Nasihate Shirazi Advise نصيحت شیرازی
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اشتراک گزاری شما محبت شما عزیزان به
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Shiraz About this sound pronunciation (help·info) (Listeni/ʃiːrɑːz/;
Persian:
شیراز
Shīrāz, Persian pronunciation: [ʃiːˈrɒːz]), is the fifth most populous city of
Iran and the capital of
Fars Province. In 2009 the population of the city was 1,455,073. Shiraz is located in the southwest of Iran on the Roodkhaneye
Khoshk (Dry river) seasonal river. It has a moderate climate and has been a regional trade center for over a thousand years. It is regarded as one of the oldest cities of ancient
Persia.
The earliest reference to the city, as Tiraziš, is on
Elamite clay tablets dated to
2000 BC. In the 13th century, Shiraz became a leading center of the arts and letters, due to the encouragement of its ruler and the presence of many Persian scholars and artists. It was the capital of the Persia during the
Zand dynasty from 1750 until 1781, as well as briefly during the
Saffarid period. Two famous poets of Iran,
Hafez and
Saadi, are from Shiraz.
Shiraz is known as the city of poets, literature, wine and flowers. It is also considered by many
Iranians to be the city of gardens, due to the many gardens and fruit trees that can be seen in the city. Shiraz has had major
Jewish and
Christian communities. The crafts of Shiraz consist of inlaid mosaic work of triangular design; silver-ware; pile carpet-weaving and weaving of kilim, called gilim and jajim in the villages and among the tribes. In Shiraz industries such as cement production, sugar, fertilizers, textile products, wood products, metalwork and rugs dominate. Shirāz also has a major oil refinery and is also a major center for Iran's electronic industries: 53% of Iran's electronic investment has been centered in Shiraz. Shiraz is home to Iran's first solar power plant.
Recently the city's first wind turbine has been installed above Babakoohi mountain near the city.
The earliest reference to the city is on Elamite clay tablets dated to
2000 BCE, found in June
1970, while digging to make a kiln for a brick factory in the south western corner of the city. The tablets written in ancient Elamite name a city called Tiraziš. Phonetically, this is interpreted as /tiračis/ or /ćiračis/. This name became
Old Persian /širājiš/; through regular sound change comes the modern
Persian name Shirāz. The name Shiraz also appears on clay sealings found at a
2nd-century CE
Sassanid ruin, east of the city. By some of the native writers, the name Shiraz has derived from a son of Tahmuras, the third Shāh (
King) of the world according to
Ferdowsi's Shāhnāma.
Shiraz is most likely more than 4,
000 years old. The name Shiraz is mentioned in cuneiform inscriptions from around 2000 BCE found in south western corner of the Shiraz city. According to some
Iranian mythological traditions, it was originally erected by
Tahmuras Diveband, and afterward fell to ruin. The oldest sample of wine in the world, dating to approximately
7,000 years ago, was discovered on clay jars recovered outside of Shiraz (according to the referenced article, this discovery was made in
Hajji Firuz Tepe, a Neolithic village in Iran's northern
Zagros Mountains, more than a thousand kilometers north of Shiraz).
In
Achaemenian era, Shiraz was on the way from
Susa to
Persepolis and
Pasargadae. In Ferdowsi's Shāhnāma it has been said that
Artabanus V, the Parthian
Emperor of Iran, expanded his control over Shiraz.
Ghasre Abu-Nasr (meaning "the palace of AbuNasr") which is originally from Parthian era is situated in this area. During the
Sassanid era, Shiraz was in between the way which was connecting
Bishapur and Gur to
Istakhr. Shiraz was an important regional center under the
Sassanians.
The city became a provincial capital in 693, after the
Arab invaders conquered Istakhr, the nearby
Sassanian capital. As Istakhr fell into decline, Shiraz grew in importance under the
Arabs and several local dynasties. The
Buwayhid empire (945--1055) made it their capital, building mosques, palaces, a library and an extended city wall. It was also ruled by the
Seljuks and the
Khwarezmians before the
Mongol conquest.
The city was spared destruction by the invading
Mongols, when its local ruler offered tributes and submission to
Genghis Khan. Shiraz was again spared by
Tamerlane, when in 1382 the local monarch,
Shah Shoja agreed to submit to the invader. In the 13th century, Shiraz became a leading center of the arts and letters, thanks to the encouragement of its ruler and the presence of many Persian scholars and artists. For this reason the city was named by classical geographers Dar al-'Elm, the
House of Knowledge. Among the Iranian poets, mystics and philosophers born in Shiraz were the poets
Sa'di and
Hafiz, the mystic Roozbehan, and the philosopher
Mulla Sadra. Thus Shiraz has been nicknamed "The
Athens of Iran"