Sunday, April 7, 2013

A tour of Esfahan

Esfahan. The more or less beautiful city in Iran, perhaps make up the most beautiful city in the world. We were here for collar days and we still have the idea we have nevertheless seen a few of the sights of this marvelous city.

At our front day, we started with a scrutinize of the Friday Mosque. This mosque is like a museum of Islamic Architecture over a thousand years.

From the coming of Islam to Iran, every dynasty has added new constructions to the mosque, without destroying the older things. The oldest musical composition was originally a Zoroastrian fire temple.

Some people ordinate the Friday Mosque is the most interesting building in all of Iran. Yes, the imam Mosque is more beautiful, precisely this combination of different styles of architecture makes it rum in the world.

We made enough photographs to give this mosque its own page, but we decided to keep it down to two pictures on this page.

Our first day in Esfahan was a Friday. On this day of the week, most of the sights of Esfahan atomic number 18 closed, except (curiously enough) the Friday Mosque, the Shaky Minarets where it was too crowded to bang the shaking, the Zoroastrian fire temple, the Christian churches in the Jolfa district and the bridge across the river.

So, this enumeration of open-things-on-a-friday describes about what we saw the first day.

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There are about 13 churches in Esfahans Jolfa district. This district is where galore(postnominal) Christians, most of them Armenians, live. The most famous church is the Vank Cathedral, which is not only a church but also a museum. Anyway, the Vank was closed by and by all, so we went to see another one called the Miriam-church.

Before the Arabs invaded Iran, there were many fire temples in Esfahan. The Arabs destroyed them all, except...

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