IRAN Section 1
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I
Introduction
Iran, officially the Islamic
Republic of Iran, country in southwestern Asia, located on the eastern
shore of the Persian Gulf. One of the world's most mountainous countries, Iran contains Mount Damāvand, the highest peak in Asia west of the Himalayas. The country’s
population, while ethnically and linguistically diverse, is almost entirely
Muslim. For centuries, the region has been the center of the Shia branch of
Islam. Iran ranks among the world’s
leaders in its reserves of oil and natural gas. As is the case in other
countries in the petroleum-rich Persian Gulf region, the export of oil
has dominated Iran’s economy since the early
20th century
In the 6th century bc the territory of present-day Iran was the center of the Persian Empire, the world’s preeminent
power at that time. For more than 2,000 years, the region’s inhabitants have
referred to it by the name Iran, derived from the Aryan
tribes who settled the area long
ago. However, until 1935, when the Iranian ruler demanded that the name Iran be used, the
English-speaking world knew the country as Persia, a legacy of the Greeks who
named the region after its most important province, Pars (present-day Fārs). Iran was a monarchy ruled by a
shah, or king, from 1501 until 1979, when a yearlong popular revolution led by
the Shia clergy culminated in the overthrow of the monarchy and the
establishment of an Islamic republic.
Iran lies at the easternmost
edge of the geographic and cultural region known as the Middle East. The country is bordered on
the north by Armenia, Azerbaijan, the Caspian Sea, and Turkmenistan; on the east by Afghanistan and Pakistan; on the south by the Gulf of Oman, the Strait of Hormuz, and the Persian Gulf; and on the west by Iraq and Turkey. Iran’s capital and largest city
is Tehrān, located in the northern part of the country.
II LAND AND RESOURCES
Iran is the second largest
country in the Middle East, after Saudi Arabia. It extends over a total
area of 1,648,000 sq km (636,300 sq mi). The country is roughly triangular in
shape, with its longest side extending in a slightly outward arc for 2,500 km
(1,600 mi) from the border with Turkey in the northwest to the
border with Pakistan in the southeast. The third
point of the triangle lies in the northeast, about halfway along Iran’s border with Turkmenistan. Iran’s greatest extent from
north to south is 1,600 km (1,000 mi) and from east to west is 1,700 km (1,100
mi).
A Natural
Regions
Iran’s interior plateaus are
almost completely surrounded by mountains. The main mountain system, the Zagros Mountains, cuts across the country
for more than 1,600 km (1,000 mi) from northwest to southeast. With the
exception of the Khūzestān coastal plain, which extends from the
northern reaches of the Persian Gulf, the Zagros Mountains occupy all of western Iran. The central part of the
range averages more than 340 km (210 mi) in width. Many peaks of the Zagros
exceed 4,000 m (12,000 ft) in elevation; the highest is Zard Kūh (4,547
m/14,918 ft). Peaks rising above 2,300 m (7,500 ft) capture considerable
moisture, which percolates down to the lower-lying basins as groundwater. These
basins, ranging from about 1,200 to 1,500 m (4,000 to 5,000 ft) in elevation,
contain fertile soil that traditionally has sustained diverse and intensive
crop cultivation.
In Iran’s northern reaches, a
steep, narrow mountain range, the Alborz Mountains, rims the entire southern
coast of the Caspian Sea. This range extends more than 600 km (400 mi) in
length and averages about 100 km (about 60 mi) in width. The country's highest
peak, Mount Damāvand (5,670 m/18,602 ft), lies
in the central part of the range. Several other peaks of the Alborz Mountains exceed 3,600 m (12,000 ft).
The northern slopes of the range receive considerable rainfall throughout the
year and support forests. A fertile coastal plain averaging 24 km (15 mi) in
width lies between the Caspian Sea and the mountains. East of
the Alborz Mountains is a series of parallel
mountain ranges with elevations of 2,400 to 2,700 m (8,000 to 9,000 ft). These
ranges are interspersed with many narrow, arable valleys. Several low mountain
ridges, generally referred to as the eastern highlands, run along Iran’s eastern border.
Within this mountainous rim lies a series of basins
known collectively as the central plateau. They include the Dasht-e Kavir, a
huge salt-encrusted desert in north central Iran; the Dasht-e Lūt, a
sand-and-pebble desert in the southeast; and several fertile oases.
