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Qom

Qom (also spelled "Ghom", "Ghum", or "Qum") (Persian: قم [ɢom] i) is a city in the Central District of Qom County, Qom province, Iran, and serves as capital of the province, county, and district. It is the seventh largest metropolis[4] and also the seventh largest city in Iran.[5] The city is 140 km (87 mi) to the south of Tehran,[6] and on the banks of the Qom River.

Qom
قم
کلانشهر قم · Qom Metropolis
Top: Fatima Masumeh Shrine, Second Row: Left: Bagh-e Gonbad-e Sabz Right: Grand Timcheh of Qom, Third Row: Left: Feyziyeh Madrasas Right: Qom Jamkaran Mosque, Bottom: Panoramic view of downtown Qom
Nickname: 
Religious Capital Of Iran
Qom
Coordinates: 34°38′24″N 50°52′35″E / 34.64000°N 50.87639°E / 34.64000; 50.87639[2]
CountryIran
ProvinceQom
DistrictCentral
Elevation
936 m (3,071 ft)
Population
 (2016)
 • City1,201,158[1]
 • Metro
1,260,000 [3]
 • Population Rank in Iran
7th
Time zoneUTC+3:30 (IRST)
Postal code
37100
Area codes(+98) 025
ClimateBWh
Websitewww.qom.ir

At the 2006 census, its population was 957,496 in 241,827 households.[7] The following census in 2011 counted 1,074,036 people in 299,752 households.[8] The latest census in 2016 showed a population of 1,201,158 people in 356,976 households.[1]

Qom is considered holy in Shi'a Islam, as it is the site of the shrine of Fatimah bint Musa, sister of Imam Ali ibn Musa Rida[9] (Persian: Imam Reza; 789–816). The city is the largest center for Shi'a scholarship in the world, and is a significant destination of pilgrimage, with around twenty million pilgrims visiting the city every year, the majority being Iranians but also other Shi'a Muslims from all around the world.[10] Qom is also famous for a Persian brittle toffee known as sohan (Persian: سوهان), considered a souvenir of the city and sold by thousands of sohan vendors.

Qom has developed into a lively industrial center owing in part to its proximity to Tehran. It is a regional center for the distribution of petroleum and petroleum products, and a natural gas pipeline from Bandar Anzali and Tehran and a crude oil pipeline from Tehran run through Qom to the Abadan refinery on the Persian Gulf. Qom gained additional prosperity when oil was discovered at Sarajeh near the city in 1956 and a large refinery was built between Qom and Tehran.

Geography Edit

Qom, the capital of Qom province, is located 125 kilometers south of Tehran, on a low plain. The shrine of Fatimeh Masumeh, the sister of Imam Reza, is located in this city, which is considered by Shiʿa Muslims holy. The city is located in the boundary of the central desert of Iran (Kavir-e Markazi). At the 2011 census its population was 1,074,036,[11] comprising 545,704 males and 528,332 females.

Qom is a focal center of the Shiʿah.[12][13] Since the revolution, the clerical population has risen from around 25,000 to more than 45,000 and the non-clerical population has more than tripled to about 700,000. Substantial sums of money in the form of alms and Islamic taxes flow into Qom to the ten Marja'-e taqlid or "Source to be Followed" that reside there.[14] The number of seminary schools in Qom is now over fifty, and the number of research institutes and libraries somewhere near two hundred and fifty.[14]

Its theological center and the Fatima Masumeh Shrine are prominent features of Qom.[15][16] Another very popular religious site of pilgrimage formerly outside the city of Qom but now more of a suburb is called Jamkaran. Qom's proximity to Tehran has allowed the clerical establishment easy access to monitor the affairs and decisions of state. Many Grand Ayatollahs possess offices in both Tehran and Qom; many people simply commute between the two cities as they are only 156 kilometres or 97 miles apart. Southeast of Qom is the ancient city of Kashan. Directly south of Qom lie the towns of Delijan, Mahallat, Naraq, Pardisan City, Kahak, and Jasb. The surrounding area to the west of Qom is populated by Tafresh, Saveh, and Ashtian and Jafarieh. Arak city (Industrial Capital of Iran) is in the southwest of Qom.

 
View Of Southwestern Qom

Climate Edit

Qom has a hot desert climate bordering a cold desert climate (Köppen BWh border on BWk) with low annual rainfall due to remoteness from the sea and being situated in the vicinity of the subtropical anticyclone aloft. Summer weather is very hot and essentially rainless, whilst in winter weather can vary from warm to – when Siberian air masses are driven south across the Elburz Mountains by blocking over Europe – frigid. An example of the latter situation was in January 2008 when minima fell to −23 °C or −9.4 °F on the 15th, whilst earlier similar situations occurred in January 1964 and to a lesser extent January 1950, January 1972 and December 1972.

The highest recorded temperature was 47 °C (117 °F) on 11 July 2010 and the lowest recorded temperature was −23 °C (−9 °F) on 15 January 2008.

Climate data for Qom (1986–2010, records 1986–2020)
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 23.4
(74.1)
26.5
(79.7)
35.5
(95.9)
37.0
(98.6)
41.8
(107.2)
45.9
(114.6)
47.0
(116.6)
45.6
(114.1)
42.3
(108.1)
37.7
(99.9)
31.0
(87.8)
22.5
(72.5)
47.0
(116.6)
Average high °C (°F) 10.2
(50.4)
13.6
(56.5)
19.1
(66.4)
26.0
(78.8)
31.8
(89.2)
37.9
(100.2)
40.3
(104.5)
39.4
(102.9)
34.9
(94.8)
27.7
(81.9)
18.9
(66.0)
12.2
(54.0)
26.0
(78.8)
Daily mean °C (°F) 4.2
(39.6)
7.1
(44.8)
12.0
(53.6)
18.3
(64.9)
23.6
(74.5)
29.1
(84.4)
31.8
(89.2)
30.3
(86.5)
25.2
(77.4)
19.0
(66.2)
11.5
(52.7)
6.1
(43.0)
18.2
(64.8)
Average low °C (°F) −1.9
(28.6)
0.6
(33.1)
5.0
(41.0)
10.5
(50.9)
15.4
(59.7)
20.2
(68.4)
23.4
(74.1)
21.2
(70.2)
15.6
(60.1)
10.3
(50.5)
4.1
(39.4)
−0.1
(31.8)
10.4
(50.7)
Record low °C (°F) −23.0
(−9.4)
−11.2
(11.8)
−11.0
(12.2)
−0.2
(31.6)
5.4
(41.7)
8.0
(46.4)
15.0
(59.0)
11.8
(53.2)
6.5
(43.7)
0.6
(33.1)
−11.0
(12.2)
−10.5
(13.1)
−23.0
(−9.4)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 25.4
(1.00)
20.5
(0.81)
27.7
(1.09)
20.2
(0.80)
10.4
(0.41)
2.3
(0.09)
0.7
(0.03)
0.3
(0.01)
0.8
(0.03)
6.2
(0.24)
14.3
(0.56)
19.4
(0.76)
148.2
(5.83)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 4.4 4.1 4.2 3.9 2.0 0.4 0.2 0.1 0.3 1.8 2.6 3.2 27.2
Average snowy days 3.1 1.4 0.3 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.1 0.9 5.8
Average relative humidity (%) 66 58 48 42 33 24 23 24 26 38 52 66 41
Mean monthly sunshine hours 185.0 194.0 221.5 233.3 296.6 351.5 354.5 347.3 309.9 263.4 204.9 172.7 3,134.6
Source: Iran Meteorological Organization (records),[17] (temperatures),[18] (precipitation),[19] (humidity),[20] (days with precipitation and snow),[21] (sunshine)[22]

History Edit

 
Azam Mosque in Qom

The present town of Qom in Central Iran dates back to ancient times. Its pre-Islamic history can be partially documented, although the earlier epochs remain unclear. Excavations at Tepe Sialk indicate that the region had been settled since ancient times (Ghirshman and Vanden Berghe), and more recent surveys have revealed traces of large, inhabited places south of Qom, dating from the 4th and 1st millennium BC. While nothing is known about the area from Elamite, Medes, and Achaemenid times, there are significant archeological remains from the Seleucid and Parthian epochs, of which the ruins of Khurha (about 70 kilometres or 43 miles southwest of Qom) are the most famous and important remnants. Their dating and function have instigated long and controversial debates and interpretations, for they have been interpreted and explained variously as the remains of a Sasanian temple, or of a Seleucid Dionysian temple, or of a Parthian complex. Its true function is still a matter of dispute, but the contributions by Wolfram Kleiss point to a Parthian palace that served as a station on the nearby highway and was used until Sasanian times.[23]

The recently published results of the excavations carried out in 1955 by Iranian archeologists have, however, revived the old thesis of a Seleucid religious building.[24] Besides Khurha, which is already mentioned as Khor Abad at Qomi in the 9th century, the region has turned up a few other remnants from this epoch, including the four Parthian heads found near Qom, now kept in the National Museum of Iran in Tehran.[25] Qomi names Parthian personalities as founders of villages in the Qom area.[26][full citation needed] The possible mention of Qom in the form of Greek names in two ancient geographical works (the Tabula Peutingera and Ptolemy's geographical tables) remains doubtful.

 
View Of Qom city in a painting in 1723 AD

The Sasanian epoch offers many archeological findings and remnants, besides the fact that various sources mention Qom. The most interesting building from an archeological point of view is the Qalʿa-ye Doḵtar in Qom itself, which was long thought to have served religious purposes, while more recent research points to an administrative use.[27] The wider surroundings of Qom also contain numerous traces from palaces, religious, military and administrative buildings.[28][full citation needed] Some of these are mentioned by Qomi, who also names many more fire temples in the urban area of present Qom and its region, of which no archeological traces are left although the location of one fire temple can probably be equated with today's Masjed-e Emām in the city.[29] According to Qomi, the most important fire temple of the area stood in the nearby village of Dizijan.[30]

Tāriḵ-e Qom and some other sources also speak of genuine historical figures of the Sasanian epoch in connection with Qom and its region. They shed new light on the time of the seizure of power by the first Sasanian king Ardashir I, who fought his decisive battles near Qom,[31] and the collapse of the Sasanian empire, which is extensively reported by Ebn Aʿṯam Kufi and the Nehāyat al-Erab and names a certain Šērzād as the satrap of the region.[32] The existence of an urban settlement in the Sasanian epoch is furthermore verified by Middle Persian sources (literary sources, inscriptions, and seals) that mention in the time of Shapur I and Kawād I the names Godmān/Gomān and Ērān Win(n)ārd Kawād, both of which could be identified as Qom.[33] Altogether one can assume that Qom functioned as a small administrative unit throughout the whole Sasanian era. Probably the urban structure of the Sasanian settlement of Qom can be compared with the type of city of Ctesiphon (Or. Madāʾen) and consisted of several villages and little towns with Abaraštejān, Mamajjān and Jamkarān as the bigger settlements that were loosely connected by defense installations.[34]

