2012–13 Iran Football's 3rd Division
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2012–13 Iran Football's 3rd Division
The article contains information about the 2012–13 Iran Iran Football's 3rd Division, 3rd Division football season. This is the 4th rated football league in Iran after the Persian Gulf Cup, Azadegan League, and Iran Football's 2nd Division, 2nd Division. The league started from September 2012. In total and in the first round, 70 teams will compete in 9 different groups. From the first round, 18 teams go through the second round. In the second round 18 teams will be divided in three groups of 6, where the winner of each group will be directly promoted to 2013–14 Iran Football's 2nd Division. The three group runner-up and the best third place team will go through play-off matches, where the two play-off winners also will be promoted. Therefore, in total, five team will be promoted from this league to Iran Football's 2nd Division. Teams The following 70 teams will compete in 2012–13 Iran Football's 3rd Division season. *Aria Khorramdarreh Zanjan F.C., Aria Khorramdarreh Zanja ...
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Iran Football's 3rd Division
Iranian football's 3rd division () is the fourth-highest football (soccer), football division overall in the Iranian football league system. Before 2001, the 3rd division league was the third-highest division in Iranian football league system, however, it became the fourth-highest division when Iran's football structure officially became professional. The league consists of two stages. In the first stage, 65 teams participate in five groups of 13 teams each. The groups are organized in such a manner that teams closer to each other geographically end up in the same group. Because of this, the 3rd division can be considered a regional league. Stage one is played in single round-robin format and this is the only league organised by IRIFF which has no home-and-away format. Top two teams of each group promote to second stage and join 20 teams which already have spots due to their performance in the previous season. This means 85 different teams compete in 3rd division. See also * Ir ...
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Mehr Hamedan F
Mehr or Mihr may refer to: Persian names * Mehr, an alternative name for Mithra, a Zoroastrian divinity * Mehr (month), the seventh month of the year and the sixteenth day of the month of the Iranian and Zoroastrian calendars * Mehr's day, or ''Mehregan'', the Zoroastrian/Iranian festival celebrated in honor of Mehr/Mithra People * Mehr (name) * Mihr (name) * House of Mihran, a Parthian clan and an Armenian king Places * Mehr, alternate spelling of Mohr, Fars, a city in Iran * Kabud Mehr, a village in Iran * Mehr, Ilam, a village in Ilam Province, Iran * Mehr-e Olya, a village in Markazi Province, Iran * Mehr-e Sofla, a village in Markazi Province, Iran * Mehr, Razavi Khorasan, a village in Razavi Khorasan Province, Iran * Mehrabad International Airport in Tehran * ''Darb-e Mehr'', Mithra's court, an alternate name for a Zoroastrian fire temple * Mihrimah Mosque, an Ottoman mosque located just inside the Edirnekapı District on the Walls of Istanbul, Turkey * Mihrim ...
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Mahtab Baft Shafagh F
'Mahtāb' (, "moonlight", "the fullmoon", splendor of the "moon") is a given name derived from Persian. Notable people with the name include: Females * Mahtab Farid (born 1985), American journalist * Mahtab Keramati (born 1970), Iranian actress * Mahtab Parsamehr (born 1989), Iranian archer * Mahtob Mahmoody (born 1979), American author * Mahtab Norouzi (c. 1934–2012), Iranian Baluchi master artisan in needlework Needlework refers to decorative sewing and other textile arts, textile handicrafts that involve the use of a Sewing needle, needle. Needlework may also include related textile crafts like crochet (which uses a crochet hook, hook), or tatting, ( ... Males * Mahtabuddin Sarker (1903–1973), Bangladeshi politician and magistrate * Mahtab Uddin Ahmad, member of the Pakistan National Assembly * Shah Mahatab Ahmad, Bangladeshi politician * Mamun Al Mahtab (born 1970), Bangladeshi doctor, hepatologist, medical scientist, and author * Mahtab Hussain (born 1981), British- ...
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Khalkhal Dasht Ardebil F
Khalkhal or Khalkhāl or Khal Khal may refer to: * Xalxal, Nakhchivan, a village in Azerbaijan * Xalxal, Oghuz, a village and municipality in Azerbaijan *Khalkhal County Khalkhal County () is in Ardabil province, Iran. Its capital is the city of Khalkhal. Demographics Language The majority of Khalkhal County residents are Azerbaijanis, but there are many Tats and Kurds living in the southern areas of the ..., a subdivision of Ardabil Province, Iran * Herowabad, a city in Ardabil province, Iran * Khalkhal, Ardabil, a town in Ardabil province, Iran * Khal Khal, Kermanshah, a village in Kermanshah province, Iran {{place name disambiguation ...
