Isfahan: Iran's Hidden Jewel
Once the dazzling capital of ancient Persia, Isfahan fell victim to neglect, but a new generation hopes to restore its lost luster
- By Andrew Lawler
- Photographs by Ghaith Abdul-Ahad
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2009, Subscribe
The courtyard is coated in a fine brown dust, the surrounding walls are crumbling and the flaking plaster is the same monotonous khaki color as the ground. This decrepit house in a decaying maze of narrow alleys in Isfahan, Iran, betrays little of the old capital's glory days in the 17th century. Suddenly, a paint-splattered worker picking at a nearby wall shouts, waves his steel trowel and points. Underneath a coarse layer of straw and mud, a faded but distinct array of blue, green and yellow abstract patterns emerges—a hint of the dazzling shapes and colors that once made this courtyard dance in the shimmering sun.
I crowd up to the wall with Hamid Mazaheri and Mehrdad Moslemzadeh, the two Iranian artist-entrepreneurs who are restoring this private residence to its former splendor. When these mosaics were still vibrant, Isfahan was larger than London, more cosmopolitan than Paris, and grander, by some accounts, than even storied Istanbul. Elegant bridges crossed its modest river, lavishly outfitted polo players dashed across the world's largest square and hundreds of domes and minarets punctuated the skyline. Europeans, Turks, Indians and Chinese flocked to the glittering Persian court, the center of a vast empire stretching from the Euphrates River in what is today Iraq to the Oxus River in Afghanistan. In the 17th century, the city's wealth and grandeur inspired the rhyming proverb, Isfahan nesf-e jahan, or "Isfahan is half the world."
After a brutal siege shattered that golden age in the early 18th century, new rulers eventually moved the capital to Tehran, leaving Isfahan to languish as a provincial backwater, which not incidentally left many of the old city's monuments intact. "One could explore for months without coming to an end of them," marveled British traveler Robert Byron on his 1933-34 journey across Asia. That artistry, he wrote in The Road to Oxiana, "ranks Isfahan among those rarer places, like Athens or Rome, which are the common refreshment of humanity."
Today, however, the city is mainly known abroad as the site of Iran's premier nuclear research facility. What once was a sleepy town has emerged as the country's third largest metropolis, surrounded by expanding suburbs, belching factories and the choking traffic of more than three million people. Nothing symbolizes Iran's disconcerting modernity more than its launch, in February, of a satellite named Omid (Hope). In Isfahan, however, hope is a commodity in sharp decline. The elegant urban landscape that survived invasions by Afghan tribesmen and Mongol raiders is now threatened by negligence and reckless urban development.
Mazaheri and Moslemzadeh are members of a new generation of Isfahanis who want to restore not just buildings but their city's reputation as a Persian Florence, one they hope will one day enthrall Westerners with its wonders once again. Inside the cool and dark interior of the house that is their current focus, the freshly painted white stucco ceiling bristles with scalloped stalactites. Delicate gilded roses frame wall paintings of idyllic gardens. (Paradise is a Persian word meaning "walled garden.") Above a central fireplace, hundreds of inset mirrors reflect light from the courtyard. "I love this profession," says Safouva Saljoughi, a young, chador-clad art student who is dabbing at a faded painting of flowers in one corner of the room. "I have a special relationship with these places."
The house may have been built in the 17th century by a wealthy merchant or prosperous government official, then remodeled to suit changing tastes over the next two centuries. Even the fireplace damper is shaped in the delicate figure of a peacock. "Ornament and function together," says Mazaheri in halting English. Located just a short walk from the medieval Friday Mosque, the house is of classic Iranian design—a central courtyard surrounded by rooms on two sides, a single entrance on the third and a grand two-story reception room with large windows on the fourth.
Rocket attacks during the war with Saddam Hussein's Iraq in the early 1980s emptied this old neighborhood, and the house was badly vandalized. As Moslemzadeh guides Saljoughi's careful restoration effort, Mazaheri nods toward gaping holes in the reception room, which once held oak-framed stained glass that bathed the interior in a rainbow of vivid colors. "There are still a few masters left in Isfahan who can rebuild such windows," he says. Just repairing the elaborate stucco ceiling took five professionals on scaffolding more than a year.
Trained as a specialist in conservation techniques, the lean and energetic Mazaheri, 38, says he has built a restoration business that tackles anything from old ruins to 17th-century wall paintings. Together with his colleague Moslemzadeh, who is 43 and studied art conservation in St. Petersburg, Russia, they are investing their time and profits to convert this wreck of a home into a teahouse where visitors can appreciate traditional Isfahani crafts, music and art. Like many Isfahanis I meet, they are welcoming to foreigners, refreshingly open and immensely proud of their heritage. Without a trace of irony or discouragement, Mazaheri looks around the half-finished reception room and says, "It may take five more years to finish fixing this place up."