It is difficult to decipher the actual process of the Arab conquest of Qom from the extant Arabic sources. According to Balāḏori, the first tentative conquest of Qom took place in 23/644 by Abu Musa Ashaari after a few days of fighting (although Abu Musa's route through Western Persia, as narrated by Balāḏori, appears somewhat confusing). It remains unclear who the defenders of Qom were; probably fleeing Sasanian nobles and local soldiers returning from the great battles against the Arabs formed the core of the resistance. The area remained largely untouched for 60 years after the initial conquest and was probably administered from Isfahan.[35]

The first permanent settlement of Arab settlers in Qom took place during the revolts of Mukhtar al-Thaqafi and Moṭarref b. Moḡira b. Šaʿba in 66–77/685–96, when small groups of refugees moved there and Qom itself was affected by the fighting between the Umayyad state power and the rebels[36]

The decisive step for the later urban development of Qom occurred when a group of Ashaari Arabs came to the area. These Ashaaries originated in Yemen and the first important figure among them was the first conqueror of the area of Qom, the above-mentioned Abu Musa Ashaari. ʿAbd-Allāh b. Saʿd and Aḥwaṣ b. Saʿd were grandsons of Abi Musa's nephew and led the group of Ashaaries that emigrated from Kufa to the region of Qom. It is not exactly clear why they migrated, but it might have also been a general opposition to the Umayyad dynasty. A central element was the early contact with the leading local Zoroastrian Persian noble Yazdanfadar.[37]

As the Arabs required a great deal of pasture for their large herds of cattle and were much wealthier than the local Persians, they slowly started to buy land and take over more villages. The decisive step for controlling the area was the elimination of the local Persian noble class that took place after the death of Yazdanfadar in 733.[38] The emigration and the subsequent settlement and building activities led to the fusion of the original six villages on the area of Qom to an urban conglomerate which probably happened within two generations after the first coming of Arabs.[citation needed]

 
The Fatima Masumeh Shrine in Qom

Although a few names of governors and their tax assessments are known from the time after the administrative independence, the death of Fātimah bint Mūsā, the sister of the eighth Imam of Shias Ali al-Ridha in the city in 201/816–17 proved to be of great importance for the later history of Qom. Fātimah bint Mūsā died while following her brother to Khorasan, a region in northern Iran. The place of her entombment developed from 869–70 into a building that was transformed over time into today's magnificent and economically important sanctuary.[39]

In 825–26 a major rebellion against the tax regulations of the caliphate broke out in Qom. It was caused by the refusal of the caliph Al-Ma'mun to lower the yearly tax assessment as he had done in Ray. The revolt was led by an Ashaari named Yahya ibn Emran, maintaining that taxes should not be paid to an unlawful ruler. Yahya was killed by troops sent by the caliph and the citizens were severely punished; the taxes were raised from 2 million to 7 million dirhams. Two years later the taxes were again raised by 700,000 dirham by the Ashaari governor Ali ibn Isa, who was subsequently deposed because he was strongly rejected by the inhabitants of Qom. But in 833 Ali returned to the post of governor (wali) and forcefully collected tax debts that were laid upon him by the caliph. He destroyed parts of Qom and handed over a wanted rebel to caliphal authorities under Al-Moʿtasem. Between 839–42 two contradicting tax assessments were carried out under turbulent circumstances which amounted to a sum of 5 million dirhams. The names of those involved have survived.[40]

 
Deire Gachin Caravansarai

The move of a Hadith transmitter from Kufa to Qom, which took place probably in the middle of the 9th century, indicates the increased importance of Qom as a center of Shia learning. At about the same time another military attack on the city occurred in 254/868, when Mofleḥ, the Turkish officer of the caliph Al-Mostaʿin, executed some of its inhabitants because of the city's refusal to pay taxes. Mofleḥ became governor of Qom and lasted in that position for at least five years. During his governorship important Alids moved to Qom and there are references to close contacts between the representative of the 11th Shia's Imam, Hassan al-Askari, in Qom and other Qomis. The representative Aḥmad b. Esḥāq was at the same time administrator of the Fāṭema sanctuary and the agent (wakil) responsible for the pensions of the Alids.[41]

The first Friday mosque in Qom was built in 878–79 on the site of a fire temple, although there are also confusing reports concerning a possible earlier Friday mosque.[42] In 881–82 Qom was occupied by the Turkish military leader Edgu Tegin (Arabic: Yadkutakin b. Asātakin or Aḏkutakin), who tried to collect the tax arrears for seven years which partially ruined the guarantors (some of whom are known) of these taxes. At about the same time the early orthodox Shias achieved their victory in the town. In 893–94, at the latest, all extremists (ḡolāt) were driven out of town by the leading Shia shaikh of Qom, Aḥmad b. Moḥammed b. Isa Ashaari. Probably one year later the famous Islamic mystic Ḥosayn b. Manṣur Ḥallaj stayed in Qom, where he was arrested.[43]

From 895–96 onwards the history of Qom was connected with a family of Turkish military leaders from the army of the caliph Al-Mu'tadid, including the governor Berun (Birun). In the same year, Berun destroyed a big and probably still active fire temple located on the territory of the evolving city and probably opposite today's sanctuary of Fātimah bint Mūsā. In these unstable political times, Qom was visited by the vizier of Al-Moʿtazed, Obayd-Allah ibn Solayman, and two tax assessments were organized.[44] An administrative peculiarity of Qom was put to an end at about the same time, to wit the independent appointment of judges through the Arab inhabitants of Qom until the time of al-Moktafi, which, together with the dispatch of a joint Arab-Persian delegation to the vizier Ḥamid ibn Abbas indicate the end of the elevated position of the Arabs in Qom. The period of the governor Abbas ibn Amr Ganawi (292–96/904–09) is remarkable for the presence of non-Twelver Shias in Qom and the establishment of the office of the jahbaḏ (financial officer) as the tax broker for the city, which fostered local self-determination.[45]

In 909 Hosayn ibn Hamdan ibn Hamdun was appointed governor of Qom and Kāšān by the caliph Al-Moqtader and had to assist the caliph's army against the Saffarids in Fars. Altogether he stayed in power only for two years before he had to return to Baghdad.[46] In the years 301/913–14 to 315/927 the people of Qom had, besides another tax assessment (meanwhile the eighth), a caliphal intervention that resulted in the appointment of a governor to stabilize the administrative grip over the region. This move caused more unrest and affected the balance of power in an area that was disputed between the powers of the time (Daylamites, Samanids). Beginning in 316/928 Qom fell into the sphere of interest of Daylami warlords and was relieved from the direct authority of the caliph, although it changed hands several times between 928 and 943. The Daylamites brutally exploited the city through harsh taxes. With the firm establishment of Buyids control from 340/951–52 on, the political circumstances were less troubled than before, although the economic situation deteriorated.[47]

No outstanding events are reported for the relatively stable political period until 988–89, but Qom seems to have been isolated inside Persia because of its Shia creed. At the same time, the Fatima sanctuary was enlarged and the number of sayyeds residing in Qom reached a considerable number. In 373/984 Qom and its environs were affected by the revolt of the Kurdish Moḥammad Barzikāni against the Buyid Fakr-Al-Dawla.[48]

The population amounted to 50,000 inhabitants at the most and consisted of Persians and Arabs who had adopted the Persian of the time[49] as their language and many social customs from the Persians, whose proportion was probably smaller than the Arabs. The Kurds lived in the countryside to the west. The Twelver Shia constituted the great majority of the population and many important Shia scholars of the time came from Qom or lived there. As many as 331 male Alids lived in Qom in 988–89, and they produced a good number of community leaders and there is also mention of one prominent female ʿAlid besides Fātimah bint Mūsā. These Alids descended from the Imams and were supported by pensions.

Apart from the Shia mainstream, other Shia sects existed in the city and one can also assume the presence of Sunnies. Ḏemmis, or followers of other revealed religions (Jews, Christians, and Zoroastrians) must have lived in the city, too, as the payment of poll tax (jezya) indicates, although their number can only be very roughly estimated at a few thousand at the end of the 9th century and must have shrunk drastically in the 10th century. The majority of these non-Muslims were Zoroastrians, who made their living mostly as farmers. Jews must have lived in Qom as well, but information on them is scant. It is striking that the formerly dominant Ashaaries had lost their leading positions by the end of the 10th century. This points at a new social situation that allowed assimilated Persians to join the local establishment.[50]

The city's topography in the 10th century still reflected the evolutionary merging of the original six villages; these were still separated by fields. The town center was located in the village of Mamajjān, which was connected to other parts of the city on the other side of the river by four bridges. There were about eight squares whose function is not clear and three mosques within the city. There is almost no information about madrasas. The sanctuary must have still been quite small as only two cupolas are mentioned. A bazaar and bathhouses must have existed, too, as well as certain administrative buildings (prison, mint). Five bigger and eight smaller roads indicate good traffic connections, which were supported by at least three or maybe even nine city gates.[51]

Qom was then in a difficult economic and social position. Many houses inside the city as well as bridges and mills were ruined, and the roads and agriculture were suffering from an insecure situation. This has to be attributed to difficult social circumstances and excessive taxation.[52] The water supply seems to have been satisfactory and the Ashaaries seem to have undertaken continuous renovation works on the irrigation channels between 733 and 900. The Ašʿaris were also the proprietors of the water rights, which were safeguarded in the water authority (divān-e āb) that regulated the water shares. The system made the Ašʿaris the wealthiest inhabitants of Qom and stayed in place until 347/958–59 when they were expropriated by the Buyids, which consequently brought about a decline in the whole system of irrigation. Although there were attempts at restoration in 371/981–82, only three of originally twenty-one channels had flowing water which meant enough drinking water was supplied for the population, but the available amount could not have been adequate for agricultural purposes.[53]

 
Grand Timcheh.

