalists of the province continued since.

The name of 'Khuzistan' came to be applied to the entire territory by 1936.[25] Over the next decades of the Pahlavi rule, the province of Khuzestan remained relatively quiet, gaining to hold an important economic and defensive strategic position.

Islamic Republic

After the revolution

With the Iranian Revolution taking place in early 1979, local rebellions swept the country, with Khuzestan being no exception. In April 1979, an uprising broke out in the province, led by the Arab separatist group Arab Political and Cultural Organisation (APCO), seeking to gain independence from the new theocratic rule.[26]

The Iranian Embassy siege of 1980 in London was initiated by an Arab separatist group as an aftermath response to the regional crackdown in Khuzestan, after the 1979 uprising. Initially it emerged the terrorists wanted autonomy for Khuzestan; later they demanded the release of 91 of their comrades held in Iranian jails.[27][28] The group which claimed responsibility for the siege the Arab Popular Movement in Arabistan (See Arab separatism in Khuzestan) gave a number of press conferences in the following months, referring to what it described as "the racist rule of Khomeini". It threatened further international action as part of its campaign to gain self-rule for Khuzestan. But its links with Baghdad served to undermine its argument that it was a purely Iranian opposition group; there were allegations that it was backed by Iran's regional rival, Iraq. Their leader ("Salim" - Awn Ali Mohammed) along with four other members of the group were killed and the fifth member, Fowzi Badavi Nejad, was sentenced to life imprisonment.[28]

Iran–Iraq war

During the Iran–Iraq War, Khuzestan was the focus of the Iraqi invasion of Iran, leading to the flight of thousands of the province's residents. As a result, Khuzestan suffered the heaviest damage of all Iranian provinces during the war. Iraq's President Saddam Hussein felt confident that the Arab population of the Khuzestan would react enthusiastically to the prospect of union with Iraq. However, resistance to the invasion was fierce, stalling the Iraqi military's advance, and ultimately opening a window of opportunity for an Iranian counter-offensive.

What used to be Iran's largest refinery at Abadan was destroyed, never to fully recover. Many of the famous nakhlestans (palm groves) were annihilated, cities were destroyed, historical sites were demolished, and nearly half the province captured by the invading Iraqi army.[29] This created a mass exodus into other provinces that did not have the logistical capability of taking in such a large number of refugees.

However, by 1982, Iranian forces managed to push Iraqi forces out of Iran. The Battle of Khorramshahr (one of Khuzestan's largest cities and the most important Iranian port prior to the war) was a turning point in the war, and is officially celebrated every year in Iran.

The city of Khorramshahr was almost completely destroyed as a result of the scorched earth policy ordered by Iraq's leader, Saddam Hussein. However, Iranian forces were able to prevent the Iraqis from attempting to spread the execution of this policy to other major urban centres.

2005–present

In 2005, Ahvaz witnessed a number of terrorist attacks, which came following the violent Ahvaz riots. The first bombing came ahead of the presidential election on 12 June 2005. In 2011, another wave of protests by Arab tribes occurred mostly in the urban area of Ahvaz. Before the Iran–Iraq War of the 1980s, the Arabs of Khuzestan mostly resided in the rural regions along the Karkhe and Karun rivers in the southwest of the province and the number living in cities was very limited because the Arab tribes were still following a nomadic lifestyle.[citation needed] But after the end of the war, most of the refuged Arabs were relocated by the government to the urban centres and smaller towns. This conversion of lifestyle directly from nomadic to city life caused many problems and conflicts in the structure of their societies and ultimately has led to some unrest. An unfinished building collapsed in Khuzestan provice in June 2022. It was reported that thirteen people were arrested over the collapse. The incident also caused demonstrations in the region.[30][31]

Geography and climate

The province of Khuzestan can be basically divided into two regions; the rolling hills and mountainous regions north of the Ahwaz Ridge, and the plains and marsh lands to its south. The area is irrigated by the Karoun, Karkheh, Jarahi and Maroun rivers. The northern section maintains a non-Persian Bakhtiari minority, while the southern section always had diverse minority groups known as Khuzis. Since the 1940s, a flood of job seekers from all over Iran to the oil and commerce centers on the Persian Gulf Coast has made the region more Persian-speaking. Presently, Khuzestan still maintains its diverse group, but does have Arabs, Persians, Bakhtiari and ethnic Qashqais and Lors.

Khuzestan has great potential for agricultural expansion, which is almost unrivaled by the country's other provinces. Large and permanent rivers flow over the entire territory contributing to the fertility of the land. Karun, Iran's most effluent river, 850 kilometers long, flows into the Persian Gulf through this province. The agricultural potential of most of these rivers, however, and particularly in their lower reaches, is hampered by the fact that their waters carry salt, the amount of which increases as the rivers flow away from the source mountains and hills. In case of the Karun, a single tributary river, Rud-i Shur ("Salty River") that flows into the Karun above Shushtar contributes most of the salt that the river carries. As such, the freshness of the Karun waters could be greatly enhanced if the Rud-i Shur could be diverted away from the Karun. The same applies to the Jarahi and Karkheh in their lower reaches. Only the Marun is exempt from this.

The climate of Khuzestan is generally very hot and occasionally humid, particularly in the south, while winters can be cold and dry. Summertime temperatures routinely exceed 45 °C (113 °F) almost daily and in the winter it can drop below freezing, with occasional snowfall, all the way south to Ahvaz. Khuzestan is possibly one of the hottest places on earth with maximum temperature in summer soaring up to 55 °C (131 °F) degrees Celsius at 2 metres height. Satellite imagery has shown that in spite of this fact it is still not the hottest place in Iran, which lies to the east and can be found in Dasht-e Lut. Reliable measurements in the city range from −5 to 53 °C (23 to 127 °F). Khuzestan has desert conditions and experiences many sandstorms.

Administrative divisions

 

Khuzestan Province Population History
Administrative Divisions 2006[5] 2011[6] 2016[2]
Abadan County 275,126 271,484 298,090
Aghajari County1 17,654
Ahvaz County 1,317,377 1,395,184 1,302,591
Andika County2 50,797 47,629
Andimeshk County 154,081 167,126 171,412
Bagh-e Malek County 103,217 107,450 105,384
Bavi County3 89,160 96,484
Behbahan County 172,597 179,703 180,593
Dasht-e Azadegan County 126,865 99,831 107,989
Dezful County 384,851 423,552 443,971
Dezpart County4
Gotvand County 58,311 64,951 65,468
Haftkel County5 22,391 22,119
Hamidiyeh County3 53,762
Hendijan County 35,932 37,440 38,762
Hoveyzeh County6 34,312 38,886
Izeh County 193,510 203,621 198,871
Karkheh County7
Karun County3 105,872
Khorramshahr County 155,224 163,701 170,976
Lali County 35,549 37,381 37,963
Mahshahr County 247,804 278,037 296,271
Masjed Soleyman County 167,226 113,257 113,419
Omidiyeh County 85,195 90,420 92,335
Ramhormoz County 120,194 105,418 113,776
Ramshir County 49,238 48,943 54,004
Shadegan County 138,226 153,355 138,480
Shush County 189,793 202,762 205,720
Shushtar County 182,282 191,444 192,028
Total 4,192,598 4,531,720 4,710,509
1Separated from Behbahan County and Omidiyeh County
2Separated from Masjed Soleyman County
3Separated from Ahvaz County
4Separated from Izeh County
5Separated from Ramhormoz County
6Separated from Dasht-e Azadegan County
7Separated from Shush County

