Online Encyclopedia

FIRUZABAD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V10, Page 425 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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FIRUZABAD  , a

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town of
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Persia, in the province of Fars, 72 M . S. of
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Shiraz, in 28° 51' N . Pop. about 3000 . It is situated in a fertile plain, 15 m. long and 7 M. broad, well watered by the
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river Khoja which flows through it from north to south . The town is surrounded by a mud wall and ditch . Three or four miles north-west of the town are the ruins of the ancient city and of a large
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building popularly known as the fire-temple of
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Ardashir, and beyond them on the face of the rock in the
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gorge through which the river enters the plain are two
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Sassanian bas-reliefs . The river leaves the plain by a narrow gorge at the
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southern end, and according to Persian
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history it was there that Alexander the
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Great, when unable to capture the ancient city, built a dike across the gorge, thus damming up the
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water of the river and turning the plain into a lake and submerging the city and villages . The lake remained until the beginning of the 3rd century, when Ardashir, the first Sassanian monarch, drained it by destroying the dike . He built a new city, called it Gar, and made it the capital of one of the five great provinces or divisions of Fars . Firuz (or Peroz, q.v.), one of Ardashir's successors, called the
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district after his name Firazabad (" theabode of Firuz "), but the name of the city remained Gar until Azud ed Dowleh (Adod addaula) (949–982) changed it to its
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present name . He did this because he frequently resided at Gar, and the name meaning also " a
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grave " gave rise to unpleasant allusions, for instance, "
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People who go to Gar (grave) never return alive; our king goes to Gar (the town) several times a
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year and is not dead yet." The district has twenty villages and produces much wheat and rice . It is said that the rice of Firazabad bears sixty-
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fold .

(A .

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