Altogether the state of cultivation in Qom seems to have resembled that of the other regions of Persia, although the thirty different crops and plants are only indirectly mentioned in connection with the tax assessments. The soil is reported to have good quality and produced big quantities of food. Little is known about animal husbandry in the region, but the considerable number of fifty-one mills existed, of which a fifth was in decay. Legends speak of mineral deposits and mines of silver, iron, gold and lead, while Kurds seem to have produced salt from a lake nearby (see Qom Lake). The production of chairs, textiles, and saddle equipment indicates craftsmanship.[54]

The city's taxation has to be distinguished between the more proper rule of the Abbasid tax bureaucracy and the time of the Deylamid warlords where rules were bent arbitrarily. A stunning diversity of taxes is known (often meant to serve the Abbasid bureaucracy and the Deylamid and Buyid war machinery) but the Karaj (land tax), which was composed of many different separate sums, was the most important single tax existing in Qom at least since post-Sasanian times. Within the known 18 tax figures ranging over 160 years there are great differences and the tax figures vary from 8 million to 2 million dirhams with a mean value at around 3 million. In taxation Qom always followed the solar calendar with its own local variation, starting from the death of the Sasanian Yazdegerd III. A highly differentiated tax administration existed and is known in great detail; 24 tax collectors (ʿommāl) are listed from 189/804–05 to 371/981–82 plus two jahabaḏa who acted as mediators after the attempt to enforce collective responsibility by the taxpayers had failed. The information in the Tāriḵ-e Qom on taxation also mention by name 21 tax districts (rasātiq) in the region with 900 villages.[55]

Little is known about the time until the period of Seljuki dominance. In 387/997, Qom became involved in internal Buyid quarrels and was subsequently unsuccessfully besieged. In 418/1027–28, Qom fell under the rule of Šahryuš from the Kakuyid dynasty and a few years later (1030–40) it became part of the Ghaznavid domain. The Seljuki did not occupy Qom at once but left the town and Jebāl in Kakuyid hands for ten years. From 442/1050–51 on, the city was under Seljuk rule and nothing is known about its fate until 487/1094. Afterwards the growing instability of the Seljuk empire involved Qom in the power struggles between the competing Seljuk factions in Jebāl and the city changed hands many times. The most stable period seems to have been the 14 years (513–27/1119–33) when Qom lay in Sanjar's sphere of power and witnessed the construction of a second Friday mosque.[56]

Surprisingly, Qom enjoyed relative prosperity in its economy in the Seljuk period. The rigidly Sunni Seljuks seem to have practiced a pragmatic policy and one of the main sources of this time (ʿAbd-al-Jalil Qazvini) speaks of good relations between the famous vizier Nizam al-Mulk and Seljuk sultans on the one hand, and members of the local nobility on the other. Sultans reportedly visited the sanctuary (although no specific sultan is mentioned by name) and in general no religiously motivated punitive action against Qom is known to have taken place. Under Seljuk rule a considerable number of religious buildings were erected. At least ten madrasas are known by name. Two Friday mosques seem to have existed in Seljuk times: the old one was renovated and a new one, located outside of the town area, was built in 528/1133–34 by the order of Sultan Togrel II (Persian: سلطان طغرل دوم). Qom must have expanded during this period, but precise reasons for its prosperity are not known. A family of Ḥosaynid Alids was influential and provided a number of community leaders. Another important Shia family was that of the Daʿwidār (Persian: دعوی‌دار), whose members were judges (Arabic: قاضی) in town, which indicates the transformation of Qom from a town governed by the Sunnis to a completely Shai domain.[57]

The following epochs of the Eldiguzids and Khawrazmshahs lasted for almost 30 years and brought different systems of rule in quick succession. The two noteworthy events of this period are the execution of ʿEzz-al-Din Yaḥyā, the naqib of the Shias, by the Tekesh in 592/1196 and the work on the tiles of the sanctuary (probably in 605–13/1208–17), which indicate a certain economic prosperity at a time of unstable political conditions. From 614/1217–18 until the Mongol attack, Qom remained under Muhammad II of Khwarezm.[58]

The Mongol invasion led to the total destruction of Qom by the armies of the Mongol generals, Jebe and Sübedei, in 621/1224 and left the city in ruins for at least twenty years, when the sources (Jovayni) tell of the levying of taxes. Twenty years later, reconstruction and repair works, probably sponsored by some wealthy inhabitants, were being done on the mausoleums of Shia saints in the city, which contradict those sources, such as Ḥamd-Allāh Mostawfi, that describe Qom as a ruined and depopulated city throughout the Ilkhanid period. Besides, the fact that the Ilkhanid vizier Šams-al-Din Jovayni took refuge in the Fātimah bint Mūsā sanctuary in 683/1284, indicates that the city must have experienced at least a modest comeback. The city walls were probably rebuilt and, moreover, four graves of saints are known to have been constructed between 720/1301 and 1365. Additionally, some fine tiles are known from this period. Nothing is known about the irrigation systems of the town, but nearby a dam was built in the Ilkhanid period and the local administration must have functioned again, as the name of a judge shows. The agricultural situation is described as flourishing with a variety of cultivated plants and a good supply of water, and legends indicate the use of deposits of mineral resources. Information exists concerning taxes for the post-Mongolian period. Qom paid 40,000 dinars, but more remarkable is the fact that some of the surrounding rural districts paid as much as Qom or even more, which suggests that the whole administrative structure of districts had also changed.[59]

In the late 14th century, the city was plundered by Tamerlane and the inhabitants were massacred. Qom gained special attention and gradually developed due to its religious shrine during the Saffavid dynasty. By 1503, Qom became one of the important centers of theology in relation to Shia Islam and became a significant religious pilgrimage site and pivot.[citation needed]

Historical population
YearPop.±% p.a.
1986543,139—    
1991681,253+4.64%
1996777,677+2.68%
2006959,116+2.12%
20111,074,036+2.29%
20161,201,158+2.26%
source:[60]

The city suffered heavy damage again during the Afghan invasions, resulting in consequent severe economic hardships. Qom further sustained damage during the reign of Nader Shah and the conflicts between the two households of Zandieh and Qajariyeh in order to gain power over Iran. Finally in 1793 Qom came under the control of Agha Muhammad Khan Qajar. On being victorious over his enemies, the Qajar Sultan Fath Ali Shah was responsible for the repairs done on the sepulchre and Holy Shrine of Hæzræt Mæ'sume, as he had made such a vow.[citation needed]

The city of Qom began another era of prosperity in the Qajar era. After Russian forces entered Karaj in 1915, many of the inhabitants of Tehran moved to Qom due to reasons of proximity, and the transfer of the capital from Tehran to Qom was even discussed. But the British and Russians defeated prospects of the plan by putting Ahmad Shah Qajar under political pressure.

As a center of religious learning Qom fell into decline for about a century from 1820 to 1920 but had a resurgence when Shaykh Abdul Karim Haeri Yazdi accepted an invitation to move from Sultanabad (now called Arak, Iran), where he had been teaching, to Qom.[61]

In 1964–65, before his exile from Iran, the Ayatollah Khomeini led his opposition to the Pahlavi dynasty from Qom.

On 19 February 2020, the Iranian Students News Agency reported that the first two cases of the COVID-19 pandemic in Iran were detected in Qom.[62]

Governance Edit

Authority for the city lies with the mayor, who is elected by a municipal board. The municipal board is periodically elected by the city's residents. The municipal central office is located on Saheli Street. The current mayor of Qom is Mohammad Delbari.

Old districts Edit

Modern districts Edit

Tourism Edit

 
Jamkaran Mosque

Historical and cultural heritage Edit

 
Imam Hassan Al-Askari Mosque
 
Al-Ghadir Mosque

Iran's Cultural Heritage Organization lists 195 sites of historical and cultural significance in Qom. But the more visited sites of Qom are:

Museums Edit

  • Astaneh Moqaddaseh Museum (Qom Central Museum)
     
    Quran manuscript written by Ali ibn Musa in the Qom Museum
  • Anthropology Museum Of Qom
  • The Museum Of Traditional Arts
  • The Museum Of Natural History & Wildlife
  • The Museum Of Astronomy

Educational institutions Edit

 
Iranian Seminaries Management Centre

Qom is well known for its many religious seminaries and institutes that offer advanced religious studies, which made this city the largest center for Shia scholarship in the world. There are an estimated 50,000 seminarians in the city coming from 80 countries, including Iraq, Lebanon, Syria and Pakistan. Qom has seminaries for women and some non-Shia students. Most of the seminaries teach their students modern social sciences and Western thought as well as traditional religious studies.[63]

Hawzah 'Ilmiyya Qom (Qom Seminary) Edit

 
Qom Seminary
 
Imam Hassan Askari Mosque, Qom, Iran

The Hawzah (a short form of al-Hawzah al-Ilmiyya), which presently consists of over 200 education and research centres and organisations, catering for over 40,000 scholars and students from over 80 List of sovereign states. The modern Qom hawza was revitalized by Abdul Karim Haeri Yazdi and Grand Ayatollah Borujerdi and is barely a century old. There are nearly 300,000 clerics in Iran's seminaries.

Universities and seminaries Edit

  • University of Qom
  • Mofid University
  • Qom University of Medical Sciences
  • Al-Mustafa International University
  • Al-Zahra Seminary
  • Seyyed Hassan Shirazi Seminary
  • Imam Hossein Seminary
  • Imam Baghir Seminary
  • Imam Mahdi Seminary
  • Rasoul A'zam Seminary
  • Razavia Seminary
  • Satia Seminary
  • Imam Khomeini Seminary
  • Aba-Salih Seminary
  • Al-Mahdi Seminary
  • Al-Hadi Seminary
  • Haghani Seminary
  • Janbazan Seminary
  • Resalat Seminary
  • Itrat Seminary
  • Darb-Astana Seminary
  • Seyyed Abdol Aziz Seminary
  • Toloo-e-Mehr Educational Institute
  • Shahab Danesh University
  • Pardis-e-Daneshgah-e-Tehran University
  • IRIB University Of Qom
  • Qom's Industrial College
  • Azad Islami University of Pardisan
  • Payam-Nour College of Pardisan
  • Ma'sumia University
  • Hikmat College
  • The University Of Religions & Denominations
  • Quran & Hadis University
  • Fekr-e-Eslami University
  • Ma'aref-e-Islami University
  • Computer Research Center of Islamic Sciences
  • Qom University of Technology

Fordow uranium enrichment facility Edit

The Fordow uranium enrichment facility is located 20 miles north east of Qom.[64] In January 2012 the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) announced that Iran had started producing uranium enriched up to 20% for medical purposes and that material "remains under the agency's containment and surveillance."[65] Iranian authorities state the facility is built deep in a mountain because of repeated threats by Israel to attack such facilities, which Israel believes can be used to produce nuclear weapons.[66] However, attacking a nuclear facility so close to a city considered so holy in Shia Islam brings concern of a potential risk of a Shiite religious response.[67]

Transportation Edit

The city has a number of streets and roadways.

It will be served by Qom International Airport which is under construction.

