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Lorestān Province
استان لرستان
Location
Map of Iran with Lorestān highlighted.
Info
Admin. Center:
 • Coordinates:
Khorramabad
 33°29′14″N 48°21′14″E / 33.4871, 48.3538
Area : 28,294 km²
Population(2005):
 • Density :
1,758,628
 62.2/km²
No. of Counties: 9
Time zone: IRST (UTC+3:30)
  -Summer (DST): IRST (UTC+4:30)
Main language(s): Luri
Persian
Laki

Lorestān (Persian لرستان; Luri لورستان ,also Luristan) comprises a province and a historic territory of western Iran amidst the Zagros Mountains.The population of Lorestān is calculated 1,739,644 people in 2006 [1].

Lorestān covers an area of 28,392 km². The major cities in this province are: Borujerd, Khorramabad,Aligoodarz, Dorood, Koohdasht, Azna, Alashtar, Noor Abad, and Pol-e-Dokhtar.

Contents

Geography and climate

A road in Lorestān, winter 2006.

The name Lorestān means "land of the Lurs", and in the wider sense consists of that part of western Iran bounded by ilam and extending for about 400 miles on a northwest to southeast axis from Kermanshah to Fars, with a breadth of 100 to 140 miles. The terrain consists chiefly of mountains, with numerous ranges, part of the Zagros chain, running northwest to southeast. The central range has many summits which almost reach the line of perpetual snow, rising to 13,000 feet and more, and it feeds the headwaters of Iran's most important rivers, such as the Zayandeh rud, Jarahi, Karun, Dix, Abi, Karkheh. Between the higher ranges lie many fertile plains and low hilly, well-watered districts.

The highest point of the province is Oshtoran Kooh peak at 4,050 m. The low-lying areas being in the southern most sector of the province, are approximately 500 m above sea level.

The climate is generally sub-humid continental with winter precipitation, a lot of which falls as snow (Köppen Csa). Because it lies on the westernmost slopes of the Zagros Mountains, annual precipitation in Lorestān is among the highest anywhere in Iran south of the Alborz Mountains. At Khorramabad, the average annual precipitation totals 530 millimetres (21 inches) of rainfall equivalent, whilst up to 1270 millimetres (50 inches) may fall on the highest mountains. The months June to September are usually absolutely dry, but Khorramabad can expect 4 inches of rainfall equivalent in December and January.

Temperatures vary widely with the seasons and between day and night. At Khorramabad, summer temperatures typically range from a minimum of 12°C (54°F) to a hot maximum of 32°C (90°F). In winter, they range from a minimum of -2°C (28°F) to a chilly maximum of 8°C (46°F).

Administrative divisions

Lorestān has 9 counties (Shahrestans): Aligudarz County, Azna County, Borujerd County, Delfan County, Dorud County, Khorramabad County, Kuhdasht County, Selseleh County, and Poldokhtar County.

History

Imamzadeh Ja'far, built during the Ilkhanid period, in Borujerd. Has a peculiar style of architecture rarely seen in other provinces in Iran.

Lorestān is one of the oldest regions of Iran. In the third and fourth millennium B.C., migrant tribes settled down in the mountainous area of the Zagros Mountains. The Kassites, an ancient people who spoke neither an Indo-European nor a Semitic language, originated in Lorestān.

Lorestān was invaded and settled by the Iranian Medes in the second millennium B.C. The Medes absorbed the indigenous inhabitants of the region, primarily the Elamites and Kassites, by the time the area was conquered by the Persians in the first millennium B.C.

Lorestān was successfully integrated into the Achamenid, Parthian and Sassanian empires. Parts of Lorestān managed to stay independent during the Arab, Seljuk and Mongol invasions.

According to the Encyclopaedia of Islam, the Lurs, previously open adherents of the Ahl-e-Haqq faith, revere bread and fire like the Zoroastrians. "Being split up into numerous tribes and sections, they migrate to their summer pastures as separate bands without overall command. In 1936, Reza Shah's army conquered them, with much bloodshed and starvation, forcing many of the survivors to settle in villages under landlords." [2].

Lors were amongst the original Qizilbash that aided in the founding and administration of the Safavid dynasty.

People and culture

Main article: Lurs
Relief resembles a fish tailed woman holding snakes, (Elamite era)

Like most peoples are mixed around the world [3], Lurs to, like most Iranians, are a mixture of indigenous inhabitants of the Zagros mountains-(Sumerians, Mesopotamians and Elamites) and Iranian-speaking.citation needed Together with Afghans, they make up the eastern branch of the mediterranean group termed Irano-Afghans in anthropological terms and part of a larger branch termed Indo-Iranians, spread across the Iranian plateau, stretching from the Hindu Kush to central Anatolia and from Central Asia to the Persian Gulf - a region that is sometimes termed Greater Iran.1 Their language (called Luri) is closely related to Persian, and there are two distinct dialects of this language. "Lur-e-Bozourg" (Greater Lur), which is spoken by the Bakhtiaris, and "Lur-e-Kuchik" (Lesser Lur), spoken by the Lurs themselves. People in Borujerd speak in Borujerdi Dialect, a local Lori Persian dialect which is extracted from Luri. Northwest of Lorestan Province is dominated by Laki speakers. The overwhelming majority of Lurs are Shia Muslims. In Khuzestan, Lur tribes are primarily concentrated in the northern part of the province, while in Ilam they are mainly in the southern region.