Cities

According to the 2016 census, 3,554,205 people (over 75% of the population of Khuzestan province) live in the following cities: Abadan 231,476, Abezhdan 1,673, Abu Homeyzeh 5,506, Aghajari 11,912, Ahvaz 1,184,788, Alvan 6,860, Andimeshk 135,116, Arvandkenar 11,173, Azadi 4,957, Bagh-e Malek 26,343, Bandar-e Emam Khomeyni 78,353, Bandar-e Mahshahr 162,797, Behbahan 122,604, Bidrubeh 2,386, Bostan 8,476, Cham Golak 5,446, Chamran 33,505, Chavibdeh 7,906, Choghamish 2,013, Darkhoveyn 5,655, Dehdez 5,490, Dezful 264,709, Elhayi 7,651, Fath Olmobin 2,973, Golgir 1,089, Gotvand 24,216, Guriyeh 2,890, Haftkel 15,802, Hamidiyeh 22,057, Hamzeh 6,091, Hendijan 29,015, Horr 9,177, Hoseyniyeh 1,821, Hosseinabad 8,833, Hoveyzeh 19,481, Izeh 119,399, Jannat Makan 5,360, Jayezan 2,357, Khanafereh 3,853, Khorramshahr 133,097, Kut-e Abdollah 56,252, Kut-e Seyyed Naim 4,541, Lali 18,473, Mansuriyeh 5,441, Masjed Soleyman 100,497, Meydavud 3,513, Mianrud 10,110, Minushahr 2,231, Mollasani 17,337, Moshrageh 2,095, Omidiyeh 67,427, Qaleh Tall 10,698, Qaleh-ye Khvajeh 2,408, Rafi 3,797, Ramhormoz 74,285, Ramshir 25,009, Safiabad 9,879, Saland 2,560, Saleh Shahr 7,309, Sardarabad 5,240, Sardasht 6,912, Seydun 7,650, Shadegan 41,733, Shahr-e Emam 11,393, Shamsabad 10,858, Sharafat 11,757, Sheyban 36,374, Shush 77,148, Shushtar 101,878, Siah Mansur 5,406, Somaleh 1,784, Susangerd 51,431, Tashan 4,281, Torkalaki 5,688, Veys 15,312, and Zahreh 1,192.[2]

Politics

Khuzestan is ethnically diverse, home to many different ethnic groups.[8] This has a bearing on Khuzestan's electoral politics, with ethnic minority rights playing a significant role in the province's political culture. The province's geographical location bordering Iraq and its oil resources also make it a politically sensitive region, particularly given its history of foreign intervention, notably the Iraqi invasion of 1980.

Some ethnic groups complain over the distribution of the revenue generated by oil resources with claims that the central government is failing to invest profits from the oil industry in employment generation, post-war reconstruction and welfare projects. Low human development indicators among local Khuzestanis are contrasted with the wealth generation of the local oil industry. Minority rights are frequently identified with strategic concerns, with ethnic unrest perceived by the Iranian government as being generated by foreign governments to undermine the country's oil industry and its internal stability. The politics of Khuzestan therefore have international significance and go beyond the realm of electoral politics.

According to Jane's Information Group, "Most Iranian Arabs seek their constitutionally guaranteed rights and do not have a separatist agenda. … While it may be true that some Arab activists are separatists, most see themselves as Iranians first and declare their commitment to the state's territorial integrity."[32]

People and culture

 
A bust from The National Museum of Iran of Queen Musa, wife of Phraates IV of Parthia, excavated by a French team in Khuzestan in 1939.

According to the 1996 census, the province had an estimated population of 3.7 million people, of which approximately 62.5% were in the urban centres, 36.5% were rural dwellers and the remaining 1% were non-residents. According to the most recent census taken in 2016, the province had 4,710,509 inhabitants.[2]

Khuzestan is inhabited by many different ethnic groups;[8] the population of Khuzestan consists of Persians, Arabs, Bakhtiaris, Lurs, Qashqai people of the Afshar tribe, Mandaeans and Armenians.[8]

In literature

Khuzestan has long been the subject of many a writer and poet of Persia, banking on its ample sugar production to use the term as allegory for sweetness. Some popular verses are:

"Her lips aflow with sweet sugar,
The sweet sugar that aflows in Khuzestan."
Nizami

"Your graceful figure like the cypress in Kashmar,
Your sweet lips like the sugar of Khuzestan."
Nizari Qohistani

"So Sām hath not need ride afar
from Ahvaz up to Qandehar."
Ferdosi

Languages

Apart from Persian languages, other languages and dialects are also spoken in Khuzestan. For instance, a portion of Khuzestan's populace speaks Arabic (Khuzestani Arabic).[33][34] Another part of Khuzestanis speak in Bakhtiari dialect.[35][36][37]

Traditions and religion

The people of Khuzestan are predominantly Shia Muslims, with small Sunni Muslim, Jewish, Christian and Mandean minorities. Khuzestanis are also very well regarded for their hospitality and generosity.[8]

Cuisine

Seafood is the most important part of Khuzestani cuisine, but many other dishes are also featured. The most popular Khuzestani dish is Ghalyeh Mahi, a fish dish that is prepared with heavy spices, onions and cilantro. The fish used in the dish is locally known as mahi soboor (shad fish), a species of fish found in the Persian Gulf. Other provincial specialties include Ghalyeh Meygu ("shrimp casserole"), ashe-mohshala (a Khorramshahri breakfast stew), sær shir (a Dezfuli breakfast of heavy cream), hælim (a Shushtari breakfast of wheatmeal with shredded lamb), and kohbbeh (a deep-fried rice cake with ground beef filling and other spices of Arabic origin, a variant on Levantine kibbeh).[38]

Historical figures

Many scientists, philosophers, and poets have come from Khuzestan, including Abu Nuwas, Abdollah ibn-Meymun Ahvazi, the astronomer Nowbækht-e Ahvazi and his sons as well as Jorjis, the son of Bakhtshua Gondishapuri, Ibn Sakit, Da'bal-e Khazai and Sheikh Mortedha Ansari, a prominent Shi'a scholar from Dezful.

Economy

 
The government of Iran is spending large amounts of money in Khuzestan province. The massive Karun-3 dam, was inaugurated recently as part of a drive to boost Iran's growing energy demands.

Khuzestan is the major oil-producing region of Iran, and as such is one of the wealthiest provinces in Iran. Khuzestan ranks third among Iran's provinces in GDP.[39]

In 2005, Iran's government announced it was planning the country's second nuclear reactor to be built in Khuzestan province.[40] The 360 MW reactor will be a light water PWR Reactor.[41]

Khuzestan is also home to the Arvand Free Trade Zone.[42] It is one of six economic Free Trade Zones in Iran.[43] and the PETZONE (Petrochemical Special Economic Zone in Mahshahr).

Shipping

Karun River is the only navigable river in Iran. The British, up until recent decades, after the discovery by Austen Henry Layard, transported their merchandise via Karun's waterways, passing through Ahvaz all the way up to Langar near Shushtar, and then sent by road to Masjed Soleimanthe site of their first oil wells in the Naftoon oil field. Karoun is capable of the sailing of fairly large ships as far up as Shushtar.

Karkheh, Jarrahi, Arvandrood, Handian, Shavoor, Bahmanshir (Bahman-Ardeshir), Maroon-Alaa', Dez, and many other rivers and water sources in the form of Khurs, lagoons, ponds, and marshes demonstrate the vastness of water resources in this region, and are the main reason for the variety of agricultural products developed in the area.

 
Sketch of the Abadan island showing rivers and date palm plantations

Agriculture

The abundance of water and the fertility of the soil have made this region a rich and well-endowed land. The variety of agricultural products such as wheat, barley, oilseeds, rice, eucalyptus, medicinal herbs; the existence of many palm and citrus farms; the proximity of mountains suitable for raising olives, and of course sugar cane—from which Khuzestan takes its name—all show the great potential of this fertile region. In 2005, 51,000 hectares of land were planted with sugar canes, producing 350,000 tons of sugar.[44] The abundance of water supplies, rivers, and dams, also have an influence on the fishery industries, which are prevalent in the area.