Notable people Edit

Twin towns Edit

Qom is twinned with:

Gallery Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b . AMAR (in Persian). The Statistical Center of Iran. p. 25. Archived from the original (Excel) on 11 January 2021. Retrieved 19 December 2022.
  2. ^ OpenStreetMap contributors (13 May 2023). "Qom, Qom County" (Map). OpenStreetMap. Retrieved 13 May 2023.
  3. ^ . citypopulation.de. Archived from the original on 13 September 2018. Retrieved 13 September 2018.
  4. ^ The metropolises of Iran amar.org.ir Retrieved 19 Oct 2018
  5. ^ The largest cities in Iran worldatlas.com Retrieved 21 Oct 2018
  6. ^ The province Qom yjc.ir Retrieved 21 Oct 2018
  7. ^ . AMAR (in Persian). The Statistical Center of Iran. p. 25. Archived from the original (Excel) on 20 September 2011. Retrieved 25 September 2022.
  8. ^ "Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran, 1390 (2011)" (Excel). Iran Data Portal (in Persian). The Statistical Center of Iran. p. 25. Retrieved 19 December 2022.
  9. ^ The biography of Hazrat Ma'sumeh tasnimnews.com Retrieved 4 Oct 2018
  10. ^ Alex Shams (6 December 2018), "On Persian pilgrimages, Pakistanis and Indians reconnect with Iran", Dawn News. Retrieved 9 March 2019.
  11. ^ "Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran, 1385 (2006)" (Excel). Statistical Center of Iran. from the original on 20 September 2011.
  12. ^ The holy city of Qom is the pole of Shia world irna.ir Retrieved 10 Oct 2018
  13. ^ Qom should be the capital of Shia world aghigh.ir Retrieved 10 Oct 2018
  14. ^ a b Christopher de Bellaigue, The Struggle for Iran, New York Review of Books, 2007, p. 24
  15. ^ When does the history of the holy shrine of Lady Ma'sumah start from? islamquest.net Retrieved 10 Oct 2018
  16. ^ The role of Qom and Hazrat Ma'sumah's court in the appearance of Islamic republic iqna.ir Retrieved 10 Oct 2018
  17. ^
    • "Highest record temperature in Ghom by Month 1986–2010". Iran Meteorological Organization. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
    • "Lowest record temperature in Ghom by Month 1986–2010". Iran Meteorological Organization. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  18. ^ *. Iran Meteorological Organization. Archived from the original on 6 September 2014. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
    • "Average Mean Daily temperature in Ghom by Month 1986–2010". Iran Meteorological Organization. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
    • . Iran Meteorological Organization. Archived from the original on 6 September 2014. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  19. ^ "Monthly Total Precipitation in Ghom by Month 1986–2010". Iran Meteorological Organization. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  20. ^ . Iran Meteorological Organization. Archived from the original on 16 September 2014. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  21. ^ *. Iran Meteorological Organization. Archived from the original on 22 August 2014. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
    • . Iran Meteorological Organization. Archived from the original on 26 August 2014. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  22. ^ . Iran Meteorological Organization. Archived from the original on 6 September 2014. Retrieved 8 April 2015.
  23. ^ Kleiss, 1973, p. 181; idem, 1981, pp. 66–67; idem, 1985, pp. 173–79
  24. ^ Hakemi, pp. 16, 22, 26, 28, 35, 39
  25. ^ Ghirshman, 1962, pl. 52; Hakemi, pp. 13–14 and pl. 3
  26. ^ Qomi, pp. 65, 82, 84–86
  27. ^ Schippmann, pp. 416–21
  28. ^ for a summary, see Drechsler, pp. 44–46
  29. ^ Qomi, pp. 22–23, 32, 37, 61, 62, 69–71, 74, 77, 82, 90, 137–38
  30. ^ Qomi, pp. 88–89
  31. ^ Qomi, pp. 70–71; Nehāyat al-erab, p. 179; Widengren, pp. 271, 743–45
  32. ^ Ebn Aʿṯam, I, p. 201, II, pp. 31, 33, 58/59; Nehāyat al-Erab, pp. 383, 388
  33. ^ Frye, 1956, p. 320; idem, 1975, p. 11; Gyselen, pp. 28, 73–74
  34. ^ Drechsler, pp. 57–60
  35. ^ Balāḏori, pp. 312–14; Drechsler, pp. 69–74
  36. ^ Qomi, p. 38; Ṭabari, II, p. 992
  37. ^ Qomi, pp. 242–50, 258–65, 284–91; Drechsler, pp. 78–91
  38. ^ Qomi, pp. 48–49, 242, 244, 250, 253–57, 260, 262–63
  39. ^ Qomi, pp. 31, 101–02, 164, 213–14; Ebn Bābuya, II, p. 271; Modarresi Ṭabāṭabāʾi 1976, I, p. 18; Drechsler, pp. 124–31
  40. ^ Qomi, pp. 35, 102–04, 156–57, 163–64; Ṭabari, III, pp. 1092–93, 1102, 1106, 1111; Modarresi Ṭabāṭabāʾi, 1983, p. 166; Drechsler, pp. 132–39
  41. ^ Najāši, p. 12, 262; Qomi, pp. 35, 156–57, 163–64, 211–12, 215; Ṭabari, III, p. 1697; Modarresi Ṭabāṭabāʾi, 1983, p. 166; Drechsler, pp. 140–45
  42. ^ Qomi, pp. 26, 37–38; Modarresi Ṭabāṭabāʾi, 1976, II, pp. 115–16; Drechsler, pp. 146–48
  43. ^ Ṭabari, III, p. 2024, tr. XXXVII, p. 78; Qomi, pp. 35, 157–58, 163, 215; Najāši, pp. 33, 132; Ṭusi, pp. 20, 25, 247–48; Modarresi Ṭabāṭabāʾi, 1993, pp. 34–35, 37; Drechsler, pp. 148–54
  44. ^ Qomi, pp. 89–90, 104–06, 125, 128, 133–34, 156, 163–64; Ebn al-Faqih, p. 247; Drechsler, pp. 154–60
  45. ^ Qomi, pp. 17, 35–36, 149–53, 225, 229; Drechsler, pp. 160–64
  46. ^ Ṭabari, III, p. 2284, tr., XXXVIII, pp. 197–98; Drechsler, pp. 164–66
  47. ^ Qomi, pp. 99–100, 105–06, 142–44, 164–65, 217–18; Ebn al-Aṯir, VIII, pp. 102–04, 162, 196, 290, 388–89; Drechsler, pp. 166–81
  48. ^ Qomi, pp. 214, 219–220; Modarresi Ṭabāṭabāʾi, 1971, p. 117; idem, 1976, I, p. 18; Drechsler, pp. 181–91
  49. ^ Ebn Ḥawqal, p. 362; Drechsler, p. 198, n. 956
  50. ^ Qomi, pp. 18, 32, 44–46, 108, 123, 125, 128, 191–241; Ebn al-Faqih, p. 209; Ebn Ḥawqal, pp. 315, 342; Ṭusi, pp. 42, 75–76, 93; Najāši, p. 276; Biruni, p. 228; Ebn Saʿd, VII, p. 382; Samʿāni, X, p. 486; Modarresi Ṭabāṭabāʾi, 1971, pp. 121–25; 136–37; Drechsler, pp. 198–207
  51. ^ Qomi, pp. 23, 26–27, 32, 35–40, 42, 60, 167, 214, 216; Saʿidniā, pp. 151–53, 155–56, 158–59; Drechsler, pp. 194–98
  52. ^ Qomi, pp. 13, 27, 36–37, 53–56; Drechsler, pp. 192–93
  53. ^ Yaʿqubi, pp. 273–74; Qomi, pp. 40–46; 48–53, 244; Lambton, 1989, pp. 156–59; Drechsler, pp. 243–52
  54. ^ Qomi, pp. 48, 53–56, 76–77, 87–88, 107–08, 112–13, 119–22, 167, 174–76, 244, 251; Ebn Ḥawqal, p. 342; Ebn al-Faqih; pp. 50, 265; Moqaddasi, pp. 396, 470; Spuler, pp. 387–90, 392–94; 405–06, 408; Drechsler, pp. 253–58
  55. ^ Qomi, pp. 28–29, 31, 34, 38–39, 42, 56–59, 101–90, 242, 253, 262; Balāḏori, p. 314; Yaʿqubi, p. 274; Ebn al-Faqih, pp. 264–65; Modarresi Ṭabāṭabāʾi, 1983, pp. 28, 40–41; Lambton, 1969, pp. 41–45; Drechsler, pp. 258–73, 285–306
  56. ^ Ebn al-Aṯir, IX, pp. 204, 357–58, 429–30, X, pp. 289, 332–33, 551, XI, p. 237; ʿAbd-al-Jalil Qazvini, pp. 167–68; Bayhaqi, pp. 422–33; Mostawfi, pp. 833, 841; Bosworth, 1968, pp. 38, 106–110, 120, 125, 135; Drechsler, pp. 208–19
  57. ^ ʿAbd-al-Jalil Qazvini, pp. 47, 51, 163–64, 182, 191, 220–21, 229–30, 280, 430, 437, 494, 643; Abu'l-Rajāʾ Qomi, pp. 105–06, 262; Modarresi Ṭabāṭabāʾi, 1971, pp. 5, 130, 138–39, 165–67; idem, 1976, I, p. 20, II, pp. 109–10, 217–18; Drechsler, pp. 220–28
  58. ^ Ebn al-Aṯir, X, p. 118, XII, p. 317; Abu'l-Rajāʾ Qomi, p. 262; Modarresi Ṭabāṭabāʾi, 1971, pp. 132–33; Drechsler, pp. 228–31
  59. ^ Ebn al-Aṯir, XII, p. 419; Rašid al-Din Fażl-Allāh, 1957, p. 63; Jovayni, pp. 538, 542; Ḥamd-Allāh Mostawfi, 1919, pp. 67–68, 71–73; Boyle, pp. 311, 331, 337, 368–69, 496, 541; Spuler, 1955, pp. 30–31, 41, 82–83; Modarresi Ṭabāṭabāʾi, 1976, II, p. 35, 43, 67, 78; Survey of Persian Art, IV, pp. 1684–86; Drechsler, pp. 232–41, 308–12
  60. ^ Iran: Provinces and Cities population statistics
  61. ^ Momen, Moojan, An Introduction to Shi'i Islam, Yale University Press, 1985, p. 247
  62. ^ "Iran Reports Its First 2 Cases of the New Coronavirus". New York Times. 19 February 2020. Archived from the original on 19 February 2020. Retrieved 10 April 2020.
  63. ^ Nasr, Vali The Shia Revival, Norton (2006), p. 217
  64. ^ Russia 'regrets' reported Iran nuclear activity in Qom facility, Haaretz, January 10, 2012.
  65. ^ "Iran enriching uranium at Fordo plant near Qom". BBC. 10 January 2012. Retrieved 1 March 2012.
  66. ^ Azmat Khan (13 January 2012). "Did Santorum Suggest Iran Wants Nukes to Bring Back Messiah?". Public Broadcasting Service.
  67. ^ Akluf Benn (3 September 2009). "Cries of 'hold me back' may lead Israel to strike Iran". Haaretz.com.

