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TABRIZ , the capital of the province of Azerbaijan inSee also: Persia,
situated in the valley of the Aji Chai, " Bitter See also: River," at an See also: elevation of 4400 ft. in 38° 4' N., 46° 18' E
.
Based on a
census taken in 1871 the population of Tabriz was in 1881 estimated at 165,000, and is now said to be about 200,000
.
The popular etymology of the name Tabriz from tab=fever, riz = pourer away (verb, rikhtan= pour away, flow; See also: German rieseln?), hence " fever-destroying," is erroneous and was invented in See also: modern times
.
It is related that Zobeideh, the wife of See also: Harun-al-Rashid, founded the See also: town in 791 after recovering there from fever, but the earlier See also: chronicles give no support to this statement, and it is nowhere recorded that Zobeideh ever visited Azerbaijan, and the name Tabriz was known many centuries before her See also: time
.
In 1842 See also: Hammer-Purgstall correctly explained the name as meaning the " warm-flowing " (tab= warm, same See also: root as lep in " tepid ") from some warm See also: mineral springs in the neighbourhood, and compared it with the synonymous See also: Teplitz in Bohemia
.
In old Armenian histories the name is Tavresh, which means the same
.
The popular pronunciation
to and tau for tab has given rise to the spellings Toris and Tauris met with in older travellers and used even now
.
Overlooking the valley on the N.E. and N. are bold See also: bare rocks, while to the S. rises the majestic See also: cone of Sahand (12,000 ft.)
.
The town possesses few buildings of note, and of the extensive ruins few merit See also: attention
.
The ark, or citadel, in the See also: south-west extremity of the city, now used as an See also: arsenal, is a See also: noble See also: building of burnt brick with mighty walls and a tower 120 it. in height
.
Among the ruins of old Tabriz the sepulchre of the Mongol See also: king, Ghazan Khan (1295--13o4), in a quarter once known as Shanb (generally pronounced Sham and Sham) i Ghazan, is no longer to be distinguished except as
See also: part of a huge See also: tumulus
.
The See also: great shanb (cupola or dome) and other buildings erected341
by Ghazan have also disappeared
.
They stood about 2 m . S.W. from the modern town, but far within the See also: original boundaries
.
The " spacious See also: arches of See also: stone and other vestiges of departed majesty," with which
See also: Ker See also: Porter found it surrounded in 1818, were possibly remains of the See also: college (medresseh) and monastery (zavieh) where See also: Ibn Batista found shelter during his visit to the locality
.
On the eastern See also: side of the city stand the ruins of the Masjed i Jehan Shah, commonly known as the Masjed i Kebud, or " Blue Mosque," from the blue glazed tiles which cover its walls
.
It was built by Jehan Shah of the Kara Kuyunli, or Black See also: Sheep dynasty (1437–1467).1 Tabriz is celebrated as one of the most healthy cities in Persia
.
Tabriz was for a long See also: period the emporium for the See also: trade of Persia on the west, but since the opening of the railway through the See also: Caucasus and greater facilities for transport on the See also: Caspian, much of its trade with See also: Russia has been diverted to See also: Astara and See also: Resht, while the insecurity on the Tabriz-See also: Trebizond route since 1878 has diverted much commerce to the See also: Bagdad road
.
According to consular reports the value of the exports and imports which passed through the Tabriz See also: custom-See also: house during the years 1867–73 averaged £593,800 and £1,226,660 (See also: total for the See also: year, £1,820,460); the averages for the six years 1893–9 were £212,880 and £544,530
.
There are reasons to believe that these values were considerably understated
.
For the year 1898–9 the See also: present writer obtained figures directly from the books kept by the custom-house official at Tabriz, and although, as this official informed him, some important items had not been entered at all, the value of the exports and imports shown in the books exceeded that of the consular reports by about io per cent
.
Since that time the customs of Azerbaijan have been taken over by the central customs department under Belgian officials, and it is stated that the trade has not decreased
.
See also: British, See also: Russian, French, See also: Turkish and See also: Austrian consulates and a few See also: European commercial firms are established at Tabriz; there are also See also: post and telegraph offices
.
Tabriz has suffered much from earthquakes, notably in 858, 1042 and 1721, each time with almost See also: complete destruction of the city
.
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