The mountains of Iran constitute an active
earthquake zone, and numerous minor earthquakes occur each year. Major
earthquakes causing great loss of life and property damage also occur
periodically. During the 18th century earthquakes twice leveled Tabrīz, the principal city in the
northwest, killing at least 50,000 people on each occasion. Several severe
earthquakes resulting in 1,000 or more deaths occurred during the second half
of the 20th century. The most devastating earthquake, centered in the fault
zone where the Alborz and Zagros mountains intersect, killed an
estimated 40,000 people in June 1990. Several of Iran's highest mountains are
volcanic cones; only Mount Damāvand and Kūh-e Taftān
in southeastern Iran are active volcanoes, both
periodically emitting gases near their summits.
B Rivers and Lakes
Nearly all of Iran’s numerous rivers are
relatively short, shallow streams unsuitable for navigation. The country’s only
navigable river, the Kārūn, flows through the city of Ahvāz in the southwest. Most
rivers rise in the mountainous regions and drain into the interior basins.
Since ancient times, the region’s inhabitants have used the rivers for
irrigation. Dams constructed in the 20th century on the Āb-e Dez, Karkheh, Karun, Sefid Rud, and other
rivers have expanded the area under irrigation and also have provided a
principal source of hydroelectricity. Three rivers form portions of Iran's international boundaries.
The Aras River lies along the border with Armenia and Azerbaijan, the Atrek River borders Turkmenistan, and the Shatt al Arab is part of the border with Iraq. Iran also shares the Caspian Sea, the world's largest inland
body of water, with four other countries. Several smaller saltwater lakes lie
entirely within Iran; the largest is Lake Urmia in the northwest. A few
small freshwater lakes exist in high mountain valleys.
C Coastline
More than half of Iran's international border of
4,430 km (2,750 mi) is coastline, including 740 km (460 mi) along the Caspian Sea in the north and 1,700 km
(1,100 mi) along the Persian Gulf and adjacent Gulf of Oman in the south. Both the Caspian Sea and the Persian Gulf have important ports and
contain extensive underwater deposits of oil and natural gas. Iran's largest harbor, Bandar-e
‘Abbās, is located on the Strait of Hormuz, the narrow passage
separating the Persian Gulf and the Gulf of Oman.
D Plant and Animal Life
Although more than 10,000 plant species have been
identified in Iran, the natural vegetation in
most of the country has been uprooted and replaced by cultivated crops or
pastures. Natural forests consisting of beech, oak, other deciduous trees, and
conifers grow in parts of the Alborz Mountains. Some regions of higher
elevation in the Zagros Mountains contain wooded areas consisting primarily of oak.
Wild fruit trees, including almond, pear, pomegranate, and walnut, grow in both
the Alborz and Zagros mountains. In the more arid central part of the country,
wild pistachio and other drought-resistant trees grow in areas that have not
been disturbed by human activity. Tamarisk and other salt-tolerant bushes grow
along the margins of the Dasht-e Kavir.
A wide variety of native mammals, reptiles, birds,
and insects inhabit Iran. Many species of
mammals—including wolves, foxes, bears, mountain goats, red mountain sheep,
rabbits, and gerbils—continue to thrive. Others—including Caspian tigers,
Caspian seals, desert onagers, three species of deer, gazelles, and lynx—are
endangered despite the establishment of special wildlife refuge areas and other
government programs initiated to protect them. Some 502 species of birds
inhabit Iran; more than 200 species are
migratory birds that spend part of the year in other countries.
E Natural Resources
Iran's extensive petroleum and natural
gas deposits are located primarily in the southwestern province of Khūzestān and in the Persian Gulf. Iran also has one of the world's
largest reserves of copper; deposits are located throughout the country, but
the major lode lies in the central region between the cities of Yazd and Kermān. This region also serves as
a center for the mining of bauxite, coal, iron ore, lead, and zinc. Additional
coal mines operate throughout the Alborz Mountains; iron ore mines also exist
near Zanjān in the northwest, near Mashhad in the northeast, and on Hormuz Island in the Strait of Hormuz. Iran also has valuable deposits
of aluminum, chromite, gold, manganese, silver, tin, and tungsten, as well as
various gemstones, such as amber, agate, lapis lazuli, and turquoise.
Although about one-third of Iran’s total land area is
arable, only 10.7 percent is under cultivation. An additional 6 percent of the
total land is used for pasture. Forested areas, found primarily in the Alborz Mountains and the higher elevations
of the Zagros
Mountains, have declined slightly in recent decades and account for 4.5 percent
of the total land area.
F Climate
Iran’s varied landscape produces
several different climates. On the northern edge of the country, the Caspian
coastal plain, with an average elevation at or below sea level, remains humid
all year. Winter temperatures rarely fall below freezing, and maximum summer
temperatures rarely exceed 29° C (85° F). Annual precipitation averages 650 mm
(26 in) in the eastern part of the plain (Māzandarān Province) and more than 1,900 mm (75
in) in the western part (Gilān Province).