Bibliography Edit

  • Balāḏori
  • Drechsler
  • Frye
  • Ghirshman
  • Hakemi
  • Kleiss
  • Modarresi Ṭabāṭabāʾi
  • Najāši
  • Qomi
  • Schippmann

External links Edit

  • Irani, Hamed (2 November 2005). . ROOZ (ROOZ Online). Archived from the original on 25 March 2006. Retrieved 28 June 2009.
  • Sādeq Sabā, Visiting Iran's ayatollahs at Qom, Tuesday, 17 June 2008, BBC

redirects, here, other, uses, disambiguation, other, uses, disambiguation, this, article, possibly, contains, inappropriate, misinterpreted, citations, that, verify, text, please, help, improve, this, article, checking, citation, inaccuracies, february, 2017, . Qum redirects here For other uses see Qum disambiguation For other uses see Qom disambiguation This article possibly contains inappropriate or misinterpreted citations that do not verify the text Please help improve this article by checking for citation inaccuracies February 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Qom also spelled Ghom Ghum or Qum Persian قم ɢom i is a city in the Central District of Qom County Qom province Iran and serves as capital of the province county and district It is the seventh largest metropolis 4 and also the seventh largest city in Iran 5 The city is 140 km 87 mi to the south of Tehran 6 and on the banks of the Qom River Qom قمCityکلانشهر قم Qom MetropolisTop Fatima Masumeh Shrine Second Row Left Bagh e Gonbad e Sabz Right Grand Timcheh of Qom Third Row Left Feyziyeh Madrasas Right Qom Jamkaran Mosque Bottom Panoramic view of downtown QomFlagNickname Religious Capital Of IranQomCoordinates 34 38 24 N 50 52 35 E 34 64000 N 50 87639 E 34 64000 50 87639 2 CountryIranProvinceQomDistrictCentralElevation936 m 3 071 ft Population 2016 City1 201 158 1 Metro1 260 000 3 Population Rank in Iran7thTime zoneUTC 3 30 IRST Postal code37100Area codes 98 025ClimateBWhWebsitewww wbr qom wbr irAt the 2006 census its population was 957 496 in 241 827 households 7 The following census in 2011 counted 1 074 036 people in 299 752 households 8 The latest census in 2016 showed a population of 1 201 158 people in 356 976 households 1 Qom is considered holy in Shi a Islam as it is the site of the shrine of Fatimah bint Musa sister of Imam Ali ibn Musa Rida 9 Persian Imam Reza 789 816 The city is the largest center for Shi a scholarship in the world and is a significant destination of pilgrimage with around twenty million pilgrims visiting the city every year the majority being Iranians but also other Shi a Muslims from all around the world 10 Qom is also famous for a Persian brittle toffee known as sohan Persian سوهان considered a souvenir of the city and sold by thousands of sohan vendors Qom has developed into a lively industrial center owing in part to its proximity to Tehran It is a regional center for the distribution of petroleum and petroleum products and a natural gas pipeline from Bandar Anzali and Tehran and a crude oil pipeline from Tehran run through Qom to the Abadan refinery on the Persian Gulf Qom gained additional prosperity when oil was discovered at Sarajeh near the city in 1956 and a large refinery was built between Qom and Tehran Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Climate 2 History 3 Governance 3 1 Old districts 3 2 Modern districts 4 Tourism 4 1 Historical and cultural heritage 4 2 Museums 5 Educational institutions 5 1 Hawzah Ilmiyya Qom Qom Seminary 5 2 Universities and seminaries 5 3 Fordow uranium enrichment facility 6 Transportation 7 Notable people 8 Twin towns 9 Gallery 10 See also 11 References 12 Bibliography 13 External linksGeography EditQom the capital of Qom province is located 125 kilometers south of Tehran on a low plain The shrine of Fatimeh Masumeh the sister of Imam Reza is located in this city which is considered by Shiʿa Muslims holy The city is located in the boundary of the central desert of Iran Kavir e Markazi At the 2011 census its population was 1 074 036 11 comprising 545 704 males and 528 332 females Qom is a focal center of the Shiʿah 12 13 Since the revolution the clerical population has risen from around 25 000 to more than 45 000 and the non clerical population has more than tripled to about 700 000 Substantial sums of money in the form of alms and Islamic taxes flow into Qom to the ten Marja e taqlid or Source to be Followed that reside there 14 The number of seminary schools in Qom is now over fifty and the number of research institutes and libraries somewhere near two hundred and fifty 14 Its theological center and the Fatima Masumeh Shrine are prominent features of Qom 15 16 Another very popular religious site of pilgrimage formerly outside the city of Qom but now more of a suburb is called Jamkaran Qom s proximity to Tehran has allowed the clerical establishment easy access to monitor the affairs and decisions of state Many Grand Ayatollahs possess offices in both Tehran and Qom many people simply commute between the two cities as they are only 156 kilometres or 97 miles apart Southeast of Qom is the ancient city of Kashan Directly south of Qom lie the towns of Delijan Mahallat Naraq Pardisan City Kahak and Jasb The surrounding area to the west of Qom is populated by Tafresh Saveh and Ashtian and Jafarieh Arak city Industrial Capital of Iran is in the southwest of Qom nbsp View Of Southwestern QomClimate Edit Qom has a hot desert climate bordering a cold desert climate Koppen BWh border on BWk with low annual rainfall due to remoteness from the sea and being situated in the vicinity of the subtropical anticyclone aloft Summer weather is very hot and essentially rainless whilst in winter weather can vary from warm to when Siberian air masses are driven south across the Elburz Mountains by blocking over Europe frigid An example of the latter situation was in January 2008 when minima fell to 23 C or 9 4 F on the 15th whilst earlier similar situations occurred in January 1964 and to a lesser extent January 1950 January 1972 and December 1972 The highest recorded temperature was 47 C 117 F on 11 July 2010 and the lowest recorded temperature was 23 C 9 F on 15 January 2008 Climate data for Qom 1986 2010 records 1986 2020 Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 23 4 74 1 26 5 79 7 35 5 95 9 37 0 98 6 41 8 107 2 45 9 114 6 47 0 116 6 45 6 114 1 42 3 108 1 37 7 99 9 31 0 87 8 22 5 72 5 47 0 116 6 Average high C F 10 2 50 4 13 6 56 5 19 1 66 4 26 0 78 8 31 8 89 2 37 9 100 2 40 3 104 5 39 4 102 9 34 9 94 8 27 7 81 9 18 9 66 0 12 2 54 0 26 0 78 8 Daily mean C F 4 2 39 6 7 1 44 8 12 0 53 6 18 3 64 9 23 6 74 5 29 1 84 4 31 8 89 2 30 3 86 5 25 2 77 4 19 0 66 2 11 5 52 7 6 1 43 0 18 2 64 8 Average low C F 1 9 28 6 0 6 33 1 5 0 41 0 10 5 50 9 15 4 59 7 20 2 68 4 23 4 74 1 21 2 70 2 15 6 60 1 10 3 50 5 4 1 39 4 0 1 31 8 10 4 50 7 Record low C F 23 0 9 4 11 2 11 8 11 0 12 2 0 2 31 6 5 4 41 7 8 0 46 4 15 0 59 0 11 8 53 2 6 5 43 7 0 6 33 1 11 0 12 2 10 5 13 1 23 0 9 4 Average precipitation mm inches 25 4 1 00 20 5 0 81 27 7 1 09 20 2 0 80 10 4 0 41 2 3 0 09 0 7 0 03 0 3 0 01 0 8 0 03 6 2 0 24 14 3 0 56 19 4 0 76 148 2 5 83 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 4 4 4 1 4 2 3 9 2 0 0 4 0 2 0 1 0 3 1 8 2 6 3 2 27 2Average snowy days 3 1 1 4 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 9 5 8Average relative humidity 66 58 48 42 33 24 23 24 26 38 52 66 41Mean monthly sunshine hours 185 0 194 0 221 5 233 3 296 6 351 5 354 5 347 3 309 9 263 4 204 9 172 7 3 134 6Source Iran Meteorological Organization records 17 temperatures 18 precipitation 19 humidity 20 days with precipitation and snow 21 sunshine 22 History EditSee also Timeline of Qom nbsp Azam Mosque in QomThe present town of Qom in Central Iran dates back to ancient times Its pre Islamic history can be partially documented although the earlier epochs remain unclear Excavations at Tepe Sialk indicate that the region had been settled since ancient times Ghirshman and Vanden Berghe and more recent surveys have revealed traces of large inhabited places south of Qom dating from the 4th and 1st millennium BC While nothing is known about the area from Elamite Medes and Achaemenid times there are significant archeological remains from the Seleucid and Parthian epochs of which the ruins of Khurha about 70 kilometres or 43 miles southwest of Qom are the most famous and important remnants Their dating and function have instigated long and controversial debates and interpretations for they have been interpreted and explained variously as the remains of a Sasanian temple or of a Seleucid Dionysian temple or of a Parthian complex Its true function is still a matter of dispute but the contributions by Wolfram Kleiss point to a Parthian palace that served as a station on the nearby highway and was used until Sasanian times 23 The recently published results of the excavations carried out in 1955 by Iranian archeologists have however revived the old thesis of a Seleucid religious building 24 Besides Khurha which is already mentioned as Khor Abad at Qomi in the 9th century the region has turned up a few other remnants from this epoch including the four Parthian heads found near Qom now kept in the National Museum of Iran in Tehran 25 Qomi names Parthian personalities as founders of villages in the Qom area 26 full citation needed The possible mention of Qom in the form of Greek names in two ancient geographical works the Tabula Peutingera and Ptolemy s geographical tables remains doubtful nbsp View Of Qom city in a painting in 1723 ADThe Sasanian epoch offers many archeological findings and remnants besides the fact that various sources mention Qom The most interesting building from an archeological point of view is the Qalʿa ye Doḵtar in Qom itself which was long thought to have served religious purposes while more recent research points to an administrative use 27 The wider surroundings of Qom also contain numerous traces from palaces religious military and administrative buildings 28 full citation needed Some of these are mentioned by Qomi who also names many more fire temples in the urban area of present Qom and its region of which no archeological traces are left although the location of one fire temple can probably be equated with today s Masjed e Emam in the city 29 According to Qomi the most important fire temple of the area stood in the nearby village of Dizijan 30 Tariḵ e Qom and some other sources also speak of genuine historical figures of the Sasanian epoch in connection with Qom and its region They shed new light on the time of the seizure of power by the first Sasanian king Ardashir I who fought his decisive battles near Qom 31 and the collapse of the Sasanian empire which is extensively reported by Ebn Aʿṯam Kufi and the Nehayat al Erab and names a certain Serzad as the satrap of the region 32 The existence of an urban settlement in the Sasanian epoch is furthermore verified by Middle Persian sources literary sources inscriptions and seals that mention in the time of Shapur I and Kawad I the names Godman Goman and Eran Win n ard Kawad both of which could be identified as Qom 33 Altogether one can assume that Qom functioned as a small administrative unit throughout the whole Sasanian era Probably the urban structure of the Sasanian settlement of Qom can be compared with the type of city of Ctesiphon Or Madaʾen and consisted of several villages and little towns with Abarastejan Mamajjan and Jamkaran as the bigger settlements that were loosely connected by defense installations 34 It is difficult to decipher the actual process of the Arab conquest of Qom from the extant Arabic sources According to Balaḏori the first tentative conquest of Qom took place in 23 644 