Alex Shams Profile picture
Sep 6, 2019 35 tweets 22 min read
Iran is a land of beauty and contrasts. I'd love to share some of that with you!

Today we're going to explore northwestern Iran, traveling into the forests of Gilan and over into Iranian Azerbaijani cities of Ardebil and Tabriz.

THREAD:
The road north from Tehran leads first into the subtropical Hyrcanian forests of Gilan, along the Caspian Sea coast.

This region is full of small villages surrounded by rice paddies or corn.
Bandar Anzali, our first stop, is actually located in the middle of a lagoon!

Anzali is Iran's main port on the Caspian Sea, and it boomed during World War II.
Anzali has some great mid-century architecture left over from its wartime boom, as well as a lot of cute more humble homes around the bazaar.
Around 500,000 Polish refugees entered Iran during the war through Anzali, contributing immensely to Iranian culture and cuisine.

The large Polish cemetery in Anzali is testament to their presence.
No visit to Anzali would be complete without a lagoonside meal!
We're heading back on the road, up into the forests of Gilan yet again!
The road from Asalem, on the Caspian coast, to Khalkhal, in the interior is a mist-covered beauty! And a perfect place to stop for some corn.
Khalkhal is the perfect place to stop for a typical Iranian breakfast- fresh barbari bread, an omelette, and sarshir (heavy cream) with locally made honey!
From Khalkhal, it's a quick drive up into the mountains to Ardebil, a former Safavid capital city where the weather is cool year-round, thanks to its altitude.
Ardebil is in the heart of Iranian Azerbaijan.

About 1/4 of Iranians - 25 million people - speak Azeri Turkish as their mother tongue, far more than in neighboring Republic of Azerbaijan.

Banners here, especially for religious occasions, are often written in Azeri.
In Iranian Azerbaijan, Azeri is written in Persian script. But sometimes you see it written in Latin letters, to cater to tourists from across the border.
Now for the real reason we're in Ardebil! The tomb of Sheikh Safi al-Din, a stunning architectural masterpiece.

It's home to the tomb of the Safaviyya Sufi order's founder. The Safavids went on to conquer Iran and ruled from 1500s to the 1700s as the Safavid Empire.
Originally Kurdish, the Safavid founders moved to Iranian Azerbaijan and absorbed Azeri Turkish culture, before becoming leaders of a Persian empire.

The Safavids converted to Shi’ism - and they converted most of Iran along with them.
And don't forget to look up!!
From Ardebil, it's a two hour drive to the mysterious city of Shehr Yeri, a Neolithic city whose ruins date back around 7,000 years.

The site is known as the City of the Mouthless for the markings that cover hundreds of big stones and boulders, arranged atop a vast hill.
The most distinctive stones have been gathered at the bottom of the hill for protection; but as other photos show, atop the hill more than 500 of these big stones are arranged in what was once a holy site.

The oldest remains date to around 6000 BC.
Now it's onward to Tabriz, the cultural and social heart of Azerbaijan!

Tabriz was a major turn of the century intellectual hub, playing a key role in the 1905-12 Constitutional Revolution, when Iranians rose up to demand an end to absolute monarchy and a constitution.
The beautiful bazaar of Tabriz, the largest covered marketplace in the world.

The bazaar has existed for at least 1,300 years, a key stopping point on the Silk Road and today the heart of commercial life of Iranian Azerbaijan.
The bazaar flourished when Tabriz was the capital of Iran during Safavid rule, and it’s grandiose serays hosted traders from across the region.
No visit to Tabriz is complete without a quick stop at the book bazaar in the city's main park.
From Tabriz, we're in for a quick stop at the cliff village of Kandovan, built as a series of caves into volcanic rock on the edges of Mount Sahand.

Known as troglodyte dwellings, these cave homes are found around inactive volcanoes.
Kandovan was said to have been settled 700 years ago, as villagers took safety in somewhat hidden mountain caves, expanding them over the years.

Today the village is fronted by newer mud brick houses, leading down to farming terraces in the small river valley below.
And a quick sunset dip in Lake Urmia, the largest saltwater lake in the Middle East and freshly full up after a winter of heavy rain and snow.
In the mountains north of Tabriz, along the River Aras that today forms the border between Iran on one side and Armenia and Azerbaijan on the other, sits a series of Iranian Armenian monasteries dating back over 1,000 years.
St Stepanos Monastery was established in the 600s and grew extensively in the Middle Ages, by the 1300s becoming a major center of Armenian cultural and intellectual production spurred by the monks based here.
In the early 1800s, Russia invaded the Caucasus - until then part of Iran - as part of its colonial expansion. They reached the river Aras, which became Iran’s new border. And this river that once facilitated back and forth across the region became over night a dividing line.
The Aras River Valley is one of the strangest borders I’ve ever seen- especially strange for a seemingly calm border that’s an active war zone.
As you drive on the south side in Iran, passing centuries-old Armenian churches, you see no less than 4 borders on the northern side-Naxchivan, Armenia, Nagorno-Karabakh, and finally Republic of Azerbaijan. The shallow river is all that divides you from what was once all USSR.
Since the late 1980s, Armenia and Azerbaijan have fought a war directly across the river.

