پنجشنبه چهارم خرداد 1385
Tehran
Map of Iran and surrounding lands, showing location of Tehran
Tehran is Iran's commercial, economic, and political capital.
Tehran (also transcribed Teheran) (تهران in Persian), population 9,000,000 (metropolitan: 14,000,000), and a land area of 254 square miles, the capital of Iran (Persia) and the center of Tehran Province. Tehran is located at 35°40′N 51°25′E. [1]
More than half of the country's industry is based there. Industries include the manufacturing of cars, electronics and electrical equipment, weaponry, textiles, sugar, cement, and chemical products. It is also a leading center for the sale of carpets and furniture. There is an oil refinery nearby.
Tehran is a sprawling city at the foot of the Alborz mountain range with an immense network of highways unparalleled in western Asia. It is also the hub of the country's railway network. The city has numerous large museums, art centers, palace complexes and cultural centers. Besides Persians there are Azeri, Armenian, Kurdish and Jewish communities in Tehran. 98.3 percent of Tehran's residents speak Persian [2]. The city is dotted with mosques. There are some churches and synagogues.
The word Tehran in Persian means "warm mountain slope" (دامنه گرم).
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[edit]
History
Excavations place the existence of settlements in Tehran as far back as 6000 BC. Tehran was well known as a village in the 9th century, but was less well-known than the city of Rages which was flourishing nearby in the pre-Mongol era. In the 13th century, following the destruction of Rages by Mongols, many of its inhabitants fled to Tehran. In some sources of the Mongol era the city is mentioned as "Rages's Tehran" (طهرانِ ری). The city is later mentioned in Hamdollah Mostowfi's Nezhat ol-Gholoob (written in 1340) as a famous village.
Toopkhaneh Square, Tehran, the early to mid-1900s.
No one knows for sure how the city got its name, but one accepted explanation is that Tehran means "a warm place", as opposed to "a cool place", called Shemiran - a cooler district in northern Tehran. Don Ruy Gonzáles de Clavijo, a Castilian ambassador, was probably the first European to visit Tehran, stopping in July 1404, while on a journey to Samarkand (now in Uzbekistan) and the Mongol capital at the time. At this time, the city of Tehran was unwalled.
Tehran became a residence of the Safavid rulers in the 17th century. Tahmasp I built a bazaar and a wall around the city, but it somewhat fell out of favour after Abbas I turned sick when he was passing the city to go to a war with the Uzbeks.
In the early 18th century, Karim Khan Zand ordered a palace, a harem, and a government office to be built in Tehran, possibly to declare the city his capital, but later moved his government to Shiraz. Tehran finally became the capital of Persia in 1795, when the Qajar king Agha Mohammad Khan was crowned in the city. It remains the capital to this day.
During World War II, British and Soviet troops entered the city. Tehran was the site of the Teheran Conference in 1943, attended by US President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin.
On September 8, 1978, demonstrations against the Shah led to riots. The army reportedly opened fire on the demonstrating mob. Martial law was installed in the wake of the ensuing revolution, from 1978-80.
During the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War, Tehran was the scene of repeated Scud missile attacks and air strikes against random residential and industrial targets within the city, resulting in thousands of civilian casualties.
[edit]
About Tehran
The Azadi Tower is the first thing visitors come across when coming from the Mehr-abad International Airport. The tower has become an icon of sorts for Tehran and Iran.
Tehran suffers from extremely serious traffic congestion and pollution problems. Respiratory ailments such as asthma are now very common. Tehran has become so congested in the past 10 years, that the government has considered moving the nation's capital to another city to alleviate these problems and help de-centralize the economy and population. This is especially true in light of predictions of an imminent major earthquake in Tehran, situated on top of three major faultlines. But because Iran's economy and politics is so centralized, millions have little choice but to live and work in Tehran despite these problems.
Borj-e Sefid (The White Tower) in Pasdaran Ave. district.
Milad Tower, Gisha district.
Keshavarz Blvd (formerly Elizabeth Blvd), Laleh Park district.
Argentina district.
The Peacock Throne of the Persian Shahs can be found in Tehran's Golestan Palace. Some of the important museums are National Museum of Iran, Sa'dabad Palaces Complex, Glassware and Ceramics Museum of Iran, The Carpet Museum of Iran, Tehran's Underglass painting Museum, and Niavaran Palace Complex. The Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art is also appealing to many because it features the works of great artists such as Van Gogh, Pablo Picasso and Andy Warhol.
The huge Tehran International Fair organises many expositions. Its book expositions are especially popular. Tehran is also the seat of Iran's Parliament (the Majles). And Tehran is also home to the world's fourth tallest free standing structure, the Milad Tower.
The Tehran Stock Exchange which is a full member of the FIBV and a founding member of the Federation of Euro-Asian Stock Exchanges, was one of the world's best performing stock exchanges in recent years.[3]. But since the election win of hardliner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, it has seen a sharp fall and is now seen as one of the least profitable exchanges in the world.