by Abu Musa Ashaari after a few days of fighting although Abu Musa s route through Western Persia as narrated by Balaḏori appears somewhat confusing It remains unclear who the defenders of Qom were probably fleeing Sasanian nobles and local soldiers returning from the great battles against the Arabs formed the core of the resistance The area remained largely untouched for 60 years after the initial conquest and was probably administered from Isfahan 35 The first permanent settlement of Arab settlers in Qom took place during the revolts of Mukhtar al Thaqafi and Moṭarref b Moḡira b Saʿba in 66 77 685 96 when small groups of refugees moved there and Qom itself was affected by the fighting between the Umayyad state power and the rebels 36 The decisive step for the later urban development of Qom occurred when a group of Ashaari Arabs came to the area These Ashaaries originated in Yemen and the first important figure among them was the first conqueror of the area of Qom the above mentioned Abu Musa Ashaari ʿAbd Allah b Saʿd and Aḥwaṣ b Saʿd were grandsons of Abi Musa s nephew and led the group of Ashaaries that emigrated from Kufa to the region of Qom It is not exactly clear why they migrated but it might have also been a general opposition to the Umayyad dynasty A central element was the early contact with the leading local Zoroastrian Persian noble Yazdanfadar 37 As the Arabs required a great deal of pasture for their large herds of cattle and were much wealthier than the local Persians they slowly started to buy land and take over more villages The decisive step for controlling the area was the elimination of the local Persian noble class that took place after the death of Yazdanfadar in 733 38 The emigration and the subsequent settlement and building activities led to the fusion of the original six villages on the area of Qom to an urban conglomerate which probably happened within two generations after the first coming of Arabs citation needed nbsp The Fatima Masumeh Shrine in QomAlthough a few names of governors and their tax assessments are known from the time after the administrative independence the death of Fatimah bint Musa the sister of the eighth Imam of Shias Ali al Ridha in the city in 201 816 17 proved to be of great importance for the later history of Qom Fatimah bint Musa died while following her brother to Khorasan a region in northern Iran The place of her entombment developed from 869 70 into a building that was transformed over time into today s magnificent and economically important sanctuary 39 In 825 26 a major rebellion against the tax regulations of the caliphate broke out in Qom It was caused by the refusal of the caliph Al Ma mun to lower the yearly tax assessment as he had done in Ray The revolt was led by an Ashaari named Yahya ibn Emran maintaining that taxes should not be paid to an unlawful ruler Yahya was killed by troops sent by the caliph and the citizens were severely punished the taxes were raised from 2 million to 7 million dirhams Two years later the taxes were again raised by 700 000 dirham by the Ashaari governor Ali ibn Isa who was subsequently deposed because he was strongly rejected by the inhabitants of Qom But in 833 Ali returned to the post of governor wali and forcefully collected tax debts that were laid upon him by the caliph He destroyed parts of Qom and handed over a wanted rebel to caliphal authorities under Al Moʿtasem Between 839 42 two contradicting tax assessments were carried out under turbulent circumstances which amounted to a sum of 5 million dirhams The names of those involved have survived 40 nbsp Deire Gachin CaravansaraiThe move of a Hadith transmitter from Kufa to Qom which took place probably in the middle of the 9th century indicates the increased importance of Qom as a center of Shia learning At about the same time another military attack on the city occurred in 254 868 when Mofleḥ the Turkish officer of the caliph Al Mostaʿin executed some of its inhabitants because of the city s refusal to pay taxes Mofleḥ became governor of Qom and lasted in that position for at least five years During his governorship important Alids moved to Qom and there are references to close contacts between the representative of the 11th Shia s Imam Hassan al Askari in Qom and other Qomis The representative Aḥmad b Esḥaq was at the same time administrator of the Faṭema sanctuary and the agent wakil responsible for the pensions of the Alids 41 The first Friday mosque in Qom was built in 878 79 on the site of a fire temple although there are also confusing reports concerning a possible earlier Friday mosque 42 In 881 82 Qom was occupied by the Turkish military leader Edgu Tegin Arabic Yadkutakin b Asatakin or Aḏkutakin who tried to collect the tax arrears for seven years which partially ruined the guarantors some of whom are known of these taxes At about the same time the early orthodox Shias achieved their victory in the town In 893 94 at the latest all extremists ḡolat were driven out of town by the leading Shia shaikh of Qom Aḥmad b Moḥammed b Isa Ashaari Probably one year later the famous Islamic mystic Ḥosayn b Manṣur Ḥallaj stayed in Qom where he was arrested 43 From 895 96 onwards the history of Qom was connected with a family of Turkish military leaders from the army of the caliph Al Mu tadid including the governor Berun Birun In the same year Berun destroyed a big and probably still active fire temple located on the territory of the evolving city and probably opposite today s sanctuary of Fatimah bint Musa In these unstable political times Qom was visited by the vizier of Al Moʿtazed Obayd Allah ibn Solayman and two tax assessments were organized 44 An administrative peculiarity of Qom was put to an end at about the same time to wit the independent appointment of judges through the Arab inhabitants of Qom until the time of al Moktafi which together with the dispatch of a joint Arab Persian delegation to the vizier Ḥamid ibn Abbas indicate the end of the elevated position of the Arabs in Qom The period of the governor Abbas ibn Amr Ganawi 292 96 904 09 is remarkable for the presence of non Twelver Shias in Qom and the establishment of the office of the jahbaḏ financial officer as the tax broker for the city which fostered local self determination 45 In 909 Hosayn ibn Hamdan ibn Hamdun was appointed governor of Qom and Kasan by the caliph Al Moqtader and had to assist the caliph s army against the Saffarids in Fars Altogether he stayed in power only for two years before he had to return to Baghdad 46 In the years 301 913 14 to 315 927 the people of Qom had besides another tax assessment meanwhile the eighth a caliphal intervention that resulted in the appointment of a governor to stabilize the administrative grip over the region This move caused more unrest and affected the balance of power in an area that was disputed between the powers of the time Daylamites Samanids Beginning in 316 928 Qom fell into the sphere of interest of Daylami warlords and was relieved from the direct authority of the caliph although it changed hands several times between 928 and 943 The Daylamites brutally exploited the city through harsh taxes With the firm establishment of Buyids control from 340 951 52 on the political circumstances were less troubled than before although the economic situation deteriorated 47 No outstanding events are reported for the relatively stable political period until 988 89 but Qom seems to have been isolated inside Persia because of its Shia creed At the same time the Fatima sanctuary was enlarged and the number of sayyeds residing in Qom reached a considerable number In 373 984 Qom and its environs were affected by the revolt of the Kurdish Moḥammad Barzikani against the Buyid Fakr Al Dawla 48 The population amounted to 50 000 inhabitants at the most and consisted of Persians and Arabs who had adopted the Persian of the time 49 as their language and many social customs from the Persians whose proportion was probably smaller than the Arabs The Kurds lived in the countryside to the west The Twelver Shia constituted the great majority of the population and many important Shia scholars of the time came from Qom or lived there As many as 331 male Alids lived in Qom in 988 89 and they produced a good number of community leaders and there is also mention of one prominent female ʿAlid besides Fatimah bint Musa These Alids descended from the Imams and were supported by pensions Apart from the Shia mainstream other Shia sects existed in the city and one can also assume the presence of Sunnies Ḏemmis or followers of other revealed religions Jews Christians and Zoroastrians must have lived in the city too as the payment of poll tax jezya indicates although their number can only be very roughly estimated at a few thousand at the end of the 9th century and must have shrunk drastically in the 10th century The majority of these non Muslims were Zoroastrians who made their living mostly as farmers Jews must have lived in Qom as well but information on them is scant It is striking that the formerly dominant Ashaaries had lost their leading positions by the end of the 10th century This points at a new social situation that allowed assimilated Persians to join the local establishment 50 The city s topography in the 10th century still reflected the evolutionary merging of the original six villages these were still separated by fields The town center was located in the village of Mamajjan which was connected to other parts of the city on the other side of the river by four bridges There were about eight squares whose function is not clear and three mosques within the city There is almost no information about madrasas The sanctuary must have still been quite small as only two cupolas are mentioned A bazaar and bathhouses must have existed too as well as certain administrative buildings prison mint Five bigger and eight smaller roads indicate good traffic connections which were supported by at least three or maybe even nine city gates 51 Qom was then in a difficult economic and social position Many houses inside the city as well as bridges and mills were ruined and the roads and agriculture were suffering from an insecure situation This has to be attributed to difficult social circumstances and excessive taxation 52 The water supply seems to have been satisfactory and the Ashaaries seem to have undertaken continuous renovation works on the irrigation channels between 733 and 900 The Asʿaris were also the proprietors of the water rights which were safeguarded in the water authority divan e ab that regulated the water shares The system made the Asʿaris the wealthiest inhabitants of Qom and stayed in place until 347 958 59 when they were expropriated by the Buyids which consequently brought about a decline in the whole system of irrigation Although there were attempts at restoration in 371 981 82 only three of originally twenty one channels had flowing water which meant enough drinking water was supplied for the population but the available amount could not have been adequate for agricultural purposes 53 nbsp Grand Timcheh Altogether the state of cultivation in Qom seems to have resembled that of the other regions of Persia although the thirty different crops and plants are only indirectly mentioned in connection with the tax assessments The soil is reported to have good quality and produced big quantities of food Little is known about animal husbandry in the region but the considerable number of fifty one mills existed of which a fifth was in decay Legends speak of mineral deposits and mines of silver iron gold and