QOM


'Qom' (Persian: 'قم', also known as 'Q'um' or 'Kom') is a city in Iran. It lies by road southwest of Tehran and is the capital of Qom Province. It has an estimated population of 1,042,309 in 2005.[1] It is situated on the banks of the Qom river.
Qom is considered to be a holy city in Shi`a Islam, as it is the site of the shrine of Fatema Mæ'sume, sister of Imam `Ali ibn Musa Rida (Persian ''Imam Reza'', 789-816 A.D.). The city is the largest center for Shi'a scholarship in the world, and is a significant destination of pilgrimage.
Area near the shrine of Hazrat Masuma-e-Qum


Contents
History
Qom today
Attractions of Qom
Qom space center
Universities in Qom
Seminaries of Qom
Listing of Qom's Senior ranking clerics
Current
Deceased
Sister cities
References
See also
External links
Religiously affiliated
Non-Religiously affiliated

History


Qom as an urban settlement existed in the pre-Islamic ages. Architectural discoveries indicate that Qom was a residential area from the 5th millennium B.C. Pre-Islamic remaining relics and historical texts point to the fact of Qom being a large regional city. ''Kum'' was known to be the name of this ancient city, thus, the incoming 7th century Arabs called it ''Qom'' during the conquests of Iran.
During the caliphate of ˤUmar ibn al-KhattÄb, the area of Qom fell to the invading Arab armies of Islam. In 645 A.D., Abu Musa Ash'ari, also dispatched forces under his command to the area. Conflicts resulted between the incoming Arab army and the residents of the area.
In Seljuki times, the city flourished as well. During the Mongol invasion of Persia the city witnessed widespread destruction, but after the Mongol ruling dynasty, also known as the Ilkhanate, converted to Islam during the reign of Öljeitü (Persian ''Muhammad Khudabænde''), the city received special attention, thus undergoing a revival once more.
In the late 14th century, the city was plundered by Tamerlane and the inhabitants were massacred. But during the periods of rule of the ''Qara Qoyunlu'', ''Aq Qoyunlu'' and especially during the reign of the Safavids, Qom gained special attention and gradually developed due to its religious shrine.
By 1503 Qom became one of the important centers of theology in relation to the Shia Islam, and became a significant religious pilgrimage site and pivot.
The city suffered heavy damages again during the Afghan invasions, resulting in consequent severe economic hardships. Qom further sustained damages during the reigns of Nadir 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 Fæteh Æli Shah was responsible for the repairs done on the sepulchre and Holy Shrine of Hæzræt Mæ'sume, as he had made such a vow.
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 Æhmæd Shah Qajar under political pressure. Coinciding with this period, a "National Defense Committee" was set up in Tehran, and Qom turned into a political and military apex opposed to the Russian and British colonial powers.
Many years later, Qom also became the center from which Ayatollah Khomeini based his opposition to the Pahlavi dynasty while in Iran. For many years Qom was the home of Ayatollah Khomeini, who led Iran during the events that led to the Islamic revolution in 1979 before permanently leaving for Tehran after the revolution.
Qom today

Qom, Autumn 2005

Today, Qom is counted as one of the focal centers of the Shi'a both in Iran and around the globe. Its theological center and the Holy Shrine of Hadrat Ma'sumah are prominent features of the provincial capital of Qom province. Another religious site of pilgrimage is outside the city of Qom and is called Jamkaran.
Qom's proximity to Tehran, Iran's capital, has allowed the clerical establishment easy access to monitor the affairs and decisions of state. Many Grand Ayatollahs hold offices in both Tehran and Qom; many people simply commute between the two cities as they are only 100 km away.
In 2001, journalist Camelia Entekhabi-Fard reported that some women earn money in Qom, Iran, by engaging in temporary marriage with pilgrims and religious scholars, in what she claimed was "a thinly veiled form of prostitution". [1]

Attractions of Qom


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


★ Kahak Cave

★ Vashnaveh Cave

★ Howz-e Soltan Salt Lake

★ Namak Great Salt Lake

★ Mar'ashi Najafi Library, with over 500,000 handwritten texts and copies.

★ Astaneh Moqaddaseh Museum

★ Qom Bazaar

Feyzieh Seminary

Jamkaran Mosque

★ Jami' Mosque Qom

★ Atiq Mosque in Qom

★ A'zam Mosque

Shrine of Fatimah al-Masumah

Qom space center


Qom space center is, with the Emamshahr space center, one of the two places where the Iranian Space Agency is launching its suborbital Shahab 3s space rockets.

Universities in Qom


:# Mofid University
:# Islamic Azad University of Qom
:# payam noor University of Qom
:# University of Qom
:# The Research Institute of Hawzeh va Daneshgah
:# Computer Research Center of Islamic Sciences, Qom
:# Imam Khomeini Education and Research Institute
:# Qom University of Medical Sciences
:# Fatemieh School of Medical Sciences
:# Qom Students Organisation

Seminaries of Qom


Qom is currently the largest center for Shi'a scholarship in the world. The following seminaries (Hawzahs) are located there:

