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Shahre Ray, Shahr-e Ray, Shahre Rey, or Shahr-e Rey (, ) or simply Ray or Rey (), is the capital of Rey County in
Tehran Province Tehran province () is one of the 31 provinces of Iran. Its capital is the city of Tehran. Tehran province covers an area of and is located to the north of the central plateau of Iran. It was made a part of the First Region with its secretar ...
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Iran Iran, officially the Islamic Republic of Iran (IRI) and also known as Persia, is a country in West Asia. It borders Iraq to the west, Turkey, Azerbaijan, and Armenia to the northwest, the Caspian Sea to the north, Turkmenistan to the nort ...
. Formerly a distinct city, it has now been absorbed into the metropolitan area of Greater Tehran as the 20th district of municipal Tehran, the capital city of the country. In historical sources also known as Rhages (), Rhagae, and Arsacia, Ray is the oldest existing city in Tehran Province. In the Classical antiquity, classical era, it was a prominent city belonging to Media (region), Media, the political and cultural base of the Medes. Old Persian cuneiform, Ancient Persian inscriptions and the Avesta (Zoroastrianism, Zoroastrian Religious text, scriptures), among other sources, attest to the importance of ancient Ray. Ray is mentioned several times in the Biblical apocrypha, Apocrypha. It is also shown on the fourth-century Tabula Peutingeriana, Peutinger Map. The city was subject to severe destruction during the Middle Ages, medieval invasions by the Muslim conquest of Persia, Arabs, Oghuz Turks, Turks, and Mongol conquest of Khwarezmia, Mongols. Its position as a capital city was revived during the reigns of the Buyid dynasty, Buyid Daylamites and the Seljuk Empire, Seljuk Turks. Ray is richer than many other ancient cities in the number of its historical monuments. The Neolithic site of Cheshmeh-Ali (Shahr-e-Rey), Cheshme-Ali, the reconstructed Median-era Rey Castle, the Parthian Empire, Parthian-era Rashkan Castle, the Sasanian-era Zoroastrian Bahram Fire Temple, Fire Temple of Bahram, and the once Zoroastrian and now Islamic Bibi Shahr Banu Shrine, Shrine of Bibi Shahrbanu are among the many archaeological sites in Ray. Ray has been home to many historical figures, including royalty, merchants, scholars and poets. The medieval Persian scholar Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi, Rhazes, one of the most important figures in medical science, was from Ray. One of the Etymology, etymologies proposed for the name of the Radhanites—a group of merchants, some of Jews, Jewish origin, who kept open the Eurasia, Eurasian Trade route, trade routes in the early Middle Ages—links them to Ray. Ray today has many industries and factories in operation. It is connected via the rapid Public transport, transit system of Tehran Metro to the rest of Greater Tehran.


Geography


Mountain ranges

Ray County is located in the plain and its mountains are not very tall. These mountains are: 1. Bibi Shahrbanu Shrine, Bibi Sharbanu (): The Bibi Sharbanu mountains are located in the east of Ray City, measuring 1535 meters above sea level. 2. Arad mountains (): located in the center of Ray County, on the border between Kahrizak and Fashapuyeh District, Fashapoye parts, its height is 1428 meters. This range also appears in a map dated to 1307 AH, during the era of Naser al-Din Shah Qajar, drawn by two Iranian engineers of the time. In the book ''Detailed Geography of Iran'', Mount Arad is mentioned with the name of mountains ''Hasanabad'' and ''Kanargard'' (). 3. Mar_e (mære): located in the southwest of Ray City and in the south of the cities of Hassanabad and Rudshur. Its height is 1503 meters. 4. Kūh-e Qarah Bologh (): This mountain is located at the intersection of four cities, Zarandiyeh, Saveh, Ray and Qom.


Rivers

1. Karaj River: The Karaj River originates from Mount Alborz and flows into the Salt Lake after passing through several cities in Tehran Province. This river runs in a northwest-southeast direction throughout Ray City and after joining one of the branches of Jajroud flows into the salt lake. It is the second largest river after Zayanderud, Zayandarud in the central plateau region. 2. Jajrud (river), Jajrud river: Jajroud river is one of the permanent and important rivers of Tehran province, which flows along the southern direction and finally into the salt lake. A branch of this river passes through the eastern border of Ray City. 3. Fashapuyeh District#Shur Fashapoye River, Shur Fashapoye River: The Shore River originates from Zanjan province and after passing through Qazvin province, the southwest of Tehran province and Zarandieh city, it reaches Ray City. This river crosses the width of Ray city in a northwest-southeast direction. The river is permanent and is 420 kilometers long.


