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Culture of Iran

The culture of Iran (Persian: فرهنگ ایران) or culture of Persia[1][2][3] is among the most influential in the world. Iran (Persia) is widely considered to be one of the cradles of civilization.[4][5][6][7] Due to its dominant geopolitical position in the world, it has heavily influenced peoples and cultures situated as far away as Southern Europe and Eastern Europe to the west; Central Asia to the north; the Arabian Peninsula to the south; and South Asia, East Asia, and Southeast Asia to the east.[4][5][8] Iranian history has had a significant impact on the world through art, architecture, poetry, science and technology, medicine, philosophy, and engineering.

Iranian family wearing traditional clothing
The Shah Mosque in Isfahan

An eclectic cultural elasticity has been said to be one of the key defining characteristics of the Iranian identity and a clue to its historical longevity.[9] Richard N. Frye, a prominent Iranologist, stresses the high-level historical impact of Iranian culture in his 2005 book Greater Iran: A 20th-century Odyssey:

"Iran's glory has always been its culture."[10]

Furthermore, Iran's culture has manifested itself in several facets throughout the history of the Iranian Plateau as well as of the South Caucasus, Central Asia, Anatolia, and Mesopotamia.

History edit

Art edit

Iran has one of the oldest, richest and most influential art heritages in the world which encompasses many disciplines including literature, music, dance, architecture, painting, weaving, pottery, calligraphy, metalworking, embroidery and stonemasonry.

 
Intricate stone art of Persepolis

Iranian art has gone through numerous phases, which is evident from the unique aesthetics of Iran. From the Elamite Chogha Zanbil to the Median and Achaemenid reliefs of Persepolis to the mosaics of Bishapur.

The Islamic Golden Age brought drastic changes to the styles and practice of the arts. However, each Iranian dynasty had its own particular foci, building upon the previous dynasty's, all of which during their times were heavily influential in shaping the cultures of the world then and today.

Language edit

Several languages are spoken throughout Iran. Languages from the Iranian, Turkic, and Semitic language families are spoken across Iran. According to the CIA Factbook, 78% of Iranians speaks an Iranian language as their native tongue, 18% speak a Turkic language as their native tongue and 2% speak a Semitic language as their native tongue while the remaining 2% speak languages from various other groups.[11] Although the Azerbaijanis speak a Turkic language, due to their culture, history and genetics, they are often associated with the Iranian peoples.[12]

The predominant language and national language of Iran is Persian, which is spoken fluently across the country. Azerbaijani is spoken primarily and widely in the northwest, Kurdish and Luri are spoken primarily in the west, Mazandarani and Gilaki spoken in the regions along the Caspian Sea, Arabic primarily in the Persian Gulf coastal regions, Balochi primarily in the southeast, and Turkmen primarily in northern border regions. Smaller languages spread in other regions notably include Talysh, Georgian, Armenian, Assyrian, and Circassian, amongst others.

Ethnologue estimates that there are 86 Iranian languages, the largest among them being Persian, Pashto, and the Kurdish dialect continuum with an estimated 150–200 million native speakers of the Iranian languages worldwide.[13][14][15] Dialects of Persian are sporadically spoken throughout the region from China to Syria to Russia, though mainly in the Iranian Plateau.

Literature edit

 
Behistun inscription reliefs
 
Tomb of Sa'adi in Shiraz, Iran

The literature of Iran is one of the world's oldest and most celebrated literatures, spanning over 2500 years from the many Achaemenid inscriptions, such as the Behistun inscription, to the celebrated Iranian poets of the Islamic Golden Age and Modern Iran.[16][17][18] Iranian literature has been described as one of the great literature's of humanity and one of the four main bodies of world literature.[19][20] Distinguished Professor L.P. Elwell-Sutton described the literature of the Persian language as "one of the richest poetic literatures of the world".[21]

Very few literary works of pre-Islamic Iran have survived, due partly to the destruction of the libraries of Persepolis by Alexander of Macedon during the era of the Achaemenids and subsequent invasion of Iran by the Arabs in 641, who sought to eradicate all non-Quranic texts.[22] This resulted in all Iranian libraries being destroyed, books either being burnt or thrown into rivers. The only way that Iranians could protect these books was to bury them but many of the texts were forgotten over time.[22] As soon as circumstances permitted, the Iranians wrote books and assembled libraries.[22]

 
The Tomb of Ferdowsi in Tus, Iran

Iranian literature encompasses a variety of literature in the languages used in Iran. Modern Iranian literature includes Persian literature, Azerbaijani literature, Kurdish literature and the literature of the remaining minority languages. Persian is the predominant and official language of Iran and throughout Iran's history, it has been the nation's most influential literary language. The Persian language has been often dubbed as the most worthy language of the world to serve as a conduit for poetry.[23] Azerbaijani literature has also had a profound effect on Iran's literature with it being developed highly after Iran's first reunification in 800 years under the Safavid Empire, whose rulers themselves wrote poetry.[24] There remain a few literary works of the extinct Iranian language of Old Azeri that was used in Azerbaijan prior to the linguistic Turkification of the people of the region.[25] Kurdish literature has also had a profound impact on the literature of Iran with it incorporating the various Kurdish dialects that are spoken throughout the Middle East. The earliest works of Kurdish literature are those of the 16th-century poet Malaye Jaziri.[26]

Some notable greats of Iranian poetry which have had major global influence include the likes of Ferdowsi, Sa'di, Hafiz, Attar, Nezami, Jami, Rumi, Omar Khayyam, Taleb Amoli, Ubayd Zakani, Shams Tabrizi, Rudaki and Vahshi Bafqi.[27][28] These poets have inspired the likes of Goethe, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and many others.

Contemporary Iranian literature has been influenced by classical Persian poetry, but also reflects the particularities of modern-day Iran, through writers such as Houshang Moradi-Kermani, the most translated modern Iranian author, and poet Ahmad Shamlou.[29]

Music edit

 
Music, dance, poetry and wine-drinking at the court of 17th century ruler Shah Abbas II

Iranian music has directly influenced the cultures of West Asia, Central Asia, Europe and South Asia.[30] It has mainly influenced and built up much of the musical terminology of the neighboring Turkic and Arabic cultures, and reached India through the 16th-century Persianate Mughal Empire, whose court promoted new musical forms by bringing Iranian musicians.[30]

Iran is the place of origin of complex instruments, with the instruments dating back to the third millennium BC.[31] A number of trumpets made of silver, gold, and copper were found in eastern Iran that are attributed to the Oxus civilization and date back between 2200 and 1750 BC. The use of both vertical and horizontal angular harps have been documented at the archaeological sites of Madaktu (650 BC) and Kul-e Fara (900–600 BC), with the largest collection of Elamite instruments documented at Kul-e Fara. Multiple depictions of horizontal harps were also sculpted in Assyrian palaces, dating back between 865 and 650 BC.[31]

The reign of Sassanian ruler Khosrow II is regarded as a "golden age" for Iranian music. Sassanid music is where many the many music cultures of the world trace their distant origins to. The court of Khosrow II hosted a number of prominent musicians, including Azad, Bamshad, Barbad, Nagisa, Ramtin, and Sarkash. Among these attested names, Barbad is remembered in many documents and has been named as remarkably high skilled. He was a poet-musician who developed modal music, may have invented the lute and the musical tradition that was to transform into the forms of dastgah and maqam.[31][32][33] He has been credited to have organized a musical system consisting of seven "royal modes" (xosrovāni), 30 derived modes (navā), and 360 melodies (dāstān).[31][32]

The academic classical music of Iran, in addition to preserving melody types that are often attributed to Sassanian musicians, is based on the theories of sonic aesthetics as expounded by the likes of Iranian musical theorists in the early centuries of after the Muslim conquest of the Sasanian Empire, most notably Avicenna, Farabi, Qotb-ed-Din Shirazi, and Safi-ed-Din Urmawi.[30]

Dance edit

Iran has a rich and ancient dance culture which extends to the sixth millennium BC. Dances from ancient artifacts, excavated at the archaeological pre-historic sites of Iran, portray a vibrant culture that mixes different forms of dances for all occasions. In conjunction with music, the artifacts depicted actors, dancers and ordinary people dancing in plays, dramas, celebrations, mourning and religious rituals with equipment such as costumes of animals or plants, masks and surrounding objects. As time progressed, this culture of dance began to develop and flourish.[34]

Iran is a multi-ethnic nation. Although the cultures of its ethnic groups are very similar and in most areas near identical, each has their own distinct and specific dance style. Iran possesses four categories of dance with these being: group dances, solo improvisational dance, war or combat dances and spiritual dances.

Typically, the group dances are often unique and named after the region or the ethnic groups with which they are associated with. These dances can be chain dances involving a group or the more common group dances mainly performed at festive occasions like weddings and Noruz celebrations which focus less on communal line or circle dances and more on solo improvisational forms, with each dancer interpreting the music in their own special way but within a specific range of dance vocabulary sometimes blending other dance styles or elements.[35]

Solo dances are usually reconstructions of the historical and court dances of the various Iranian dynasties throughout history, with the most common types being that of the Safavid and Qajar dynasties due to them being relatively newer.[35] These often are improvisational dances and utilize delicate, graceful movements of the hands and arms, such as wrist circles.[35]

War or Combat dances, imitate combat or help to train the warrior. It could be argued that men from the Zurkhaneh ("House of Strength") and their ritualized, wrestling-training movements are known as a type of dance called "Raghs-e-Pa" or "Pay-Bazi" with the dances and actions done in the Zurkhaneh also resembling that of a martial art.[35][36]

Spiritual dances in Iran are known as "sama". There are various types of these spiritual dances which are used for spiritual purposes such as ridding the body of ill omens and evil spirits. These dances involve trance, music and complex movements. An example of such dance is that of the Balochi's called "le'b gowati", which is performed to rid a supposedly possessed person of the possessing spirit. In the Balochi language, the term "gowati" refers to psychologically ill patients who have recovered through music and dance.[37][38]

The earliest researched dances from Iran is a dance worshiping Mithra, the Zoroastrian angelic divinity of covenant, light, and oath, which was used commonly by the Roman Cult of Mithra.[39] One of the cult's ceremonies involved the sacrifice of a bull followed by a dance that promoted vigor in life.[39] The Cult of Mithra were active from the 1st century CE to the 4th century CE and worshiped a mystery religion inspired by the Iranian worship of Mithra. It was a rival of Christianity in the Roman Empire and was eventually suppressed in the 4th century CE by Roman authorities in favor of Christianity.[40][41][42] This was done in order to counter the greater Iranian cultural influence that was expanding throughout the Roman empire.[41] The cult was highly adhered and respected throughout the Roman Empire with it center in Rome, and was popular throughout the western half of the empire, as far south as Roman Africa and Numidia, as far north as Roman Britain, and to a lesser extent in Roman Syria in the east.[43][44]

