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Photo panoramique par
Reza Pazhouhesh
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ouramanThe World > Asia > Middle East > Iran |
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روستای اورامانات تخت در جنوب شرقى شهر مریوان در استان کردستان قرار دارد که بوسیله جادهاى به طول 75 کیلومتر به شهر مریوان متصل مىشود.
این روستا را هزار ماسوله نیز مىنامند. زیرا معمارى آن همانند ماسوله است. حیاط هر خانه بام خانهاى دیگر است، اما با وسعتى بیشتر.
معمارى اورامانات و سرسبزى این منطقه کوهستانى رویاى پلههایى به سمت بهشت را متصور مىکند. خانههاى این روستا با سنگ و اغلب به صورت خشکه و به صورت پلکانى ساخته شده است. مردم منطقه معتقدند اورامانات تخت زمانى شهرى بزرگ بوده و مرکزیتى خاص داشته به همین دلیل از آن به عنوان تخت یا مرکز (حکومت) ناحیهاى اورامان یاد مىکردهاند.
به غیر از وضعیت خاص روستا از نظر معمارى، موقعیت چشمههاى پرآب، مراسم خاص و آداب و رسوم و وجود مقبره و مسجد پیر شالیار و به ویژه جمعیت و تعداد سکنه قابل توجه آن نشانگر اهمیت منطقه از زمان ساسانى است.
پوشاک کردى آمیزهاى از رنگ و نقش است. لباس مردم اورامانات نیز کردى است. پیش از ورود پارچه و کفشهاى خارجى و سایر منسوجات داخلى به استان کردستان، بیشتر پارچهها و پاى افزار مورد نیاز آنها توسط بافندگان و دوزندگان محلى بافته و ساخته مىشده است.
از تولیدات هنرهاى سنتى این روستا میتوان به گلیم، سجاده، نمد، سبد، گیوه به عنوان سوغات اشاره کرد.
This building is one of the historical monuments of the Kurdestan province. The same has been convert...
Taqwasân or Taq-e Bostan or Taq-i-Bustan (Persian: طاق بستان) is a series of large rock relief from t...
This mosque is located in Kermanshah and is a relic from the Qajar period. The primary building of th...
Mahabad Bazar (Baazaar) is an old neighbours of this town and traditionally very small sellers or sho...
Mahabad Bazar (Baazaar) is an old neighbours of this town and traditionally very small sellers or sho...
This mosque is the oldest mosque in Mahabad, and have construdted in the middle of 17th century at th...
The Islamic Republic of Iran has been occupied since 4000BCE, making Iran home to the world's oldest continuous civilization.
It is located in central Eurasia on two ancient trade routes. One runs North-South and connects the Caspian Sea to the Persian Gulf, the other one goes East-West between China, India, Europe and Africa.
There's a city called Isfahan at the intersection of these two routes, which at one time was the wealthiest city in the world. Isfahan was twice the capital of the Persian Empire, during the Median and then Safavid Dynasties.
Interesting artifacts from pre-Islamic Persia include the cylinder of Cyrus the Great, which is the world's first written declaration of human rights. The hanging gardens of Babylon (one of the seven wonders of the ancient world) and the Code of Hammurabi (a set of rules which outlast the King) are also on the list.
The Persian Empire was so magnificent that returning Crusaders carried tales of its splendor and helped spark the Renaissance in Europe! Influence of the Zoroastrian teachings of equality also inspired Greek philosophers such as Aristotle and Socrates.
The Persian Empire was conquered by Muslim Arabs around 650CE during the Sassanid Dynasty. Initially the Zoroastrian, Christian and Jewish faiths were tolerated but by 1000CE most Persians had accepted Islam.
In the sixteenth century Shi'a Islam was declared in Isfahan to be the national religion of Persia and the second golden age began. From 1500 to 1720 the Safavid Dynasty built the greatest Iranian empire since before the Islamic conquest of Persia.
Because of its strategic location and oil resources, World War I found Persia in the middle of conflicts between the Ottoman Empire, Russia and the British Empire-via-India. Persia became Iran as of 1935 and was ruled by the Shah, a Persian term for "monarch."
In the Islamic Revolution of 1979 Iran re-established a theocratic government under the Ayatollah Khomeini.
Today the capital of Iran is the city of Tehran, and Iran is known as the world's center of Shi'a Islam.
Text by Steve Smith.