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Neighborhoods and Districts of Tehran
The city of Tehran is divided into 22 municipal districts, each with its own administrative centers. Within these 22 districts, Tehran contains the following major neighborhoods :
Abbas Abad, Afsariyeh, Amir Abad, Bagh Feiz, Baharestan, Darakeh, Darband, Dardasht, Dar Abad, Dehkadeh Olampik, Ekhtiyariyeh, Elahiyeh, Evin, Gholhak, Gisha, Gomrok, Hasan Abad, Jamaran, Jannat Abad, Javadiyeh, Jomhuri, Jordanne, Narmak, Navvab, Nazi Abad, Niavaran, Park Shahr, Pasdaran, Punak, Ray, Sa'adat Abad, Sadeghiyeh, Shahrara, Shahreziba, Shahrak-e Gharb, Shemiran, Tehranpars, Vanak, Yaft Abad, Yusef Abad, etc.
For full list, see List of the localities around Tehran.
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The older neighborhoods of Tehran
Tehran's old city fabric changed dramatically during the first Pahlavi era. Some of the older remaining districts of Tehran are: Udlajan, Sangelaj, Bazaar, Chaleh Meydan, Dowlat. Chaleh Meydan is the oldest neighborhood of the aforementioned.
[edit]
Transportation
Tehran has five Metro lines.
In 2001 a metro system that had been in planning since the 1970s opened the first two of seven envisaged lines -- even though the city is prone to earthquakes. Work has been slow and coverage remains very limited. Development of the Tehran metro system had been interrupted by the Islamic Revolution and the Iran-Iraq War. Problems arising from the late completion of the metro led to buses taking on the role of the metro lines, serving mainly long distance routes. Taxis filled the void for localised routes, not carrying passengers to their final destinations but operating along main routes and arteries. This has all led to extreme congestion and air pollution within the city.
Tehran is served by Mehrabad International Airport, the old airport which doubles as a military base located in the western part of the city, and Imam Khomeini International Airport, 50 kilometers south, which handles flights from the Persian Gulf but which will eventually handle all international flights. The new airport is overdue and over budget, and Britain and Australia have warned their nationals not to use it because of safety concerns.
Tehran also has a central train station with connecting services round the clock to various cities in the country. There are four bus terminals that also provide connections at low fares. These are the South, East, West, and Bei-haghi Park-Drive Terminals.
While the center of the city contains the government ministries and headquarters, the commercial centers are more located toward Taleghani Ave. and Beheshti Ave. further north. Although administratively separate, Rey, Shemiran, and Karaj are often considered part of the larger Tehran metropolitan area.
See also: List of Tehran metro stations
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Colleges and universities
Tehran University, with 32,000 students, is Iran's largest university.
Ever since the establishment of Darolfonoon, Tehran has amassed an abundance of institutions of higher education. Some of these institutions have played crucial roles in the unfolding of Iranian political events. There are 45 major colleges and universities in total today in Tehran, listed below:
• K.N.Toosi University of Technology
• Allameh Tabatabaii University
• Amirkabir University of Technology (Tehran Polytechnic) (website)
• Alzahra University (website)
• Baghiatollah University
• Imam Hossein University
• Imam Sadegh University
• Institute for Studies in Theoretical Physics and Mathematics (IPM) (website)
• Iran University of Medical Sciences
• Iran University of Science and Technology (IUST)(website)
• Islamic Azad University of Karaj
• Islamic Azad University of Roodehen
• Islamic Azad University of Tehran-Medical Sciences
• Islamic Azad University of Tehran-North
• Islamic Azad University of Tehran-South
• Islamic Azad University of Tehran-Central
• Islamic Azad University of Tehran-Region one
• Shahed University
• Shahid Beheshti University (website)
• Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences (website)
• Sharif University of Technology (webiste)
• Tarbiat Modares University(website)
• Tehran University of Medical Sciences
• Tehran University of Tarbiat Moallem
• University of The Arts
• University of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Sciences
• University of Tehran (website)
• University of Emam Reza
• Hadith College of Tehran
• Imam Ali University for Army Officers
• Comprehensive University of Technology
• Tehran University of Applied Science and Technology
• Tehran College of Environment
• Bagher Aloloum University
• International University of Iran
• Iran College of Tele-communications
• Medical University for the Islamic Republic of Iran's Army
• NAJA University of Police
• School of Economic Affairs (SEA)
• School of International Relations (SIR)
• Shahed University of Medical Sciences
• Shahid Sattari University of Aeronautical Engineering
• University of Islamic Sects
• The Research Institute of The Petroleum Industry
• Iran Polymer and Petrochemical Institute
Tehran also contains Iran's largest military academy, and several religious schools and seminaries.
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Sports
Tehran was the first city in the Middle East to host the Asian Games. The 7th Asian Summer Games in 1974, was held with the participation of 2363 athletes and officials from 25 countries.