Architecture edit

The history of Iranian architecture dates back to at least 5,000 BC with characteristic examples distributed over a vast area from Turkey and Iraq to Uzbekistan and Tajikistan to the South Caucasus and Zanzibar. Currently, there are 19 UNESCO designated World Heritage Sites that were designed and constructed by Iranians, with 11 of them being located outside of Iran. Iranian architecture displays a great variety of both structure and aesthetics and despite the repeated trauma of destructive invasions and cultural shocks, the Iranian zeal and identity has always triumphed and flourished. In turn, it has greatly influenced the architecture of its invaders from the Greeks to the Arabs to the Turks.[45][46]

The traditional theme of Iranian architecture is cosmic symbolism, which depicts the communication and participation of man with the powers of heaven. This theme has not only given continuity and longevity to the architecture of Iran, but has been a primary source of its emotional character of the nation as well. Iranian architecture ranges from simple structures to "some of the most majestic structures the world has ever seen".[46][47]

Iranian architectural style is the combination of intensity and simplicity to form immediacy, while ornament and, often, subtle proportions reward sustained observation. Iranian architecture makes use of abundant symbolic geometry, using pure forms such as the circle and square, and plans are based on often symmetrical layouts featuring rectangular courtyards and halls. The paramount virtues of Iranian architecture are: "a marked feeling for form and scale; structural inventiveness, especially in vault and dome construction; a genius for decoration with a freedom and success not rivaled in any other architecture".[48]

The traditional architecture of Iran throughout the ages is categorized into two families and six following classes or styles. The two categories are Zoroastrian and Islamic, which references the eras of pre-Islamic and post-Islamic Iran, and the six styles, in order of their era, are: Parsian, Parthian Khorasani, Razi, Azari, Esfahani. The pre-Islamic styles draw on 3000 to 4000 years of architectural development from the various civilizations of the Iranian plateau. The post-Islamic architecture of Iran in turn, draws ideas from its pre-Islamic predecessor, and has geometrical and repetitive forms, as well as surfaces that are richly decorated with glazed tiles, carved stucco, patterned brickwork, floral motifs, and calligraphy.[49]

In addition to historic gates, palaces, bridges, buildings and religious sites which highlight the highly developed supremacy of the Iranian art of architecture, Iranian gardens are also an example of Iran's cosmic symbolism and unique style of combining intensity and simplicity for form immediacy.[45][47] There are currently 14 Iranian gardens that are listed as UNESCO World Heritage Sites, with 5 of them being located outside of Iran.[50] The traditional style of Iranian gardens are to represent an earthly paradise or a heaven on Earth. From the time of the Achaemenid Empire, the idea of an earthly paradise spread through Iranian literature to other cultures, with the word for paradise in the Iranian languages of Avestan, Old Persian and Median, spreading to languages across the world.[51] The style and design of the Iranian garden greatly influenced the garden styles of countries from Spain to Italy and Greece to India, with some notable examples of such gardens being the gardens of the Alhambra in Spain, Humayun's Tomb and the Taj Mahal in India, the Hellenistic gardens of the Seleucid Empire and the Ptolemies in Alexandria.[51]

Cuisine edit

Iranian cuisine refers to the culinary practices of Iran. Due to the historically common usage of the term "Persia" to refer to Iran in the Western world,[52][53][3] it is alternatively known as Persian cuisine, despite Persians being only one of a multitude of Iranian ethnic groups who have contributed to Iran's culinary traditions.[a]

The cuisine of Iran has made extensive contact throughout its history with the cuisines of its neighbouring regions, including Cuisine from the Caucasus, Central Asian cuisine, Greek cuisine, Levantine cuisine, Mesopotamian cuisine, Russian cuisine and Turkish cuisine.[55][56][57][58] Aspects of Iranian cuisine have also been significantly adopted by Indian cuisine and Pakistani cuisine through various historical Persianate sultanates that flourished during Muslim rule on the Indian subcontinent, with the most notable and impactful of these polities being the Mughal Empire.[59][60][61]

Typical Iranian main dishes are combinations of rice with meat, vegetables and nuts. Herbs are frequently used, along with fruits such as plums, pomegranates, quince, prunes, apricots and raisins. Characteristic Iranian spices and flavourings such as saffron, cardamom, and dried lime and other sources of sour flavoring, cinnamon, turmeric and parsley are mixed and used in various dishes.

Outside of Iran, a strong presence of Iranian cuisine can be found in cities with significant Iranian diaspora populations, namely the San Francisco Bay Area, Toronto,[62][63][64][65] Houston and especially Los Angeles and its environs.[62][63][66]

Religion in Iran edit

 
Shah Mosque, Isfahan

Zoroastrianism was the national faith of Iran for more than a millennium before the Arab conquest. It has had an immense influence on Iranian philosophy, culture and art after the people of Iran converted to Islam.[67] The Persian Samanid dynasty made great attempts to spread the Islamic faith in the 9th and 10th century while promoting a Persian cultural revival. Until the 16th century, Iran was majority Sunni ushering a golden age of the arts and sciences.[67] In 1501 the Safavid dynasty took control of Iran and made Shia Islam the state religion, with this being one of the most important events in Islamic history.[67]

Today of the 98% of Muslims living in Iran, around 89% are Shi'a and only around 9% are Sunni. This is quite the opposite trend of the percentage distribution of Shi'a to Sunni Islam followers in the rest of the Muslim population from state to state (primarily in the Middle East) and throughout the rest of the world.

Followers of the Baháʼí Faith form the largest non-Muslim minority in Iran. Baháʼís are scattered throughout small communities in Iran, although there seems to be a large population of Baháʼís in Tehran. The Iranian government actively pursues the persecution of Baháʼís.

Followers of the Christian faith consist of around 250,000 Armenians, around 32,000 Assyrians, and a small number of Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Protestant Iranians that have been converted by missionaries in earlier centuries. Thus, Christians that live in Iran are primarily descendants of indigenous Christians that were converted during the 19th and 20th centuries. Judaism is an officially recognized faith in Iran, and in spite of the hostilities between Iran and Israel over the Palestinian issue, the millennia-old Jewish community in Iran enjoys the right to practice their religion freely as well as a dedicated seat in parliament to a representative member of their faith. In addition to Christianity and Judaism, Zoroastrianism is another officially recognized religion in Iran, although followers of this faith do not hold a large population in Iran. In addition, although there have been isolated incidences[spelling?] of prejudice against Zoroastrians, most followers of this faith have not been persecuted for being followers of this faith.[68]

Holidays in Iran edit

The Persian year begins in the vernal equinox: if the astronomical vernal equinox comes before noon, then the present day is the first day of the Persian year. If the equinox falls after noon, then the next day is the official first day of the Persian year. The Persian Calendar, which is the official calendar of Iran, is a solar calendar with a starting point that is the same as the Islamic calendar. According to the Iran Labor Code, Friday is the weekly day of rest. Government official working hours are from Saturday to Wednesday (from 8 am to 4 pm).[69]

Although the date of certain holidays in Iran are not exact (due to the calendar system they use, most of these holidays are around the same time), some of the major public holidays in Iran include Oil Nationalization Day (20 March). Yalda (which is the longest night of the year) (21 December), Nowrooz—which is the Iranian equivalent of New Years (20 March), the Prophet's Birthday and Imam Sadeq (4 June), and the Death of Imam Khomeini (5 June). Additional holidays include The Anniversary of the Uprising Against the Shah (30 January), Ashoura (11 February), Victory of the 1979 Islamic Revolution (20 January), Sizdah-Bedar—Public Outing Day to end Nowrooz (1 April), and Islamic Republic Day (2 April).

Wedding ceremonies edit

There are two stages in a typical wedding ritual in Iran. Sometimes, both phases take place in one day. The first stage is known as "Aghd", which is basically the legal component of marriage in Iran. In this process, the bride and groom, as well as their respective guardians, sign a marriage contract. This phase usually takes place in the bride's home. After this legal process is over, the second phase, "Jashn-e Aroosi" takes place. In this step, which is basically the wedding reception, where actual feasts and celebrations are held, typically lasts from about 3–7 days. The ceremony takes place in a decorated room with flowers and a beautifully decorated spread on the floor. This spread is typically passed down from mother to daughter and is composed of very nice fabric such as "Termeh" (cashmere), "Atlas" (gold embroidered satin), or "Abrisham" (silk).

 
Iranian Wedding Ceremony

Items are placed on this spread: a Mirror (of fate), two Candelabras (representing the bride and groom and their bright future), a tray of seven multi-colored herbs and spices (including poppy seeds, wild rice, angelica, salt, nigella seeds, black tea, and frankincense). These herbs and spices play specific roles ranging from breaking spells and witchcraft, to blinding the evil eye, to burning evil spirits. In addition to these herbs/spices, a special baked and decorated flatbread, a basket of decorated eggs, decorated almonds, walnuts and hazelnuts (in their shell to represent fertility), a basket of pomegranates/apples (for a joyous future as these fruits are considered divine), a cup of rose water (from special Persian roses)—which helps perfume the air, a bowl made out of sugar (apparently to sweeten life for the newlywed couple), and a brazier holding burning coals and sprinkled with wild rue (as a way to keep the evil eye away and to purify the wedding ritual) are placed on the spread as well. Finally, there are additional items that must be placed on the spread, including a bowl of gold coins (to represent wealth and prosperity), a scarf/shawl made of silk/fine fabric (to be held over the bride and groom's head at certain points in the ceremony), two sugar cones—which are ground above the bride and groom's head, thus symbolizing sweetness/happiness, a cup of honey (to sweeten life), a needle and seven strands of colored thread (the shawl that is held above the bride and groom's head is sewn together with the string throughout the ceremony), and a copy of the couple's Holy Book (other religions require different texts); but all of these books symbolize God's blessing for the couple.[70] An early age in marriage—especially for brides—is a long documented feature of marriage in Iran. While the people of Iran have been trying to legally change this practice by implementing a higher minimum in marriage, there have been countless blocks to such an attempt. Although the average age of women being married has increased by about five years in the past couple decades, young girls being married is still common feature of marriage in Iran—even though there is an article in the Iranian Civil Code that forbid the marriage of women younger than 15 years of age and males younger than 18 years of age.[71]

Persian rugs edit

In Iran, Persian rugs have always been a vital part of the Persian culture.

 
Antique Persian Mashad Rug

Iranians were some of the first people in history to weave carpets. First deriving from the notion of basic need, the Persian rug started out as a simple/pure weave of fabric that helped nomadic people living in ancient Iran stay warm from the cold, damp ground. As time progressed, the complexity and beauty of rugs increased to a point where rugs are now bought as decorative pieces.[72] Because of the long history of fine silk and wool rug weaving in Iran, Persian rugs are world-renowned as some of the most beautiful, intricately designed rugs available. Around various places in Iran, rugs seem to be some of the most prized possessions of the local people. Iran currently produces more rugs and carpets than all other countries in the world put together.[73]

Modern culture edit

Cinema edit

With 300 international awards in the past 10 years, Iranian films continue to be celebrated worldwide. The best known Persian directors are Abbas Kiarostami, Majid Majidi, Jafar Panahi and Asghar Farhadi.

