KERMANSHAH


Hellenistic-era depiction of Bahram as Hercules carved in 153 B.C.

'Kermanshah' (, ''Kermānshāh'', Gorani Kurdish: کرماشان), is the capital city of Kermanshah Province, located 525 kilometers (324 miles) from Tehran in the western part of Iran. The city is about 50 miles from the border of Iraq. It had an estimated population of 822,921 in 2005 [1] and its climate is mild. The majority of the inhabitants speak Persian as well as the Kalhori dialects of Kurdish. The majority of the population in this city are Shi'a Muslims. The city is named after Bahram IV, the Sassanid emperor of Persia who was called ''Kermanshah'' because he had been governor of Kerman before his accession to the throne.

Contents
History
Language
Industry
Higher education
Sport
Notable people
Arts
History and Politics
Literature
Science
Sport
See also
External Links

History


Monuments of Taq-Bostan , carved 4-6th A.D

Given its antiquity, attractive landscapes and rich culture, Kermanshah is considered one of the cradles of prehistoric cultures such as Neolithic villages.
According to archaeological surveys and excavation, the Kermanshah area have been occupied by prehistoric people since Lower Paleolithic Period, and continued to later Paleolithic periods till late Pleistocene period.The Lower Paleolithic evidence consist of some handaxes found in the Gakia area to the east of the city. The Middle Paleolithic remains have been found in the northern viceinity of the city in Tang-e Kenesht and near Taq-e Bostan. The known Paleolithic caves in this area are Warwasi, Kobeh, and Do-Ashkaft.
The region was also one of the first places in which human settlements including Asiab, Qazanchi, Tappeh Sarab and Ganj-Darreh were established between 8000-10.000 years ago. This is about the same time that the first potteries pertaining to Iran were made in Ganj-Darreh, near present-day Harsin.
Kermanshah has some of the most interesting and famous archaeological sites. Its construction is attributed to Tahmoures Divband, the fabulous king of Pishdadian dynasty, but some others attribute it to the Sassanids. It was a glorious city in Sassanid period about the 4th century AD when it became a political city and a significant health center serving as a summer resort for Sassanid kings.
In A.D. 226, following a two-year war led by the Persian Emperor - Ardashir I - against Kurdish tribes in the region, the Empire reinstated a local Kurdish prince, Kayus of Medya, to rule Kermanshah. Within the dynasty known as the House of Kayus (also ''Kâvusakân'') remained a semi-independent Kurdish kingdom lasting until A.D. 380 before Ardashir II removed the dynasty's last ruling member.[2]
Kermanshah was conquered by the Arabs in A.D. 640 and called the town Qirmasin (Qirmashin). Under Seljuk rule in the 11th century, it was, and still is, a major cultural and commercial centre in Western Iran and the southern Kurdish region as a whole. The Safavids fortified the town, and the Qajars repulsed an attack by the Turks during Fath Ali Shah's rule (1797–1834).
Occupied by the Turkish Army in 1915 during World War I, it was evacuated in 1917. Kermanshah played an important role in Mashrota Movement in Qajar period and Republic Movement in Pahlavi period.
After The Islamic Revolution in the 1970's, the city and its provinces (also called Kermanshah) were shortly renamed Bakhtaran, apparently owing to the use of "Shah" in the name. After the Iran-Iraq War, however, they renamed it to Kermanshah. The City was hit hard during the Iran-Iraq War, and although it was rebuilt, it has never fully recovered.
Language

The province is settled mainly by Kurdish speakers. Also there are minority Persian, Arabs and Azeriss living in this province. In addition to the inhabitants of the towns and villages, there are nomadic societies through out the province. High mountain ranges closer to the Iraqi border are home to Kurdish tribes people.The predominant language in Kermanshah and its suburb is Kurdish ( Southern Kurdish Dialect called "Kurdî Başûr" ), but Persian is also spoken in the cities.

Industry


Kermanshah is now a fairly important industrial center; industries include petrochemical refinery, textile manufacturing, food processing, oil refining, carpet making, sugar refining, and the production of electrical equipment and tools.

Higher education



Kermanshah University of Medical Sciences

Razi University

Azad University of Kermanshah

Sport


Kermanshah is home to football club Shirin Faraz Kermanshah F.C. who were recently promoted to Iran's Premier Football League.

Notable people


Arts


Nemat Ali Kharabati,vocalist and musician and sofi

Shahram Nazeri, famous vocalist and musician

Hanibal Alkhas, painter, poet

Marganita Vogt-Khofri, Opera Vocalist, pianist

Kayhan Kalhor, musician, nominated for the Grammy Award

Guity Novin, painter, founder of Transpressionism

Alexis Kouros, writer, documentary-maker, director and producer

Manouchehr Taherzadeh, pop singer

Pouran Derakhshandeh, director

Fakhri Khourvash, actress

Irandokht Mohasses, painter

Jamal Shourjeh, director

Mahshid Farhoudi-Di Marco, painter, visual arts

Seyyed Khalil Alinejad, tanbour mastero

Roknoddin Mokhtari, violin player

Mojtaba Mirzadeh, violin player

Yolanda Moradzadeh, graphist, owner of Yoli's Dolls

Bagher Azadi, ceramic painter, poet

Farhad Aslani, actor

Ata Hayati, photographer, director

Nikzad Nodjoumi, painter

Bahram Kalhornia, graphist

Aliakbar MoradiTanbur player , Composer
History and Politics


Nasser Zarafshan, novelist, translator, and attorney

Karim Sanjabi, Iran's attorney in the oil's national movement, former foreign minister

Bijan Namdar Zangeneh, former minister

Ebrahim Azizi, member and spokesman of the Guardian Council

Ahamd Shirzad, political activist

Latif Safari, journalist

Abdolreza Mesri, minister
Literature


Rashid Yasemi, one of the Five-Masters(Panj Ostad) of Persian grammar

Rahim Moeini Kermanshahi, famous poet of classical Persian lyrics

Ali Ashraf Darvishian, novelist and writer, director of the Writers Assocciation of Iran

Doris Lessing, writer

Ali Mohammad Afghani, novelist

Mir Jalaleddin Kazzazi, writer

Mohammad Javad Mohabbat, poet

Navab Safa, poet

Abolghasem Lahouti, poet

Yadolah Behazad(Yadolah Eivani),poet

Parto Kermanshahi, poet

Ahmad Golshiri, writer

Shahmorad Moshtaq Kermanshah(Shami Kermanshahi), poet
Science


Al-Dinawari, botanist, historian, geographer, astronomer and mathematician

Towfig Arjmand, physician

Mojtaba Shamsipur, Chemist, ISI highly cited
Sport


Shirin Faraz F.C., the soccer team in Iran's Premier Football League

Kourosh Bagheri, weight lifting champion

Mohammad Hassan Mohebbi, wrestling champion, former coach of Iranian wrestling national team

Mohammad Ranjbar, soccer

Mohammad Hossein Mohebbi, wrestling champion

Fereidoun Ghanbari, wrestling champion

Bijan Batmani, boxer

Jalal Moradi, international soccer referee

Mashallah Hosseini, Wrestling champion

See also



Kohneh Bridge

External Links



Photos from Bisotun Complex - From Online Photo Gallery Of Aryo.ir

Photos from Taq-e Bostan - From Online Photo Gallery Of Aryo.ir

Photos from Moavenol Molk Tekieh - From Online Photo Gallery Of Aryo.ir

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