Tehran is also the site of Iran's national football stadium on Azadi Sport Complex with 100000 seating capacity. Many of the top matches of Iran's Premier League are held here. In 2005, FIFA ordered Iran limit spectators allowed into Azadi stadium because of a fatal crush and inadequate safety procedures.
The Swiss (Poma) built gondolas that carry tourists and skiers to Tochal mountain.
Within 10 minutes of driving distance from Tehran lies a ski resort. Tochal is the world's fifth highest ski resort at over 3730m at its highest 7th station. The resort was completed in 1976 shortly before the overthrow of the Shah.
Here, one must first ride the eight km (five mile) long gondola lift which covers a huge vertical. The 7th station has three slopes. The resort's longest slope is the south side U shaped slope which goes from the 7th station to 5th station. The other two slopes are located on the north side of the 7th station. Here, there are two parallel chair ski lifts that go up to 3900m near Tochal's peak (at 4000m), rising higher than the gondola 7th station station. This altitude is higher than any of the European resorts.
From the Tochal peak, one has a spectacular view of the Alborz range, including the 5671 metre (18606 ft) high Mt. Damavand, a dormant volcano.
At the bottom of the lifts in a valley behind the Tochal peak is Tochal hotel, located at 3500m altitude. From there a T lift takes skiers up the 3800 metres of Shahneshin peak, where the third slope of Tochal is.
Tochal 7th station has skiing eight months of the year. But there are also some glaciers and year-round snow fields near Tehran where skiing began in 1938, thanks to the efforts of two German railway engineers. Today, 12 ski resorts operate in Iran, but the most famous are Tochal, Dizin, and Shemshak, all within one to three hours of Tehran.
See also: Sports in Iran
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Football
In football (soccer), Tehran is host to six football clubs in Iran's Premier Football League, namely:
• Esteghlal
• Saba Battery
• Saipa
• Rah Ahan
• Pas Tehran
• Pirouzi/Persepolis
These clubs have on numerous occasions won Asian titles, and some of their players are known internationally.
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Outdoor
The towering Alborz mountains rising above modern Elahiyeh district and its green neighborhoods.
• Tochal Ski resort
• Darband hiking trail
• Chitgar Park
• Mellat Park
• Laleh Park
• Jamshidieh Park
• Niavaran Park
• Sa'ei Park
• Shahr-e Bazi amusement park.
• Shatranj Park
• Darabad hiking trail
• Darakeh hiking trail
• Jahan-e Kudak Park
• Azadi Sports complex
• Enghelab Sports Complex and Golf course
• Several caves, springs, and waterfalls outisde Tehran.
• Latyan Lake
• Lavizan Forest Park
• Vardavard Forest Park
• Khajeer National Park
• Kavir National Park
• Tar Lake
• Amir Kabir Lake
• Lar Protected Natural Habitat
• Varjeen Protected Natural Habitat
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Culture
Tehran, as Iran's showcase and historical capital city, has a wealth of cultural attractions, some of which are listed below.
Azadi Sport Complex
Bagh-e Melli (National Garden)
A bowl from the 4th Millennium BCE in the National Museum of Iran.
Iran's National Rug Gallery
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Palaces
Columns on the side of the Green Palace located inside the Sa'd Abad palace Complex.
• Golestan Palace and Takht-e Marmar. (website)
• Niavaran Palace Complex (website)
• Sadabad Palace (website)
• Saltanat Abad Palace
• Firouzeh Palace, (which belongs to Tehran's Zoroastrian community)
• Soleymaniyeh Palace
• Baharestan Palace, (where Iran's first parliament was located at)
• Morvarid Palace, Karaj, designed by The Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation. [4]
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Museums
• Sa'd Abad Gallery of Fine Arts
• Glassware Museum of Tehran
• Iran's National Rug Gallery (website)
• Reza Abbasi Museum
• Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art (website)
• Tehran Theater of the Performing Arts (Te'atr e Shahr)
• Talar Vahdat Theater
• National Museum of Iran, (website)
• Dar-abad Nature & Wildlife Museum
• National Library of Iran
• Malek National Library
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Religious centers
• Soltani Mosque, built by Fath Ali Shah
• Atiq Mosque, built in 1663.
• Mo'ezz o-dowleh mosque, built by Fath Ali Shah
• Haj Seyd Azizollah mosque, built by Fath Ali Shah
• Al-javad mosque, Iran's first modernist design mosque.
• The Old Sepahsalar mosque, another prominent Qajar era mosque.
• The new Sepahsalar mosque (Madreseh e Motahari)
• Filsuf o-dowleh Mosque, Qajar era
• Moshir ol-Saltaneh Mosque, Qajar era
• Mo'ayyer ol-Mamalik Mosque, Qajar era
• Shahr Banu Mausopleum
• Javan-mard Qassab Mausoleum, a pre-Islamic semi-mythical hero
• Dozens of Imam-zadeh shrines, hundreds of years old, including that of Imam Zadeh Saleh.