Contemporary art edit

There is a resurgence of interest in Iranian contemporary artists and in artists from the larger Iranian diaspora. Key notables include Shirin Aliabadi, Mohammed Ehsai, Ramin Haerizadeh, Rokni Haerizadeh, Golnaz Fathi, Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian, Parastou Forouhar, Pouran Jinchi, Farhad Moshiri, Shirin Neshat, Parviz Tanavoli, Y. Z. Kami, and Charles Hossein Zenderoudi.[74]

Music edit

Architecture edit

 
Sassanian fortress in Derbent, Dagestan. Now inscribed on Russia's UNESCO world heritage list since 2003.

Cuisine edit

Cuisine in Iran is considered to be one of the most ancient forms of cuisine around the world. Bread is arguably the most important food in Iran, with a large variety of different bread, some of the most popular of which include: nan and hamir, which are baked in large clay ovens (also called "tenurs"). In Iranian cuisine, there are many dishes that are made from dairy products. One of the most popular of which includes yoghurt ("mast")—which has a specific fermentation process that is widely put to use amongst most Iranians. In addition, mast is used to make soup and is vital in the production of oil. In addition to these dairy products, Iranian cuisine involves a lot of dishes cooked from rice. Some popular rice dishes include boiled rice with a variety of ingredients such as meats, vegetables, and seasonings ("plov") including dishes like chelo-horesh, shish kebab with rice, chelo-kebab, rice with lamb, meatballs with rice, and kofte (plain boiled rice). In addition, Iranian cuisine is famous for its sweets. One of the most famous of which includes "baklava" with almonds, cardamom, and egg yolks. Iranian sweets typically involve the use of honey, cinnamon, lime juice, and sprouted wheat grain. One very popular dessert drink in Iran, "sherbet sharbat-portagal", is made from a mixture of orange peel and orange juice boiled in thin sugar syrup and diluted with rose water. Just like the people of many Middle Eastern countries the most preferred drink of the people of Iran is tea (without milk) or "kakhve-khana".[75]

Sports edit

  • The game of Polo originated with Iranian tribes in ancient times and was regularly seen throughout the country until the revolution of 1979 where it became associated with the monarchy. It continues to be played, but only in rural areas and discreetly. Recently, as of 2005, it has been acquiring an increasingly higher profile. In March 2006, there was a highly publicised tournament and all significant matches are now televised.
  • The Iranian Zoor Khaneh

Women in Persian culture edit

Since the 1979 Revolution, Iranian women have lost almost all their rights that was gained in 1962 under the rule of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi. Many restrictive and legal measures are imposed since 1979, including mandatory Hijab. By law, women's testimony in court are half of the men under the rule of the Islamic Regime, the age of marriage is 9, and marital rape is legal. Women cannot leave the country without the formal permission of their guardians (father or husband). They cannot run for presidency or become a judge. This is a striking change from the full and equal rights that women enjoyed during the Pahlavi era. The Iranian women who had gained confidence and higher education during the Pahlavi era participated in demonstrations against the Shah to topple the monarchy. The culture of education for women was very strongly established by the time of revolution so that even after the revolution, large numbers of women entered civil service and higher education.[76] Even though Islamic Republic pushed back hard on women's rights, Iranian women have been at the forefront of progress, education and battle for freedom. In 1996 fourteen women were elected to the Islamic Consultative Assembly. In 2003, Iran's first female judge during the Pahlavi era, Shirin Ebadi, won the Nobel Peace Prize for her efforts in promoting human rights.

According to a UNESCO world survey, at the primary level of enrolment Iran has the highest female to male ratio in the world among sovereign nations, with a female to male ratio of 1.22 : 1.00.[77] By 1999, Iran had 140 female publishers, enough to hold an exhibition of books and magazines published by women.[78] As of 2005, 65% of Iran's university students and 43% of its salaried workers were women.[79] and as of early 2007 nearly 70% of Iran's science and engineering students are women.[80] This has led to many female school and university graduates being under-utilized. This is beginning to have an effect on Iranian society and was a contributing factor to protests by Iranian youth in various times over the past few decades.

During recent decades, Iranian women have had significant presence in Iran's scientific movement, art movement, literary new wave and contemporary Iranian cinema. Women account for 60% of all students in the natural sciences, including one in five PhD students.[81]

Traditional holidays/celebrations edit

 
Tirgan and Damavand National Day Festival at Amol

Iranians celebrate the following days based on a solar calendar, in addition to important religious days of Islamic and Shia calendars, which are based on a lunar calendar.

Traditional cultural inheritors of the old Persia edit

 
Prince Muhammad-Beik of Georgia, 1620. Artist is Reza Abbasi.

Like the Persian carpet that exhibits numerous colors and forms in a dazzling display of warmth and creativity, Persian culture is the glue that bonds the peoples of western and central Asia. The South Caucasus and Central Asia "occupy an important place in the historical geography of Persian civilization." Much of the region was included in the pre-Islamic Persian empires, and many of its ancient peoples either belonged to the Iranian branch of the Indo-European peoples (e.g. Medes and Soghdians), or were in close cultural contact with them (e.g. the Armenians).[82] In the words of Iranologist Richard Nelson Frye:

Many times I have emphasized that the present peoples of central Asia, whether Iranian or Turkic speaking, have one culture, one religion, one set of social values and traditions with only language separating them.

The Culture of Persia has thus developed over several thousand years. But historically, the peoples of what are now Iran, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Turkey, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan,[83][84] Eastern Georgia, and Afghanistan are related to one another as part of the larger group of peoples of the Greater Iranian cultural and historical sphere. The Northern Caucasus is well within the sphere of influence of Persian culture as well, as can be seen from the many remaining relics, ruins, and works of literature from that region. (e.g. 2)

Contributions to humanity in ancient history edit

 
Figurine holding a stringed instrument (early tanbur or lute). First half of second millennium BC. Susa. Kept at the National Museum of Iran.

From the humble brick, to the windmill, Persians have mixed creativity with art and offered the world numerous contributions.[85][86] What follows is a list of just a few examples of the cultural contributions of Greater Iran.

  • (10,000 BC) – Earliest known domestication of the goat.[87][88][89][90]
  • (6000 BC) – The modern brick.[91] Some of the oldest bricks found to date are Persian, from c. 6000 BC.
  • (5000 BC) – Invention of wine. Discovery made by University of Pennsylvania excavations at Hajji Firuz Tepe in northwestern Iran.[92]
  • (5000 BC) – Invention of the Tar (lute), which led to the development of the guitar.[93][94]
  • (3000 BC) – The ziggurat. The Sialk ziggurat, according to the Cultural Heritage Organization of Iran, predates that of Ur or any other of Mesopotamia's 34 ziggurats.
  • (3000 BC) – A game resembling backgammon appears in the east of Iran.[95]
  • (1400 BC – 600 BC) – Zoroastrianism: where the first prophet of a monotheistic faith arose according to some scholars,[96] claiming Zoroastrianism as being "the oldest of the revealed credal religions, which has probably had more influence on mankind directly or indirectly, more than any other faith".[97][98]
  • (576 BC – 529 BC) – The Cyrus Cylinder: The world's first charter of human rights.[99]
  • (521 BC) – The game of polo.[100]
  • (500 BC) – First banking system, at the time of the Achaemenid, establishment of Governmental Banks to help farmers at the time of drought, floods, and other natural disasters in form of loans and forgiveness loans to restart their farms and husbandries. These Governmental Banks were effective in different forms until the end of Sassanian Empire before invasion of Arabs to Persia.[citation needed]
  • (500 BC) – The word "check" has a Persian root in the old Persian language. The use of this document as a check was in use from Achaemenid time to the end of Sassanian Empire. The word of [Bonchaq, or Bonchagh] in modern Persian language is new version of old Avestan and Pahlavi language "check". In Persian, it means a document which resembles money value for gold, silver and property. By law, people were able to buy and sell these documents or exchange them.[citation needed]
  • (500 BC) – World's oldest staple.
  • (500 BC) – The first taxation system (under the Achaemenid Empire).
  • (500 BC) – "Royal Road" – the first courier post.[101]
  • (500 BC) – Source for introduction of the domesticated chicken into Europe.
  • (500 BC) – First cultivation of spinach.
  • (400 BC) – Yakhchals, ancient refrigerators.
  • (400 BC) – Ice cream.[102]
  • (250 BC) – Original excavation of the Ancient Suez Canal, begun under Darius, completed under the Ptolemies.[103]
  • (50 AD) – Peaches, a fruit of Chinese origin, were introduced to the west through Persia, as indicated by their Latin scientific name, Prunus persica, from which (by way of the French) we have the English word "peach".[104]
  • (271 AD) – Academy of Gundishapur – The first hospital.[105]
  • (700 AD) – The cookie.
  • (700 AD) – The windmill.[106]
  • (864 AD – 930 AD) – First systematic use of alcohol in Medicine: Rhazes.[107]
  • (1000 AD) – Tulips were first cultivated in medieval Persia.[108]
  • (1000 AD) – Introduction of paper to the west.[109]
  • (935 AD – 1020 AD) – Ferdowsi writes the Shahnama (Book of Kings) that resulted in the revival of Iranian culture and the expansion of the Iranian cultural sphere.
  • (980 AD – 1037 AD) – Avicenna, a physician, writes The Canon of Medicine, one of the foundational manuals in the history of modern medicine.
  • (1048 AD – 1131 AD) – Khayyam, one of the greatest polymaths of all time, presents a theory of heliocentricity to his peers. His contributions to laying the foundations of algebra are also noteworthy.
  • (1207 AD – 1273 AD) – Rumi writes poetry and in 1997, the translations were best-sellers in the United States.[110]
  • Algebra and trigonometry: Iranian scientists were directly responsible for the establishment of Algebra, the advancement of Medicine and Chemistry, and the discovery of Trigonometry.[111]
  • Qanat, subterranean aqueducts.
  • Wind catchers, ancient air residential conditioning.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ This issue is still debated today.[54]