Isfahan's history is an epic cycle of fabulous boom and calamitous bust. Here a road traveling across the Iranian plateau east to the Mesopotamian plain meets a path connecting the Caspian Sea to the north with the Persian Gulf to the south. That geography linked the city's fate to the merchants, pilgrims and armies who passed through. Blessed with a pleasant climate—the city lies at nearly the same altitude as Denver and has relatively mild summers—Isfahan evolved into a bustling township at ancient Persia's crossroads.
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Comments (22)
isfehan is one of wonderfull and serius place in all over the world!
Posted by Amin on February 16,2012 | 12:07 PM
Greetings again!
People may be interested in my Set of photos and comments of Isfahan from a recent visit:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/peteshep/sets/72157625495320685/
P :-) (NZ)
Posted by Peter Sheppard on October 29,2011 | 09:42 AM
Hi
i have an article about safavian (shah abbas)
Posted by lora on April 30,2010 | 10:35 AM
Very recently I returned from Iran, having journeyed there due to the article in the Smithsonian magazine. I so wanted to see the Dome of Earth as well as see the copy of the Canon of Medicine. The journey was extraordinary, filled with beautiful sights, gorgeous landscapes, and hospitable and beautiful people. The true treasure of Iran can be found in the people, warm, hospitable and courteous.
I look forward to my return journey!
Posted by Nica Adorno on November 27,2009 | 04:51 PM
I TOO AFTER LEAVING SAIGON, WENT TO ESFAHAN IN 1974 TO WORK IN THE HELICOPTER BUISNESS. I MARRIED MY WIFE IN IRAN AND WE LIVE AND WORKED IN ESFAHAN FOR SEVERAL YEARS..WHAT A WONDERFUL TIME AND GREAT PLACE IT WAS THEN..TO MUCH HISTORY AND DIVERSE PEOPLES...I MADE MANY FRIENDS THERE AND WOULD LIKE TO GO BACK AT SOME POINT...THAT PROB. WILL NEVER HAPPEN..I CAN REMEMBER STANDING IN PERSOPOLIS WHERE NEBACNEZAR NOT SURE OF THE SPELLING ONECE RULED WHAT A PLACE.. WELL GOOD TO HEAR FROM SOME OF THE PEOPLE THAT WAS THERE THE SAME TIME...WHAT TIMES WE HAD WHEN THE SHAH.
JOHN
Posted by JOHN INGRAM on November 7,2009 | 12:20 PM
Your beautiful article and photographs moved me to immediately research a journey to Isfahan. I can't wait! I was shocked that I never knew of the existence of the Dome of Earth prior to reading your article, nor the other beautiful treasures of Iran. Thank you for educating me and my friends.
Posted by Nica on October 2,2009 | 10:53 PM
I too lived in Esfahan in the 70s, and had to leave in a hurry as did most Americans. I would have loved to have seen the city when it was, as you say, "Once the dazzling capital of ancient Persia." Isfahan fell victim to neglect, and it was very dusty and dirty with traffic jams everywhere. I could see the beauty beneath the dust as we visited the beautiful Naghsh-é Jahan square, the Hotel Shah Abbas and the beautiful bridges. We lived outside of town at a suburb called Khaneh, not sure if it was just built for American expats or not. I'm happy to hear that a new generation hopes to restore its lost luster, and I'm sure that Iranians all over the world loved your story.
Posted by Dodie Cross on September 27,2009 | 06:35 PM
Most interesting. As a young architect, I visited wonderful Isfahan in 1968. I've found just one of many slides. It may be of interest to you at:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/peteshep/3783620824/
P :-)
Posted by peteshep on August 28,2009 | 06:38 AM
I am another American who was in Isfahan in the 70's. My family was there from 74 unwil we were evacuated in early 79. We spent our last months in the suburb of Shah-in-Shar. Isfahan was beautiful, and the Maiden was called Maiden-e-shah back then. Our house was about three or four blocks away and this was our playground!
Posted by Diana Lindley Dubois on May 7,2009 | 04:06 PM
This is Isfahan but if enyone wants to know this situation I have to say, half of the world,the place has got every thing depended to out by just a little detemined to see the matter out of this place,I love u my earth,my simple people
Posted by Sasan Samani on May 3,2009 | 12:45 PM
All you see and hear in the media in USA about Iran and Iranian people is the ugly part of this great country and its people.
Your article made me very happy and proud. Thank yor for exposing American people to beautiful parts of Iran.