The Abadan island is an important area for the production of datepalms, but it has suffered from the invasion of the Iraqi army during the Iran–Iraq War. The palm groves are irrigated by tidal irrigation.[45] At high tide, the waterlevel in the rivers is set up and the river flow enters the irrigation canals that have been dug from the river towards the inland plantations. At low tide, the canals drain the unused part of the water back to the river.

Industry

 
Shahid Abbaspour Dam

There are several cane sugar mills in Khuzestan province, among them Haft Tepe and Karun Agro Industry near Shushtar.

The Karun 3 and 4, and Karkheh Dam, as well as the petroleum reserves provide Iran with national sources of revenue and energy. The petrochemical and steel industries, pipe making, the power stations that feed the national electricity grid, the chemical plants, and the large refineries are some of Iran's major industrial facilities.

Oil

The province is also home to Yadavaran Field, which is a major oil field in itself and part of the disputed Al-Fakkah Field. Khuzestan holds 80% of Iran's onshore oil reserves, and thus 57% of Iran's total oil reserves, making it indispensable to the Iranian economy.[46]

Higher education

Attractions of Khuzestan

Iran National Heritage Organization lists 140 sites of historical and cultural significance in Khuzestan, reflecting the fact that the province was once the seat of Iran's most ancient empire.

Some of the more popular sites of attraction include:

 
The Parthian Prince, found in Khuzestan c. AD 100, is kept at The National Museum of Iran, Tehran.
  • Choqa Zanbil: The seat of the Elamite Empire, this ziggurat is a magnificent five-story temple that is one of the greatest ancient monuments in the Middle-East today. The monolith, with its labyrinthine walls made of thousands of large bricks with Elamite inscription, manifest the sheer antiquity of the shrine. The temple was religiously sacred and built in the honor of Inshushinak, the protector deity of the city of Susa.
  • Shush-Daniel: Burial site of the Jewish prophet Daniel. He is said to have died in Susa on his way to Jerusalem upon the order of Darius. The grave of Ya'qub bin Laith as-Saffar, who rose against the oppression of the Umayyad Caliphate, is also located nearby.
  • Dezful (Dezh-pol), whose name is taken from a bridge (pol) over the Dez river having 12 spans built by the order of Shapur I. This is the same bridge that was called "Andamesh Bridge" by historians such as Istakhri who says the city of Andimeshk takes its name from this bridge. Muqaddasi called it "The City of the Bridge."
  • Shushtar, Home to the famous Shushtar Watermills and one of the oldest fortress cities in Iran, known as the "City of Forty Elders" in local dialect. In and around Shushtar, there are many displays of ancient hydraulic engineering. There are also the Band Mizan and Band Qeysar, 2000-year-old dams on the Karoun river and the famous Shadervan Bridge which is over 2000 years old. The Friday Mosque of Shushtar was built by the Abbasids. The mosque, which features "Roman" arches, has 54 pillars and balconies.
  • Izeh, or Izaj, was one of the main targets of the invading Islamic army in their conquest of Persia. Kharezad Bridge, one of the strangest bridges of the world, was situated in this city and was named after Ardeshir Babakan's mother. It is built over cast pillars of lead each 104 meters high. Ibn Battuta, who visited the city in the 14th century, refers to many monasteries, caravanserais, aqueducts, schools, and fortresses in the town. The brass statue of The Parthian Man, kept at the National Museum of Iran, is from here.
  • Masjed Soleiman, another ancient town, has ancient fire altars and temples such as Sar-masjed and Bard-neshondeh. It is also the winter's resting area of the Bakhtiari tribe, and where William Knox D'Arcy dug Iran's first oil well.
  • Abadan is said to be where the tomb of Elijah, the long lived Hebrew prophet is.
  • Iwan of Hermes, and Iwan of Karkheh, two enigmatic ruins north of Susa.

Prominent people

See also

References

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  9. ^ See Encyclopædia Iranica, Columbia University, Vol 1, p687-689.
  10. ^ "Iran Provinces". Statoids.com. Retrieved 2017-03-07.
  11. ^ According to: Sir Percy Sykes, A History of Persia, RoutledgeCurzon Publishers. 3rd edition. October 16, 2003. ISBN 0-415-32678-8 p.38
  12. ^ According to The Cambridge History of Iran, 2, 259, ISBN 0-521-20091-1
  13. ^ van Bladel, “The Language of the Xuz̄ and the Fate of Elamite”
  14. ^ Daniel, Elton L. The History of Iran. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood, 2001. ISBN 0-313-30731-8. Print. p. 26
  15. ^ Worthington, Ian (2012). Alexander the Great: A Reader. Routledge. p. 46. ISBN 978-1136640049.
  16. ^ "Encyclopædia Iranica | Home". Iranica.com. Retrieved 2017-03-07.
  17. ^ Hoyland, Robert G., Seeing Islam as Others Saw It, Darwin Press, 1998, ISBN 0-87850-125-8 p184
  18. ^ Encyclopædia Iranica, p. 206
  19. ^ Encyclopædia Iranica, page 204, under "Arab conquest of Persia"
  20. ^ Encyclopædia Iranica, p. 212
  21. ^ Encyclopædia Iranica, p. 215, under "Arab Tribes of Iran"
  22. ^ See J.R. Perry, "The Banu Ka'b: An Amphibious Brigand State in Khuzestan", Le Monde Iranien et L'Islam I, 1971, p. 133
  23. ^ Encyclopædia Iranica, p. 216
  24. ^ Ramhormozi, H. (19 April 2016). Averting an Iranian geopolitical crisis : a tale of power play for dominance between colonial powers, tribal and government actors in the pre and post World War One era. ISBN 9781460280645. OCLC 978354291.
  25. ^ Journal of Middle Eastern studies, Vol. 25, No. 3 (August, 1993), pp. 541-543
  26. ^ . Ucdp.uu.se. Archived from the original on 2014-07-19. Retrieved 2017-03-07.
  27. ^ "In Depth | Iranian embassy siege | Six days of fear". BBC News. 2000-04-26. Retrieved 2017-03-07.
  28. ^ a b "In Depth | Iranian embassy siege | Iran and the hostage-takers". BBC News. 2000-04-26. Retrieved 2017-03-07.
  29. ^ . Archived from the original on 2006-01-10. Retrieved 2006-01-08.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  30. ^ "Iran building collapse: Protesters turn on government over disaster".{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  31. ^ "Experts: Iran disrupts internet; tower collapse deaths at 36".{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  32. ^ . Janes Information Group. Archived from the original on 2007-07-08. Retrieved 2009-04-11.
  33. ^ Iranian Arabs parsine.com Retrieved 24 June 2018
  34. ^ Khuzestani Arabic isna.ir Retrieved 24 June 2018
  35. ^ Bakhtiari tribes kojaro.com
  36. ^ Bakhtiari 2018-07-25 at the Wayback Machine aparat.com
  37. ^ Arab Kamari/Arab-Bakhtiari 2018-07-24 at the Wayback Machine rangvarehayeyekrang.ir
  38. ^ Davidson et al. The Oxford Companion to Food OUP Oxford, 21 aug. 2014 ISBN 978-0191040726 pp. 444-445
  39. ^ . Ostan KZ. Archived from the original on 2005-05-25. Retrieved 2005-04-22.
  40. ^ "Middle East | Iran to build new nuclear plant". BBC News. 2005-12-05. Retrieved 2017-03-07.
  41. ^ "Iran nuclear aghazadeh". BBC News Persian. December 2005. Retrieved 2017-03-07.
  42. ^ . Archived from the original on 2018-01-14. Retrieved 2017-03-07.
  43. ^ http://www.iftiz.org.ir 2006-02-02 at the Wayback Machine
  44. ^ http://former.president.ir/eng/cronicnews/1383/8312/831212/index-e.htm[dead link]
  45. ^ Consultancy report on the Abadan project. Abvarzan Co., Tehran, Iran, 12 September 2004, under nr. 1, or as PDF
  46. ^ Facts Global Energy, Iran's Oil and Gas Annual Report 2017 (December 2017).

