Kermanshah (Persian: کرمانشاه, Gorani Kurdish: کرماشان)
34°18′N 47°4′E / 34.300°N 47.067°E Located 525 kilometers (324 miles) from Tehran in the west part of Iran, Kermanshah is the capital city of Kermanshah Province. The city is about 50 miles from the border of Iraq. It had an estimated population of 822,921 in 2005 [1] and its climate is mild.
The inhabitants are mainly Persian and Kurds who speak the Gorani and Kalhori dialects of Kurdish, Persian and Harsini dialect of Laki. The overwhelming majority of the Kurdish and Persian population in this city are Shi'a Muslims.
History
The origins of the founding of the city Kermanshah are disputed but it's most glorious era was during the 4th century AD when it become a political city and region during the Sassanid era. In AD 226, following a two-year war led by the Persian Emperor - Ardashir I - against Kurdish tribes in the region, the Empire reinstated a local Kurdish prince, Kayus of Medya, to rule Kermanshah. Within the dynasty known as the House of Kayus (also Kâvusakân) remained a semi-independent Kurdish kingdom lasting until AD 380 before Ardashir II removed the dynasty's last ruling member.[2]
Kermanshah was conquered by the Arabs in AD 640 and called the town Qirmasin (Qirmashin). Under Seljuk rule in the 11th century, it was, and still is, a major cultural and commercial centre in Western Iran and the southern Kurdish region as a whole. The Safavids fortified the town, and the Qajars repulsed an attack by the Turks during Fath 'Ali Shah's rule (1797–1834). Occupied by the Turkish Army in 1915 during World War I, it was evacuated in 1917. After The Islamic Revolution in the 1970's, the city and its provinces (also called Kermanshah) were shortly renamed Bakhtaran, apparently owing to the use of "Shah" in the name. After the Iran-Iraq War, however, they were renamed Kermanshah. The City was hit hard during the Iran-Iraq War, and although it was rebuilt, it has never fully recovered.
Industry
It is now a fairly important industrial centre; industries include textile manufacturing, food processing, oil refining, carpet making, sugar refining, and the production of electrical equipment and tools.
Higher education
Notable people
Art
- Shahram Nazeri, famous vocalist and musician
- Kayhan Kalhor, musician, nominated for the Grammy Award
- Alexis Kouros, writer, documentary-maker, director and producer
- Manouchehr Taherzadeh, pop singer
- Pouran Derakhshandeh, director
- Hanibal Alkhas, painter, poet
- Fakhri Khourvash, actress
- Jamal Shourjeh, director
- Rasoul Molla Gholipour, director
- Seyyed Khalil Alinejad, Tanbour Mastero
History and Politics
- Nasser Zarafshan, novelist, translator, and attorney
- Karim Sanjabi, Iran's attorney in the oil's national movement, former minister of foreign affairs
- Bijan Namdar Zangeneh, former minister
- Ebrahim Azizi, member and spokesman of the Guardian Council
- Ahamd Shirzad, political activist
- Latif Safari, journalist
Literature
- Rahim Moeini Kermanshahi, famous poet of many classic persian songs
- Ali Ashraf Darvishian, novelist and writer
- Doris Lessing, writer
- Ali Mohammad Afghani, novelist
- Mir Jalaleddin Kazzazi, writer
- Mohammad Javad Mohabbat, poet
- Navab Safa, poet
- Abolghasem Lahouti, poet
Sport
- Kourosh Bagheri, weight lifting champion
- Mohammad Hassan Mohebbi, wrestling champion, former coach of Iranian wrestling national team
- Mohammad Ranjbar, soccer
- Mohammad Hossein Mohebbi, wrestling champion
- Fereidoun Ghanbari, wrestling champion
- Bijan Batmani, boxer
- Jalal Moradi, international soccer referee