(Redirected from Ardashir-Khwarrah):''For the city in
Uttar Pradesh, see:
Firozabad''
Map of Iran and surrounding countries, showing location of Firouzabad.
'Firouzabad' or Firuzabad (
Sassanid Middle Persian ''Ardasher-Khwarrah'' اردشيرخوره, or The Glory of Ardasher, post-Arab rule ''Fīrūzābād'' فيروزآباد) is a city in
Iran. It is located in
Fars province south of
Shiraz. The town is surrounded by a mud wall and ditch. It had an estimated population of 67,909 in 2005.
[1]
Alexander of Macedonia destroyed the original city of Gōr. Centuries later,
Ardashir I, founder of the
Sassanid Dynasty, revived the city before it was ransacked during the Arab invasion of the seventh century.
Firuzabad is situated in a low-lying area of the region, so
Alexander was able to drown the city by directing the flow of a river into the city. The lake he created remained until
Ardashir I built a tunnel to drain it. He founded his new capital city on this site.
Ardeshir's new city was known as ''Khor Ardeshīr'', ''Ardeshīr Khurah'' and ''Shāhr-ī Gōr''. It had a circular plan so precise in measurement that the
Persian historian
Ibn Balkhi wrote it to be "devised using a compass". It was protected by a trench 50 meters in width, and was 2 kilometers in diameter. The city had four gates; to the north was the ''Hormoz Gate'', to the south the ''Ardeshir Gate'', to the east the ''
Mithra Gate'' and to the west the ''Bahram Gate''. The royal capital's compounds were constructed at the center of a circle 450m in radius. At the center point of the city was a
Zoroastrian fire temple 30m high and spiral in design, which is thought to have been the architectural predecessor of the
Great Mosque of Samarra of
Iraq.
The city's importance was revived again in the reign of
Azud al-Dawla of the
Daylamite dynasty, who used the city as his frequent residence. It is at this time that the old name of the city--Gōr, is abandoned in favor of the new. In New Persian spoken at the time Gōr had come to mean "grave." King
Azud al-Dawla, as the story goes, found it distastful to reside in a "grave." Per his instruction, the city's name was changed to Peroz-abad, "City of Victory." Since then, the city has been known by variations of that name, to include ''Firuzabad'' (Middle Persian ''Fīrūzābād'').
Among the attractions of the city are the
Ghal'eh Dokhtar, the
Palace of Ardeshir, and the fire temple tower among the remains of Gōr.
The people of modern Firuzabad are mostly descendants of the
Qashqai. They used to live along the
Amu Darya River before fleeing before
Genghis Khan to
Fars.
See also
★
Fars Cultural Heritage Organization
★
Ghal'eh Dokhtar in Firuzabad.
★
Palace of Ardeshir in Firuzabad.
★
Bishapur
External links