References edit

  1. ^ "Cultural Life". Tehrān. Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 16 April 2018. Persian cuisine is characterized by the use of lime and saffron, the blend of meats with fruits and nuts, a unique way of cooking rice, and Iranian hospitality. Food is delicate in flavour and appearance, heavy in meat, dairy, and herbs, and not hot or spicy. An emphasis on sour and sweet is found within this cuisine. Many recipes date back to ancient times; Iran's historical contacts have assisted in the exchange of ingredients, flavours, textures, and styles with various cultures ranging from the Mediterranean Sea region to China, some of whom retain these influences today.
  2. ^ Clark, Melissa (19 April 2016). "Persian Cuisine, Fragrant and Rich With Symbolism". The New York Times.
  3. ^ a b Yarshater, Ehsan Persia or Iran, Persian or Farsi 2010-10-24 at the Wayback Machine, Iranian Studies, vol. XXII no. 1 (1989)
  4. ^ a b Oelze, Sabine (13 April 2017). "How Iran became a cradle of civilization". DW. Retrieved 3 July 2019.
  5. ^ a b Bakhtiyar, Afshin (2014). Iran the Cradle of Civilization. Gooya House of Cultural Art. ISBN 978-9647610032.
  6. ^ "Iran – Cradle of Civilisation". Drents Museum. 12 April 2018. Retrieved 3 July 2019.
  7. ^ , 28 September 2007. Retrieved 4 July 2019
  8. ^ "Persian Influence on Greek Culture". Livius.org. 7 November 2018. Retrieved 3 July 2019.
  9. ^ Milani, A. Lost Wisdom. 2004.ISBN 0-934211-90-6 p.15
  10. ^ Greater Iran, Mazda Publishers, 2005. ISBN 1568591772 xi
  11. ^ "The World Factbook – Central Intelligence Agency". Cia.gov. Archived from the original on 2012-02-03. Retrieved 2019-07-01
  12. ^ Grebennikov, Marat (2013). "The Puzzle of a Loyal Minority: Why Do Azeris Support the Iranian State?". Middle East Journal. 67 (1): 64–76. doi:10.3751/67.1.14. ISSN 0026-3141. JSTOR 23361693. S2CID 145719557.
  13. ^ Windfuhr, Gernot. The Iranian Languages. Routledge, Taylor and Francis Group.
  14. ^ "Ethnologue report for Iranian". Ethnologue.com.
  15. ^ Eberhard, David M., Gary F. Simons, and Charles D. Fennig (eds.). 2019. Ethnologue: Languages of the World. Twenty-second edition. Dallas, Texas: SIL International. Online version: http://www.ethnologue.com.
  16. ^ Spooner, Brian (1994). "Dari, Farsi, and Tojiki". In Marashi, Mehdi (ed.). Persian Studies in North America: Studies in Honor of Mohammad Ali Jazayery. Leiden: Brill. pp. 177–178.
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  20. ^ Von David Levinson; Karen Christensen, Encyclopedia of Modern Asia, Charles Scribner's Sons. 2002, vol. 4, p. 480
  21. ^ Elwell-Sutton, L.P. (trans.), In search of Omar Khayam by Ali Dashti, Columbia University Press, 1971, ISBN 0-231-03188-2
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  28. ^ Franklin Lewis, Rumi Past and Present, East and West, Oneworld Publications, 2000. How is it that a Persian boy born almost eight hundred years ago in Khorasan, the northeastern province of greater Iran, in a region that we identify today as Central Asia, but was considered in those days as part of the Greater Persian cultural sphere, wound up in Central Anatolia on the receding edge of the Byzantine cultural sphere, in which is now Turkey, some 1500 miles to the west? (p. 9)
  29. ^ HOUSHMAND, Zara, "Iran", in Literature from the "Axis of Evil" (a Words Without Borders anthology), ISBN 978-1-59558-205-8, 2006, pp.1–3
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  33. ^ ČAKĀVAK, Encyclopædia Iranica. IV. 15 December 1990. pp. 649–650. (Pers. navā, Ar. laḥn, naḡma, etc.)
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  42. ^ Martin, Luther H.; Beck, Roger (30 December 2004). "Foreword". Beck on Mithraism: Collected Works With New Essays. Ashgate Publishing. pp. xiii. ISBN 978-0-7546-4081-3. However, the cult was vigorously opposed by Christian polemicists, especially by Justin and Tertullian, because of perceived similarities between it and early Christianity. And with the anti-pagan decrees of the Christian emperor Theodosius during the final decade of the fourth century, Mithraism disappeared from the history of religions as a viable religious practice.
  43. ^ Lewis M. Hopfe, "Archaeological indications on the origins of Roman Mithraism", in Lewis M. Hopfe (ed). Uncovering ancient stones: essays in memory of H. Neil Richardson, Eisenbrauns (1994), pp. 147–158. p. 156: "Beyond these three Mithraea [in Syria and Palestine], there are only a handful of objects from Syria that may be identified with Mithraism. Archaeological evidence of Mithraism in Syria is therefore in marked contrast to the abundance of Mithraea and materials that have been located in the rest of the Roman Empire. Both the frequency and the quality of Mithraic materials is greater in the rest of the empire. Even on the western frontier in Britain, archaeology has produced rich Mithraic materials, such as those found at Walbrook. If one accepts Cumont's theory that Mithraism began in Iran, moved west through Babylon to Asia Minor, and then to Rome, one would expect that the cult left its traces in those locations. Instead, archaeology indicates that Roman Mithraism had its epicenter in Rome. Wherever its ultimate place of origin may have been, the fully developed religion known as Mithraism seems to have begun in Rome and been carried to Syria by soldiers and merchants. None of the Mithraic materials or temples in Roman Syria except the Commagene sculpture bears any date earlier than the late first or early second century. [footnote in cited text: 30. Mithras, identified with a Phrygian cap and the nimbus about his head, is depicted in colossal statuary erected by King Antiochus I of Commagene, 69–34 BCE. (see Vermaseren, CIMRM 1.53–56). However, there are no other literary or archaeological evidences to indicate that the religion of Mithras as it was known among the Romans in the second to fourth centuries AD was practiced in Commagene]. While little can be proved from silence, it seems that the relative lack of archaeological evidence from Roman Syria would argue against the traditional theories for the origins of Mithraism."
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  50. ^ https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/1372 "The Persian Garden" (1372) at World Heritage Site website
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  54. ^ Majd, Hooman, The Ayatollah Begs to Differ: The Paradox of Modern Iran, by Hooman Majd, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, September 23, 2008, ISBN 0385528426, 9780385528429. p. 161
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    • Sardar, Ziauddin. Introducing Mathematics. Totem Books. 1999.

Further reading edit

  • Michael C. Hillman. Iranian Culture. 1990. University Press of America. ISBN 0-8191-7694-X
  • Iran: At War with History, by John Limbert, pub. 1987, a book of socio-cultural customs of The Islamic Republic of Iran
  • George Ghevarghese Joseph.The Crest of the Peacock: The Non-European Roots of Mathematics. July 2000. Princeton U Press.
  • Welch, S.C. (1972). A king's book of kings: the Shah-nameh of Shah Tahmasp. New York: The Metropolitan Museum of Art. ISBN 9780870990281.

External links edit

  • Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance Of Iran Official Website 3 October 2019 at the Wayback Machine
  • Islamic Republic of Iran Academy of The Arts
  • Islamic Republic of Iran International Center for Dialogue Among Civilizations
  • Culture of Iran – parstimes.com
  • Culture of Iran
  • Iran Institute for Humanities and Cultural Studies
  • (Persian)
  • Iran: Cultural and Historical Zones