lead while Kurds seem to have produced salt from a lake nearby see Qom Lake The production of chairs textiles and saddle equipment indicates craftsmanship 54 The city s taxation has to be distinguished between the more proper rule of the Abbasid tax bureaucracy and the time of the Deylamid warlords where rules were bent arbitrarily A stunning diversity of taxes is known often meant to serve the Abbasid bureaucracy and the Deylamid and Buyid war machinery but the Karaj land tax which was composed of many different separate sums was the most important single tax existing in Qom at least since post Sasanian times Within the known 18 tax figures ranging over 160 years there are great differences and the tax figures vary from 8 million to 2 million dirhams with a mean value at around 3 million In taxation Qom always followed the solar calendar with its own local variation starting from the death of the Sasanian Yazdegerd III A highly differentiated tax administration existed and is known in great detail 24 tax collectors ʿommal are listed from 189 804 05 to 371 981 82 plus two jahabaḏa who acted as mediators after the attempt to enforce collective responsibility by the taxpayers had failed The information in the Tariḵ e Qom on taxation also mention by name 21 tax districts rasatiq in the region with 900 villages 55 Little is known about the time until the period of Seljuki dominance In 387 997 Qom became involved in internal Buyid quarrels and was subsequently unsuccessfully besieged In 418 1027 28 Qom fell under the rule of Sahryus from the Kakuyid dynasty and a few years later 1030 40 it became part of the Ghaznavid domain The Seljuki did not occupy Qom at once but left the town and Jebal in Kakuyid hands for ten years From 442 1050 51 on the city was under Seljuk rule and nothing is known about its fate until 487 1094 Afterwards the growing instability of the Seljuk empire involved Qom in the power struggles between the competing Seljuk factions in Jebal and the city changed hands many times The most stable period seems to have been the 14 years 513 27 1119 33 when Qom lay in Sanjar s sphere of power and witnessed the construction of a second Friday mosque 56 Surprisingly Qom enjoyed relative prosperity in its economy in the Seljuk period The rigidly Sunni Seljuks seem to have practiced a pragmatic policy and one of the main sources of this time ʿAbd al Jalil Qazvini speaks of good relations between the famous vizier Nizam al Mulk and Seljuk sultans on the one hand and members of the local nobility on the other Sultans reportedly visited the sanctuary although no specific sultan is mentioned by name and in general no religiously motivated punitive action against Qom is known to have taken place Under Seljuk rule a considerable number of religious buildings were erected At least ten madrasas are known by name Two Friday mosques seem to have existed in Seljuk times the old one was renovated and a new one located outside of the town area was built in 528 1133 34 by the order of Sultan Togrel II Persian سلطان طغرل دوم Qom must have expanded during this period but precise reasons for its prosperity are not known A family of Ḥosaynid Alids was influential and provided a number of community leaders Another important Shia family was that of the Daʿwidar Persian دعوی دار whose members were judges Arabic قاضی in town which indicates the transformation of Qom from a town governed by the Sunnis to a completely Shai domain 57 The following epochs of the Eldiguzids and Khawrazmshahs lasted for almost 30 years and brought different systems of rule in quick succession The two noteworthy events of this period are the execution of ʿEzz al Din Yaḥya the naqib of the Shias by the Tekesh in 592 1196 and the work on the tiles of the sanctuary probably in 605 13 1208 17 which indicate a certain economic prosperity at a time of unstable political conditions From 614 1217 18 until the Mongol attack Qom remained under Muhammad II of Khwarezm 58 The Mongol invasion led to the total destruction of Qom by the armies of the Mongol generals Jebe and Subedei in 621 1224 and left the city in ruins for at least twenty years when the sources Jovayni tell of the levying of taxes Twenty years later reconstruction and repair works probably sponsored by some wealthy inhabitants were being done on the mausoleums of Shia saints in the city which contradict those sources such as Ḥamd Allah Mostawfi that describe Qom as a ruined and depopulated city throughout the Ilkhanid period Besides the fact that the Ilkhanid vizier Sams al Din Jovayni took refuge in the Fatimah bint Musa sanctuary in 683 1284 indicates that the city must have experienced at least a modest comeback The city walls were probably rebuilt and moreover four graves of saints are known to have been constructed between 720 1301 and 1365 Additionally some fine tiles are known from this period Nothing is known about the irrigation systems of the town but nearby a dam was built in the Ilkhanid period and the local administration must have functioned again as the name of a judge shows The agricultural situation is described as flourishing with a variety of cultivated plants and a good supply of water and legends indicate the use of deposits of mineral resources Information exists concerning taxes for the post Mongolian period Qom paid 40 000 dinars but more remarkable is the fact that some of the surrounding rural districts paid as much as Qom or even more which suggests that the whole administrative structure of districts had also changed 59 In the late 14th century the city was plundered by Tamerlane and the inhabitants were massacred Qom gained special attention and gradually developed due to its religious shrine during the Saffavid dynasty By 1503 Qom became one of the important centers of theology in relation to Shia Islam and became a significant religious pilgrimage site and pivot citation needed Historical populationYearPop p a 1986543 139 1991681 253 4 64 1996777 677 2 68 2006959 116 2 12 20111 074 036 2 29 20161 201 158 2 26 source 60 The city suffered heavy damage again during the Afghan invasions resulting in consequent severe economic hardships Qom further sustained damage during the reign of Nader Shah and the conflicts between the two households of Zandieh and Qajariyeh in order to gain power over Iran Finally in 1793 Qom came under the control of Agha Muhammad Khan Qajar On being victorious over his enemies the Qajar Sultan Fath Ali Shah was responsible for the repairs done on the sepulchre and Holy Shrine of Haezraet Mae sume as he had made such a vow citation needed The city of Qom began another era of prosperity in the Qajar era After Russian forces entered Karaj in 1915 many of the inhabitants of Tehran moved to Qom due to reasons of proximity and the transfer of the capital from Tehran to Qom was even discussed But the British and Russians defeated prospects of the plan by putting Ahmad Shah Qajar under political pressure As a center of religious learning Qom fell into decline for about a century from 1820 to 1920 but had a resurgence when Shaykh Abdul Karim Haeri Yazdi accepted an invitation to move from Sultanabad now called Arak Iran where he had been teaching to Qom 61 In 1964 65 before his exile from Iran the Ayatollah Khomeini led his opposition to the Pahlavi dynasty from Qom On 19 February 2020 the Iranian Students News Agency reported that the first two cases of the COVID 19 pandemic in Iran were detected in Qom 62 Governance EditAuthority for the city lies with the mayor who is elected by a municipal board The municipal board is periodically elected by the city s residents The municipal central office is located on Saheli Street The current mayor of Qom is Mohammad Delbari Old districts Edit Soltan Mohammad Sharif Bagh Pambeh Jouy Shour Safaiyyeh Sadough Yakhchal Ghazi Shah Ahmad Ghasim Bagh Ashrafi Darvaze Ghale Khandagh Ghale Amou Hossein Barassoun Hammam Taalaar Sang Band Eshgh Ali Tekyeh Agha Sayyed Hassan Arabestan Darvazeh Kashan Sarbakhsh Sar Howz Alvandiyeh Gozar Sadegh Lab Chaal Chehel Akhtaran Razavia Manba Ab Nikouyee Nowbahar Allouchou Khak Faraj Haj Zaynal Haj Khalil Bagh Shazdeh Chehel Derakht Zad Chahar Imamzadeh Hanif Nizhad Paminar Qom Now Maydan Now Zandyan va Handyan Darvazeh Choubi Modern districts Edit Tohid Shahr e Gha em Panzdah e Khordad Jahan Bini Talighani Town Baajak Town Farhangian Town Tavaneer Town Fatimia Town Imam Hassan Town nbsp Ashura Mourning in Bagh Shazdeh Qom Imam Hossein Residential Area Bonyad Residential Area Mahdia Town Imam Khomeini Town Pardisan City Safa Shahr Qods TownTourism Edit nbsp Jamkaran MosqueHistorical and cultural heritage Edit nbsp Imam Hassan Al Askari Mosque nbsp Al Ghadir MosqueIran s Cultural Heritage Organization lists 195 sites of historical and cultural significance in Qom But the more visited sites of Qom are Shrine of Fatimah al Masumah Jamkaran Mosque Azam Mosque Imam Hassan Al Asgari Mosque Al Ghadir Mosque Atiq Mosque in Qom Qom Bazaar Feyzieh Religious School Mar ashi Najafi Library with over 500 000 handwritten texts and copies Timcheh ye Bozorg Grand Timcheh Paminar School Jahangirkhan School Fath Ali Shah Qajar Tomb Mohammad Shah Qajar Tomb Shah Abbas II Tomb Shah Soleyman III amp Shah Safi Tomb Gonbad Sabz Historical Garden Ali Ibn Ja afar Tomb Shah Hamzeh Tomb Seyyed Hossein Borujerdi s Historical House Yazdan Panah Historical House Haji Khan Historical House Zand Historical House Ruhollah Khomeini s House Beyt on noor House Haj Asgar Khan Historical Bath The Minarets Of Risbaf Historical Factory Gholi Darvish Historical Hill Jamkaran Historical Castle 500 year Cypress Tree in Jamkaran Sirang Tourism Centre Kohne Bazaar Commercial Centre Kohne Mosque Museums Edit Astaneh Moqaddaseh Museum Qom Central Museum nbsp Quran manuscript written by Ali ibn Musa in the Qom Museum Anthropology Museum Of Qom The Museum Of Traditional Arts The Museum Of Natural History amp Wildlife The Museum Of AstronomyEducational institutions Edit nbsp Iranian Seminaries Management CentreQom is well known for its many religious seminaries and institutes that offer advanced religious studies which made this city the largest center for Shia scholarship in the world There are an estimated 50 000 seminarians in the city coming from 80 countries including Iraq Lebanon Syria and Pakistan Qom has seminaries for women and some non Shia students Most of the seminaries teach their students modern social sciences and Western thought as well as traditional religious studies 63 Hawzah Ilmiyya Qom Qom Seminary Edit nbsp Qom Seminary nbsp Imam Hassan Askari Mosque Qom IranThe Hawzah a short form of al Hawzah al Ilmiyya which presently consists of over 200 education and research centres and organisations catering for over 40 000 scholars and students from over 80 List of sovereign states The modern Qom hawza was revitalized by Abdul Karim Haeri Yazdi and Grand Ayatollah Borujerdi and is barely a century old There are nearly 300 000 clerics in Iran s seminaries Universities and seminaries Edit University of Qom Mofid University Qom University of Medical Sciences Al Mustafa International University Al Zahra Seminary Seyyed Hassan Shirazi Seminary Imam Hossein Seminary Imam Baghir Seminary Imam Mahdi Seminary Rasoul A zam Seminary Razavia Seminary Satia Seminary Imam Khomeini Seminary Aba Salih Seminary Al Mahdi Seminary Al Hadi Seminary Haghani Seminary Janbazan Seminary Resalat Seminary Itrat Seminary Darb Astana Seminary Seyyed Abdol Aziz Seminary Toloo e Mehr Educational Institute Shahab Danesh University Pardis e Daneshgah e Tehran University IRIB University Of