External links

  • Houchang E. Chehabi (ed.). . Bibliographia Iranica. USA: Iranian Studies Group at MIT. Archived from the original on 2021-11-02. Retrieved 2017-02-11. (Bibliography)

khuzestan, province, khuzestan, province, also, spelled, xuzestan, persian, استان, خوزستان, ostān, xūzestān, provinces, iran, southwest, country, bordering, iraq, persian, gulf, capital, ahvaz, covers, area, square, kilometres, since, 2014, been, part, iran, r. Khuzestan Province also spelled Xuzestan Persian استان خوزستان Ostan e Xuzestan is one of the 31 provinces of Iran It is in the southwest of the country bordering Iraq and the Persian Gulf Its capital is Ahvaz and it covers an area of 63 238 square kilometres 24 416 sq mi Since 2014 it has been part of Iran s Region 4 4 Xuzestan Province استان خوزستان in Persian ProvinceZiggurat in Chogha Zanbil 13th century BCLocation of Khuzestan province in IranCoordinates 31 19 38 N 48 41 38 E 31 3273 N 48 6940 E 31 3273 48 6940 Coordinates 31 19 38 N 48 41 38 E 31 3273 N 48 6940 E 31 3273 48 6940CountryIranRegionRegion 4CapitalAhvazCounties29Government Governor generalAli Akbar Hosseini MehrabArea Total64 055 km2 24 732 sq mi Population 2016 Total4 710 509 Estimate 2020 4 936 000 1 Density74 km2 190 sq mi 2 Time zoneUTC 03 30 IRST Main language s Persian Khuzestani Arabic Lurish Persian dialects of Khuzestan Qashqai ArmenianHDI 2017 0 802 3 very high 12thDomes like this are quite common in Khuzestan province The shape is an architectural trademark of craftsmen of the province Daniel s Tomb located in Khuzestan has such a shape The shrine pictured here belongs to Imamzadeh Hamzeh located between Mahshahr and Hendijan At the 2006 National Census Khuzestan province had a population of 4 192 598 in 862 491 households 5 The following census in 2011 counted 4 531 720 people in 1 112 664 households 6 At the most recent census conducted in 2016 the province had a population of 4 710 509 in 1 280 645 households 2 Historically one of the most important regions of the Ancient Near East Khuzestan is what historians refer to as ancient Elam whose capital was in Susa The Achaemenid Old Persian term for Elam was Hujiya when they conquered it from the Elamites which is present in the modern name Khuzestan meaning the Land of the Khuz refers to the original inhabitants of this province the Susian people Old Persian Huza or Huja as in the inscription on the tomb of Darius the Great at Naqsh e Rostam They are the Shushan of the Hebrew sources where they are recorded as Hauja or Huja In Middle Persian the term evolves into Khuz and Kuzi The pre Islamic Partho Sasanian inscriptions gives the name of the province as Khwuzestan The seat of the province has for most of its history been in the northern reaches of the land first at Susa Shush and then at Shushtar During a short spell in the Sasanian era the capital of the province was moved to its geographical center where the river town of Hormuz Ardasher founded over the foundation of the ancient Hoorpahir by Ardashir I the founder of the Sasanian Dynasty in the 3rd century CE This town is now known as Ahvaz However later in the Sasanian time and throughout the Islamic era the provincial seat returned and stayed at Shushtar until the late Qajar period With the increase in the international sea commerce arriving on the shores of Khuzistan Ahvaz became a more suitable location for the provincial capital The River Karun is navigable all the way to Ahvaz above which it flows through rapids The town was thus refurbished by the order of the Qajar king Naser al Din Shah and renamed after him Naseri Shushtar quickly declined while Ahvaz Naseri prospered to the present day Khuzestan is known for its ethnic diversity the population of Khuzestan consists of Lurs Iranian Arabs Qashqai people Afshars indigenous Persians Dezfuli Shushtari Behbahani Kurds and Iranian Armenians 7 8 Khuzestan s population is predominantly Shia Muslim but there are small Christian Jewish Sunni and Mandean minorities 8 Half of Khuzestan s population is Lur From the 1920s to the early 2020s tensions on religious and ethnic grounds have often resulted in violence and attempted separatism including an insurgency in 1979 unrest in 2005 bombings in 2005 06 and protests in 2011 which drew much criticism of Iran by international human rights organizations however the conflict came to an end In 1980 the region was invaded by Ba athist Iraq leading to the Iran Iraq War Currently Khuzestan has 18 representatives in Iran s parliament the Majlis Meanwhile it has six representatives in the Assembly of Experts including Ayatollahs Mousavi Jazayeri Ka bi Heidari Farhani Shafi i and Ahmadi Contents 1 Etymology 2 History 2 1 Antiquity 2 2 Muslim conquest of Khuzestan 2 3 Qajar period 2 4 Pahlavi era 2 5 Islamic Republic 2 5 1 After the revolution 2 5 2 Iran Iraq war 2 5 3 2005 present 3 Geography and climate 4 Administrative divisions 4 1 Cities 5 Politics 6 People and culture 6 1 In literature 6 2 Languages 6 3 Traditions and religion 6 4 Cuisine 6 5 Historical figures 7 Economy 7 1 Shipping 7 2 Agriculture 7 3 Industry 7 4 Oil 8 Higher education 9 Attractions of Khuzestan 10 Prominent people 11 See also 12 References 13 External linksEtymology EditMain article Origin of the name Khuzestan The name Khuzestan means The Land of the Khuzi 9 and refers to the original inhabitants of this province the Susian people Old Persian Huza Middle Persian Khuzi or Husa 10 the Shushan of the Hebrew sources The name of the city of Ahvaz also has the same origin as the name Khuzestan being an Arabic broken plural from the compound name Suq al Ahvaz Market of the Huzis the medieval name of the town that replaced the Sasanian Persian name of the pre Islamic times The entire province was still known as the Khudhi or the Khooji until the reign of the Safavid king Tahmasp I r 1524 1576 and in general the course of the 16th century The southern half of the province south southwest of the Ahwaz Ridge had come by the 17th century to be known at least to the imperial Safavid chancery as Arabistan The contemporaneous history the Alamara i Abbasi by Iskandar Beg Munshi written during the reign of king Abbas I r 1588 1629 regularly refers to the southern part of Khuzestan as Arabistan The northern half continued to be called Khuzestan In 1925 the entire province regained the old name and the term Arabistan was dropped There is also a very old folk etymology which maintains the word khouz stands for sugar and Khouzi for people who make raw sugar The province has been a cane sugar producing area since the late Sassanian times such as the sugar cane fields of the Dez River side in Dezful Khuzhestan has been the land of Khouzhies who cultivate sugar cane even today in Haft Tepe The name of the province in Syriac is Beth Huzaye History EditMain article History of Khuzestan Antiquity Edit The ziggurat of Choqa Zanbil in Khuzestan was a magnificent structure of the Elamite Empire Khuzestan s Elamites were precursors of the royal Persians and were the founders of the first Iranian empire in the geographic sense The province of Khuzestan is one of the centres of ancient civilization and one of the most important regions of the Ancient Near East based around Susa The first large scale empire based here was that of the powerful 4th millennium BC Elamites Archeological ruins verify the entire province of Khuzestan to be home to the Elamite civilization a non Semitic and non Indo European speaking kingdom and the earliest civilization of Persia 11 The name Khuzestan is derived from the Elamite ʰuvja likely pronounced xuʒa later Middle Persian Huzig Arabic al Xuziya 12 13 In fact in the words of Elton L Daniel the Elamites were the founders of the first Iranian empire in the geographic sense 14 Hence the central geopolitical significance of Khuzestan the seat of Iran s first empire citation needed In 640 BC the Elamites were defeated by Ashurbanipal coming under the rule of the Assyrians who brought destruction upon Susa and Chogha Zanbil But in 538 BC Cyrus the Great was able to re conquer the Elamite lands after nearly 80 years of Median rule The city of Susa was then proclaimed as one of the Achaemenid capitals Darius