Marvast District

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Marvast County (Persian: شهرستان مروست)) is a county in Yazd Province, Iran. During the 2006 census, its population was 22,773, from 4,374 families.[1] The county has one city; Marvast and two rural districts (dehestan): Harabarjan Rural District and Isar Rural District.

The etymology of the word "marvast", what it means, how it came about and the reason why the region was named so has been dealt with in various forms and definitions in many historical books and has been studied in detail. Researches that come close to explaining this state that in the year (before the 6th lunar year) Omar ibn Hubayr al-Fazari sent Mani ibn Zaydah, who fought Abdullah bin Mu'awiyah's army in Merv Shadzad (now called Marwat) and ousted Abdullah's army. One of Abu'l-Abad's descendants was killed in that war.

The pool records this name, written by Mersov, writes: Mersov does not have a pulpit (p. 8, Marmalek and kingdoms)

Hamdollah Mostofi writes: Marvast is a great diya from the Persians and was originally a dyer, so to distinguish it from the Merv of Khorasan it was called Merv Shazan if Merv of Khorasan was Merv Shahjahan (p. 6, Nezhat al-Qoloub, Leiden printing).

Ibn Balkhi Farsi, p

Kamel, Ibn Ashotif Volume IV, p

Elsewhere, it is said that the name of Merwast in the historical texts was known as Dar al-Kalkat because of its many castles and the great amount of monuments that indicate its extent and prosperity in the past, with more than four castles still remaining around Merwast. Each has been the birthplace and home of many people and clans, some of whom were still living in the 1980s and are still used for livestock in some villages.

marvast history[]

Amir Mozafar, son of Mansour, son of Ghiasuddin Haji Khorasani, who was a brave cleric and a well-known believer, came to Yazd's Atabakan service when he suffered from Yazd's Atabakan, serving Ilkhan-Arghun Khan, and succeeded him as a usurper. After Arghun Khan, Gikhatu Khan, Ghazan Khan and then Oljaytul Sultan recruited him, leaving him with the rule of Abqaweh, Herat, Marvast and Ardestan… (p.)

Herat and Marvast are small towns, with grain, canvas and fruit, with temperate climate and running water, and Marvast is a large Diyat and has the same characteristics. (Nezhat Al-Qaloub, Hamdollah Mostofi)

Sheikh Aghdam Saeed al-Mashhour (2b) Bufour al-Karamat al-Maruf after the authority of Sheikh al-Haq Waddin Muhammad bin Baha al-Din. Sheikh Mushar al-Aly had several specific properties. First, he was constantly in prison to grieve the heart of the dervish. The other was that you loved to make someone important and to get rid of confinement. Another was that it was necessary for the subordinates to take care of themselves, the other because Jahanshah Mirza Pir Bagh extracted from Shiraz and he found in Baghdad Abu Yusuf Miza installed in his place in Shiraz and five thousand tomans in Shiraz in the form of {unread} He said. Buwanat, Herat and Marvast are annexed to Kerman province of Shiraz. (Diar Baker, Abu Bakr Tehrani)

From the block between Shiraz and Yazd, the northern boundary of the pomegranate is east of Babak, south of Herat and west of Fars province. Its center is the Marvast Caspian, with 4 villages and an area of 8 mins and a population of 3. From the middle of north Fars block and east of Shiraz its length from Taj Abad to Sahaf field is 14 Farsokh and its width from two farther east and north is limited to Babak Kerman block and from Maghreb to Bavanat block and from south to Nairiz block. The blockhouse is also called Marvst. Pars Province is five yards. Every court has read of the monastery which its institution had begun in its beginning, that is to say, the furnace of furnace, the furnace of al-Bjerd, and the towns of this furnace (furnace of furnace). Bowen is a town with a jumble and pulpit and a river with fruit and canvas. As its trees are like a bush, it is close to Kerman and its climate is temperate, with running water and prosperity. Herat village center - Marvast, Shahr Babak district, Yazd city, located in the northwest of Shahr Babak, near the Shawaz Yazd road to Marvast, with 2 tons of water from the aqueduct and its cereal crop. (Political Geography of the Universe)

Asadullah Fazel Mazandarani writes

Marvast was a large block in the Fars province on the Kerman border, bounded on the west by Bavanat and on the south by Niriz and its center is the village of Marvast. This was an important village in Malek especially Mirza Mahmoud Afnan. Seven people were reported in the village of Marvast in year 9.

And for obvious reasons in the past and the existence of written documents and historical books, Marvast is a vast land with very valuable and authentic archaeological remains, a large cemetery and monuments found in Hamedan and Fakhrabad castles and other areas of Marvast, Marvast has been a part of the Fars block since the early Qajar period and was annexed to Jahanshah Qaraqviunlu in the year AH Marwast and then joined Yazd province for a number of years. It is from these two regions that people nowadays have a close connection This section is adjacent to the neighboring area of the province of Bavat Fars and daily people of these areas to do banking, health and shopping and to the city of Marvast and people came to these areas to use natural and recreational resources dependence and many connections It has been well established in these areas and the people of the city of Marvast, and since the work of most people in the city of Marvast is agricultural and the catchment of the Marvast dams is promoted by this region and especially in the cultural, dialectic, daily necessities and intervals. Communication shortcuts all indicate that Marous With a long history and authentic culture and with excellent capacities and resources, as well as the regional situation and cultural, social, natural, political and other resources that have been comprehensively and fully described below, the competence needed for development and promotion, further development. Has this.

References[]

  1. ^ "Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran, 1385 (2006)" (Excel). Statistical Center of Iran. Archived from the original on 2011-11-11.


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