Qom Qom s Industrial College Azad Islami University of Pardisan Payam Nour College of Pardisan Ma sumia University Hikmat College The University Of Religions amp Denominations Quran amp Hadis University Fekr e Eslami University Ma aref e Islami University Computer Research Center of Islamic Sciences Qom University of Technology nbsp University of Qom nbsp Mofid University nbsp Qom University of Medical Sciences nbsp Ahl Al Bayt World AssemblyFordow uranium enrichment facility Edit Main article Fordow uranium enrichment facility The Fordow uranium enrichment facility is located 20 miles north east of Qom 64 In January 2012 the International Atomic Energy Agency IAEA announced that Iran had started producing uranium enriched up to 20 for medical purposes and that material remains under the agency s containment and surveillance 65 Iranian authorities state the facility is built deep in a mountain because of repeated threats by Israel to attack such facilities which Israel believes can be used to produce nuclear weapons 66 However attacking a nuclear facility so close to a city considered so holy in Shia Islam brings concern of a potential risk of a Shiite religious response 67 Transportation EditThe city has a number of streets and roadways It will be served by Qom International Airport which is under construction Notable people Edit nbsp Gholam Ali Oveissi nbsp Farrokhroo Parsa nbsp Naser Kamalian nbsp Azartash Azarnoush nbsp Sadeq Tabatabaei nbsp Hamid Reza Noorbakhsh nbsp Javad Razavian nbsp Ali Asghar Hassanzadeh nbsp Amir Mehdizadeh nbsp Alireza Vafaei nbsp Abolghasem Orouji nbsp Hamid Naderi Yeganeh Gholam Ali Oveissi 1918 1984 General and The Chief Commander of the Imperial Iranian Armed Forces Farrokhroo Parsa 1922 1980 Physician educator and parliamentarian Parviz Shapour 1924 1999 Writer Naser Kamalian b 1931 Medical scholar Nasrollah Soltaninejad b 1936 Wrestler Azartash Azarnoush b 1937 Linguist and Scholar Bahram Afzali b 1938 Commander of Iranian Navy Sadeq Tabatabaei b 1943 politician Mohammad Reza Nasehi b 1944 weightlifter Fathali Oveisi b 1946 Actor Mostafa Pourmohammadi b 1960 Politician and Prosecutor Hamid Reza Noorbakhsh b 1965 Singer Majid Abdolhosseini b 1972 Karateka Mehdi Khalaji b 1973 Writer Scholar of Islamic studies and Political analyst Javad Razavian b 1974 Actor Mohsen Hassanzadeh b 1974 Futsal coach Vahid Ghiasi b 1975 Futsal coach Alireza Katiraei b 1976 Karateka Mohsen Rabbani b 1983 Pole vaulter Ali Asghar Hassanzadeh b 1987 Futsal player Saeid Taghizadeh b 1988 Futsal player Amir Mehdizadeh b 1989 Karateka Alireza Vafaei b 1989 Futsal player Abolghasem Orouji b 1989 Futsal player Hamid Naderi Yeganeh b 1990 Mathematical artist Mehdi Hosseini b 1993 Football player Elnaz Ghasemi b 1996 Handball player Alireza Nejati b 1998 WrestlerTwin towns EditQom is twinned with nbsp Baalbek Lebanon nbsp Karbala Iraq nbsp Najaf Iraq nbsp Konya Turkey nbsp Santiago de Compostela Spain nbsp Karachi PakistanGallery Edit nbsp Qom Mosque nbsp Young Water Park nbsp Shrine of Fatimah Masumah nbsp The Hashemi park of Qom in autumn nbsp Alavi park nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp Bonyadi ParkSee also EditTimeline of Qom Fatima al Masumeh Shrine Iranian architecture University of Qom Qom Seminary Qom rug Pardisan CityReferences Edit a b Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran 1395 2016 AMAR in Persian The Statistical Center of Iran p 25 Archived from the original Excel on 11 January 2021 Retrieved 19 December 2022 OpenStreetMap contributors 13 May 2023 Qom Qom County Map OpenStreetMap Retrieved 13 May 2023 Major Agglomerations of the World Population Statistics and Maps citypopulation de Archived from the original on 13 September 2018 Retrieved 13 September 2018 The metropolises of Iran amar org ir Retrieved 19 Oct 2018 The largest cities in Iran worldatlas com Retrieved 21 Oct 2018 The province Qom yjc ir Retrieved 21 Oct 2018 Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran 1385 2006 AMAR in Persian The Statistical Center of Iran p 25 Archived from the original Excel on 20 September 2011 Retrieved 25 September 2022 Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran 1390 2011 Excel Iran Data Portal in Persian The Statistical Center of Iran p 25 Retrieved 19 December 2022 The biography of Hazrat Ma sumeh tasnimnews com Retrieved 4 Oct 2018 Alex Shams 6 December 2018 On Persian pilgrimages Pakistanis and Indians reconnect with Iran Dawn News Retrieved 9 March 2019 Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran 1385 2006 Excel Statistical Center of Iran Archived from the original on 20 September 2011 The holy city of Qom is the pole of Shia world irna ir Retrieved 10 Oct 2018 Qom should be the capital of Shia world aghigh ir Retrieved 10 Oct 2018 a b Christopher de Bellaigue The Struggle for Iran New York Review of Books 2007 p 24 When does the history of the holy shrine of Lady Ma sumah start from islamquest net Retrieved 10 Oct 2018 The role of Qom and Hazrat Ma sumah s court in the appearance of Islamic republic iqna ir Retrieved 10 Oct 2018 Highest record temperature in Ghom by Month 1986 2010 Iran Meteorological Organization Retrieved 8 April 2015 Lowest record temperature in Ghom by Month 1986 2010 Iran Meteorological Organization Retrieved 8 April 2015 Average Maximum temperature in Ghom by Month 1986 2010 Iran Meteorological Organization Archived from the original on 6 September 2014 Retrieved 8 April 2015 Average Mean Daily temperature in Ghom by Month 1986 2010 Iran Meteorological Organization Retrieved 8 April 2015 Average Minimum temperature in Ghom by Month 1986 2010 Iran Meteorological Organization Archived from the original on 6 September 2014 Retrieved 8 April 2015 Monthly Total Precipitation in Ghom by Month 1986 2010 Iran Meteorological Organization Retrieved 8 April 2015 Average relative humidity in Ghom by Month 1986 2010 Iran Meteorological Organization Archived from the original on 16 September 2014 Retrieved 8 April 2015 No of days with precipitation equal to or greater than 1 mm in Ghom by Month 1986 2010 Iran Meteorological Organization Archived from the original on 22 August 2014 Retrieved 8 April 2015 No of days with snow or sleet in Ghom by Month 1986 2010 Iran Meteorological Organization Archived from the original on 26 August 2014 Retrieved 8 April 2015 Monthly total sunshine hours in Ghom by Month 1986 2010 Iran Meteorological Organization Archived from the original on 6 September 2014 Retrieved 8 April 2015 Kleiss 1973 p 181 idem 1981 pp 66 67 idem 1985 pp 173 79 Hakemi pp 16 22 26 28 35 39 Ghirshman 1962 pl 52 Hakemi pp 13 14 and pl 3 Qomi pp 65 82 84 86 Schippmann pp 416 21 for a summary see Drechsler pp 44 46 Qomi pp 22 23 32 37 61 62 69 71 74 77 82 90 137 38 Qomi pp 88 89 Qomi pp 70 71 Nehayat al erab p 179 Widengren pp 271 743 45 Ebn Aʿṯam I p 201 II pp 31 33 58 59 Nehayat al Erab pp 383 388 Frye 1956 p 320 idem 1975 p 11 Gyselen pp 28 73 74 Drechsler pp 57 60 Balaḏori pp 312 14 Drechsler pp 69 74 Qomi p 38 Ṭabari II p 992 Qomi pp 242 50 258 65 284 91 Drechsler pp 78 91 Qomi pp 48 49 242 244 250 253 57 260 262 63 Qomi pp 31 101 02 164 213 14 Ebn Babuya II p 271 Modarresi Ṭabaṭabaʾi 1976 I p 18 Drechsler pp 124 31 Qomi pp 35 102 04 156 57 163 64 Ṭabari III pp 1092 93 1102 1106 1111 Modarresi Ṭabaṭabaʾi 1983 p 166 Drechsler pp 132 39 Najasi p 12 262 Qomi pp 35 156 57 163 64 211 12 215 Ṭabari III p 1697 Modarresi Ṭabaṭabaʾi 1983 p 166 Drechsler pp 140 45 Qomi pp 26 37 38 Modarresi Ṭabaṭabaʾi 1976 II pp 115 16 Drechsler pp 146 48 Ṭabari III p 2024 tr XXXVII p 78 Qomi pp 35 157 58 163 215 Najasi pp 33 132 Ṭusi pp 20 25 247 48 Modarresi Ṭabaṭabaʾi 1993 pp 34 35 37 Drechsler pp 148 54 Qomi pp 89 90 104 06 125 128 133 34 156 163 64 Ebn al Faqih p 247 Drechsler pp 154 60 Qomi pp 17 35 36 149 53 225 229 Drechsler pp 160 64 Ṭabari III p 2284 tr XXXVIII pp 197 98 Drechsler pp 164 66 Qomi pp 99 100 105 06 142 44 164 65 217 18 Ebn al Aṯir VIII pp 102 04 162 196 290 388 89 Drechsler pp 166 81 Qomi pp 214 219 220 Modarresi Ṭabaṭabaʾi 1971 p 117 idem 1976 I p 18 Drechsler pp 181 91 Ebn Ḥawqal p 362 Drechsler p 198 n 956 Qomi pp 18 32 44 46 108 123 125 128 191 241 Ebn al Faqih p 209 Ebn Ḥawqal pp 315 342 Ṭusi pp 42 75 76 93 Najasi p 276 Biruni p 228 Ebn Saʿd VII p 382 Samʿani X p 486 Modarresi Ṭabaṭabaʾi 1971 pp 121 25 136 37 Drechsler pp 198 207 Qomi pp 23 26 27 32 35 40 42 60 167 214 216 Saʿidnia pp 151 53 155 56 158 59 Drechsler pp 194 98 Qomi pp 13 27 36 37 53 56 Drechsler pp 192 93 Yaʿqubi pp 273 74 Qomi pp 40 46 48 53 244 Lambton 1989 pp 156 59 Drechsler pp 243 52 Qomi pp 48 53 56 76 77 87 88 107 08 112 13 119 22 167 174 76 244 251 Ebn Ḥawqal p 342 Ebn al Faqih pp 50 265 Moqaddasi pp 396 470 Spuler pp 387 90 392 94 405 06 408 Drechsler pp 253 58 Qomi pp 28 29 31 34 38 39 42 56 59 101 90 242 253 262 Balaḏori p 314 Yaʿqubi p 274 Ebn al Faqih pp 264 65 Modarresi Ṭabaṭabaʾi 1983 pp 28 40 41 Lambton 1969 pp 41 45 Drechsler pp 258 73 285 306 Ebn al Aṯir IX pp 204 357 58 429 30 X pp 289 332 33 551 XI p 237 ʿAbd al Jalil Qazvini pp 167 68 Bayhaqi pp 422 33 Mostawfi pp 833 841 Bosworth 1968 pp 38 106 110 120 125 135 Drechsler pp 208 19 ʿAbd al Jalil Qazvini pp 47 51 163 64 182 191 220 21 229 30 280 430 437 494 643 Abu l Rajaʾ Qomi pp 105 06 262 Modarresi Ṭabaṭabaʾi 1971 pp 5 130 138 39 165 67 idem 1976 I p 20 II pp 109 10 217 18 Drechsler pp 220 28 Ebn al Aṯir X p 118 XII p 317 Abu l Rajaʾ Qomi p 262 Modarresi Ṭabaṭabaʾi 1971 pp 132 33 Drechsler pp 228 31 Ebn al Aṯir XII p 419 Rasid al Din Fazl Allah 1957 p 63 Jovayni pp 538 542 Ḥamd Allah Mostawfi 1919 pp 67 68 71 73 Boyle pp 311 331 337 368 69 496 541 Spuler 1955 pp 30 31 41 82 83 Modarresi Ṭabaṭabaʾi 1976 II p 35 43 67 78 Survey of Persian Art IV pp 1684 86 Drechsler pp 232 41 308 12 Iran Provinces and Cities population statistics Momen Moojan An Introduction to Shi i Islam Yale University Press 1985 p 247 Iran Reports Its First 2 Cases of the New Coronavirus New York Times 19 February 2020 Archived from the original on 19 February 2020 Retrieved 10 April 2020 Nasr Vali The Shia Revival Norton 2006 p 217 Russia regrets reported Iran nuclear activity in Qom facility Haaretz January 10 2012 Iran enriching uranium at Fordo plant near Qom BBC 10 January 2012 Retrieved 1 March 2012 Azmat Khan 13 January 2012 Did Santorum Suggest Iran Wants Nukes to Bring Back Messiah Public Broadcasting Service Akluf Benn 3 September 2009 Cries of hold me back may lead Israel to strike Iran Haaretz com Bibliography EditSee also Bibliography of the history of Qom This section needs more complete citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding missing citation information so that sources are clearly identifiable Citations should include title publication author date and for paginated material the page number s Several templates are available to assist in formatting Improperly sourced material may be challenged and removed September 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Balaḏori Drechsler Frye Ghirshman Hakemi Kleiss Modarresi Ṭabaṭabaʾi Najasi Qomi SchippmannExternal links Edit nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Qom nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Qom Irani Hamed 2 November 2005 Qom Concerned over New Intelligence Appointments ROOZ ROOZ Online Archived from the original on 25 March 2006 Retrieved 28 June 2009 Sadeq Saba Visiting Iran s ayatollahs at Qom Tuesday 17 June 2008 BBC Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Qom amp oldid 1173316297, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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