词条 | Eṣfahān |
释义 | Eṣfahān Iran also spelled Isfahan ![]() Little is known of Eṣfahān before the rule of the Sāsānian dynasty (c. AD 224–c. 651). In the 4th century Queen Shushan-Dukht, the Jewish consort of Yazdegerd I (reigned 339–420), is said to have settled a colony of Jews in the suburb of Yahūdiyyeh. (The establishment of this colony has also been attributed to Nebuchadrezzar, but this seems less likely.) The Shahrestān Bridge, which spans the Zāyandeh River a short distance southeast of the city, dates from the Sāsānian era; the piers are, however, all that remain of the original structure, the upper part having often been rebuilt. When the Arabs captured Eṣfahān in 642, they made it the capital of Al-Jibāl (“the Mountains”) province, an area that covered much of ancient Media. Eṣfahān grew prosperous under the Persian Būyid (Būyid Dynasty) (Buwayhid) dynasty, which rose to power and ruled much of modern Iran when the temporal authority of the ʿAbbāsid caliphs waned in the 10th century. Toghrïl Beg, the Turkish conqueror and founder of the Seljūq dynasty, made Eṣfahān the capital of his domains in the mid-11th century; under his famous grandson Malik-Shah I (Malik-Shāh) (reigned 1073–92), the city grew in size and splendour. In those days the centre of the city was a square, or rectangle, situated some distance to the north of the later Maydān-e Shah. It was bordered on the north by the Great Mosque of Eṣfahān (Eṣfahān, Great Mosque of) (Masjed-e Jāmiʿ), which is still one of the chief architectural glories of the city; at the southern end was the Mosque of ʿAlī (Masjed-e ʿAlī). Only one tall minaret remains of the original building. Niẓām al-Mulk, Malik-Shah's chief minister and the patron of the poet Omar Khayyam, added a beautiful dome chamber to the Great Mosque. Not to be outdone, his rival Tāj al-Mulk then built nearby a smaller but even more beautiful dome chamber that is said to have attained “the perfection of architecture.” After the fall of the Seljūqs (c. 1200), Eṣfahān temporarily declined and was eclipsed by other Iranian cities such as Tabrīz and Qazvīn, but it regained its preeminent position during the Ṣafavid period (1501–1736). ![]() ![]() ![]() A French Huguenot jeweler and writer, Jean Chardin (Chardin, Jean), spent 10 years in Eṣfahān between 1664 and 1677 and in his Voyages gave a detailed and graphic description of the city as it was at its zenith. It then had, he said, 162 mosques, 273 public baths, 1,802 caravansaries (caravansary), and 48 madrasahs (religious colleges). Among the last group was the renowned Māder-e Shah (“Royal Mother”) madrasah; built in the early 18th century, it has a splendid Arabesque dome. During this striking period of architectural growth, the city was also the centre of the Eṣfahān school of miniature painting and was home to numerous scholars and literati. In 1722 the Ghilzay Afghans, led by Maḥmūd, defeated the Persian army a few miles east of Eṣfahān and took the city after a long siege. Eṣfahān never fully recovered from this event. For many years afterward most of the city was a heap of rubble, and its population dwindled to a fraction of what it had once been. Recovery began during the reign of Reza Shah Pahlavi (1925–41). An industrial quarter was built, and many of the historic buildings were restored. The city is on a main north-south highway from Tehrān to Shīrāz and the Persian Gulf. It is linked by road east and southeast to Yazd, Kermān, and Zāhedān and thus to Pakistan. ![]() |
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