the Great then erected a grand palace known as Apadana there in 521 BC But this astonishing period of glory and splendor of the Achaemenian dynasty came to an end by the conquests of Alexander of Macedon The Susa weddings was arranged by Alexander in 324 BC in Susa where mass weddings took place between the Persians and the Macedonians 15 After Alexander the Seleucid dynasty came to rule the area As the Seleucid dynasty weakened Mehrdad I the Parthian 171 137 BC gained ascendency over the region During the Sassanid dynasty this area thrived tremendously and flourished and this dynasty was responsible for the many constructions that were erected in Ahvaz Shushtar and the north of Andimeshk During the early years of the reign of Shapur II AD 309 or 310 379 Arabs crossed the Persian Gulf from Bahrain to Ardashir Khora of Fars and raided the interior In retaliation Shapur II led an expedition through Bahrain defeated the combined forces of the Arab tribes of Taghleb Bakr bin Wael and Abd Al Qays and advanced temporarily into Yamama in central Najd The Sassanids resettled these tribes in Kerman and Ahvaz Arabs named Shapur II as Shabur Dhul aktaf after this battle 16 The existence of prominent scientific and cultural centers such as Academy of Gundishapur which gathered distinguished medical scientists from Egypt the Byzantine Empire and Rome shows the importance and prosperity of this region during this era The Jondi Shapur Medical School was founded by the order of Shapur I It was repaired and restored by Shapur II a k a Zol Aktaf The Possessor of Shoulder Blades and was completed and expanded during the reign of Anushirvan Muslim conquest of Khuzestan Edit Main article Muslim conquest of Khuzestan Masjed Jame Dezful In spite of devastating damage caused by Iraqi shelling in the Iran Iraq War Khuzestan still possesses a rich heritage of architecture from Islamic Sassanid and earlier times The Muslim conquest of Khuzestan took place in 639 AD under the command of Abu Musa al Ash ari from Basra who drove the Persian satrap Hormuzan out of Ahvaz Susa later fell so Hormuzan fled to Shushtar There his forces were besieged by Abu Musa for 18 months Shushtar finally fell in 642 AD the Khuzistan Chronicle records that an unknown Arab living in the city befriended a man in the army and dug tunnels through the wall in return for a third of the spoil The Basrans purged the Nestorians the Exegete of the city and the Bishop of Hormizd and all their students but kept Hormuzan alive 17 There followed the conquests of Gundeshapur and of many other districts along the Tigris The Battle of Nahavand finally secured Khuzestan for the Muslim armies 18 During the Muslim conquest the Sassanids were allied with non Muslim Arab tribes which implies that those wars were religious rather than national For instance in 633 634 Khaled ibn Walid leader of the Muslim Army defeated a force of the Sassanids Arab auxiliaries from the tribes of Bakr Ejl Taghleb and Namer at Ayn Al Tamr 19 The Muslim settlements by military garrisons in southern Iran was soon followed by other types of expansion Some families for example took the opportunity to gain control of private estates 20 Like the rest of Iran the Muslim conquest thus brought Khuzestan under the rule of the Arabs of the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates until Ya qub bin Laith as Saffar from southeastern Iran raised the flag of independence once more and ultimately regained control over Khuzestan among other parts of Iran founding the short lived Saffarid dynasty From that point on Iranian dynasties would continue to rule the region in succession as an important part of Iran In the Umayyad period large groups of nomads from the Hanifa Banu Tamim and Abd al Qays tribes crossed the Persian Gulf and occupied some of the richest Basran territories around Ahvaz and in Fars during the Second Fitna in 661 665 680 684 AD 21 During the Abbasid period in the second half of the 10th century the Assad tribe taking advantage of quarrels under the Buwayhids penetrated into Khuzestan where a group of Tamim had been living since pre Islamic times citation needed However following the fall of the Abbasid dynasty the flow of Arab immigrants into Persia gradually diminished but it nonetheless continued In the latter part of the 16th century the Bani Kaab pronounced Chaub in the local Gulf dialect from Kuwait settled in Khuzestan 22 And during the succeeding centuries more Arab tribes moved from southern Iraq to Khuzestan 23 24 Pol Sefid Qajar period Edit According to C E Bosworth in Encyclopaedia Iranica under the Qajar dynasty the province was known as in Safavid times as Arabistan and during the Qajar period was administratively a governor generalate Half of Khuzestan was not known as Arabistan Khuzestan s northern more populous parts with the capital at Shushtar retained the old name but also occasionally was incorporated into the district of the Greater Lur due to the large Bakhtiari population in half of Khuzestan In 1856 in the course of the Anglo Persian War over the city of Herat the British naval forces sailed up the Karun river all the way to Ahvaz However in the settlement that followed they evacuated the province Some tribal forces such as those led by Sheikh Jabir al Kaabi the Sheikh of Mohammerah fared better in opposing the invading British forces than those dispatched by the central government which was quite feeble But the point of the invasion of the province and other coastal regions of southern Persia Iran were to force the evacuation of Herat by the Persians and not the permanent occupation of these regions Pahlavi era Edit Further information Khuzestan conflict In the two decades before 1925 although nominally part of Persian territory the western part of Khuzestan functioned for many years effectively as an autonomous emirate known as Arabistan The eastern part of Khuzestan was governed by Bakhtiari khans Following Sheikh Khazal s rebellion the western part of Khuzestan s emirate was dissolved by Reza Shah government in 1925 along with other autonomous regions of Persia in a bid to centralize the state In response Sheikh Khaz al of Muhammerah initiated a rebellion which was quickly crushed by the newly installed Pahlavi dynasty with minimal casualties A low level conflict between the central Iranian government and the Arab nationalists of the province continued since The name of Khuzistan came to be applied to the entire territory by 1936 25 Over the next decades of the Pahlavi rule the province of Khuzestan remained relatively quiet gaining to hold an important economic and defensive strategic position Islamic Republic Edit After the revolution Edit With the Iranian Revolution taking place in early 1979 local rebellions swept the country with Khuzestan being no exception In April 1979 an uprising broke out in the province led by the Arab separatist group Arab Political and Cultural Organisation APCO seeking to gain independence from the new theocratic rule 26 The Iranian Embassy siege of 1980 in London was initiated by an Arab separatist group as an aftermath response to the regional crackdown in Khuzestan after the 1979 uprising Initially it emerged the terrorists wanted autonomy for Khuzestan later they demanded the release of 91 of their comrades held in Iranian jails 27 28 The group which claimed responsibility for the siege the Arab Popular Movement in Arabistan See Arab separatism in Khuzestan gave a number of press conferences in the following months referring to what it described as the racist rule of Khomeini It threatened further international action as part of its campaign to gain self rule for Khuzestan But its links with Baghdad served to undermine its argument that it was a purely Iranian opposition group there were allegations that it was backed by Iran s regional rival Iraq Their leader Salim Awn Ali Mohammed along with four other members of the group were killed and the fifth member Fowzi Badavi Nejad was sentenced to life imprisonment 28 Iran Iraq war Edit During the Iran Iraq War Khuzestan was the focus of the Iraqi invasion of Iran leading to the flight of thousands of the province s residents As a result Khuzestan suffered