• Dozens of Saqa Khanehs: traditional places of prayer
• Several Tekyehs: traditional places for mourning Muharram ceremonies for Husayn ibn Ali.
• Ibn Babviyeh cemetery, where many Iranian giants such as Takhti and Ali Akbar Dehkhoda are buried.
• Zahir o-dowleh cemetery, where many Iranian giants of art and culture such as Iraj Mirza, Mohammad Taghi Bahar, Forough Farrokhzad, Abolhasan Saba, Ruhollah Khaleghi, and Darvish-khan are buried.
• Kordan Tomb, Seljuqi era, Karaj.
• Maydanak Tomb, 13th century, Karaj
• The Polish cemetery 1-north of Tehran in British Gholhak garden, where numerous World War II western allied soldiers are buried. 2- polish cemetery (catholic cemetery)Dulab south of Tehran
• orthodox Cemetery.Dulab/The Russian unknown soldier's Tomb(Cenotaph) is located there with red star over it
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Churches
• Surep Georg Church, 1790
• Thaddeus Bartoqimus Church, 1808
• Tatavus Church, from the Qajar era
• Enjili Church, 1867
• Assyrian Church
Khalvat-e Karimkhani, Golestan Palace.
Tehran's WW2 Cemetery of Allied Forces
Toghrol Tower, 13th century.
National Library of Iran, Niavaran branch.
[edit]
Castles and Forts
• Arzhang Fort, Taleqan, 1149CE
• Iraj Fort, Varamin
• Gol e Khandan Fort, Rudehen, Sassanid era
• Rashkan Fort, Ray, Parthian era
• Tabbarok Fort, Abbasid era
• Sorkheh-Hesar Fort, Seljuqi era.
• Kei-Ghobad Fort, Taleqan, Ismaili era
• Gabri Fort, Parthian era, Ray.
• Several other forts and castle ruins, such as Ghal'eh Dokhtar Tang Goseel, near Karaj. Like all the other forts of this area, these have been ruined by earthquakes. Seljuqi era.
• Harun Prison. Sassanid era. South of Tehran.
• Bagh e Melli foreign ministry compound.
[edit]
Traditional Houses
Dozens of houses of antiquity with splendid traditional architectural design remain standing in Tehran today. Most are from the Qajar era. Some of these are:
• Etehadiyeh House, Qajar era
• Amir Bahador House, Qajar era
• Emam Jomeh House, 1863CE
• Amin ol-Soltan House, Qajar era
• Shaghaghi (Kushak) House, Qajar era
• Emarat e Bagh e Ferdows, Qajar era
• Emarat Farmaniyeh, Qajar era
• Shahid Modarres House, Uladjan district.
• Vothuq House, 1837CE
• Moshir o-Dowleh Pir Nia House
However, there exist plenty of houses of historical heritage also open to the public, such as: House of Nima Yooshij, House of Mohammed Mossadegh, House of Ayatollah Taleghani, House of Ghavam o-Dowleh, House of Imam Khomeini, and House of Mahmoud Hessaby.
[edit]
Archeological sites
An abundance of ancient archeological historicl sites exists in and around Tehran. Some of the more prominent ones are:
• Cheshme Ali Teppe, 5th millennium BCE. Excavated by Jacques de Morgan.
• Shoghali Teppe, 6th millennium BCE.
• Qeytariyeh ancient Cemetery, 2nd millennium BCE.
• Teppe Meel, excavated by Jacques de Morgan, believed to be the temple of the legendary ancient leader Bahram Gur.
• Vavan Teppe, Sassanid era
• Ghareh Teppe, 6th millennium CE, excavated by the British Burton Brown.
• Ozbaki Teppe, Hashtgerd.
[edit]
Others
Tehran has a wealth of restaurants and popular burger joints, both western, and traditional.
• Iran National Library
• Borj-e Milad
• Darolfonoon institute of higher education
• Morvarid Canon, Afsharid dynasty era
• Tughrul Tower, Seljuqi era
• Tehran's Grand Bazaar, 1523CE.
• Several bridges of antiquity. Example: Pol e Rumi, located in Northern Tehran, from the Safavid era, today a property of the Embassy of Turkey.
• Alborz High School
• Firouz Bahram High School
• Stodan Of Zoroastrian. Located in Aminabad area.
[edit]
The Mayor of Tehran
See main article: Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf
See also: List of mayors of Tehran
[edit]
Sister cities
Tehran's annual International Trade Fair.
• Los Angeles, USA (linked before 1979)
• Havana, Cuba [5]
• Beijing, China (planned) [6]
[edit]
2005 plane crash
Main article: Iranian Air Force C-130 crash in Tehran
On December 6th 2005 a military plane crashed into a ten story building killing 128 people and injuring 90. Many others are left homeless.
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Map of Iran and surrounding lands, showing location of Tehran
Tehran is Iran's commercial, economic, and political capital.