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culture, iran, culture, iran, persian, فرهنگ, ایران, culture, persia, among, most, influential, world, iran, persia, widely, considered, cradles, civilization, dominant, geopolitical, position, world, heavily, influenced, peoples, cultures, situated, away, sou. The culture of Iran Persian فرهنگ ایران or culture of Persia 1 2 3 is among the most influential in the world Iran Persia is widely considered to be one of the cradles of civilization 4 5 6 7 Due to its dominant geopolitical position in the world it has heavily influenced peoples and cultures situated as far away as Southern Europe and Eastern Europe to the west Central Asia to the north the Arabian Peninsula to the south and South Asia East Asia and Southeast Asia to the east 4 5 8 Iranian history has had a significant impact on the world through art architecture poetry science and technology medicine philosophy and engineering Iranian family wearing traditional clothingThe Shah Mosque in IsfahanAn eclectic cultural elasticity has been said to be one of the key defining characteristics of the Iranian identity and a clue to its historical longevity 9 Richard N Frye a prominent Iranologist stresses the high level historical impact of Iranian culture in his 2005 book Greater Iran A 20th century Odyssey Iran s glory has always been its culture 10 Furthermore Iran s culture has manifested itself in several facets throughout the history of the Iranian Plateau as well as of the South Caucasus Central Asia Anatolia and Mesopotamia Contents 1 History 2 Art 2 1 Language 2 2 Literature 2 3 Music 2 4 Dance 2 5 Architecture 3 Cuisine 4 Religion in Iran 5 Holidays in Iran 6 Wedding ceremonies 7 Persian rugs 8 Modern culture 8 1 Cinema 8 2 Contemporary art 8 3 Music 8 4 Architecture 8 5 Cuisine 9 Sports 10 Women in Persian culture 11 Traditional holidays celebrations 12 Traditional cultural inheritors of the old Persia 13 Contributions to humanity in ancient history 14 See also 15 Notes 16 References 17 Further reading 18 External linksHistory editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it October 2023 Art editMain article Persian art Iran has one of the oldest richest and most influential art heritages in the world which encompasses many disciplines including literature music dance architecture painting weaving pottery calligraphy metalworking embroidery and stonemasonry nbsp Intricate stone art of PersepolisIranian art has gone through numerous phases which is evident from the unique aesthetics of Iran From the Elamite Chogha Zanbil to the Median and Achaemenid reliefs of Persepolis to the mosaics of Bishapur The Islamic Golden Age brought drastic changes to the styles and practice of the arts However each Iranian dynasty had its own particular foci building upon the previous dynasty s all of which during their times were heavily influential in shaping the cultures of the world then and today Language edit See also Iranian languages Iranian peoples and Azerbaijanis Several languages are spoken throughout Iran Languages from the Iranian Turkic and Semitic language families are spoken across Iran According to the CIA Factbook 78 of Iranians speaks an Iranian language as their native tongue 18 speak a Turkic language as their native tongue and 2 speak a Semitic language as their native tongue while the remaining 2 speak languages from various other groups 11 Although the Azerbaijanis speak a Turkic language due to their culture history and genetics they are often associated with the Iranian peoples 12 The predominant language and national language of Iran is Persian which is spoken fluently across the country Azerbaijani is spoken primarily and widely in the northwest Kurdish and Luri are spoken primarily in the west Mazandarani and Gilaki spoken in the regions along the Caspian Sea Arabic primarily in the Persian Gulf coastal regions Balochi primarily in the southeast and Turkmen primarily in northern border regions Smaller languages spread in other regions notably include Talysh Georgian Armenian Assyrian and Circassian amongst others Ethnologue estimates that there are 86 Iranian languages the largest among them being Persian Pashto and the Kurdish dialect continuum with an estimated 150 200 million native speakers of the Iranian languages worldwide 13 14 15 Dialects of Persian are sporadically spoken throughout the region from China to Syria to Russia though mainly in the Iranian Plateau Literature edit nbsp Behistun inscription reliefsSee also Literature in Iran Iranian literature and Persian literature in Western culture nbsp Tomb of Sa adi in Shiraz IranThe literature of Iran is one of the world s oldest and most celebrated literatures spanning over 2500 years from the many Achaemenid inscriptions such as the Behistun inscription to the celebrated Iranian poets of the Islamic Golden Age and Modern Iran 16 17 18 Iranian literature has been described as one of the great literature s of humanity and one of the four main bodies of world literature 19 20 Distinguished Professor L P Elwell Sutton described the literature of the Persian language as one of the richest poetic literatures of the world 21 Very few literary works of pre Islamic Iran have survived due partly to the destruction of the libraries of Persepolis by Alexander of Macedon during the era of the Achaemenids and subsequent invasion of Iran by the Arabs in 641 who sought to eradicate all non Quranic texts 22 This resulted in all Iranian libraries being destroyed books either being burnt or thrown into rivers The only way that Iranians could protect these books was to bury them but many of the texts were forgotten over time 22 As soon as circumstances permitted the Iranians wrote books and assembled libraries 22 nbsp The Tomb of Ferdowsi in Tus IranIranian literature encompasses a variety of literature in the languages used in Iran Modern Iranian literature includes Persian literature Azerbaijani literature Kurdish literature and the literature of the remaining minority languages Persian is the predominant and official language of Iran and throughout Iran s history it has been the nation s most influential literary language The Persian language has been often dubbed as the most worthy language of the world to serve as a conduit for poetry 23 Azerbaijani literature has also had a profound effect on Iran s literature with it being developed highly after Iran s first reunification in 800 years under the Safavid Empire whose rulers themselves wrote poetry 24 There remain a few literary works of the extinct Iranian language of Old Azeri that was used in Azerbaijan prior to the linguistic Turkification of the people of the region 25 Kurdish literature has also had a profound impact on the literature of Iran with it incorporating the various Kurdish dialects that are spoken throughout the Middle East The earliest works of Kurdish literature are those of the 16th century poet Malaye Jaziri 26 Some notable greats of Iranian poetry which have had major global influence include the likes of Ferdowsi Sa di Hafiz Attar Nezami Jami Rumi Omar Khayyam Taleb Amoli Ubayd Zakani Shams Tabrizi Rudaki and Vahshi Bafqi 27 28 These poets have inspired the likes of Goethe Ralph Waldo Emerson and many others Contemporary Iranian literature has been influenced by classical Persian poetry but also reflects the particularities of modern day Iran through writers such as Houshang Moradi Kermani the most translated modern Iranian author and poet Ahmad Shamlou 29 Music edit See also Music of Iran nbsp Music dance poetry and wine drinking at the court of 17th century ruler Shah Abbas IIIranian music has directly influenced the cultures of West Asia Central Asia Europe and South Asia 30 It has mainly influenced and built up much of the musical terminology of the neighboring Turkic and Arabic cultures and reached India through the 16th century Persianate Mughal Empire whose court promoted new musical forms by bringing Iranian musicians 30 Iran is the place of origin of complex instruments with the instruments dating back to the third millennium BC 31 A number of trumpets made of silver gold and copper were found in eastern Iran that are attributed to the Oxus civilization and date back between 2200 and 1750 BC The use of both vertical and horizontal angular harps have been documented at the archaeological sites of Madaktu 650 BC and Kul e Fara 900 600 BC with the largest collection of Elamite instruments documented at Kul e Fara Multiple depictions of horizontal harps were also sculpted in Assyrian palaces dating back between 865 and 650 BC 31 The reign of Sassanian ruler Khosrow II is regarded as a golden age for Iranian music Sassanid music is where many the many music cultures of the world trace their distant origins to The court of Khosrow II hosted a number of prominent musicians including Azad Bamshad Barbad Nagisa Ramtin and Sarkash Among these attested names Barbad is remembered in many documents and has been named as remarkably high skilled He was a poet musician who developed modal music may have invented the lute and the musical tradition that was to transform into the forms of dastgah and maqam 31 32 33 He has been credited to have organized a musical system consisting of seven royal modes xosrovani 30 derived modes nava and 360 melodies dastan 31 32 The academic classical music of Iran in addition to preserving melody types that are often attributed to Sassanian musicians is based on the theories of sonic aesthetics as expounded by the likes of Iranian musical theorists in the early centuries of after the Muslim conquest of the Sasanian Empire most notably Avicenna Farabi Qotb ed Din Shirazi and Safi ed Din Urmawi 30 Dance edit See also Persian dance and Mithraism Iran has a rich and ancient dance culture which extends to the sixth millennium BC Dances from ancient artifacts excavated at the archaeological pre historic sites of Iran portray a vibrant culture that mixes different forms of dances for all occasions In conjunction with music the artifacts depicted actors dancers and ordinary people dancing in plays dramas celebrations mourning and religious rituals with equipment such as costumes of animals or plants masks and surrounding objects As time progressed this culture of dance began to develop and flourish 34 Iran is a multi ethnic nation Although the cultures of its ethnic groups are very similar and in most areas near identical each has their own distinct and specific dance style Iran possesses four categories of dance with these being group dances solo improvisational dance war or combat dances and spiritual dances Typically the group dances are often unique and named after the region or the ethnic groups with which they are associated with These dances can be chain dances involving a group or the more common group dances mainly performed at festive occasions like weddings and Noruz celebrations which focus less on communal line or circle dances and more on solo improvisational forms with each dancer interpreting the music in their own special way but within a specific range of dance vocabulary sometimes blending other dance styles or elements 35 Solo dances are usually reconstructions of the historical and court dances of the various Iranian dynasties throughout history with the most common types being that of the Safavid and Qajar dynasties due to them being relatively newer 35 These often are improvisational dances and utilize delicate graceful movements of the hands and arms such as wrist circles 35 War or Combat dances imitate combat or help to train the warrior It could be argued that men from the Zurkhaneh House of Strength and their ritualized wrestling training movements are known as a type of dance called Raghs e Pa or Pay Bazi with the dances and actions done in the Zurkhaneh also resembling that of a martial art 35 36 Spiritual dances in Iran are known as sama There are various types of these spiritual dances which are used for spiritual purposes such as ridding the body of ill omens and evil spirits These dances involve trance music and complex movements An example of such dance is that of the Balochi s called le b gowati which is performed to rid a supposedly possessed person of the possessing spirit In the Balochi language the term gowati refers to psychologically ill patients who have recovered through music and dance 37 38 The earliest researched dances from Iran is a dance worshiping Mithra the Zoroastrian angelic divinity of covenant light and oath which was used commonly by the Roman Cult of Mithra 39 One of the cult s ceremonies involved the sacrifice of a bull followed by a dance that promoted vigor in life 39 The Cult of Mithra were active from the 1st century CE to the 4th century CE and worshiped a mystery religion inspired by the Iranian worship of Mithra It was a rival of Christianity in the Roman Empire and was eventually suppressed in the 4th century CE by Roman authorities in favor of Christianity 40 41 42 This was done in order to counter the greater Iranian cultural influence that was expanding throughout the Roman empire 41 The cult was highly adhered and respected throughout the Roman Empire with it center in Rome and was popular throughout the western half of the empire as far south as Roman Africa and Numidia as far north as Roman Britain and to a lesser extent in Roman Syria in the east 43 44 Architecture edit Main article Iranian architecture The history of Iranian architecture dates back to at least 5 000 BC with characteristic examples