Vegetation

The climate of the city is semi-arid and therefore does not have a natural forest, But it has a hand-planted forest of 387 hectares. However, in terms of pasture, it is relatively rich and has 166,200 hectares of pasture.


Name

''Shahr-e Rey'' (, ) is Persian language, Persian for "City of Ray". ''Ray'' or () derives from Old Persian (), related to Persian (red). It is recorded in Ancient Greek as () and () and in Latin as and . It was once renamed () under the Seleucid Empire. The name is spelled in various forms, including ''Ray'', ''Rey'', ''Rayy'' and ''Rhay''. ''Encyclopædia Iranica'' uses ''Ray''. In the past, the people of Ray were called "Razi (disambiguation), Razi".


History


Ray's Historical Artifacts and Exploitation

In the late 19th and early 20th centuries, the site was dug up carelessly by Western archaeologists and local dealers, mainly looking for valuable objects. Many of the items found were sold on the black market. Today, several museums have some of the artifacts from Ray that came from this time of collecting. The earliest Western descriptions of Ray (Rayy) came from British travelers such as Sir James Justinian Morier, James Morier and Sir William Ouseley, who explored the area in the 1810s to 1830s. Their writings lacked an archaeological viewpoint and instead reflected a sense of nostalgia, reminiscing about the city's illustrious history.


Mapping Ray: Early Explorations and Accuracy

It was only in the first half of the 19th century that Ray started to be studied more thoroughly. Robert Ker Porter (1777-1842) created the first map of old Ray, which was surrounded by a strong wall, between 1821 and 1822. Although this map was not very accurate, it has been used in all publications up to now. The map was oriented incorrectly, and it misidentified the main water source, Cheshmeh-Ali (Shahr-e-Rey), Cheshmeh-Ali. A few years later, in 1840, another traveler, the French architect Pascal Coste (1809-1889), visited Ray. He made a more accurate map of the old city. He also drew some views of the site from the Bibi Shahrbanu Shrine, Bibi Shahrbanu mountain, which is just a few meters to the east. Coste noted all the different water sources and correctly oriented the map according to the actual layout of the city. He identified the various parts of the city and showed the three different walls that were built during different periods. Agricultural settlements were long established as part of the Central Plateau Culture on local foothills such as that of Cheshmeh-Ali (Shahr-e-Rey), Cheshme-Ali in northern Ray, which dates back to around 6,000 BC. The establishment of Ray has been attributed to ancient mythological monarchs, and it is also believed that Ray was the seat of a dynasty of Zoroastrianism, Zoroastrian leadership.


Classical era

The Achaemenid Empire, Achaemenid Behistun Inscription mentions Ray (, ; , ; , ) as a part of Media (region), Media, which was the political and cultural base of the ancient Medes, one of the list of ancient Iranian peoples, ancient Iranian peoples. Ray was one of the main strongholds of the Seleucid Empire. During the Seleucid period, Alexander the Great's general Seleucus I Nicator renamed the city as ''Europos'' (), honoring his home city in Macedonia (ancient kingdom), Macedonia. In , Ray was conquered by the Parthian Empire, Parthian king Mithridates I of Parthia, Mithridates I (). Following the Parthian conquest of Ray, the city was renamed Arsacia. The city remained an important site under the Parthians, as demonstrated by its many coin mints, under the name of (the Greek form of ''Ragā/Raγā''). Ray was used as one of the shifting capitals of the Parthian Empire, according to Athenaeus. According to Isidore of Charax, under the Parthian and Seleucid eras, Ray was surrounded by the province of Rhagiana together with four other cities. Ray was amongst the bases used by the Parthians to thwart nomadic attacks and to occasionally invade the Central Asian steppe. Under the Sasanian Empire, Ray () was located near the center of the empire. It was the base of the powerful House of Mihran, House of Mehran and the House of Spandiyadh, House of Spandiyad, two of the Seven Great Houses of Iran during the Sasanian period.