Tehran (also transcribed Teheran) (تهران in Persian), population 9,000,000 (metropolitan: 14,000,000), and a land area of 254 square miles, the capital of Iran (Persia) and the center of Tehran Province. Tehran is located at 35°40′N 51°25′E. [1]
More than half of the country's industry is based there. Industries include the manufacturing of cars, electronics and electrical equipment, weaponry, textiles, sugar, cement, and chemical products. It is also a leading center for the sale of carpets and furniture. There is an oil refinery nearby.
Tehran is a sprawling city at the foot of the Alborz mountain range with an immense network of highways unparalleled in western Asia. It is also the hub of the country's railway network. The city has numerous large museums, art centers, palace complexes and cultural centers. Besides Persians there are Azeri, Armenian, Kurdish and Jewish communities in Tehran. 98.3 percent of Tehran's residents speak Persian [2]. The city is dotted with mosques. There are some churches and synagogues.
The word Tehran in Persian means "warm mountain slope" (دامنه گرم).
•
[edit]
History
Excavations place the existence of settlements in Tehran as far back as 6000 BC. Tehran was well known as a village in the 9th century, but was less well-known than the city of Rages which was flourishing nearby in the pre-Mongol era. In the 13th century, following the destruction of Rages by Mongols, many of its inhabitants fled to Tehran. In some sources of the Mongol era the city is mentioned as "Rages's Tehran" (طهرانِ ری). The city is later mentioned in Hamdollah Mostowfi's Nezhat ol-Gholoob (written in 1340) as a famous village.
Toopkhaneh Square, Tehran, the early to mid-1900s.
No one knows for sure how the city got its name, but one accepted explanation is that Tehran means "a warm place", as opposed to "a cool place", called Shemiran - a cooler district in northern Tehran. Don Ruy Gonzáles de Clavijo, a Castilian ambassador, was probably the first European to visit Tehran, stopping in July 1404, while on a journey to Samarkand (now in Uzbekistan) and the Mongol capital at the time. At this time, the city of Tehran was unwalled.
Tehran became a residence of the Safavid rulers in the 17th century. Tahmasp I built a bazaar and a wall around the city, but it somewhat fell out of favour after Abbas I turned sick when he was passing the city to go to a war with the Uzbeks.
In the early 18th century, Karim Khan Zand ordered a palace, a harem, and a government office to be built in Tehran, possibly to declare the city his capital, but later moved his government to Shiraz. Tehran finally became the capital of Persia in 1795, when the Qajar king Agha Mohammad Khan was crowned in the city. It remains the capital to this day.
During World War II, British and Soviet troops entered the city. Tehran was the site of the Teheran Conference in 1943, attended by US President Franklin D. Roosevelt, British Prime Minister Winston Churchill, and Soviet Premier Joseph Stalin.
On September 8, 1978, demonstrations against the Shah led to riots. The army reportedly opened fire on the demonstrating mob. Martial law was installed in the wake of the ensuing revolution, from 1978-80.
During the 1980-88 Iran-Iraq War, Tehran was the scene of repeated Scud missile attacks and air strikes against random residential and industrial targets within the city, resulting in thousands of civilian casualties.
[edit]
About Tehran
The Azadi Tower is the first thing visitors come across when coming from the Mehr-abad International Airport. The tower has become an icon of sorts for Tehran and Iran.
Tehran suffers from extremely serious traffic congestion and pollution problems. Respiratory ailments such as asthma are now very common. Tehran has become so congested in the past 10 years, that the government has considered moving the nation's capital to another city to alleviate these problems and help de-centralize the economy and population. This is especially true in light of predictions of an imminent major earthquake in Tehran, situated on top of three major faultlines. But because Iran's economy and politics is so centralized, millions have little choice but to live and work in Tehran despite these problems.
Borj-e Sefid (The White Tower) in Pasdaran Ave. district.
Milad Tower, Gisha district.
Keshavarz Blvd (formerly Elizabeth Blvd), Laleh Park district.
Argentina district.
The Peacock Throne of the Persian Shahs can be found in Tehran's Golestan Palace. Some of the important museums are National Museum of Iran, Sa'dabad Palaces Complex, Glassware and Ceramics Museum of Iran, The Carpet Museum of Iran, Tehran's Underglass painting Museum, and Niavaran Palace Complex. The Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art is also appealing to many because it features the works of great artists such as Van Gogh, Pablo Picasso and Andy Warhol.
The huge Tehran International Fair organises many expositions. Its book expositions are especially popular. Tehran is also the seat of Iran's Parliament (the Majles). And Tehran is also home to the world's fourth tallest free standing structure, the Milad Tower.
The Tehran Stock Exchange which is a full member of the FIBV and a founding member of the Federation of Euro-Asian Stock Exchanges, was one of the world's best performing stock exchanges in recent years.[3]. But since the election win of hardliner Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, it has seen a sharp fall and is now seen as one of the least profitable exchanges in the world.