distributed over a vast area from Turkey and Iraq to Uzbekistan and Tajikistan to the South Caucasus and Zanzibar Currently there are 19 UNESCO designated World Heritage Sites that were designed and constructed by Iranians with 11 of them being located outside of Iran Iranian architecture displays a great variety of both structure and aesthetics and despite the repeated trauma of destructive invasions and cultural shocks the Iranian zeal and identity has always triumphed and flourished In turn it has greatly influenced the architecture of its invaders from the Greeks to the Arabs to the Turks 45 46 The traditional theme of Iranian architecture is cosmic symbolism which depicts the communication and participation of man with the powers of heaven This theme has not only given continuity and longevity to the architecture of Iran but has been a primary source of its emotional character of the nation as well Iranian architecture ranges from simple structures to some of the most majestic structures the world has ever seen 46 47 Iranian architectural style is the combination of intensity and simplicity to form immediacy while ornament and often subtle proportions reward sustained observation Iranian architecture makes use of abundant symbolic geometry using pure forms such as the circle and square and plans are based on often symmetrical layouts featuring rectangular courtyards and halls The paramount virtues of Iranian architecture are a marked feeling for form and scale structural inventiveness especially in vault and dome construction a genius for decoration with a freedom and success not rivaled in any other architecture 48 The traditional architecture of Iran throughout the ages is categorized into two families and six following classes or styles The two categories are Zoroastrian and Islamic which references the eras of pre Islamic and post Islamic Iran and the six styles in order of their era are Parsian Parthian Khorasani Razi Azari Esfahani The pre Islamic styles draw on 3000 to 4000 years of architectural development from the various civilizations of the Iranian plateau The post Islamic architecture of Iran in turn draws ideas from its pre Islamic predecessor and has geometrical and repetitive forms as well as surfaces that are richly decorated with glazed tiles carved stucco patterned brickwork floral motifs and calligraphy 49 In addition to historic gates palaces bridges buildings and religious sites which highlight the highly developed supremacy of the Iranian art of architecture Iranian gardens are also an example of Iran s cosmic symbolism and unique style of combining intensity and simplicity for form immediacy 45 47 There are currently 14 Iranian gardens that are listed as UNESCO World Heritage Sites with 5 of them being located outside of Iran 50 The traditional style of Iranian gardens are to represent an earthly paradise or a heaven on Earth From the time of the Achaemenid Empire the idea of an earthly paradise spread through Iranian literature to other cultures with the word for paradise in the Iranian languages of Avestan Old Persian and Median spreading to languages across the world 51 The style and design of the Iranian garden greatly influenced the garden styles of countries from Spain to Italy and Greece to India with some notable examples of such gardens being the gardens of the Alhambra in Spain Humayun s Tomb and the Taj Mahal in India the Hellenistic gardens of the Seleucid Empire and the Ptolemies in Alexandria 51 Cuisine editIranian cuisine refers to the culinary practices of Iran Due to the historically common usage of the term Persia to refer to Iran in the Western world 52 53 3 it is alternatively known as Persian cuisine despite Persians being only one of a multitude of Iranian ethnic groups who have contributed to Iran s culinary traditions a The cuisine of Iran has made extensive contact throughout its history with the cuisines of its neighbouring regions including Cuisine from the Caucasus Central Asian cuisine Greek cuisine Levantine cuisine Mesopotamian cuisine Russian cuisine and Turkish cuisine 55 56 57 58 Aspects of Iranian cuisine have also been significantly adopted by Indian cuisine and Pakistani cuisine through various historical Persianate sultanates that flourished during Muslim rule on the Indian subcontinent with the most notable and impactful of these polities being the Mughal Empire 59 60 61 Typical Iranian main dishes are combinations of rice with meat vegetables and nuts Herbs are frequently used along with fruits such as plums pomegranates quince prunes apricots and raisins Characteristic Iranian spices and flavourings such as saffron cardamom and dried lime and other sources of sour flavoring cinnamon turmeric and parsley are mixed and used in various dishes Outside of Iran a strong presence of Iranian cuisine can be found in cities with significant Iranian diaspora populations namely the San Francisco Bay Area Toronto 62 63 64 65 Houston and especially Los Angeles and its environs 62 63 66 Religion in Iran editSee also Religion and culture in ancient Iran nbsp Shah Mosque IsfahanZoroastrianism was the national faith of Iran for more than a millennium before the Arab conquest It has had an immense influence on Iranian philosophy culture and art after the people of Iran converted to Islam 67 The Persian Samanid dynasty made great attempts to spread the Islamic faith in the 9th and 10th century while promoting a Persian cultural revival Until the 16th century Iran was majority Sunni ushering a golden age of the arts and sciences 67 In 1501 the Safavid dynasty took control of Iran and made Shia Islam the state religion with this being one of the most important events in Islamic history 67 Today of the 98 of Muslims living in Iran around 89 are Shi a and only around 9 are Sunni This is quite the opposite trend of the percentage distribution of Shi a to Sunni Islam followers in the rest of the Muslim population from state to state primarily in the Middle East and throughout the rest of the world Followers of the Bahaʼi Faith form the largest non Muslim minority in Iran Bahaʼis are scattered throughout small communities in Iran although there seems to be a large population of Bahaʼis in Tehran The Iranian government actively pursues the persecution of Bahaʼis Followers of the Christian faith consist of around 250 000 Armenians around 32 000 Assyrians and a small number of Roman Catholic Anglican and Protestant Iranians that have been converted by missionaries in earlier centuries Thus Christians that live in Iran are primarily descendants of indigenous Christians that were converted during the 19th and 20th centuries Judaism is an officially recognized faith in Iran and in spite of the hostilities between Iran and Israel over the Palestinian issue the millennia old Jewish community in Iran enjoys the right to practice their religion freely as well as a dedicated seat in parliament to a representative member of their faith In addition to Christianity and Judaism Zoroastrianism is another officially recognized religion in Iran although followers of this faith do not hold a large population in Iran In addition although there have been isolated incidences spelling of prejudice against Zoroastrians most followers of this faith have not been persecuted for being followers of this faith 68 Holidays in Iran editSee also Holidays in Iran Iranian Calendar and List of festivals in Iran The Persian year begins in the vernal equinox if the astronomical vernal equinox comes before noon then the present day is the first day of the Persian year If the equinox falls after noon then the next day is the official first day of the Persian year The Persian Calendar which is the official calendar of Iran is a solar calendar with a starting point that is the same as the Islamic calendar According to the Iran Labor Code Friday is the weekly day of rest Government official working hours are from Saturday to Wednesday from 8 am to 4 pm 69 Although the date of certain holidays in Iran are not exact due to the calendar system they use most of these holidays are around the same time some of the major public holidays in Iran include Oil Nationalization Day 20 March Yalda which is the longest night of the year 21 December Nowrooz which is the Iranian equivalent of New Years 20 March the Prophet s Birthday and Imam Sadeq 4 June and the Death of Imam Khomeini 5 June Additional holidays include The Anniversary of the Uprising Against the Shah 30 January Ashoura 11 February Victory of the 1979 Islamic Revolution 20 January Sizdah Bedar Public Outing Day to end Nowrooz 1 April and Islamic Republic Day 2 April Wedding ceremonies editSee also Persian wedding There are two stages in a typical wedding ritual in Iran Sometimes both phases take place in one day The first stage is known as Aghd which is basically the legal component of marriage in Iran In this process the bride and groom as well as their respective guardians sign a marriage contract This phase usually takes place in the bride s home After this legal process is over the second phase Jashn e Aroosi takes place In this step which is basically the wedding reception where actual feasts and celebrations are held typically lasts from about 3 7 days The ceremony takes place in a decorated room with flowers and a beautifully decorated spread on the floor This spread is typically passed down from mother to daughter and is composed of very nice fabric such as Termeh cashmere Atlas gold embroidered satin or Abrisham silk nbsp Iranian Wedding CeremonyItems are placed on this spread a Mirror of fate two Candelabras representing the bride and groom and their bright future a tray of seven multi colored herbs and spices including poppy seeds wild rice angelica salt nigella seeds black tea and frankincense These herbs and spices play specific roles ranging from breaking spells and witchcraft to blinding the evil eye to burning evil spirits In addition to these herbs spices a special baked and decorated flatbread a basket of decorated eggs decorated almonds walnuts and hazelnuts in their shell to represent fertility a basket of pomegranates apples for a joyous future as these fruits are considered divine a cup of rose water from special Persian roses which helps perfume the air a bowl made out of sugar apparently to sweeten life for the newlywed couple and a brazier holding burning coals and sprinkled with wild rue as a way to keep the evil eye away and to purify the wedding ritual are placed on the spread as well Finally there are additional items that must be placed on the spread including a bowl of gold coins to represent wealth and prosperity a scarf shawl made of silk fine fabric to be held over the bride and groom s head at certain points in the ceremony two sugar cones which are ground above the bride and groom s head thus symbolizing sweetness happiness a cup of honey to sweeten life a needle and seven strands of colored thread the shawl that is held above the bride and groom s head is sewn together with the string throughout the ceremony and a copy of the couple s Holy Book other religions require different texts but all of these books symbolize God s blessing for the couple 70 An early age in marriage especially for brides is a long documented feature of marriage in Iran While the people of Iran have been trying to legally change this practice by implementing a higher minimum in marriage there have been countless blocks to such an attempt Although the average age of women being married has increased by about five years in the past couple decades young girls being married is still common feature of marriage in Iran even though there is an article in the Iranian Civil Code that forbid the marriage of women younger than 15 years of age and males younger than 18 years of age 71 Persian rugs editIn Iran Persian rugs have always been a vital part of the Persian culture nbsp Antique Persian Mashad RugIranians were some of the first people in history to weave carpets First deriving from the notion of basic need the Persian rug started out as a simple pure weave of fabric that helped nomadic people living in ancient Iran stay warm from the cold damp ground As time progressed the complexity and beauty of rugs increased to a point where rugs are now bought as decorative pieces 72 Because of the long history of fine silk and wool rug weaving in Iran Persian rugs are world renowned as some of the most beautiful intricately designed rugs available Around various places in Iran rugs seem to be some of the most prized possessions of the local people Iran currently produces more rugs and carpets than all other countries in the world put together 73 Modern culture editCinema edit Main article Cinema of Iran With 300 international awards in the past 10 years Iranian films continue to be celebrated worldwide The best known Persian directors are Abbas Kiarostami Majid Majidi Jafar Panahi and Asghar Farhadi Contemporary art edit Main article Iranian modern and contemporary art See also List of Iranian painters There is a resurgence of interest in Iranian contemporary artists and in artists from the larger Iranian diaspora Key notables include Shirin Aliabadi Mohammed Ehsai Ramin Haerizadeh Rokni Haerizadeh Golnaz Fathi Monir Shahroudy Farmanfarmaian Parastou Forouhar Pouran Jinchi Farhad Moshiri Shirin Neshat Parviz Tanavoli Y Z Kami and Charles Hossein Zenderoudi 74 Music edit Main articles Music of Iran and Persian traditional music See also List of Iranian musicians and singers Architecture edit nbsp