While in Iran Azerbaijanis and Armenians live together still, across the river these border mark ethnic dividers.
This is Shepherd’s Chapel. It's on the Iran side of the Iran-Azerbaijan border.

It used to have a twin across the river, but as part of Republic of Azerbaijan’s to eliminate any reminder of Armenian history on their soil, it’s twin was demolished.
On the way back, a quick stop around Tabriz's cute old town before we proceed on our last leg of the journey!
Gardaneh Heyran, a steep mountain road through the foggy Hyrcanian forests of northwestern Iran.

Iran’s Caspian coast is covered in these ancient forests, and as you reach their heights the peaks become covered in thick mist, even at the height of summer.
And a last cup of tea, overlooking the beautiful mountain village of Heyran, just above the Caspian Sea.
I hope you enjoyed this quick journey through northwestern Iran!

If you're looking for more, check out my Instagram stories, where I post more detailed photos and stories from travel across Iran!

instagram.com/alex_shams/

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More from @alexshams_

Jan 18
Egypt’s 1977 Bread Intifada, a story about the power of collective action and people power in the Middle East:
“The most recent and vivid memory of bread and revolt in Egypt is tied to the 25 January revolution slogan: “eish, horeya, a’dala egtema’eya” (bread, freedom, and social justice).

Before that there was“Intifadet Al-Khobz” (The Bread Intifada).”

egyptianstreets.com/2022/01/18/45-…
The burning down of police stations, the local centres of repression, was central to the Bread Intifada:
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Dec 16, 2021
Imamzadeh Yahya, a beautiful shrine in Varamin, near Tehran, Iran, dating back 700+ years.

Notice the white gaps between the wall tiles.

What you see is a holy place stripped of its beauty by Western archaelogists.

A thread about archaeology, colonialism, museums, and theft:
In the 1800s, Western archaeologists began excavating in Iran.

The French pressured Iran, weak and indebted, to give it a monopoly.

This allowed them to take half of what they found.

Religious sites were exempted.

Yet, Imamzadeh Yahya was pillaged. ALL tiles were stolen.
Hundreds of lustrous tiles once covered the shrine's wall, many from the 1200s.

They were stripped and stolen by archaeologists, spirited away to Western museums.

This is what those tiles looked like.

These images are taken from the sites of the museums that keep them today.
Read 17 tweets
Dec 15, 2021
The history of the Sikh community in Iran, historically based in Iranian Baluchistan.

It's said that Zahedan ("Ascetics") was renamed in their honor (from Dozdab, meaning "water-thieves").

Today most Iranian Sikhs live in Tehran, home to a gurudwara.

scroll.in/magazine/10122…
Some images I took a few years back of the Sikh gurudwara in central Tehran from the outside. ImageImage
For more information, here's an academic paper about the Sikh community in Zahedan, focused on the languages (mostly Persian and Punjabi) that they speak

ijli.uoz.ac.ir/article_33195_…
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The story of Tehran Street in Seoul, South Korea.

In the 1970s, Tehran and Seoul became sister cities and renamed streets for eachother.

Tehran Street, Seoul was located in a farmland area called Gangnam.

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Teheran-ro got its name in 1977, following a visit by Tehran's mayor.

Tehran was more developed than Seoul at the time. What is now Teheran-ro was mostly farmland and gravel.

But in the decades that followed, Gangnam grew into an economic hub as Korea's economy boomed.
When Tehran Street was named, the name was largely aspirational- expressing hope that Seoul could grow like Tehran had

Teheran-ro indeed grew quickly.

Today Gangnam is a business and tech hub- and Teheran-ro it's biggest street, nicknamed "Tehran Valley," after Silicon Valley.
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THREAD:
The addition of orange to the Arab colors reflected the importance of the Jaffa orange in Palestine's coasts

The Cross & Crescent, meanwhile, was likely an inclusive Arab response to the Zionist mvmt's use of exclusively Jewish symbols

More info: plaza.ufl.edu/tsorek/article…
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Historical gems from/about Pakistan, found in Tehran’s second hand book markets
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On the cover is “Hazrat President,” Ayub Khan, as he was referred to in the Persian
The magazine was printed in Karachi and flown by post to a Tehran- notice the postal stamps
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