Six properties in Tehran approved as national heritage
TEHRAN – A total of six historical buildings and aging structures, scattered across the Iranian capital, have recently been inscribed on the national heritage list.
The Ministry of Cultural Heritage, Tourism, and Handicrafts announced the inscriptions on Thursday in separate letters to the governor-general of the province, CHTN reported.
Jeiranpur and Vasmaqi mansions and Alikhani and Alamolhoda villas were among the properties added to the prestigious list.
The first time Tehran is mentioned in historical accounts is in an 11th-century chronicle in which it is described as a small village north of Ray.
Ray, in which signs of settlement date from 6000 BC, is often considered to be Tehran’s predecessor. It became the capital city of the Seljuk Empire in the 11th century but later declined with factional strife between different neighborhoods and the Mongol invasion of 1220.
Tehran has many to offer its visitors including Golestan Palace, Grand Bazaar, Treasury of National Jewels, National Museum of Iran, Glass & Ceramic Museum, Masoudieh Palace, Sarkis Cathedral, Tehran Museum of Contemporary Art, and Carpet Museum of Iran, to name a few.
ABU/