Sassanian fortress in Derbent Dagestan Now inscribed on Russia s UNESCO world heritage list since 2003 Main article Iranian architecture Cuisine edit Main article Iranian cuisine Cuisine in Iran is considered to be one of the most ancient forms of cuisine around the world Bread is arguably the most important food in Iran with a large variety of different bread some of the most popular of which include nan and hamir which are baked in large clay ovens also called tenurs In Iranian cuisine there are many dishes that are made from dairy products One of the most popular of which includes yoghurt mast which has a specific fermentation process that is widely put to use amongst most Iranians In addition mast is used to make soup and is vital in the production of oil In addition to these dairy products Iranian cuisine involves a lot of dishes cooked from rice Some popular rice dishes include boiled rice with a variety of ingredients such as meats vegetables and seasonings plov including dishes like chelo horesh shish kebab with rice chelo kebab rice with lamb meatballs with rice and kofte plain boiled rice In addition Iranian cuisine is famous for its sweets One of the most famous of which includes baklava with almonds cardamom and egg yolks Iranian sweets typically involve the use of honey cinnamon lime juice and sprouted wheat grain One very popular dessert drink in Iran sherbet sharbat portagal is made from a mixture of orange peel and orange juice boiled in thin sugar syrup and diluted with rose water Just like the people of many Middle Eastern countries the most preferred drink of the people of Iran is tea without milk or kakhve khana 75 Sports editMain article Sport in Iran The game of Polo originated with Iranian tribes in ancient times and was regularly seen throughout the country until the revolution of 1979 where it became associated with the monarchy It continues to be played but only in rural areas and discreetly Recently as of 2005 it has been acquiring an increasingly higher profile In March 2006 there was a highly publicised tournament and all significant matches are now televised The Iranian Zoor KhanehWomen in Persian culture editMain article Iranian women Since the 1979 Revolution Iranian women have lost almost all their rights that was gained in 1962 under the rule of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi Many restrictive and legal measures are imposed since 1979 including mandatory Hijab By law women s testimony in court are half of the men under the rule of the Islamic Regime the age of marriage is 9 and marital rape is legal Women cannot leave the country without the formal permission of their guardians father or husband They cannot run for presidency or become a judge This is a striking change from the full and equal rights that women enjoyed during the Pahlavi era The Iranian women who had gained confidence and higher education during the Pahlavi era participated in demonstrations against the Shah to topple the monarchy The culture of education for women was very strongly established by the time of revolution so that even after the revolution large numbers of women entered civil service and higher education 76 Even though Islamic Republic pushed back hard on women s rights Iranian women have been at the forefront of progress education and battle for freedom In 1996 fourteen women were elected to the Islamic Consultative Assembly In 2003 Iran s first female judge during the Pahlavi era Shirin Ebadi won the Nobel Peace Prize for her efforts in promoting human rights According to a UNESCO world survey at the primary level of enrolment Iran has the highest female to male ratio in the world among sovereign nations with a female to male ratio of 1 22 1 00 77 By 1999 Iran had 140 female publishers enough to hold an exhibition of books and magazines published by women 78 As of 2005 65 of Iran s university students and 43 of its salaried workers were women 79 and as of early 2007 nearly 70 of Iran s science and engineering students are women 80 This has led to many female school and university graduates being under utilized This is beginning to have an effect on Iranian society and was a contributing factor to protests by Iranian youth in various times over the past few decades During recent decades Iranian women have had significant presence in Iran s scientific movement art movement literary new wave and contemporary Iranian cinema Women account for 60 of all students in the natural sciences including one in five PhD students 81 Traditional holidays celebrations editMain article Iranian festivals nbsp Tirgan and Damavand National Day Festival at AmolIranians celebrate the following days based on a solar calendar in addition to important religious days of Islamic and Shia calendars which are based on a lunar calendar Nowruz Iranian New Year Starts from 21 March Sizdah be dar Nature Day Jashn e Tirgan Water Festival Jashn e Sadeh Fire Festival Jashn e Mehregan Autumn Festival Shab e Yalda Winter Feast Charshanbeh SuriTraditional cultural inheritors of the old Persia editMain article Persianate society nbsp Prince Muhammad Beik of Georgia 1620 Artist is Reza Abbasi Like the Persian carpet that exhibits numerous colors and forms in a dazzling display of warmth and creativity Persian culture is the glue that bonds the peoples of western and central Asia The South Caucasus and Central Asia occupy an important place in the historical geography of Persian civilization Much of the region was included in the pre Islamic Persian empires and many of its ancient peoples either belonged to the Iranian branch of the Indo European peoples e g Medes and Soghdians or were in close cultural contact with them e g the Armenians 82 In the words of Iranologist Richard Nelson Frye Many times I have emphasized that the present peoples of central Asia whether Iranian or Turkic speaking have one culture one religion one set of social values and traditions with only language separating them The Culture of Persia has thus developed over several thousand years But historically the peoples of what are now Iran Armenia Azerbaijan Turkey Uzbekistan Tajikistan Turkmenistan 83 84 Eastern Georgia and Afghanistan are related to one another as part of the larger group of peoples of the Greater Iranian cultural and historical sphere The Northern Caucasus is well within the sphere of influence of Persian culture as well as can be seen from the many remaining relics ruins and works of literature from that region e g 1 e g 2 nbsp Iran is filled with tombs of poets and musicians such as this one belonging to Rahi Mo ayeri An illustration of Iran s deep artistic heritage nbsp Iranian chess shatranj set glazed fritware 12th century Nishapur New York Metropolitan Museum of Art nbsp Craftsmanship in Iranian Architecture An excellent animation depicting the intricate details of the traditional interior design click nbsp An ancient ice house called a yakhchal built in ancient times for storing ice during summers Contributions to humanity in ancient history edit nbsp Figurine holding a stringed instrument early tanbur or lute First half of second millennium BC Susa Kept at the National Museum of Iran From the humble brick to the windmill Persians have mixed creativity with art and offered the world numerous contributions 85 86 What follows is a list of just a few examples of the cultural contributions of Greater Iran 10 000 BC Earliest known domestication of the goat 87 88 89 90 6000 BC The modern brick 91 Some of the oldest bricks found to date are Persian from c 6000 BC 5000 BC Invention of wine Discovery made by University of Pennsylvania excavations at Hajji Firuz Tepe in northwestern Iran 92 5000 BC Invention of the Tar lute which led to the development of the guitar 93 94 3000 BC The ziggurat The Sialk ziggurat according to the Cultural Heritage Organization of Iran predates that of Ur or any other of Mesopotamia s 34 ziggurats 3000 BC A game resembling backgammon appears in the east of Iran 95 1400 BC 600 BC Zoroastrianism where the first prophet of a monotheistic faith arose according to some scholars 96 claiming Zoroastrianism as being the oldest of the revealed credal religions which has probably had more influence on mankind directly or indirectly more than any other faith 97 98 576 BC 529 BC The Cyrus Cylinder The world s first charter of human rights 99 521 BC The game of polo 100 500 BC First banking system at the time of the Achaemenid establishment of Governmental Banks to help farmers at the time of drought floods and other natural disasters in form of loans and forgiveness loans to restart their farms and husbandries These Governmental Banks were effective in different forms until the end of Sassanian Empire before invasion of Arabs to Persia citation needed 500 BC The word check has a Persian root in the old Persian language The use of this document as a check was in use from Achaemenid time to the end of Sassanian Empire The word of Bonchaq or Bonchagh in modern Persian language is new version of old Avestan and Pahlavi language check In Persian it means a document which resembles money value for gold silver and property By law people were able to buy and sell these documents or exchange them citation needed 500 BC World s oldest staple 500 BC The first taxation system under the Achaemenid Empire 500 BC Royal Road the first courier post 101 500 BC Source for introduction of the domesticated chicken into Europe 500 BC First cultivation of spinach 400 BC Yakhchals ancient refrigerators 400 BC Ice cream 102 250 BC Original excavation of the Ancient Suez Canal begun under Darius completed under the Ptolemies 103 50 AD Peaches a fruit of Chinese origin were introduced to the west through Persia as indicated by their Latin scientific name Prunus persica from which by way of the French we have the English word peach 104 271 AD Academy of Gundishapur The first hospital 105 700 AD The cookie 700 AD The windmill 106 864 AD 930 AD First systematic use of alcohol in Medicine Rhazes 107 1000 AD Tulips were first cultivated in medieval Persia 108 1000 AD Introduction of paper to the west 109 935 AD 1020 AD Ferdowsi writes the Shahnama Book of Kings that resulted in the revival of Iranian culture and the expansion of the Iranian cultural sphere 980 AD 1037 AD Avicenna a physician writes The Canon of Medicine one of the foundational manuals in the history of modern medicine 1048 AD 1131 AD Khayyam one of the greatest polymaths of all time presents a theory of heliocentricity to his peers His contributions to laying the foundations of algebra are also noteworthy 1207 AD 1273 AD Rumi writes poetry and in 1997 the translations were best sellers in the United States 110 Algebra and trigonometry Iranian scientists were directly responsible for the establishment of Algebra the advancement of Medicine and Chemistry and the discovery of Trigonometry 111 Qanat subterranean aqueducts Wind catchers ancient air residential conditioning See also edit nbsp Iran portal nbsp Society portalIranian Cultural Heritage Organization ICHO International Rankings of Iran in Culture Encyclopaedia Iranica 30 volume encyclopaedia of Iran s culture edited and published by Columbia University amp funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities Higher education in Iran Cinema of Iran Iranian calendar Iranian continent Iranian Studies Qahr and Ashti Media of Iran Museums in Iran Persian cuisine Persian theatre Persian names Persian women Persianate Persianization Persophilia the admiration of Iranians and their culture Taarof Persian form of civility emphasizing both deference and social rank Notes edit This issue is still debated today 54 References edit Cultural Life Tehran Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 16 April 2018 Persian cuisine is characterized by the use of lime and saffron the blend of meats with fruits and nuts a unique way of cooking rice and Iranian hospitality Food is delicate in flavour and appearance heavy in meat dairy and herbs and not hot or spicy An emphasis on sour and sweet is found within this cuisine Many recipes date back to ancient times Iran s historical contacts have assisted in the exchange of ingredients flavours textures and styles with various cultures ranging from the Mediterranean Sea region to China some of whom retain these influences today Clark Melissa 19 April 2016 Persian Cuisine Fragrant and Rich With Symbolism The New York Times a b Yarshater Ehsan Persia or Iran Persian or Farsi Archived 2010 10 24 at the Wayback Machine Iranian Studies vol XXII no 1 1989 a b Oelze Sabine 13 April 2017 How Iran became a cradle of civilization DW Retrieved 3 July 2019 a b Bakhtiyar Afshin 2014 Iran the Cradle of Civilization Gooya House of Cultural Art ISBN 978 9647610032 Iran Cradle of Civilisation Drents Museum 12 April 2018 Retrieved 3 July 2019 Kermanshah A Cradle of Civilization 28 September 2007 Retrieved 4 July 2019 Persian Influence on Greek Culture Livius org 7 November 2018 Retrieved 3 July 2019 Milani A Lost Wisdom 2004 ISBN 0 934211 90 6 p 15 Greater Iran Mazda Publishers 2005 ISBN 1568591772 xi The World Factbook Central Intelligence Agency Cia gov Archived from the original on 2012 02 03 Retrieved 2019 07 01 Grebennikov Marat 2013 The Puzzle of a Loyal Minority Why Do Azeris Support the Iranian State Middle East Journal 67 1 64 76 doi 10 3751 67 1 14 ISSN 0026 3141 JSTOR 23361693 S2CID 145719557 Windfuhr Gernot The Iranian Languages Routledge Taylor and Francis Group Ethnologue report for Iranian Ethnologue com Eberhard