At higher elevations to the west, settlements in the
Zagros Mountain basins experience lower
temperatures. These areas are subject to severe winters, with average daily
temperatures below freezing, and warm summers, averaging 25° C (77° F) in the
northwest and 33° C (91° F) in the central and southern Zagros. Annual
precipitation, including snowfall, averages more than 280 mm (11 in) at higher
elevations. Most precipitation falls between October and April.
The central plateau region also experiences regional
variations. In Tehrān, located at an elevation of 1,200 m (3,900 ft) on
the northern edge of the plateau, the temperature averages 2° C (36° F) in
January and 29° C (85° F) in July. The city receives an average of 230 mm (9
in) of precipitation annually. The arid basins of central and eastern Iran generally receive less than
200 mm (8 in) of precipitation per year. Yazd, for example, averages less
than 70 mm (3 in) of precipitation. Its winters are cool, but temperatures
almost never fall below freezing; summers are very hot, averaging 38° C (100°
F) for most of July and August.
The coastal plains along the Persian Gulf and the
Gulf of Oman in southern Iran have mild winters, with average January
temperatures ranging from 7° C to 18° C (45° F to 64° F) in Khūzestān
Province; average temperatures are even higher in Bandar-e ‘Abbās on the
Strait of Hormuz. Summers are very humid and hot, with temperatures exceeding
48° C (119° F) during July in the interior areas. Annual precipitation ranges
from 145 mm to 355 mm (6 to 14 in) in this region.
G Environmental Issues
Iran's rapid urbanization and industrialization
have caused major environmental problems. Air pollution, primarily from
automobile and factory emissions, has become a serious problem in Tehrān
and other large cities. A rising incidence of respiratory illnesses prompted
the city governments of Tehrān and Arāk, southwest of the capital, to
institute air pollution control programs. These programs aim to reduce
gradually the amount of harmful chemicals released into the atmosphere.
Pollution of the Caspian Sea has increased substantially since the early 1990s,
reaching levels that threaten sturgeon and other fish that sustain the Iranian
fishing industry. Although Iran enforces stringent controls on the dumping of
municipal and industrial wastes into Caspian waters within its territorial limits,
the other countries that border the Caspian Sea do not control pollution in the
northern two-thirds of the lake. Iran has urged these countries to sign a
binding international agreement for cleaning up the Caspian Sea and preserving
its water quality.
III
PEOPLE AND SOCIETY
The population of Iran was estimated at 66,622,704
in 2002. This figure is more than double the 1975 population of 33,379,000.
Between 1956 and 1986 Iran's population grew at a rate of more than 3 percent
per year. The growth rate began to decline in the mid-1980s after the
government initiated a major population control program. By 2002 the growth
rate had declined to 0.8 percent per year, with a birth rate of 18 per 1,000
persons and a death rate of 5 per 1,000. In 1998, 44 percent of the population
was under age 15, 53 percent was between 15 and 64, and only 4 percent was aged
65 or older.
Overall population density in 2002 was 40 persons
per sq km (105 per sq mi). Northern and western Iran are more densely populated
than the arid eastern half of the country, where population density in the
extensive desert regions is only 1 percent of the national average. In 2000, 62
percent of the population lived in urban areas. About 99 percent of rural
Iranians resided in villages. Only 240,000 were nomads (people without
permanent residences who migrate seasonally), a fraction of the 2 million
nomads counted in 1966.
Tehrān, the country’s capital and largest city,
serves as the main administrative, commercial, educational, financial, industrial,
and publishing center. Iran's other major cities include Mashhad, a
manufacturing and commercial center in the northeast and the site of the
country's most important religious shrine; Eşfahān, a manufacturing
center for central Iran with several architecturally significant public
buildings from the 17th and 18th centuries; Tabrīz, the main industrial
and commercial center of the northwest; Shīrāz, a manufacturing
center in the south near the ruins of the ancient Persian capital of Persepolis;
and Ahvāz, the principal commercial and manufacturing center in the
southwestern oil region.
A Ethnic Groups
Iran’s population is made up of
numerous ethnic groups. Persians migrated to the region from Central Asia
beginning in the 7th century bc and established the first Persian empire in 550
bc. They are the largest ethnic group, and include such groups as the Gilaki,
who live in Gilān Province, and the Mazandarani, who live in
Māzandarān Province. Accounting for about 60 percent of the total
population, Persians live in cities throughout the country, as well as in the
villages of central and eastern Iran. Two groups closely related to the
Persians both ethnically and linguistically are the Kurds and the Lurs. The
Kurds, who make up about 7 percent of the population, reside primarily in the
Zagros Mountains near the borders with Iraq and Turkey. The Lurs account for 2
percent of the population; they inhabit the central Zagros region. Turkic
tribes began migrating into northwestern Iran in the 11th century, gradually
changing the ethnic composition of the region so that by the late 20th century
East Azerbaijan Province was more than 90 percent Turkish. Since the early
1900s, Azeris (a Turkic group) have been migrating to most large cities in
Iran, especially Tehrān. Azeris and other Turkic peoples together account
for about 25 percent of Iran’s inhabitants. The remainder of the population
comprises small communities of Arabs, Armenians, Assyrians, Baluchis,
Georgians, Pashtuns, and others.