Middle Ages

Siyavash, the son of Mehran and the last King of Ray in the Sasanian Empire, was defeated fighting the Muslim conquest of Persia, Muslim invasion in 643. Ray was then used as a camp site under Arab Muslim military occupation. By the time of the Abbasid Caliphate, Ray was considerably restored and expanded into a new city named Mohammadiya. During the early Islamic period, the language spoken in Ray was the Razi dialect, which was most likely a continuation of the Median language. The Shah Abdol-Azim Shrine, a shrine containing the tomb of Abd al-Aziz al-Hasani, a fifth generation descendant of Hasan ibn Ali and a companion of Muhammad al-Taqi, was built in the ninth century. It remains as the main Islamic sanctuary of the city to date. A Tower of Silence, where Zoroastrians of after the Muslim conquest had come to put the bodies of the dead in the open, was built by a wealthy inhabitant of Ray on a hill in the tenth century. The tower, today in ruins and designated as ''Gabri'' (a term denoting "Zoroastrian", adopted after the Muslim conquest), was reportedly soon taken by the Muslims. Also dating to the tenth century is the Bibi Shahr Banu Shrine, Bibi Shahrbanu Shrine, which is the site of a former Zoroastrian temple dedicated to Anahita, the ancient Iranian goddess of the waters. The temple has been converted into a Muslim shrine claimed to be the burial of Shahrbanu, a legendary Sasanian princess who was captured by the Muslims and married Husayn ibn Ali, the grandson of Muhammad. It is likely that the name ''shahrbanu'', meaning "lady of the land", is in fact an attribution to Anahita, who bore the title ''banu'' ("lady"). Ray was one of the capital cities of the Buyid dynasty. It was one of the cities that were equipped with rapid postal service, which was predominantly used for transferring official mails. The Buyid period came to an end in 1029, when the city was sacked brutally by Mahmud of Ghazni. A zealous Sunni, Mahmud had large numbers of the local population, consisting of Isma'ilism, Ismailis and Mazdakites, crucified and many books of the great library of Rayy burned as he considered them heretical. Ray became later a capital city of the Seljuk Empire in the 11th century. During this time, the city of Ray was at its greatest expanse. It had developed a great urban market that also benefited its neighboring regions, including the once small town of Tehran, and had become a remarkable center for silk weaving. Commercial goods imported by traders via the Silk Road were brought into the bazaar of Ray. One of the monuments that survives from this period is the 12th-century Tughrul Tower, a brick tower built in 1140 that is attributed to Tughril, Tughrul I, the founder of the Seljuk Empire. Ray was home to a Shia Islam, Shia Muslim community and some of the earliest Shia madrasas in Iran already in the 12th century, at least one established by Shia scholar Qazvini Razi, prior to the later Safavid conversion of Iran to Shia Islam, Safavid official adoption of Shiism as the state religion. In the early 13th century, following the Mongol conquest of Khwarezmia, Mongol invasion of Iran, Ray was severely destructed. It was abandoned and eventually lost its importance in the presence of the nearby growing town of Tehran. Ray remained abandoned throughout the time of the Timurid Empire.


Early modern times

Amīn Rāzī, Amin Razi, a Persian geographer from Ray who lived by the time of the Safavid dynasty, attests to the "incomparable abundance" of the gardens and canals of his hometown. In 1618, Italian author Pietro Della Valle described Ray as a large city with large gardens that was administered by a provincial governor but was not urbanized and did not seem to be inhabited. The shrines of Shah Abdol-Azim and Bibi Shahrbanu, among other religious shrines throughout Iran, were notably reconstructed during the early modern period, using architectural techniques that were developed since the time of the Safavid dynasty to the time of the Qajar dynasty. There is Fath Ali shah inscription (Cheshmeh-Ali), a relief located at Cheshme-Ali from the time of Fath-Ali Shah Qajar, Fath-Ali Shah of the Qajar dynasty, who often used to explore the city, which shows the Qajar ruler in a hunting scene, replacing a former Sasanian relief that depicted an ancient Persian emperor in the same manner. It was engraved in 1831, and its surrounding was decorated with tablets covered with poetry.