David M Gary F Simons and Charles D Fennig eds 2019 Ethnologue Languages of the World Twenty second edition Dallas Texas SIL International Online version http www ethnologue com Spooner Brian 1994 Dari Farsi and Tojiki In Marashi Mehdi ed Persian Studies in North America Studies in Honor of Mohammad Ali Jazayery Leiden Brill pp 177 178 Spooner Brian 2012 Dari Farsi and Tojiki In Schiffman Harold ed Language policy and language conflict in Afghanistan and its neighbors the changing politics of language choice Leiden Brill p 94 Campbell George L King Gareth eds 2013 Persian Compendium of the World s Languages 3rd ed Routledge p 1339 Arberry Arthur John 1953 The Legacy of Persia Oxford Clarendon Press pp 200 ISBN 0 19 821905 9 Von David Levinson Karen Christensen Encyclopedia of Modern Asia Charles Scribner s Sons 2002 vol 4 p 480 Elwell Sutton L P trans In search of Omar Khayam by Ali Dashti Columbia University Press 1971 ISBN 0 231 03188 2 a b c Kent Allen Lancour Harold Daily Jay E 1975 Encyclopedia of Library and Information Science Volume 13 pp 23 24 ISBN 9780824720131 Emmerick Ronald Eric 23 February 2016 Iranian languages Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 1 July 2019 Doerfer Gerhard 15 December 1991 CHAGHATAY LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 1 July 2019 Yarshater E 15 December 1988 AZERBAIJAN vii The Iranian Language of Azerbaijan Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 1 July 2019 Kreyenbroek Philip G 20 July 2005 KURDISH WRITTEN LITERATURE Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 1 July 2019 C A Charles Ambrose Storey and Franco de Blois 2004 Persian Literature A Biobibliographical Survey Volume V Poetry of the Pre Mongol Period RoutledgeCurzon 2nd revised edition 21 June 2004 p 363 Nizami Ganja i whose personal name was Ilyas is the most celebrated native poet of the Persians after Firdausi His nisbah designates him as a native of Ganja Elizavetpol Kirovabad in Azerbaijan then still a country with an Iranian population and he spent the whole of his life in Transcaucasia the verse in some of his poetic works which makes him a native of the hinterland of Qom is a spurious interpolation Franklin Lewis Rumi Past and Present East and West Oneworld Publications 2000 How is it that a Persian boy born almost eight hundred years ago in Khorasan the northeastern province of greater Iran in a region that we identify today as Central Asia but was considered in those days as part of the Greater Persian cultural sphere wound up in Central Anatolia on the receding edge of the Byzantine cultural sphere in which is now Turkey some 1500 miles to the west p 9 HOUSHMAND Zara Iran in Literature from the Axis of Evil a Words Without Borders anthology ISBN 978 1 59558 205 8 2006 pp 1 3 a b c IRAN xi MUSIC Encyclopaedia Iranica 30 March 2012 Retrieved 1 July 2019 a b c d Lawergren Bo 20 February 2009 MUSIC HISTORY i Pre Islamic Iran Encyclopaedia Iranica Retrieved 1 July 2019 a b BARBAD Encyclopaedia Iranica III 15 December 1988 pp 757 758 CAKAVAK Encyclopaedia Iranica IV 15 December 1990 pp 649 650 Pers nava Ar laḥn naḡma etc Taheri Sadreddin 2012 Dance Play Drama a Survey of Dramatic Actions in Pre Islamic Artifacts of Iran Honarhay e Ziba Tehran Iran 3 43 doi 10 22059 jfadram 2012 24776 a b c d Laurel Victoria Gray 2007 A Brief Introduction to Persian Dance Central Asian Persian Turkic Arabian and Silk Road Dance Culture Retrieved 3 July 2019 Nashepour Peyman A brief about Persian dance Official Website of Dr Peyman Nasehpour Retrieved 3 July 2019 Friend Robyn C 2002 Spirituality in Iranian Music and Dance Conversations with Morteza Varzi The Best of Habibi A Journal for Lovers of Middle Eastern Dance and Arts 18 Retrieved 3 July 2019 Oakling 2 May 2003 Bandari everything2 Retrieved 3 July 2019 a b Kiann Nima 2000 Persian Dance and Its Forgotten History Les Ballets Persans Retrieved 3 July 2019 Hopfe Lewis M 1 September 1994 Uncovering Ancient Stones US pp 147 ISBN 9780931464737 Today more than four hundred locations of Mithraic worship have been identified in every area of the Roman Empire Mithraea have been found as far west as Britain and as far east as Dura Europas Between the second and fourth centuries C E Mithraism may have vied with Christianity for domination of the Roman world a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link a b Hopfe Lewis M Richardson Henry Neil September 1994 Archaeological Indications on the Origins of Roman Mithraism Martin Luther H Beck Roger 30 December 2004 Foreword Beck on Mithraism Collected Works With New Essays Ashgate Publishing pp xiii ISBN 978 0 7546 4081 3 However the cult was vigorously opposed by Christian polemicists especially by Justin and Tertullian because of perceived similarities between it and early Christianity And with the anti pagan decrees of the Christian emperor Theodosius during the final decade of the fourth century Mithraism disappeared from the history of religions as a viable religious practice Lewis M Hopfe Archaeological indications on the origins of Roman Mithraism in Lewis M Hopfe ed Uncovering ancient stones essays in memory of H Neil Richardson Eisenbrauns 1994 pp 147 158 p 156 Beyond these three Mithraea in Syria and Palestine there are only a handful of objects from Syria that may be identified with Mithraism Archaeological evidence of Mithraism in Syria is therefore in marked contrast to the abundance of Mithraea and materials that have been located in the rest of the Roman Empire Both the frequency and the quality of Mithraic materials is greater in the rest of the empire Even on the western frontier in Britain archaeology has produced rich Mithraic materials such as those found at Walbrook If one accepts Cumont s theory that Mithraism began in Iran moved west through Babylon to Asia Minor and then to Rome one would expect that the cult left its traces in those locations Instead archaeology indicates that Roman Mithraism had its epicenter in Rome Wherever its ultimate place of origin may have been the fully developed religion known as Mithraism seems to have begun in Rome and been carried to Syria by soldiers and merchants None of the Mithraic materials or temples in Roman Syria except the Commagene sculpture bears any date earlier than the late first or early second century footnote in cited text 30 Mithras identified with a Phrygian cap and the nimbus about his head is depicted in colossal statuary erected by King Antiochus I of Commagene 69 34 BCE see Vermaseren CIMRM 1 53 56 However there are no other literary or archaeological evidences to indicate that the religion of Mithras as it was known among the Romans in the second to fourth centuries AD was practiced in Commagene While little can be proved from silence it seems that the relative lack of archaeological evidence from Roman Syria would argue against the traditional theories for the origins of Mithraism Clauss M The Roman cult of Mithras pages 26 and 27 a b Arthur Upham Pope Introducing Persian Architecture Oxford University Press London 1971 a b Arthur Upham Pope Persian Architecture George Braziller New York 1965 p 266 a b Nader Ardalan and Laleh Bakhtiar Sense of Unity The Sufi Tradition in Persian Architecture 2000 ISBN 1 871031 78 8 Arthur Upham Pope Persian Architecture George Braziller New York 1965 p 10 Sabk Shenasi Mi mari Irani Study of styles in Iranian architecture M Karim Pirnia 2005 ISBN 964 96113 2 0 https whc unesco org en list 1372 The Persian Garden 1372 at World Heritage Site website a b Fakour M Achaemenid Gardens 1 CAIS Online Accessed 4 July 2019 Cultural Life Tehran Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 16 April 2018 Persian cuisine is characterized by the use of lime and saffron the blend of meats with fruits and nuts a unique way of cooking rice and Iranian hospitality Food is subtly spiced delicate in flavour and appearance and not typically hot or spicy Many recipes date back to ancient times Iran s historical contacts have assisted in the exchange of ingredients flavours textures and styles with various cultures ranging from the Mediterranean Sea region to China some of whom retain these influences today Clark Melissa 19 April 2016 Persian Cuisine Fragrant and Rich With Symbolism New York Times Majd Hooman The Ayatollah Begs to Differ The Paradox of Modern Iran by Hooman Majd Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group September 23 2008 ISBN 0385528426 9780385528429 p 161 Persian Cuisine a Brief History 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contribution to the world civilization A H Nayer Nouri 1969 Tehran General Dept of Publications Ministry of Culture and Arts OCLC number 29858074 Perry Castaneda Library Reprinted in 1996 under the title سهم ارزشمند ایران در فرهنگ جهان The effect of Persia s culture and civilization on the world Taʼ sir i farhang va tamaddun i iran dar jahan Abbas Qadiyani عباس قدياني Tehran 2005 Intisharat i Farhang i Maktub ISBN 964 94224 4 7 OCLC 70237532 Zeder M A 2001 A metrical analysis of a collection of modern goats Capra hircus aegargus and c h hircus from Iran and Iraq Implications for the study of caprine domestication Journal of Archaeological Science 28 61 79 doi 10 1006 jasc 1999 0555 S2CID 11815276 Zeder M A 2008 Domestication and early agriculture in the Mediterranean Basin Origins diffusuion and impact Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 105 33 11597 11640 Bibcode 2008PNAS 10511597Z doi 10 1073 pnas 0801317105 PMC 2575338 PMID 18697943 Zeder M A Hesse B 2000 The initial domestication of goats capra hircus in the Zagros mountains 10 000 years ago Science 287 5461 2254 2257 Bibcode 2000Sci 287 2254Z doi 10 1126 science 287 5461 2254 PMID 10731145 MacHugh D E Bradley D G 2001 Livestock genetic origins Goats buck the trend Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 98 10 5382 5384 Bibcode 2001PNAS 98 5382M doi 10 1073 pnas 111163198 PMC 33220 PMID 11344280 Arthur Upham Pope Persian Architecture 1965 New York p 15 Link University of Pennsylvania Research Archived from the original on 16 December 2008 Retrieved 31 July 2009 Cultural Sociology of the Middle East Asia and Africa An Encyclopedia Volume 2 Stanton AL p 166 Miller L Music and Song in Persia RLE Iran B The Art of Avaz Routledge 2012 p 5 8 Richard Foltz Iran in World History Oxford University Press 2015 Abbas Milani Lost Wisdom 2004 Mage Publishers p 12 ISBN 0 934211 90 6 Mary Boyce Zoroastrians London 1979 1 Notes Zoroastrianism had an important impact on Judaism and thus indirectly on Christianity and Islam Zoroaster himself was not an ethnic Persian but possibly an ethnic Bactrian who were closely related to Persians Arthur Henry Robertson and J G Merrills Human Rights in the World An Introduction to the Study of the International Political Science Page 7 1996 Paul Gordon Lauren The Evolution of International Human Rights Visions Seen Political Science Page 11 2003 Xenophon and Larry Hedrick Xenophon s Cyrus the Great The Arts of Leadership and War History Page xiii 2007 Link BBC http news bbc co uk 2 hi middle east 4272210 stm Links Benevolent Persian Empire Archived from the original on 7 September 2005 Retrieved 5 March 2007 http www infoplease com ce6 history A0839873 html Links Cotton candy KryssTal Inventions 1000 BC to 1 BC Archived from the original on 2 June 2008 Retrieved 1 February 2005 http www mmdtkw org VAncientInventions html Links http www uh edu engines epi1257 htm Benevolent Persian Empire Archived from the original on 7 September 2005 Retrieved 5 March 2007 Link http www birdnature com nov1899 peach html Elgood Cyril A medical history of Persia Cambridge University Press 1951 p 173 Links Windmill an Encarta Encyclopedia Article Titled Windmill Archived from the original on 15 January 2012 Retrieved 21 January 2012 Link http www free definition com Abu Bakr Mohammad Ibn Zakariya al Razi html Archived 11 October 2016 at the Wayback Machine Links http www flowermonthclub com newsletters vol3no4 htm http pss uvm edu ppp articles tulips2 html Link The Story of Islam s Gift of Paper to the West Archived from the original on 29 November 2013 Retrieved 11 April 2014 Refer to article by The Christian Science Monitor http www csmonitor com 1997 1125 112597 us us 3 html See Hill Donald Islamic Science and Engineering May 1994 Edinburgh University Press p 10 Sardar Ziauddin Introducing Mathematics Totem Books 1999 Further reading editMichael C Hillman Iranian Culture 1990 University Press of America ISBN 0 8191 7694 X Iran At War with History by John Limbert pub 1987 a book of socio cultural customs of The Islamic Republic of Iran George Ghevarghese Joseph The Crest of the Peacock The Non European Roots of Mathematics July 2000 Princeton U Press Welch S C 1972 A king s book of kings the Shah nameh of Shah Tahmasp New York The Metropolitan Museum of Art ISBN 9780870990281 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Culture of Iran Ministry of Culture and Islamic Guidance Of Iran Official Website Archived 3 October 2019 at the Wayback Machine Secretariat of The High Council of The Cultural Revolution Islamic Republic of Iran Physical Education Organization Islamic Republic of Iran Academy of The Arts Islamic Republic of Iran International Center for Dialogue Among Civilizations Culture of Iran parstimes com Culture of Iran Cultural Research Bureau of Iran Iran Institute for Humanities and Cultural Studies Iran a cultural profile The Culture of Iran Persian Language Persian Iran Cultural and 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