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Yazd, also
called YEZD, city, central Iran. The
city dates from the 5th century AD and
was described as the "noble city of
Yazd" by Marco Polo. It stands on a
mostly barren, sand-ridden plain about
4,000 feet (1,200 m) above sea level.
The climate is completely desertic. A
network of qanats (tunnels dug to carry
water) links Yazd with the edge of the
nearby mountain Shir Kuh (mountain).
Historically, Yazd has been the link
between Fars and Khorasan. It was
situated at the intersection of the
trade routes from central Asia and
India.It served as a provincial capital
and earned the title of Dar al-ibada
(Home of Piety), owing to its many
religious buildings. Some of the city's
inhabitants are Zoroastrians whose
ancestors had fled toward Yazd and
Kerman when the Muslim Arabs conquered
Iran. Yazd is now the most important
centre of Zoroastrianism in Iran.
Since
Sassanian times Yazd has been famous for
beautiful silk textiles that were
rivaled in later periods only by those
of Kashan and Esfahan. The city is still
a major centre of silk weaving. It has
spinning and weaving mills, a plant for
the manufacture of water
purification
and filtration equipment, and
considerable mining and quarrying
activity; copper deposits nearby are
processed at the Sar Cheshmeh
facilities. Almonds, fruit, and some
grain are grown near the city. Besides a
few remains of the imposing medieval
city wall, the city has many important
mosques and mausoleums.
The Masjed-e
Jom'eh (Friday Mosque) is distinguished
by the highest minarets in Iran, mosaic
faience (earthenware ceramics), a superb
mihrab (pulpit) dated 1375, and two
oratories that are Gothic in appearance.
Some of the other mosques and mausoleums
in the city are decorated with delicate
and rich stucco relief or are
polychromed with tones of pale blue,
rose, and yellow. The skyline is
picturesque with minarets and many tall
towers that were designed to bring cool
air from underground into the buildings'
chambers. Yazd city is linked with
Kerman, Qom, Esfahan, and Tehran by road
and railway; it also has an airport. The
economy of the area in which Yazd is
situated is dominated by agriculture
that was modernized through the
establishment of farm corporations and
processing centres for agricultural
products.
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