[edit]
Neighborhoods and Districts of Tehran
The city of Tehran is divided into 22 municipal districts, each with its own administrative centers. Within these 22 districts, Tehran contains the following major neighborhoods :
Abbas Abad, Afsariyeh, Amir Abad, Bagh Feiz, Baharestan, Darakeh, Darband, Dardasht, Dar Abad, Dehkadeh Olampik, Ekhtiyariyeh, Elahiyeh, Evin, Gholhak, Gisha, Gomrok, Hasan Abad, Jamaran, Jannat Abad, Javadiyeh, Jomhuri, Jordanne, Narmak, Navvab, Nazi Abad, Niavaran, Park Shahr, Pasdaran, Punak, Ray, Sa'adat Abad, Sadeghiyeh, Shahrara, Shahreziba, Shahrak-e Gharb, Shemiran, Tehranpars, Vanak, Yaft Abad, Yusef Abad, etc.
For full list, see List of the localities around Tehran.
[edit]
The older neighborhoods of Tehran
Tehran's old city fabric changed dramatically during the first Pahlavi era. Some of the older remaining districts of Tehran are: Udlajan, Sangelaj, Bazaar, Chaleh Meydan, Dowlat. Chaleh Meydan is the oldest neighborhood of the aforementioned.
[edit]
Transportation
Tehran has five Metro lines.
In 2001 a metro system that had been in planning since the 1970s opened the first two of seven envisaged lines -- even though the city is prone to earthquakes. Work has been slow and coverage remains very limited. Development of the Tehran metro system had been interrupted by the Islamic Revolution and the Iran-Iraq War. Problems arising from the late completion of the metro led to buses taking on the role of the metro lines, serving mainly long distance routes. Taxis filled the void for localised routes, not carrying passengers to their final destinations but operating along main routes and arteries. This has all led to extreme congestion and air pollution within the city.
Tehran is served by Mehrabad International Airport, the old airport which doubles as a military base located in the western part of the city, and Imam Khomeini International Airport, 50 kilometers south, which handles flights from the Persian Gulf but which will eventually handle all international flights. The new airport is overdue and over budget, and Britain and Australia have warned their nationals not to use it because of safety concerns.
Tehran also has a central train station with connecting services round the clock to various cities in the country. There are four bus terminals that also provide connections at low fares. These are the South, East, West, and Bei-haghi Park-Drive Terminals.
While the center of the city contains the government ministries and headquarters, the commercial centers are more located toward Taleghani Ave. and Beheshti Ave. further north. Although administratively separate, Rey, Shemiran, and Karaj are often considered part of the larger Tehran metropolitan area.
See also: List of Tehran metro stations
[edit]
Colleges and universities
Tehran University, with 32,000 students, is Iran's largest university.
Ever since the establishment of Darolfonoon, Tehran has amassed an abundance of institutions of higher education. Some of these institutions have played crucial roles in the unfolding of Iranian political events. There are 45 major colleges and universities in total today in Tehran, listed below:
• K.N.Toosi University of Technology
• Allameh Tabatabaii University
• Amirkabir University of Technology (Tehran Polytechnic) (website)
• Alzahra University (website)
• Baghiatollah University
• Imam Hossein University
• Imam Sadegh University
• Institute for Studies in Theoretical Physics and Mathematics (IPM) (website)
• Iran University of Medical Sciences
• Iran University of Science and Technology (IUST)(website)
• Islamic Azad University of Karaj
• Islamic Azad University of Roodehen
• Islamic Azad University of Tehran-Medical Sciences
• Islamic Azad University of Tehran-North
• Islamic Azad University of Tehran-South
• Islamic Azad University of Tehran-Central
• Islamic Azad University of Tehran-Region one
• Shahed University
• Shahid Beheshti University (website)
• Shahid Beheshti University of Medical Sciences (website)
• Sharif University of Technology (webiste)
• Tarbiat Modares University(website)
• Tehran University of Medical Sciences
• Tehran University of Tarbiat Moallem
• University of The Arts
• University of Social Welfare and Rehabilitation Sciences
• University of Tehran (website)
• University of Emam Reza
• Hadith College of Tehran
• Imam Ali University for Army Officers
• Comprehensive University of Technology
• Tehran University of Applied Science and Technology
• Tehran College of Environment
• Bagher Aloloum University
• International University of Iran
• Iran College of Tele-communications
• Medical University for the Islamic Republic of Iran's Army
• NAJA University of Police
• School of Economic Affairs (SEA)
• School of International Relations (SIR)
• Shahed University of Medical Sciences
• Shahid Sattari University of Aeronautical Engineering
• University of Islamic Sects
• The Research Institute of The Petroleum Industry
• Iran Polymer and Petrochemical Institute
Tehran also contains Iran's largest military academy, and several religious schools and seminaries.