★ Amuliyah Seminary

★ Ayatollah Golpayegani Seminary

★ Ayatollah Mar'ashi Najafi Seminary

★ Abul-Sadigh Seminary

★ Imam al-Husayn Seminary

★ Imam al-Askari Seminary

★ Imam al-Mahdi Seminary

★ Imam al-Hadi Seminary

★ Rasul ul-A'dham Seminary

★ Sayyed Hasan al-Shirazi Seminary

★ Alwandiyah Seminary

★ Imam al-Khamenei Seminary

★ Imam al-Baqir Seminary

★ Imam Hasan al-Mujtaba Seminary

★ Imam Khomeini Seminary

★ Imam al-Sadiq Seminary

★ Imam al-Hadi Seminary

★ Amir al-Mu'menin Seminary

★ Bi'that Seminary

★ Jabir ibn al-Hayyan Seminary

★ Al-Zahra Seminary

★ Jafariyah Seminary

★ Haj Sayyed Sadiq Seminary

★ Haj Ghazanfar Seminary

★ Hojattiyeh Seminary

★ Hossaynie Seminary

★ Hadhrat al-Masuma Seminary

★ Dar al-Shifa Seminary

★ Rasul al-Akram Seminary

★ Sa'adat Seminary

★ Sharafiddin Amili Seminary

★ Shahabiyah Seminary

★ Shahid Sadr Seminary

★ Shahidayn Seminary

★ Sadiqqiyah Seminary

★ Saduq Seminary

★ Seminary of The Judiciary

★ Alavi Seminary

★ Fatimie Seminary

Feyzie Seminary

★ Qadiriye Seminary

★ Kermani-ha Seminary

★ Ma'sumiye Seminary

★ Mahdi Mow'ud Seminary

★ Na'ini Seminary

★ Wahidiyah Seminary

★ Wali Asr Seminary

★ Al-Alam Seminary

★ Ad-Dirasat al-Islamiyya Seminary

★ Maktab al-Mahdi Seminary

★ Maktab at-Towhid Seminary

al-Kawthar Seminary

Listing of Qom's Senior ranking clerics


The following is a list of Grand Ayatollahs and the most senior ranking Ayatollahs in or directly related to Qom.
Current


Grand Ayatollah Noori-Hamedani

Grand Ayatollah Mousavi Ardebili

Grand Ayatollah Gharvi-Aliari

Grand Ayatollah Saafi Golpayegani

Grand Ayatollah Seyd Mohammad Shahroudi

Grand Ayatollah Makarem Shirazi

Grand Ayatollah Ali Khamenei

Grand Ayatollah Sheikh Wahid Khorasani

Grand Ayatollah Muhammad Taqi Behjat

Grand Ayatollah Sayyed Kadhim Haeri

Grand Ayatollah Sayyed Muhammad Vahidi

Grand Ayatollah Sheikh hasan-zadeh Amoli

Grand Ayatollah Hossein-Ali Montazeri

Grand Ayatollah Sanei

Grand Ayatollah Haj Sayyed Musa Shebiri Zanjani

★ Grand Ayatollah Sayyed Muhammad Reza Golpayegani

Ayatollah Tabrizi

Ayatollah Sheikh Jawadi Amoli

Ayatollah Abolfadhl Khansari

Ayatollah Haj Sayyed Mahmoud Hashemi Shahroudi

Ayatollah Sayyed Hasan Taheri Khurram-Abadi

Ayatollah Sheikh Jafar Sobhani

Ayatollah Sheikh Muhammad Imami Kashani

Ayatullah Haj Sheikh Ali Panah Ishtihardi

Ayatollah Mesbah Yazdi

Ayatullah Sheikh Haadi Ma`rifat

Ayatollah Sayyed Muhammad Alavi Gorgani

Ayatollah sheikh Muhammad Reza Mahdavi Kani

Ayatollah Sayyed Hassan Abtahi

Ayatollah Mohsen Qara'ati

Ayatollah Sheikh Abu Taleb Tajleel

Ayatollah Sheikh Husein Mazaheri

Ayatollah Haj Sheikh Ismail Salehi Mazandarani

Ayatollah Haj Sayyed Mehdi Rouhani

Ayatollah Haj Sheikh Ali Kashani

Ayatollah Haj Sayyed Mohsen Kharrazi

Ayatollah Sayyed Ali Mohaqqeq Damad

Ayatollah Sheikh Muhammad Ali Gerami
Deceased


Ayatollah fazel lankarani

Grand Ayatollah Borujerdi

Allameh Tabatabaei

Ayatullah Mohammad Beheshti

Ayatullah Hassan Modarres

Ayatullah Morteza Motahhari

Ayatullah Mahmoud Taleghani

Sister cities



Santiago de Compostela, Spain

References


1. Camelia E. Fard. Unveiled Threats. ''Village Voice'', 28 March 2001

See also



Iranian architecture

List of Ayatollahs

List of Marjas

Mashhad

Qom rug

Shi'a Islam.

Iranian Space Agency

Qom Students

External links


Religiously affiliated


Tuba Graphics, a religiously affiliated organization based in Qom

Noor Fiqh Library, Qom

Imam Ali commemorative website, based in Qom.

Society of Islamic Teachers of Qom's Hawzah (in Persian)

Dar-ul Hadith Institute

Hawzah Yellow Pages

Muslim Celebration in Qom

Qom Seminary Islamic Propagation Office 1

Qom Seminary Islamic Propagation Office 2

Qom Seminary Islamic Propagation Office 3

Qom Seminary Islamic Propagation Office 4

Qom Seminary Publishers

Islamic Qom City

Sharah Hawzah Seminary Information Network

Islamic International Foundation of Cooperation(IslamIFC) IslamIFC
Non-Religiously affiliated


Qom's Cultural Heritage Organization

Qom Province Dwelling Foundation of Islamic Revolution

Qom Management and Planning Organization

Governor of Qom website

Qom Province Transportation and Terminals Organization

Telecommunications Company of Qom

Qom worries about new government interference in the clerical establishment.

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