I stumbled on the scene by chance. Our host family in Iran’s second city
Mashhad, a modern and beautiful metropolis that would comfortably fit in New Zealand’s entire population, was taking us on a drive to the outskirts to visit the tomb of the famous poet and chronicler
Abul-Qasem Ferdowsi.
It just so happened that this was the very day that a new section of the surrounding gardens was being opened and the red carpet was being rolled out for a visiting cultural affairs minister. Shortly after we arrived, the political scrum began – a mass of photographers, press people and ceremonial guards pressing.
Bodyguards whisked the minister, Ali-Asghar Mounesan, head of Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism, into the cavernous tomb among the sculptured friezes of mythical hero Rostam fighting off dragons and monsters in defense of ancient Persia.
The hero’s exploits are featured in the 10th century epic Shahnameh: The Book of Kings, penned by
Ferdowsi and comprising some 50,000 couplets.
Ferdowsi is the hometown literary giant and one of Iran’s best universities and medical schools is in the city and named after him. It was opened in 1949.
Modern day Iran is steeped in massive historical and intriguing cultural icons, and also a swathe of mosques and other religious shrines, dating back to the Achaemenian empire founded by Cyrus the Great five centuries before Christ and ancient pre-Islam Zoroastrianism (fire-worshipping), one of the world’s oldest continuously practiced religions believed to have its roots some 4000 years ago.
Impressive attractions:Some critics say that Iranian authorities since the 1979 Islamic Revolution spend far more and devote greater attention to the religious artefacts and buildings of Islam to the neglect of some historical sites. However, whatever the truth about that Iran boasts a never-ending range of impressive and attractive places to visit.
The tragedy is that not enough is known about the country’s cultural and historical wonders in the West and the refusal of many mainstream travel companies to run regular
tours.
Some homegrown Iranian
tour operators, worried about the downturn in tourist numbers – a fall in spite of Iran’s plans to boost tourism and visitors by fivefold to 20 million a year by 2025 (blame Donald Trump for the fall) – have now recruited social media “
influencers” to tour the country and blog about the attributes.
One group of 12 Instagram global posters with about 16 million combined followers are this month
visiting Iran on a familiarization trip organized by Iranian traveler Hoda Rostami and social media “
influencer” who is trying encourage foreign tourists to “
discover” Iran’s fascinations.
A group of Instagram influencers with some 16 million followers in total are visiting Iran on a familiarization trip organized by Iranian social media influencer Hoda Rostami
Iran embarked last year on ambitious plans to boost tourism. Neighboring Azerbaijan, Egypt, Georgia, Lebanon, Syria and Turkey have been added to the list of countries whose nationals can get visas on arrival. Getting an e-visa for New Zealanders is now far more straight forward than it used to be – thank goodness for us not being American or British.
Iran also has plans to revive passenger sea lines, including routes between the country and Bahrain, Oman, Qatar and Saudi Arabia – or at least that was the idea before the recent tensions over the Persian Gulf and sanctions-busting for vital Iranian oil exports.
Also there have been reports on plans to build a railway from Iran’s southwestern Khuzestan province, travelling west through Iraq and ends at the Syrian port city of Latakia. This is expected to boost religious tourism, including the massive annual pilgrimage to Karbala.
Having just toured Iran myself while on sabbatical, I highly recommend the country as an absolute must visit.
My bucketlist:Here is my bucket list of 10 reasons why you should go to Iran – but there are also many other reasons.
Imam Reza (AS) shrine, Mashhad
the mausoleum of Imam Reza, the eighth Imam of Twelver Shiites. It is the largest mosque in the world by area.
The incredibly impressive
Haram-e Razavi, the
Imam Reza (AS) shrine in
Mashhad, is widely regarded as the ‘heart of Shia Iran’. More than 20 million religious tourists visit this vast shrine each year. Affluent
Mashhad, Iran’s second-largest city with a population comfortably equivalent to New Zealand’s total, thrives on “religious tourism”. The city is in north with Turkmenistan and Afghanistan.”
Tomb of Ferdowsi, Mashhad
This tomb complex composed of a white marble base, and a decorative edifice erected in honor of the Persian poet Ferdowsi located in Tus.
Abul-Qasem Ferdowsi, Iran’s greatest and one of the world’s most renowned poets. He penned the epic mythical and historical Shahnameh: The Book of Kings, the world’s longest poem in the 10th century. With some 50,000 couplets, the original book weighs 75 kilos and chronicles the saga of the early Persian empires until the seventh century Arab invasion and conquest. Ferdowsi’s tomb and museum at
Tus (Toos) are today one of
Mashhad’s inspiring
attractions.