B Language
Modern Persian is the official language of Iran. An ancient literary
language, Persian was written in the Pahlavi script before the Arab conquest in
the 7th century. A new form written in the Arabic script developed during the
9th and 10th centuries; this is the basis of the Modern Persian language used
today. As recently as 1950 there were several distinct dialects of spoken
Persian, but due to the spread of public education and broadcast media, a
standard spoken form, with minor regional accents, has evolved. Important
languages of minority groups that have their own publications and broadcast
programs include Azeri (a Turkic language of the Altaic family), Kurdish,
Arabic, and Armenian.
C Religion
Jafari Shia Islam has been the official religion of Iran since the 16th century.
Followers of Shia Islam disagree with Sunni Muslims, who form the majority of
Muslims in the Middle East and the Islamic world, over the rightful succession
to the Prophet Muhammad, the founder of Islam. Iran’s 1979 constitution assigns
to the Shia clergy important political leadership roles in the government. An
estimated 93 percent of all Iranians follow Shia Islam, and nearly all are
members of the Jafari group. Because Jafaris believe there are 12 legitimate
successors, or imams, to Muhammad, they are often called Twelvers. Most of the
remaining population belongs to other Islamic denominations, primarily Sunni
Islam. In towns where there are mixed Muslim communities, religious tensions
have surfaced frequently, especially during major religious observances.
Sufism, or Islamic mysticism, is popular among Shia and Sunni Muslims seeking
spiritual interpretations of religion. Iran also has small communities of
Armenian and Assyrian Christians, Jews, and Zoroastrians. The Baha’i faith, which
originated in Iran during the 19th century, has several thousand secret
followers, even though it has been a target of official persecution since the
Islamic republic came to power in 1979.
D Education
Public primary education was introduced in Iran after the country’s first
constitution was drafted in 1906. Predominantly an urban system, it expanded
only gradually and did not include secondary education until 1925. At the time
of the 1979 Islamic revolution, only 60 percent of Iranian children of primary
school age, and less than 50 percent of those of secondary school age, were
enrolled in public schools; overall adult literacy was only 48 percent. Since
1979 the government has given a high priority to education, with programs
focusing on adult literacy, new school construction, and expansion of public
colleges and other institutes of higher education. By 2001 literacy for all
Iranians aged 15 and older had reached 94.6 percent. The literacy rate was
higher for males (96.6 percent) than for females (92.5 percent); the rate was
also higher in cities than in rural areas.
Both the public education system and an expanding
private school system consist of a five-year primary school cycle, a three-year
middle school cycle, and a four-year high school cycle. Education is compulsory
for children between the ages of 6 and 11. All villages now have at least a
primary school, and 89.6 percent of primary school-aged children were enrolled
in school in 1996. Dropout rates begin during middle school and increase significantly
during high school. In 1996 only 74.2 percent of secondary school-aged children
were enrolled in secondary school. Dropout rates are significantly higher in
rural areas, where there is a shortage of high schools within easy commuting
distance. Although educational opportunities for girls improved after the
revolution, the dropout rate is still higher for girls. Although 87 percent of
girls of eligible age attended primary school, only 69 percent attended
secondary school.
Iran has more than 30 tuition-free
public universities (This correct number seems to be double) and many other
institutes of higher learning. These include medical universities and
specialized colleges providing instruction in teacher training, agriculture,
and other subjects. In all, only 17 percent of Iranians of relevant age were
enrolled in institutions of higher learning in 1996. Tehrān serves as a center for
higher education, with more than 15 universities and numerous colleges and
institutes. Other important universities are located in Hamedān, Eşfahān, Shīrāz, Mashhad and Tabrīz. In addition to the public
system, Iran has a private system of
higher education that consists of theological colleges and the Islamic Free
University, which has been developing campuses in cities throughout the country
since its establishment in the late 1980s.
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Contributed By:
Eric Hooglund
Microsoft® Encarta® Encyclopedia 2003. © 1993-2002
Microsoft Corporation..
Abbreviated by Ehsan Ghafoorian.
All Rights Reserved .
Website: www.geocities.com/ehsan_ghafoorian
Email: [email protected]
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