the heaviest damage of all Iranian provinces during the war Iraq s President Saddam Hussein felt confident that the Arab population of the Khuzestan would react enthusiastically to the prospect of union with Iraq However resistance to the invasion was fierce stalling the Iraqi military s advance and ultimately opening a window of opportunity for an Iranian counter offensive What used to be Iran s largest refinery at Abadan was destroyed never to fully recover Many of the famous nakhlestans palm groves were annihilated cities were destroyed historical sites were demolished and nearly half the province captured by the invading Iraqi army 29 This created a mass exodus into other provinces that did not have the logistical capability of taking in such a large number of refugees However by 1982 Iranian forces managed to push Iraqi forces out of Iran The Battle of Khorramshahr one of Khuzestan s largest cities and the most important Iranian port prior to the war was a turning point in the war and is officially celebrated every year in Iran The city of Khorramshahr was almost completely destroyed as a result of the scorched earth policy ordered by Iraq s leader Saddam Hussein However Iranian forces were able to prevent the Iraqis from attempting to spread the execution of this policy to other major urban centres 2005 present Edit In 2005 Ahvaz witnessed a number of terrorist attacks which came following the violent Ahvaz riots The first bombing came ahead of the presidential election on 12 June 2005 In 2011 another wave of protests by Arab tribes occurred mostly in the urban area of Ahvaz Before the Iran Iraq War of the 1980s the Arabs of Khuzestan mostly resided in the rural regions along the Karkhe and Karun rivers in the southwest of the province and the number living in cities was very limited because the Arab tribes were still following a nomadic lifestyle citation needed But after the end of the war most of the refuged Arabs were relocated by the government to the urban centres and smaller towns This conversion of lifestyle directly from nomadic to city life caused many problems and conflicts in the structure of their societies and ultimately has led to some unrest An unfinished building collapsed in Khuzestan provice in June 2022 It was reported that thirteen people were arrested over the collapse The incident also caused demonstrations in the region 30 31 Geography and climate EditThe province of Khuzestan can be basically divided into two regions the rolling hills and mountainous regions north of the Ahwaz Ridge and the plains and marsh lands to its south The area is irrigated by the Karoun Karkheh Jarahi and Maroun rivers The northern section maintains a non Persian Bakhtiari minority while the southern section always had diverse minority groups known as Khuzis Since the 1940s a flood of job seekers from all over Iran to the oil and commerce centers on the Persian Gulf Coast has made the region more Persian speaking Presently Khuzestan still maintains its diverse group but does have Arabs Persians Bakhtiari and ethnic Qashqais and Lors Khuzestan has great potential for agricultural expansion which is almost unrivaled by the country s other provinces Large and permanent rivers flow over the entire territory contributing to the fertility of the land Karun Iran s most effluent river 850 kilometers long flows into the Persian Gulf through this province The agricultural potential of most of these rivers however and particularly in their lower reaches is hampered by the fact that their waters carry salt the amount of which increases as the rivers flow away from the source mountains and hills In case of the Karun a single tributary river Rud i Shur Salty River that flows into the Karun above Shushtar contributes most of the salt that the river carries As such the freshness of the Karun waters could be greatly enhanced if the Rud i Shur could be diverted away from the Karun The same applies to the Jarahi and Karkheh in their lower reaches Only the Marun is exempt from this The climate of Khuzestan is generally very hot and occasionally humid particularly in the south while winters can be cold and dry Summertime temperatures routinely exceed 45 C 113 F almost daily and in the winter it can drop below freezing with occasional snowfall all the way south to Ahvaz Khuzestan is possibly one of the hottest places on earth with maximum temperature in summer soaring up to 55 C 131 F degrees Celsius at 2 metres height Satellite imagery has shown that in spite of this fact it is still not the hottest place in Iran which lies to the east and can be found in Dasht e Lut Reliable measurements in the city range from 5 to 53 C 23 to 127 F Khuzestan has desert conditions and experiences many sandstorms Administrative divisions Edit Khuzestan Province Population History Administrative Divisions 2006 5 2011 6 2016 2 Abadan County 275 126 271 484 298 090Aghajari County1 17 654Ahvaz County 1 317 377 1 395 184 1 302 591Andika County2 50 797 47 629Andimeshk County 154 081 167 126 171 412Bagh e Malek County 103 217 107 450 105 384Bavi County3 89 160 96 484Behbahan County 172 597 179 703 180 593Dasht e Azadegan County 126 865 99 831 107 989Dezful County 384 851 423 552 443 971Dezpart County4 Gotvand County 58 311 64 951 65 468Haftkel County5 22 391 22 119Hamidiyeh County3 53 762Hendijan County 35 932 37 440 38 762Hoveyzeh County6 34 312 38 886Izeh County 193 510 203 621 198 871Karkheh County7 Karun County3 105 872Khorramshahr County 155 224 163 701 170 976Lali County 35 549 37 381 37 963Mahshahr County 247 804 278 037 296 271Masjed Soleyman County 167 226 113 257 113 419Omidiyeh County 85 195 90 420 92 335Ramhormoz County 120 194 105 418 113 776Ramshir County 49 238 48 943 54 004Shadegan County 138 226 153 355 138 480Shush County 189 793 202 762 205 720Shushtar County 182 282 191 444 192 028Total 4 192 598 4 531 720 4 710 5091Separated from Behbahan County and Omidiyeh County2Separated from Masjed Soleyman County3Separated from Ahvaz County4Separated from Izeh County5Separated from Ramhormoz County6Separated from Dasht e Azadegan County7Separated from Shush CountyCities Edit See also List of cities in Khuzestan Province by population According to the 2016 census 3 554 205 people over 75 of the population of Khuzestan province live in the following cities Abadan 231 476 Abezhdan 1 673 Abu Homeyzeh 5 506 Aghajari 11 912 Ahvaz 1 184 788 Alvan 6 860 Andimeshk 135 116 Arvandkenar 11 173 Azadi 4 957 Bagh e Malek 26 343 Bandar e Emam Khomeyni 78 353 Bandar e Mahshahr 162 797 Behbahan 122 604 Bidrubeh 2 386 Bostan 8 476 Cham Golak 5 446 Chamran 33 505 Chavibdeh 7 906 Choghamish 2 013 Darkhoveyn 5 655 Dehdez 5 490 Dezful 264 709 Elhayi 7 651 Fath Olmobin 2 973 Golgir 1 089 Gotvand 24 216 Guriyeh 2 890 Haftkel 15 802 Hamidiyeh 22 057 Hamzeh 6 091 Hendijan 29 015 Horr 9 177 Hoseyniyeh 1 821 Hosseinabad 8 833 Hoveyzeh 19 481 Izeh 119 399 Jannat Makan 5 360 Jayezan 2 357 Khanafereh 3 853 Khorramshahr 133 097 Kut e Abdollah 56 252 Kut e Seyyed Naim 4 541 Lali 18 473 Mansuriyeh 5 441 Masjed Soleyman 100 497 Meydavud 3 513 Mianrud 10 110 Minushahr 2 231 Mollasani 17 337 Moshrageh 2 095 Omidiyeh 67 427 Qaleh Tall 10 698 Qaleh ye Khvajeh 2 408 Rafi 3 797 Ramhormoz 74 285 Ramshir 25 009 Safiabad 9 879 Saland 2 560 Saleh Shahr 7 309 Sardarabad 5 240 Sardasht 6 912 Seydun 7 650 Shadegan 41 733 Shahr e Emam 11 393 Shamsabad 10 858 Sharafat 11 757 Sheyban 36 374 Shush 77 148 Shushtar 101 878 Siah Mansur 5 406 Somaleh 1 784 Susangerd 51 431 Tashan 4 281 Torkalaki 5 688 Veys 15 312 and Zahreh 1 192 2 Politics EditMain article Politics of Khuzestan Province Khuzestan is ethnically diverse home to many different ethnic groups 8 This has a bearing on Khuzestan s electoral politics with ethnic minority rights playing a significant role in the province s political culture The province s geographical location bordering Iraq and its oil resources also make it a politically sensitive region particularly given its history of foreign intervention notably the Iraqi invasion of 1980 Some ethnic groups complain over the distribution of the revenue generated by oil resources with claims that the central government is failing to invest profits from