[edit]
Sports
Tehran was the first city in the Middle East to host the Asian Games. The 7th Asian Summer Games in 1974, was held with the participation of 2363 athletes and officials from 25 countries.
Tehran is also the site of Iran's national football stadium on Azadi Sport Complex with 100000 seating capacity. Many of the top matches of Iran's Premier League are held here. In 2005, FIFA ordered Iran limit spectators allowed into Azadi stadium because of a fatal crush and inadequate safety procedures.
The Swiss (Poma) built gondolas that carry tourists and skiers to Tochal mountain.
Within 10 minutes of driving distance from Tehran lies a ski resort. Tochal is the world's fifth highest ski resort at over 3730m at its highest 7th station. The resort was completed in 1976 shortly before the overthrow of the Shah.
Here, one must first ride the eight km (five mile) long gondola lift which covers a huge vertical. The 7th station has three slopes. The resort's longest slope is the south side U shaped slope which goes from the 7th station to 5th station. The other two slopes are located on the north side of the 7th station. Here, there are two parallel chair ski lifts that go up to 3900m near Tochal's peak (at 4000m), rising higher than the gondola 7th station station. This altitude is higher than any of the European resorts.
From the Tochal peak, one has a spectacular view of the Alborz range, including the 5671 metre (18606 ft) high Mt. Damavand, a dormant volcano.
At the bottom of the lifts in a valley behind the Tochal peak is Tochal hotel, located at 3500m altitude. From there a T lift takes skiers up the 3800 metres of Shahneshin peak, where the third slope of Tochal is.
Tochal 7th station has skiing eight months of the year. But there are also some glaciers and year-round snow fields near Tehran where skiing began in 1938, thanks to the efforts of two German railway engineers. Today, 12 ski resorts operate in Iran, but the most famous are Tochal, Dizin, and Shemshak, all within one to three hours of Tehran.
See also: Sports in Iran
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Football
In football (soccer), Tehran is host to six football clubs in Iran's Premier Football League, namely:
• Esteghlal
• Saba Battery
• Saipa
• Rah Ahan
• Pas Tehran
• Pirouzi/Persepolis
These clubs have on numerous occasions won Asian titles, and some of their players are known internationally.
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Outdoor
The towering Alborz mountains rising above modern Elahiyeh district and its green neighborhoods.
• Tochal Ski resort
• Darband hiking trail
• Chitgar Park
• Mellat Park
• Laleh Park
• Jamshidieh Park
• Niavaran Park
• Sa'ei Park
• Shahr-e Bazi amusement park.
• Shatranj Park
• Darabad hiking trail
• Darakeh hiking trail
• Jahan-e Kudak Park
• Azadi Sports complex
• Enghelab Sports Complex and Golf course
• Several caves, springs, and waterfalls outisde Tehran.
• Latyan Lake
• Lavizan Forest Park
• Vardavard Forest Park
• Khajeer National Park
• Kavir National Park
• Tar Lake
• Amir Kabir Lake
• Lar Protected Natural Habitat
• Varjeen Protected Natural Habitat
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Culture
Tehran, as Iran's showcase and historical capital city, has a wealth of cultural attractions, some of which are listed below.
Azadi Sport Complex
Bagh-e Melli (National Garden)
A bowl from the 4th Millennium BCE in the National Museum of Iran.
Iran's National Rug Gallery
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Palaces
Columns on the side of the Green Palace located inside the Sa'd Abad palace Complex.
• Golestan Palace and Takht-e Marmar. (website)
• Niavaran Palace Complex (website)
• Sadabad Palace (website)
• Saltanat Abad Palace
• Firouzeh Palace, (which belongs to Tehran's Zoroastrian community)
• Soleymaniyeh Palace
• Baharestan Palace, (where Iran's first parliament was located at)
• Morvarid Palace, Karaj, designed by The Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation. [4]
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Museums
• Sa'd Abad Gallery of Fine Arts
• Glassware Museum of Tehran
• Iran's National Rug Gallery (website)
• Reza Abbasi Museum
• Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art (website)
• Tehran Theater of the Performing Arts (Te'atr e Shahr)
• Talar Vahdat Theater
• National Museum of Iran, (website)
• Dar-abad Nature & Wildlife Museum
• National Library of Iran
• Malek National Library
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Religious centers
• Soltani Mosque, built by Fath Ali Shah
• Atiq Mosque, built in 1663.
• Mo'ezz o-dowleh mosque, built by Fath Ali Shah
• Haj Seyd Azizollah mosque, built by Fath Ali Shah
• Al-javad mosque, Iran's first modernist design mosque.
• The Old Sepahsalar mosque, another prominent Qajar era mosque.
• The new Sepahsalar mosque (Madreseh e Motahari)
• Filsuf o-dowleh Mosque, Qajar era
• Moshir ol-Saltaneh Mosque, Qajar era
• Mo'ayyer ol-Mamalik Mosque, Qajar era
• Shahr Banu Mausopleum
• Javan-mard Qassab Mausoleum, a pre-Islamic semi-mythical hero
• Dozens of Imam-zadeh shrines, hundreds of years old, including that of Imam Zadeh Saleh.
