Engraved stone discovered accidentally in northwest Iran
TEHRAN – An engraved stone has recently been unearthed accidentally in the small village of Sahzab, East Azarbaijan province, northwest Iran, during a construction project, a senior police official in charge of protecting cultural heritage has said.
The locals soon informed authorities in charge of protecting the cultural heritage, and the stone was handed over to the village council for better protection, Kazem Dadashi explained on Tuesday.
Soaked in history and culture for millennia, Tabriz, which is the capital of East Azarbaijan, embraces several historical and religious sites, including Jameh Mosque of Tabriz and Arg of Tabriz, and UNESCO-registered Tabriz Historic Bazaar Complex to name a few. The city became the capital of the Mongol Il-Khan Mahmud Gazan (1295–1304) and his successor. Timur (Tamerlane), a Turkic conqueror, took it in 1392. Some decades later, the Kara Koyunlu Turkmen made it their capital. It was when the famous Blue Mosque was built in Tabriz.
The city retained its administrative status under the Safavid dynasty until 1548 when Shah Tahmasp I relocated his capital westward to Qazvin. During the next two centuries, Tabriz changed hands several times between Persia and the Ottoman Empire. During World War I, the city was temporarily occupied by Turkish and then Soviet troops.
ABU/AM