the oil industry in employment generation post war reconstruction and welfare projects Low human development indicators among local Khuzestanis are contrasted with the wealth generation of the local oil industry Minority rights are frequently identified with strategic concerns with ethnic unrest perceived by the Iranian government as being generated by foreign governments to undermine the country s oil industry and its internal stability The politics of Khuzestan therefore have international significance and go beyond the realm of electoral politics According to Jane s Information Group Most Iranian Arabs seek their constitutionally guaranteed rights and do not have a separatist agenda While it may be true that some Arab activists are separatists most see themselves as Iranians first and declare their commitment to the state s territorial integrity 32 People and culture Edit A bust from The National Museum of Iran of Queen Musa wife of Phraates IV of Parthia excavated by a French team in Khuzestan in 1939 According to the 1996 census the province had an estimated population of 3 7 million people of which approximately 62 5 were in the urban centres 36 5 were rural dwellers and the remaining 1 were non residents According to the most recent census taken in 2016 the province had 4 710 509 inhabitants 2 Khuzestan is inhabited by many different ethnic groups 8 the population of Khuzestan consists of Persians Arabs Bakhtiaris Lurs Qashqai people of the Afshar tribe Mandaeans and Armenians 8 In literature Edit Khuzestan has long been the subject of many a writer and poet of Persia banking on its ample sugar production to use the term as allegory for sweetness Some popular verses are Her lips aflow with sweet sugar The sweet sugar that aflows in Khuzestan Nizami Your graceful figure like the cypress in Kashmar Your sweet lips like the sugar of Khuzestan Nizari Qohistani So Sam hath not need ride afar from Ahvaz up to Qandehar Ferdosi Languages Edit Apart from Persian languages other languages and dialects are also spoken in Khuzestan For instance a portion of Khuzestan s populace speaks Arabic Khuzestani Arabic 33 34 Another part of Khuzestanis speak in Bakhtiari dialect 35 36 37 Traditions and religion Edit Further information Beth Huzaye East Syriac ecclesiastical province The people of Khuzestan are predominantly Shia Muslims with small Sunni Muslim Jewish Christian and Mandean minorities Khuzestanis are also very well regarded for their hospitality and generosity 8 Cuisine Edit See also Iranian cuisine Seafood is the most important part of Khuzestani cuisine but many other dishes are also featured The most popular Khuzestani dish is Ghalyeh Mahi a fish dish that is prepared with heavy spices onions and cilantro The fish used in the dish is locally known as mahi soboor shad fish a species of fish found in the Persian Gulf Other provincial specialties include Ghalyeh Meygu shrimp casserole ashe mohshala a Khorramshahri breakfast stew saer shir a Dezfuli breakfast of heavy cream haelim a Shushtari breakfast of wheatmeal with shredded lamb and kohbbeh a deep fried rice cake with ground beef filling and other spices of Arabic origin a variant on Levantine kibbeh 38 Historical figures Edit Many scientists philosophers and poets have come from Khuzestan including Abu Nuwas Abdollah ibn Meymun Ahvazi the astronomer Nowbaekht e Ahvazi and his sons as well as Jorjis the son of Bakhtshua Gondishapuri Ibn Sakit Da bal e Khazai and Sheikh Mortedha Ansari a prominent Shi a scholar from Dezful Economy Edit The government of Iran is spending large amounts of money in Khuzestan province The massive Karun 3 dam was inaugurated recently as part of a drive to boost Iran s growing energy demands Khuzestan is the major oil producing region of Iran and as such is one of the wealthiest provinces in Iran Khuzestan ranks third among Iran s provinces in GDP 39 In 2005 Iran s government announced it was planning the country s second nuclear reactor to be built in Khuzestan province 40 The 360 MW reactor will be a light water PWR Reactor 41 Khuzestan is also home to the Arvand Free Trade Zone 42 It is one of six economic Free Trade Zones in Iran 43 and the PETZONE Petrochemical Special Economic Zone in Mahshahr Shipping Edit Karun River is the only navigable river in Iran The British up until recent decades after the discovery by Austen Henry Layard transported their merchandise via Karun s waterways passing through Ahvaz all the way up to Langar near Shushtar and then sent by road to Masjed Soleimanthe site of their first oil wells in the Naftoon oil field Karoun is capable of the sailing of fairly large ships as far up as Shushtar Karkheh Jarrahi Arvandrood Handian Shavoor Bahmanshir Bahman Ardeshir Maroon Alaa Dez and many other rivers and water sources in the form of Khurs lagoons ponds and marshes demonstrate the vastness of water resources in this region and are the main reason for the variety of agricultural products developed in the area Sketch of the Abadan island showing rivers and date palm plantations Agriculture Edit The abundance of water and the fertility of the soil have made this region a rich and well endowed land The variety of agricultural products such as wheat barley oilseeds rice eucalyptus medicinal herbs the existence of many palm and citrus farms the proximity of mountains suitable for raising olives and of course sugar cane from which Khuzestan takes its name all show the great potential of this fertile region In 2005 51 000 hectares of land were planted with sugar canes producing 350 000 tons of sugar 44 The abundance of water supplies rivers and dams also have an influence on the fishery industries which are prevalent in the area The Abadan island is an important area for the production of datepalms but it has suffered from the invasion of the Iraqi army during the Iran Iraq War The palm groves are irrigated by tidal irrigation 45 At high tide the waterlevel in the rivers is set up and the river flow enters the irrigation canals that have been dug from the river towards the inland plantations At low tide the canals drain the unused part of the water back to the river Industry Edit Shahid Abbaspour Dam There are several cane sugar mills in Khuzestan province among them Haft Tepe and Karun Agro Industry near Shushtar The Karun 3 and 4 and Karkheh Dam as well as the petroleum reserves provide Iran with national sources of revenue and energy The petrochemical and steel industries pipe making the power stations that feed the national electricity grid the chemical plants and the large refineries are some of Iran s major industrial facilities Oil Edit The province is also home to Yadavaran Field which is a major oil field in itself and part of the disputed Al Fakkah Field Khuzestan holds 80 of Iran s onshore oil reserves and thus 57 of Iran s total oil reserves making it indispensable to the Iranian economy 46 Higher education EditKhorramshahr University of Nautical Sciences and Technologies Institute for Higher Education ACECR Khouzestan Ahvaz Jundishapur University of Medical Sciences Petroleum University of Technology Shahid Chamran University of Ahvaz Shahid Chamran University Dezful Abadan University of Medical Sciences Dezful University of Medical Sciences Rahnama Institute of Higher Education MehrArvand University PNU of Abadan Islamic Azad University Ahvaz Branch Islamic Azad University Science amp Research Branch Khuzestan Islamic Azad University of Abadan Islamic Azad University of Shushtar Islamic Azad University Masjed Soleyman Branch Islamic Azad University of Abadan Islamic Azad University of Omidiyeh Islamic Azad University of Ahvaz Islamic Azad University of Behbahan Islamic Azad University of Izeh Islamic Azad University Mahshahr Branch Amirkabir University of Technology Mahshahr campus Ramin Agriculture and Natural Resources University of Khuzestan Payame Noor University of Ahvaz Amiralmoemenin UniversityAttractions of Khuzestan EditIran National Heritage Organization lists 140 sites of historical and cultural significance in Khuzestan reflecting the fact that the province was once the seat of Iran s most ancient empire Some of the more popular sites of attraction include The