Naqsh-e Jahan Square, Isfahan
Naghsh-e Jahan Square situated at the center of Isfahan, Constructed between 1598 and 1629, it is now an important historical site, and one of UNESCO's World Heritage Sites.
Isfahan’s impressive and peaceful
Naqsh-e Jahan Square is the world’s largest after Tiananmen. It is indeed a spectacle. Once a vast polo field, the hewn stone goalposts are still at one end. Designed and laid out in 1602 under the reign of Shah Abbas (Safavid epoch) when Isfahan was capital of Iran, it is today a popular place of family picnics and horse-drawn carriage rides. The square is ringed by a maze of fascinating shops and traditional Sheikh Lotfallah bazaar.
Khaju Bridge, Isfahan
The Khaju Bridge (Pol-e Khajoo) is one of the most famous bridges in Iran was built around 1650, under the reign of Abbas II.
The 133m
Khaju Bridge and weir is one of several historical bridges across the
Zayandeh Rood river, which has started flowing again after being dry for several years. Built about 1650 by Shah Abbas II, the bridge has 23 arches and a place in the middle for a throne for the shah to admire the water flowing by.
Milad Tower, Tehran
Milad Tower in Tehran, the sixth-tallest tower and the 24th-tallest freestanding structure in the world.
Iran’s impressive
Tehran Milad Tower, is at 435m the 6th tallest TV tower in the world. It also has the world’s biggest head structure of any telecommunications tower. The top floor of the 12-level head structure can be reached by high speed lifts within 50sec.
Golestan Palace, Tehran
Awesome example of iranian architecture, the mirror salon is phenomenal, it is very beautiful and takes you right back in the time of the kings.
An elegant complex standing as a reminder of the glories and opulence of Iran’s Qajar dynasty in the 19th and early 20th centuries.
Golestan Palace is where the coronation of Reza Shah took place on a Marble Throne on display and where his son, Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, was also crowned in the Museum Hall before being deposed in the 1979 Revolution.
Sa’ad Abad Museum Complex, Tehran
Its construction was begun in 1931, by order of Reza Shah, and completed in 1936.
The
Mellat Palace or
White Palace, is the largest mansion in the
Sa’ad Abad forest museum complex in north Tehran. This was built in the 1930s and has bullet proof windows. It was used by Mohammad Reza Shah (Pahlavi dynasty), and empress Farah, as a summer palace before he was deposed in the 1979 Revolution. Among the more interesting museums in this complex are one devoted to the exploits of the Iranian adventurer brothers Omidvar and the brilliant contemporary artist Mahmoud Farschian.
Persepolis, near Shiraz
Persepolis was the ceremonial capital of the Achaemenid Empire. It is situated 60km northeast of the city of Shiraz.
One of the seven great wonders of the ancient world,
Persepolis was the extraordinary capital of Darius the Great in 520 BC, conceived and established following the vast Persian Empire forged by
Cyrus the Great. The ruins near Shiraz are still very impressive from the
Gate of all Nations onwards.
Karim Khan Citadel, Shiraz
In the past, the citadel was sometimes used as a prison. Today, it is a museum operated by Iran's Cultural Heritage Organization. A public park surrounds it.
The 18th century
Karim Khan Citadel was once a political prison for 40 years. It has a strange “leaning tower” where the impressive bathhouse outflows eroded the foundations over a couple of centuries. The nearby
Bazar-e Vakil traditional bazaar network and
Hammam-e Vakil bathhouse, which has a display of traditional ablutions, are also fascinating and worth visits.
Tombs of Hafez and Sa’adi, Shiraz
Tomb of Sadi (Sa'dieh), The great Iranian poet in Shiraz
Tombs of Hafez and
Sa’adi in
Shiraz are major sites for Iranians, and they ought to be for Westerners too.
This is a mere introduction to places in Iran to visit, and thanks to Zahra Ebrahimzadeh (our former homestay student), her family and friends for such a wonderful start. I haven’t even mentioned the amazing United Nations heritage old mudwalled town of
Yazd on the edge of a desert, or the northwestern mountain city of
Tabriz with one of the finest bazaars, and a host of other fascinating places.
When I return, I would love to go to the north of the country and around the Caspian Sea.
Visit Iran and enjoy.