Contemporary era

In the middle of the 19th century, Ray was described as a place of ruins, the only settlement being around the Shah Abdol-Azim Shrine. Being the only important pilgrimage site in vicinity to the royal court in the new capital Tehran brought more people to visit the shrine and a major restoration was sponsored by the court. Thus, between the years 1886 and 1888, under the reign of Qajar ruler Naser al-Din Shah Qajar, Naser al-Din Shah, Ray became the first place in Iran to be connected to the capital by a railway. The railway had a short single line and transported a few steam locomotives that were colloquially called ("smoky machine"), between terminals that were called (from French language, French ). Excavations in the old city began in the late 19th century, and many of the findings were traded. Between 1933 and 1936, the Cheshme-Ali hill was excavated by archaeologists from the Boston Fine Arts Museum and the University Museum at the University of Pennsylvania headed by Erich Schmidt, which resulted in the discovery of a number of 7,000-year-old artifacts. Some of the discovered objects are displayed at museums in Iran, Chicago, and Philadelphia. Due to real estate expansions in the 1980s and 1990s, the hill is now mostly leveled out. Further excavations began in 1997, in a collaboration between the Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism Organization of Iran, Iranian Ministry of Cultural Heritage, the Department of Archaeological Sciences of the University of Bradford and the Department of Archaeology of the University of Tehran. In 1951, Reza Shah of the Pahlavi dynasty, the second last shah of the Imperial State of Iran, was buried by the order of his son and successor Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in a mausoleum dedicated to him in Ray. The mausoleum was built near the Shah Abdol-Azim Shrine. Following the Iranian Revolution, 1979 Revolution, the Reza Shah's mausoleum, Mausoleum of Reza Shah was destroyed under the direction of Sadegh Khalkhali, an infamous cleric who was appointed by Ruhollah Khomeini as the head of the newly established Revolutionary Courts.


Climate

Rey has a cold semi-arid climate (Köppen climate classification, Köppen ''BSk'').


Notable people

*Muhammad ibn Zakariya al-Razi, Persian physician, philosopher and alchemist *Abu Hatim Muhammad ibn Idris al-Razi, Abu Hatim al-Razi, Major Sunni Hadith scholar *Abu Zur’ah Ar-Razi, Major Sunni Hadith Scholar *Amin Razi *Harun al-Rashid, Abbasid caliph *Fakhr al-Din al-Razi, Ash'ari, Theologian and Qur'an Exegete *:ar:قطب الدين الرازي, Qutb al-Din al-Razi, Theologian and logician *Najmeddin Razi *Morteza Avini *Mohammad Reza Heydari *Javad Nekounam *Farzad Ashoubi *Hadi Saei *Alireza Dabir *Hamid Sourian *Mehdi Kamrani *Ruhollah Zam *Hasan Irlu


Gallery

File:Rey map by Ker Porter.jpg, A 1818 map of Ray by Scottish traveler Robert Ker Porter. File:Tour caliph Yezid by Eugène Flandin.jpg, A 1840 depiction of the 12th-century Seljuk Empire, Seljuk-era Tughrul Tower of Ray by French orientalist Eugène Flandin. File:Cheshmeh Ali by Eugène Flandin.jpg, A 1840 depiction of Cheshme-Ali in Ray by French orientalist Eugène Flandin. File:Le Tour du monde-02-p036.jpg, A 1860 depiction of Ray by French orientalist Jules Laurens. File:Cheshme Ali - 003.jpg, People spreading washed carpets to dry at Cheshme-Ali in 1960. File:سبزیکاری در شهر ری.jpg, Growing vegetables in a residential area in Ray. File:Shahr Rey, Iran 2013 (20) (15025618305).jpg, Shahr-e-Rey Metro Station, part of the rapid transit system of Tehran Metro. File:Shahr Rey, Iran 2013 (10) (15002619346).jpg, The clock tower of the Shah Abdol-Azim Shrine in Ray. File:Shrine of Shaykh Saduq, Ray.jpg, Ibn Babawayh Cemetery, named after Shia scholar Ibn Babawayh, in Ray. File:1399020718554637720237464 حرم حضرت عبدالعظیم حسنی.jpg, A view of Abd al-Azim al-Hasani shrine in Ray


See also

*Behesht-e Zahra, Behesht-e Zahra Cemetery *Ibn Babawayh Cemetery *Javan Mard-e Ghassab Tomb


References


Sources

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External links


Daily Life Ornamented: The Medieval Persian City Of Rayy
Special Exhibition at University of Chicago Oriental Institute, Chicago Oriental Institute (May 15-October 14, 2007). {{Authority control Geography of Tehran Neighbourhoods in Tehran Populated places along the Silk Road Former capitals of Iran Ancient Iranian cities Shia holy cities Ray County, Iran Burial sites of the Ziyarid dynasty Achaemenid cities Seleucid colonies Parthian cities Sasanian cities