• Dozens of Saqa Khanehs: traditional places of prayer
• Several Tekyehs: traditional places for mourning Muharram ceremonies for Husayn ibn Ali.
• Ibn Babviyeh cemetery, where many Iranian giants such as Takhti and Ali Akbar Dehkhoda are buried.
• Zahir o-dowleh cemetery, where many Iranian giants of art and culture such as Iraj Mirza, Mohammad Taghi Bahar, Forough Farrokhzad, Abolhasan Saba, Ruhollah Khaleghi, and Darvish-khan are buried.
• Kordan Tomb, Seljuqi era, Karaj.
• Maydanak Tomb, 13th century, Karaj
• The Polish cemetery 1-north of Tehran in British Gholhak garden, where numerous World War II western allied soldiers are buried. 2- polish cemetery (catholic cemetery)Dulab south of Tehran
• orthodox Cemetery.Dulab/The Russian unknown soldier's Tomb(Cenotaph) is located there with red star over it
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Churches
• Surep Georg Church, 1790
• Thaddeus Bartoqimus Church, 1808
• Tatavus Church, from the Qajar era
• Enjili Church, 1867
• Assyrian Church
Khalvat-e Karimkhani, Golestan Palace.
Tehran's WW2 Cemetery of Allied Forces
Toghrol Tower, 13th century.
National Library of Iran, Niavaran branch.
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Castles and Forts
• Arzhang Fort, Taleqan, 1149CE
• Iraj Fort, Varamin
• Gol e Khandan Fort, Rudehen, Sassanid era
• Rashkan Fort, Ray, Parthian era
• Tabbarok Fort, Abbasid era
• Sorkheh-Hesar Fort, Seljuqi era.
• Kei-Ghobad Fort, Taleqan, Ismaili era
• Gabri Fort, Parthian era, Ray.
• Several other forts and castle ruins, such as Ghal'eh Dokhtar Tang Goseel, near Karaj. Like all the other forts of this area, these have been ruined by earthquakes. Seljuqi era.
• Harun Prison. Sassanid era. South of Tehran.
• Bagh e Melli foreign ministry compound.
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Traditional Houses
Dozens of houses of antiquity with splendid traditional architectural design remain standing in Tehran today. Most are from the Qajar era. Some of these are:
• Etehadiyeh House, Qajar era
• Amir Bahador House, Qajar era
• Emam Jomeh House, 1863CE
• Amin ol-Soltan House, Qajar era
• Shaghaghi (Kushak) House, Qajar era
• Emarat e Bagh e Ferdows, Qajar era
• Emarat Farmaniyeh, Qajar era
• Shahid Modarres House, Uladjan district.
• Vothuq House, 1837CE
• Moshir o-Dowleh Pir Nia House
However, there exist plenty of houses of historical heritage also open to the public, such as: House of Nima Yooshij, House of Mohammed Mossadegh, House of Ayatollah Taleghani, House of Ghavam o-Dowleh, House of Imam Khomeini, and House of Mahmoud Hessaby.
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Archeological sites
An abundance of ancient archeological historicl sites exists in and around Tehran. Some of the more prominent ones are:
• Cheshme Ali Teppe, 5th millennium BCE. Excavated by Jacques de Morgan.
• Shoghali Teppe, 6th millennium BCE.
• Qeytariyeh ancient Cemetery, 2nd millennium BCE.
• Teppe Meel, excavated by Jacques de Morgan, believed to be the temple of the legendary ancient leader Bahram Gur.
• Vavan Teppe, Sassanid era
• Ghareh Teppe, 6th millennium CE, excavated by the British Burton Brown.
• Ozbaki Teppe, Hashtgerd.
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Others
Tehran has a wealth of restaurants and popular burger joints, both western, and traditional.
• Iran National Library
• Borj-e Milad
• Darolfonoon institute of higher education
• Morvarid Canon, Afsharid dynasty era
• Tughrul Tower, Seljuqi era
• Tehran's Grand Bazaar, 1523CE.
• Several bridges of antiquity. Example: Pol e Rumi, located in Northern Tehran, from the Safavid era, today a property of the Embassy of Turkey.
• Alborz High School
• Firouz Bahram High School
• Stodan Of Zoroastrian. Located in Aminabad area.
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The Mayor of Tehran
See main article: Mohammad Bagher Ghalibaf
See also: List of mayors of Tehran
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Sister cities
Tehran's annual International Trade Fair.
• Los Angeles, USA (linked before 1979)
• Havana, Cuba [5]
• Beijing, China (planned) [6]
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2005 plane crash
Main article: Iranian Air Force C-130 crash in Tehran
On December 6th 2005 a military plane crashed into a ten story building killing 128 people and injuring 90. Many others are left homeless.
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