(Redirected from Khorasan province)
Map showing the pre-2004 Khorasan Province in Iran
'Khorasan' (
Persian: خراسان) (also transcribed as 'Khurasan' and 'Khorassan', anciently called 'Traxiane' during
Hellenistic and
Parthian times
[1]) is currently a region located in north eastern
Iran, but historically referred to a much larger area east and north-east of the
Persian Empire (''see '
Greater Khorasan'''). The name ''Khorasan'' is Persian and means "where the sun arrives from." The name was given to the
eastern province of
Persia during the
Sassanid empire.
Khorasan is famous world wide for its
saffron and
zereshk which are produced in the southern cities of the province. Production is more than 170 tons per year. Khorasan is also known for its famous
rugs as well as for the
ferdousi and
imamreza shrines/tombs.
Khorasan was the largest province of Iran until it was divided to three provinces on
September 29,
2004. The provinces approved by the
parliament (on
May 18,
2004) and the
Council of Guardians (on
May 29,
2004) are:
★ ''
North Khorasan'', center:
Bojnourd, other counties:
Shirvan,
Jajarm,
Maneh and
Samlaghan,
Esfarayen
★ ''
South Khorasan'', center:
Birjand, other counties:
Sarayan,
Nahbandan,
Sarbisheh
★ ''
Razavi Khorasan'', center:
Mashhad, other counties:
Ghouchan,
Dargaz,
Chenaran,
Sarakhs,
Fariman,
Torbat-e Jam,
Taybad,
Ferdows,
Ghayen,
Khaf and
Rashtkhar,
Kashmar,
Bardaskan,
Neyshabour,
Sabzevar,
Gonabad,
Kalat,
Boshrooyeh and
Khalil Abad
The older
Persian province of Khorasan (also known as ''the '
Greater Khorasan''') included parts which are today in
Iran,
Afghanistan,
Tajikistan,
Turkmenistan and
Uzbekistan. Some of the main historical cities of Persia are located in the older Khorasan:
Nishapur (now in Iran),
Merv and
Sanjan (now in Turkmenistan),
Samarkand and
Bukhara (both now in Uzbekistan),
Herat,
Kabul,
Zabul,
Kandahar,
Ghazni and
Balkh (now in Afghanistan). In its long history, Khorasan knew many conquerors and empires:
Greeks,
Arabs,
Seljuk Turks,
Safavids,
Pashtuns (ethnic Afghans) and others.
The major ethnic group in this region is
Persians, Most of the people in the region speak closely related modern day dialects of
Persian (''see also:''
Dari;
Tajiki). However Khorasan, as a result of its troubled history, is peopled by a great variety of ethnic groups:
Turcomans in the northwest;
Kurds around
Bojnurd and
Quchan;
Timuris and Jamshidis in the east, some of whom are still nomadic and are believed to be of mixed Iranic and Turkic origin; and in the southeast,
Baloch people. The highlands in the south are home to a settled population of old Iranian stock. There is also a sizeable
Afghan community in the province due to the influx of refugees from
Afghanistan in recent years. Here and there are found Berberis of
Mongol origin (called
Hazaras in Afghanistan),
Khorasani Arabs,
Gypsies, and a few Jews in the towns.
The largest cluster of settlements and cultivation stretches around the city of Meshed northwestward, containing the important towns of Quchan, Shirvan, and Bojnurd. The languages spoken in Khorasan are
Persian,
Turkic languages, and
Kurdish.
In August
1968 and September
1978, the region was the scene of two major
earthquakes that left 12,000 and 25,000 people dead, respectively.
Notes
1. Stronach to guide Iranian archaeologists? search
See also
★
Greater Khorasan
★
Khwarezm
★
Afsharid dynasty