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IRAN
To visit
Iran is a unique experience, the experience of being in the cradle of a
civilization and culture that has had and continues to have its impact on
the world for more than 2,500 years of written history -antiquity versus
modernization. Archaeological studies during the first half of the
twentieth century indicate that as early as 10,000 BC, tribes lived on the
southern shores of the Caspian, one of the few regions of the world which
according to scientists escaped the Ice Age. They were probably the first
men in the history of mankind to engage in agriculture and animal
husbandry. It was they and others who spread out shortly afterwards along
the Zagros Mountains in central Iran and founded the first centers of
civilization in the land. Iran's former name -Persia till 1935 -
derives from the historical prominence of the province called Fars or Pars, at
a time when the Greeks -who called it Persis - attempted to conquer
the country. Practically speaking only the English talk about Persia. It
is like them to do so, for in reality "Persia" is to
"Iran" what "England" is to the "United
Kingdom". The word Iran is etymologically akin to the word Aryan
(meaning of noble origin), and throughout history it has been
intermittently applied to the people of Indo-European, that is, Aryan
origin occupying the plateau.
Persian (Farsi) using Arabic letters is the language used and
understood by the whole nation. There are a number of other dialects and
national languages -Turkish (Azarbaijani), Kurdish, Luri, Guilaki, Baluchi
and Arabic -used by the corresponding provincial population for daily life
purposes (see also Languages and Dialects). Iran is a highly diverse
country from every point of view, not least in topography and climate. It
is a large country, with an area of more than 1,648,000 sq km in southwest
Asia, roughly three times the size of France or equal to a fifth of the
United States of America, that is to say larger than the Belgium and
France, Holland and Germany, Switzerland and UK put together. At one
period or another its territory has included much of Caucasia, Iraq,
Afghanistan -which is really apart of the same culture as Iran -and
regions of Central Asia, particularly Uzbakistan and Tajikistan, which
were the sites of famous Iranian cities such as Samarqand and Bokhara.
The country has many specific features of its own in its landscapes,
inhabitants, arts and customs. But over and above this superficial image,
the enchantment of a visit to Iran is the feeling of contact with a
"different", but not incomprehensible world, with a country,
which is both accessible, unusual and diverse. Iran is not a country like
Spain or Britain that stands theatrically distinct and complete. There is
nothing insular about Iran: it has always been a bridge-country in both
geographical and cultural sense of the word, between the great
civilizations of Asia, such as India and China, and those of the Near East
and the Mediterranean. This geographical situation has made Iran the arena
for many invasions throughout history, from the east, west, and north.
Ethnic groups as well as ideas and techniques have penetrated into the
country from all directions, often to be spread abroad again to countries
both to the east and west of Iran. Thus many trends in Iranian culture
have blended into the cultural patterns of nations in both Asia and
Europe. Modern Iran has frontiers with Arabs, Afghans, Turks, Pakistanis, Azarbaijanis, Armenians and Turkamans; it has ancient connections with
Greeks, Romans, Chinese, Indians, Egyptians, Mongols, the British and the
Americans, plus newly established relations with many other independent
nations of the world. Iran was Alexander's ultimate enemy and his most
dazzling conquest. Physically, Iran is formidable.
The shape of the land is a distorted square, as if it has been melted in a
furnace, and allowed to set crooked. Down its western flank, from the
Turkish frontier to the Gulf of Oman, run the Zagros mountains, so strong
a barrier that some world strategists considered them to be a real
boundary of the western world: however, Iranian historical monuments are
scattered far away on both sides of the range. From the southern end of
the Zagros range, Zard Kuh-e Bakhtiari, 4,309 m it's highest peak, a
blistered flat coastline runs toward the Indian Ocean. Across the northern
Iran, at the southern coastline of the Caspian, which is 28 m below sea
level, runs a narrow but high mountain range, the Alborz, which receives
more than 1,200 mm of annual rainfall, and looms away eastward to the
Afghan frontier, with snow-capped peaks all the year round. The highest of
some of the peaks in the range are as follows: Damavand, northeast of
Tehran, 5,671 m (see also Sports and Games); Sabalan, west of Ardabil,
4,860 m (see also Ardabil); and Takht-e Soleiman, northwest of Tehran,
south of Tonekabon, 4,820 m. Natural pasture and forestlands exist over
wide areas of this region. In provinces on the north of the Alborz most of
the fertile land is used for cornfields, tea-plantations, and paddy
fields. The timber resources of Mazandaran and Guilan provinces in the
region are used through the wood processing and paper manufacturing
factories of Asalem and Neka.