Parthian Prince found in Khuzestan c AD 100 is kept at The National Museum of Iran Tehran Choqa Zanbil The seat of the Elamite Empire this ziggurat is a magnificent five story temple that is one of the greatest ancient monuments in the Middle East today The monolith with its labyrinthine walls made of thousands of large bricks with Elamite inscription manifest the sheer antiquity of the shrine The temple was religiously sacred and built in the honor of Inshushinak the protector deity of the city of Susa Shush Daniel Burial site of the Jewish prophet Daniel He is said to have died in Susa on his way to Jerusalem upon the order of Darius The grave of Ya qub bin Laith as Saffar who rose against the oppression of the Umayyad Caliphate is also located nearby Dezful Dezh pol whose name is taken from a bridge pol over the Dez river having 12 spans built by the order of Shapur I This is the same bridge that was called Andamesh Bridge by historians such as Istakhri who says the city of Andimeshk takes its name from this bridge Muqaddasi called it The City of the Bridge Shushtar Home to the famous Shushtar Watermills and one of the oldest fortress cities in Iran known as the City of Forty Elders in local dialect In and around Shushtar there are many displays of ancient hydraulic engineering There are also the Band Mizan and Band Qeysar 2000 year old dams on the Karoun river and the famous Shadervan Bridge which is over 2000 years old The Friday Mosque of Shushtar was built by the Abbasids The mosque which features Roman arches has 54 pillars and balconies Izeh or Izaj was one of the main targets of the invading Islamic army in their conquest of Persia Kharezad Bridge one of the strangest bridges of the world was situated in this city and was named after Ardeshir Babakan s mother It is built over cast pillars of lead each 104 meters high Ibn Battuta who visited the city in the 14th century refers to many monasteries caravanserais aqueducts schools and fortresses in the town The brass statue of The Parthian Man kept at the National Museum of Iran is from here Masjed Soleiman another ancient town has ancient fire altars and temples such as Sar masjed and Bard neshondeh It is also the winter s resting area of the Bakhtiari tribe and where William Knox D Arcy dug Iran s first oil well Abadan is said to be where the tomb of Elijah the long lived Hebrew prophet is Iwan of Hermes and Iwan of Karkheh two enigmatic ruins north of Susa Prominent people EditAntiochus III the Great 6th ruler of the Seleucid Empire Ayatollah Haj Muhammmad Hassan Jazayeri religious leader Mohammad Ali Mousavi Jazayeri previous Wali Faqih representative Ahwaz Friday Imam Siavash Shams famous Persian pop singer songwriter and record producer Mehrangiz Kar feminist lawyer and human rights activist Ezzat Negahban Patriarch of the Iranian modern archaeology Siavash Ghomeyshi singer songwriter and composer Kaiser Aminpour famous poet Hamid Dabashi intellectual historian cultural and literary critic Patrick Monahan Irish comedian Parviz Abnar sound recordist Saeed Abdevali wrestler Nasser Taghvaee director photographer Parviz Dehdari well known footballer Mohsen Chavoshi pop singer Bizhan Emkanian actor Hamed Haddadi NBA athlete Ali Shamkhani Iran s minister of defense 1997 2005 Secretary of the Supreme National Security Council Masoud Shojaei national football star Hossein Kaebi national football star Jalal Kameli Mofrad national football player Iman Mobali national football star Ahmad Mahmoud novelist Mohammad Reza Eskandari Iran s minister of agriculture 2017 2021 Mohsen Rezaee Secretary of Iran s powerful Expediency Discernment Council until 2021 Abu Nuwas a well known poet Majusi famous physician Naubakht astronomer Seyyed Nematollah Jazayeri Shia Islam scholar Ali Hashemi commander in Iran Iraq WarSee also Edit Iran portalAhvaz Andimeshk Shushtar Susa Choqa Zanbil Rahian e Noor Islamic conquest of Persia Origin of the name Khuzestan Occupation of Khuzestan by Muslims Mesopotamian Marshes The Ascetical Homilies of Isaac the Syrian Tidal irrigation in Abadan IslandReferences 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 06 Archived from the original Excel on 21 October 2020 Retrieved 19 December 2022 Sub national HDI Area Database Global Data Lab hdi globaldatalab org Retrieved 2018 09 13 همشهری آنلاین استان های کشور به ۵ منطقه تقسیم شدند Provinces 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 06 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 06 Retrieved 19 December 2022 Welcome to Encyclopaedia Iranica a b c d e f Iranian Provinces Khuzestan Iran chamber Retrieved 2017 03 07 See Encyclopaedia Iranica Columbia University Vol 1 p687 689 Iran Provinces Statoids com Retrieved 2017 03 07 According to Sir Percy Sykes A History of Persia RoutledgeCurzon Publishers 3rd edition October 16 2003 ISBN 0 415 32678 8 p 38 According to The Cambridge History of Iran 2 259 ISBN 0 521 20091 1 van Bladel The Language of the Xuz and the Fate of Elamite Daniel Elton L The History of Iran Westport Conn Greenwood 2001 ISBN 0 313 30731 8 Print p 26 Worthington Ian 2012 Alexander the Great A Reader Routledge p 46 ISBN 978 1136640049 Encyclopaedia Iranica Home Iranica com Retrieved 2017 03 07 Hoyland Robert G Seeing Islam as Others Saw It Darwin Press 1998 ISBN 0 87850 125 8 p184 Encyclopaedia Iranica p 206 Encyclopaedia Iranica page 204 under Arab conquest of Persia Encyclopaedia Iranica p 212 Encyclopaedia Iranica p 215 under Arab Tribes of Iran See J R Perry The Banu Ka b An Amphibious Brigand State in Khuzestan Le MondeIranien et L Islam I 1971 p 133 Encyclopaedia Iranica p 216 Ramhormozi H 19 April 2016 Averting an Iranian geopolitical crisis a tale of power play for dominance between colonial powers tribal and government actors in the pre and post World War One era ISBN 9781460280645 OCLC 978354291 Journal of Middle Eastern studies Vol 25 No 3 August 1993 pp 541 543 Number of Conflicts 1975 2015 Ucdp uu se Archived from the original on 2014 07 19 Retrieved 2017 03 07 In Depth Iranian embassy siege Six days of fear BBC News 2000 04 26 Retrieved 2017 03 07 a b In Depth Iranian embassy siege Iran and the hostage takers BBC News 2000 04 26 Retrieved 2017 03 07 Archived copy Archived from the original on 2006 01 10 Retrieved 2006 01 08 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Iran building collapse Protesters turn on government over disaster a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Experts Iran disrupts internet tower collapse deaths at 36 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint url status link Anger among Iran s Arabs Janes Information Group Archived from the original on 2007 07 08 Retrieved 2009 04 11 Iranian Arabs parsine com Retrieved 24 June 2018 Khuzestani Arabic isna ir Retrieved 24 June 2018 Bakhtiari tribes kojaro com Bakhtiari Archived 2018 07 25 at the Wayback Machine aparat com Arab Kamari Arab Bakhtiari Archived 2018 07 24 at the Wayback Machine rangvarehayeyekrang ir Davidson et al The Oxford Companion to Food OUP Oxford 21 aug 2014 ISBN 978 0191040726 pp 444 445 Papercut detail Ostan KZ Archived from the original on 2005 05 25 Retrieved 2005 04 22 Middle East Iran to build new nuclear plant BBC News 2005 12 05 Retrieved 2017 03 07 Iran nuclear aghazadeh BBC News Persian December 2005 Retrieved 2017 03 07 سازمان منطقه آزاد اروند Arvand Free Zone Organization Archived from the original on 2018 01 14 Retrieved 2017 03 07 http www iftiz org ir Archived 2006 02 02 at the Wayback Machine http former president ir eng cronicnews 1383 8312 831212 index e htm dead link Consultancy report on the Abadan project Abvarzan Co Tehran Iran 12 September 2004 under nr 1 or as PDF Facts Global Energy Iran s Oil and Gas Annual Report 2017 December 2017 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Khuzestan Province Houchang E Chehabi ed Regional Studies Khuzistan Bibliographia Iranica USA Iranian Studies Group at MIT Archived from the original on 2021 11 02 Retrieved 2017 02 11 Bibliography Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Khuzestan province amp oldid 1153868018, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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