Prior to the 20th century the majority of Lurs were nomadic herders, with an urban minority residing in the city of Khorramabad. There were several attempts by the Pahlavi governments to forcibly settle the nomadic segment of the Lur population. Under Reza Shah, these campaigns tended to be unsuccessful. The last Shah of Iran, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, used less forceful methods along with economic incentives, which met with greater, though not complete, success. By the mid-1980s the vast majority of Lurs had been settled in towns and villages throughout the province, or had migrated to the major urban centres.

A number of nomadic Lur tribes continue to exist in the province. Amongst the settled urban populace the authority of tribal elders still remains a strong influence, though not as dominant as it is amongst the nomads. As in Bakhtiari and Kurdish societies, Lur women have had much greater freedoms than women in other Iranian groups.

Northern region

Golden masks. Excavated in Kalmakareh, Lorestān. First half of first millennium B.C. National Museum of Iran.

In the northern part of Lorestān, formerly known as Lesser Lorestān ("Lur-e-Kuchik"), live the Feili Lurs, divided into the Pishkuh Lurs in the east and Pushtkuh Lurs in the adjoining Iraqi territory in the west.

Lesser Lorestān maintained its independence under a succession of princes of the Khorshidi dynasty, known as Atabegs, from A.D. 55 to the beginning of the 17th century. Shah Abbas I then removed the last Atabeg, Shah Verdi Khan, and entrusted the government of the province to Hossein Khan Shamlu, the chief of the rival tribe of Shamlu , with the title of Vali in exchange for that of Atabeg. The descendants of Hossein Khan retained the title as governors of the Pushtkuh Lurs, to whom only the denomination of Feili now applies.

Southern region

The southern part of the province, formerly known as Greater Lorestān ("Lur-e-Bozourg"), comprises the Bakhtiari region of the province of Khuzestan and the districts of the Mamasenni and Kuhgilu Lurs which are located in Fars province. At one time, Greater Lorestān formed an independent state under the Fazlevieh Atabegs from A.D. 1160 until 1424. Its capital, Idaj, survives as mounds and ruins at Malamir, sixty miles southeast of the city of Shushtar in Khuzestan.

Famous people of Lorestān

Lur man in traditional clothing, 1921
  • Colonel Hassan Reza Kalantari,(Bahrami chegini) one of the bravest army officer
  • Grand Ayatollah Borujerdi: religious grand cleric.
  • Ayatollah Rouhollah Kamalvand: senior religious cleric.
  • Ali Akbar Shekarchi: kamancheh player.
  • Shamirza Moradi: oboe player.
  • Nasrollah Kasraian: photographer.
  • Ali Reza Hosseinkhani: kamancheh player.
  • Reza Saghaee: singer.
  • Nasser Gholamrezai: filmmaker.
  • Dr. Sekandar Amanollahi Baharvand: sociocultural author.
  • Ali Mohammad Saki: sociocultural author.
  • Esfandiar Ghazanfari Amraee: poet.
  • Hamid Izadpanah: poet.
  • Dr Abdolhosein Zarrinkoub: writer, historian, and critic
  • Dr Sayyed Jafar Shahidi: writer, historian, and critic.
  • Abdol Mohammad Ayati: poet.
  • Mehrdad Avesta: poet.
  • Mola Hagh-Ali Siah Poosh: poet (1323 A.H.).
  • Mola Parishan: poet (7th century A.H.).
  • Khaan Almaas: poet (19th century).
  • Mir Nowrooz Mirderikvand: poet (12th century).
  • Ali Mirderikvand: author of No Haven For Gon Gadeen.
  • Parviz Shahbazi: writer, filmmaker, director of Deep Breath (2003).
  • Loris Tjeknavorian: Armenian-Iranian composer and conductor.
  • alireza karami\ poet

Lorestān today

Attractions

Lorestān has 263 sites of historical and cultural significance according to Iran's Cultural Heritage Organization.

Some of the more popular attractions are:

Kiyou Lake and its environment
  • Oshtoran Kooh Mountain, Dorood
  • Bisheh Waterfall Dorood

Colleges and universities

  1. Lorestān University of Medical Sciences
  2. University of Lorestān
  3. Islamic Azad University of Borujerd
  4. Islamic Azad University of Dorood
  5. Islamic Azad University of Aligudarz
  6. Islamic Azad University of Khorram Abad
  7. Payam Nour University of Poldokhtar
  8. Payam Nour University of Alashtar
  9. Payam Nour University of Borujerd
  10. Al-ghadir Applicational Scientific Comprehensive University
  11. Shahid Madani school of Khoramabad
  12. Ma’soumeh School of Khoramabad
  13. Gahar Lake Place of Dorood

See also

External links

Government

Peoples and culture

Current events

Arts and Culture

References


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