The Caspian shores with their sandy beaches and scenic views are among the
most popular regions for relaxation and tourism in Iran. Due to the
presence of great quantities of limestone and other porous stones, many
caves have been formed in Iran that could be visited and investigated by
the average tourists or speleologists as places of interest and study. The
most famous of these caves is found in Azarbaiian, in Kurdestan,
near Hamadan, Esfahan Province and in the Tehran area. The climatic
diversity in Iran is such that some tourists can enjoy winter sports in
the mountains while others can bathe in the warm waters of the southern
shores, both within a few hours drive from the main cities. In the
heartland of Iran and within these natural barricades lies the high
central Iranian Plateau, much of it salt desert and most of it more than
1,200 m high, including both the Dasht-e Kavir and Dasht-e Lut with
an area of over 200,000 and 166,000 sq km, respectively. Both deserts,
despite their vastness, are still considered to be the unknown and
unexplored regions of Iran. Dasht-e
Kavir and Dasht-e Lut were traversed in the past by great trade
caravans along the Silk Road carrying goods from the east to the west and
vice versa.
Fertile areas abound where water resources are adequate, such as the
Esfahan basin, northern Khorasan, Fars, and the Qazvin and Varamin plains.
The climate of Iran is one of extremes, very hot and dry in summer and
cold with some snow in winter. The lands of the Iranian Fertile Crescent
in the northwest and west, including Lurestan, Kurdestan, and Azarbaijan,
receive good and relatively reliable rainfall and, despite marked seasonal
extremes of temperature, support large herds and prosperous dry farming.
The contrast in climatic conditions between the different regions has
contributed to the scenic magnificence of the landscape as well. The long
southern area of the country stretches from the plains of Khuzestan, along
the narrow plains and hills adjacent to the Persian Gulf and into the
Mokran Mountains of Baluchestan. This suffers from a hot and debilitating
clime scanty rainfall. The plains of Khuzestan have extensive areas of
good soil, which are cultivated whenever river water is made available for
irrigation from many watercourses that feed down from the Zagros Mountains
to the north.
A practically effective method of combating the dominant dry climatic
conditions in the Iranian Plateau for the past 2,500 years, has been the
excavation of qanats (underground watercourses) to transmit
underground water. The method, which has endured till the modern age,
found its way from Iran to other parts of the Middle East, North Africa,
and even Spain. Total length of Iranian qanats amounts to nearly
40,000 km.lran is also the land of the oldest dams in the world, most of
which are in good condition even today (see also Dam Construction in
Iran). However, Iran has a good climate compared to other Middle Eastern
countries. More than one third of the land surface receives rainfall of
more than 250 mm on average each year, while the heavy winter snowfalls on
the mountain hills which surround the central plateau provide a reservoir of
water for irrigating spring crops. Ferdowsi, the famous Iranian epic poet,
described the southern Caspian shores as an average region where spring
prevails throughout the year. Soil is deep and fertile over extensive
areas although subject to chronic erosion in some areas. The Caspian coast
lands, the central plains and the valleys of the interior are all endowed
with comparatively fragile but cultivable soil. Land and water resources
are not used to the full. Only a fraction of total available land is used
for agriculture, leaving scope for large-scale reclamation at the
extensive margin and intensification of agricultural output on existing
agricultural land through more widespread and effective use of water
resources.
Statistically, about 20.7% of the total area of Iran is desert and
uncultivable land, 54.9% natural range land, 7.6% forest land, and only1he
remaining 16.8% is potentially arable land, of which 11.6 million hectares
go annually under cultivation and the rest lie fallow. Despite the fact
that Iran is generally dry and mountainous, the tourist should know that
the land is however, rich in terms of inland lakes and wetlands (which
amount to 33 in number), some of the most important of which are: Lake
Orumieh (West Azarbaijan), 483,000 hectares; Lake Parishan (Pars), 4,200
hectares; Lakes Maharlu and Barimshur (Fars), 21,600 hectares; Neiriz
Lakes (Fars), 98,000 hectares; and Hamoun-e Hirmand (or Jazmurian)
around Kuh-e Khajeh (Sistan), 40,000 hectares. Wetlands must not only be
prized as the home of a multitude of valuable waterflow, but also for their
intrinsically high natural productivity, their scenic beauty and the sport
and recreation which they provide. The distance between Mount Ararat on
the Turkish-Armenian-Iranian frontier and the southeastern extremity of
the country near the port of Chah Bahar on the Sea of Oman is longer than
that between Paris and Athens. If Iran were to be superimposed upon a map
of Western Europe, the holy city of Mashhad would be over Budapest, Abadan within Sardinia, Tehran would take the place of Venice, and Shiraz
that of Naples! The vastness of the country is reflected in the different
climates from north to south, from east to west.
This contrast among the regions is increased by the contrast brought with
each season: a scorching summer and piercing winter can invade the same
place. In the five main tourist centers- Esfahan, Mashhad, Shiraz, Tabriz, and Tehran -winter is somewhat similar, except for Shiraz, which
enjoys a milder temperature. The visitor may not be accustomed to this
scale of distance. This is of great importance, because upon it depends
the planning of his trip and part of his enjoyment. Laps are always long.
Excursions around a central point rarely take less than one full day. Persepolis, for example, considered as being "near" Shiraz is 60
km away, and Pasargadae 130 km! Notwithstanding such natural barriers,
however, there have always existed close economic and social ties between
the people of the coastal and internal areas.
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