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Khazar Mahmoudabad F
The Khazars ; 突厥可薩 ''Tūjué Kěsà'', () were a nomadic Turkic people who, in the late 6th century CE, established a major commercial empire covering the southeastern section of modern European Russia, southern Ukraine, Crimea, and Kazakhstan. They created what, for its duration, was the most powerful polity to emerge from the break-up of the Western Turkic Khaganate. Astride a major artery of commerce between Eastern Europe and Southwestern Asia, Khazaria became one of the foremost trading empires of the early medieval world, commanding the western marches of the Silk Road and playing a key commercial role as a crossroad between China, the Middle East, and Kievan Rus'. For some three centuries (–965), the Khazars dominated the vast area extending from the Volga-Don steppes to the eastern Crimea and the northern Caucasus. Khazaria long served as a buffer state between the Byzantine Empire, the nomads of the northern steppes, and the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates, ...
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Karoun Ahvaz F
The Karun (, ) is the Iranian river with the highest water flow, and the country's only navigable river. It is long. The Karun rises in the Zard Kuh mountains of the Bakhtiari district in the Zagros Range, receiving many tributaries, such as the Dez and the Kuhrang. It passes through the city of Ahvaz, the capital of the Khuzestan Province of Iran, before emptying to its mouth into Arvand Rud.Karun River, Encyclopædia Iranica at http://www.iranicaonline.org/articles/karun The Karun continues toward the Persian Gulf, forking into two primary branches on its delta – the Bahmanshir and the Haffar – that join the Arvand Rud, emptying into the Persian Gulf. The important Island of Abadan is located between these two branches of the Karun. The port city of Khorramshahr is divided from the Island of Abadan by the Haffar branch. Juris Zarins and other scholars have identified the Karun as one of the four rivers of Eden (Gihon), the others being the Tigris, the Euphrates, and ...
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Isar Jiroft F
The Isar () is a river in Austria and in Bavaria, Germany. Its source is in the Karwendel mountain range of the Alps. The Isar river enters Germany near Mittenwald and flows through Krün, Wallgau, Bad Tölz, Munich, and Landshut before reaching the Danube near Deggendorf. With 295 km length, it is among the longest rivers in Bavaria. It is Germany's second most important tributary of the Danube. Etymology One theory is that the name ''Isar'' stems from ''*es'' or ''*is'' in the Indo-European languages, meaning "flowing water", and later turned into a word with a meaning narrowed to frozen water (hence English ''ice'', ) in Proto-Germanic. The name itself is mentioned for the first time in 763 as ''Isura''. Related names include: *Eisack / Isarco (Italy) *Ésera (Spain) *Isar (Spanish town, in the province of Burgos) * Isauro (Italy) *Isère (France) * Isel (Austria) *IJssel (Netherlands; known to Romans as ''Isala'') * IJzer/Yser (Belgium) * Isonzo (Slovenia, Italy) * Jize ...
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Homa Qom F
Homa may refer to: Places Ethiopia * Homa (woreda), a district in Oromia Region, Ethiopia Kenya * Homa Bay, a town and a bay on the shore of Lake Victoria in Kenya * Homa Mountain, a volcano near Homa Bay, Kenya Iran * Chal Homa, Markazi, Iran * Homa, Iran, a village in Lorestan Province, Iran * Homa-ye Bala (other), places in Iran * Homag (other), various places in Iran * Homay, Iran (other), various places in Iran Israel * Har Homa, East Jerusalem neighborhood, Israel United States * Homa Hills, Wyoming * La Homa, Texas, U.S. People People with the given name Homa * Homa Arjomand (born 1952), Iranian political activist * Homa Darabi (1994–1940), Iranian pediatrician, academic, and political activist * Homa Vafaie Farley, Iranian-born potter and ceramist * Homa Hoodfar, Canadian-Iranian sociocultural anthropologist * Homa Katouzian (born 1942), Iranian economist, historian, sociologist and literary critic * Homa Mirafs ...
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Heyat Football Babol F
Hayad is a village in the Aghdara District of Azerbaijan. It was previously part of the self-proclaimed Republic of Artsakh's Martakert Province Martakert Province () was a de facto province of the Republic of Artsakh, when it was ''de jure'' part of the Republic of Azerbaijan. The population was mainly Armenian. The province had 43 communities of which one was considered urban and 42 a .... References * Populated places in Kalbajar District {{Azerbaijan-geo-stub ...
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