Posted by Maryam on April 18,2009 | 02:15 AM
Great! I was born and lived 27 years in this beautiful city and came to US two years ago to study and get my PhD degree. I cannot tell you my feeling when I saw the picture of my home (Isfahan) on the cover of the magazine. I had tear on my face. I am really proud of my culture. My biggest wish is to see my city again! Friends, I recommend you to go and see the city that is half the world!
Posted by Shahideh on April 14,2009 | 07:50 PM
iwas born in this magnificent city, this article made me homesick all over again .
Posted by joehalabian on April 10,2009 | 10:38 AM
The history and beauty of Persia as presented in articles like this also took me to Iran. I also fled in '79. I left memories of wonderful people who touched my heart. The profound wish is that all of these treasures will be preserved and that our children will be able to journey to see them. We need to build the bridge to peace.
Posted by Nancy Galloway on April 8,2009 | 06:01 PM
As an American with proud multi-ethnic and religious Persian heritage, bred, born and raised in Isfahan, where it is estimated more than half the population were of Jewish and the other Zoroastrian heritage till 600 years ago, I was soothed by the tone of your article bringing much nostalgia that has been missing in my life ever since I left in the late 70's for the obvious reason.
On the contrary to common beliefs in the west albeit the US where the biased media has utilized the ill acts of the government in Iran to denigrate and discredit an otherwise rich Iran culture more than 10,000 years in the making, the Iranians, 70 millions in current IRAN, but their pedigree and cultures infused in the two dozens (another 100 millions) neighboring countries, are amongst the most tolerant human beings who if anything have always been harrased by the invadors and intruders from within and beyond. Their rich literature, history, arts, music, mysticism, etc. have, nonetheless, made them capable of enduring through tumultuous junctures in life of the past many millennia. Isfahan embodies such complex diverse life, as it has has Shiites and Sunni Moselems,but also respectful cohorts of christian Armenians, Jews, Baha'i s, Zoroastrians, agnostics and atheists.....
Kudos to the writers of this much timely anticipated article.
Posted by Rachel Eliassi Kohan on April 6,2009 | 05:06 PM
Great article! Thank you for providing such a wonderful background to the city and the architecture. The British Museum is currently hosting the Shah Abbas exhibition and this article is a lovely compliment to it.
Posted by Emily Mitchell on April 6,2009 | 10:03 AM
This is great story/article. I have never heard of Isfahan before. I do wish there had been several pictures of the city so that everyone could see what the article was talking about. I would like to visit this city if I had the money and the time just from what was mentioned as I really like to visit historic places.
Posted by Norma on April 5,2009 | 06:46 PM
During the 70's, I was the architect of Hotel Shah Abbas,(today's Abbasi!)its brick facades, its banquet-room and its expansion. I also was the winner of the competition for "plaza" across from the Hotel. Before moving to US, my main office was in Tehran. But my heart was attached to these projects and to this most incredible city. My efforts were a success. For Hotel Shah Abbas complex,I was nominated for "Agha Khan Award", which is related to archtecture in the Islamic Counties. Today,I am proud that this complex is one of the most popular in Isfahan.I feel also, very sad that, probably due to Islamic Government's rules,in the official website of the Hotel,names of every individual, including the carpenter of the project is listed,.....except credit to the Architect of course! Is this called"discrimination"?
Posted by Yassi Gabbay (Architect) on April 2,2009 | 07:58 PM
The wonderful people have multiplied and Esfahan is a jungle of concrete and asphalt now due to demand for more apartment buidlings. If it wasnt for the kilometers of parks on both sides of the zayande river, living in Esfahan would be unbearable. About 400 years ago Nadir Shah brought my Bakhtiari ancesestors to Esfahan to fight off the Afghans which turned out to be a successful campaign. Later he took 20,000 fighting men from my tribe to invade India. What you dont read in the article is that the math student who cant find work, does not go hungry because the structure of the society is such that kids can and will stay with their parents at home if they dont find a job and families do support them. Parents in Iran don't throw their kids out of the house to find a job at McDonald's and live in an apartment. At least not yet. The bridges were build by Georgian general of Shah Abass and Georgian have a large community near Esfahan called Fereydon shahr. If you want to call them Christians go ahead but before Georgia was Christian they were Iranians and Zoroastrians. Mother of Sahh Abass was Georgian. The Article does not mention that underneat the Meydan there is a tunnel connecting the ali Qapu palace and the Sheyk Lotfolah Mosque, where there are paintings of Shirly brothers visit to Esfahan. Every Friday night underneath the khajoo bridge people gather to sing or practice their singing. Here is a song for those who want to return to Esfahan http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MhNuVZHUT5Y
Posted by BoB on April 2,2009 | 05:17 AM
I lived in Esfahan for 6 years. I received my bachelor of science from the University of Esfahan. During this time I visited almost all beautiful ancient buildings my favorite is the Shah's Square. I can not describe the beauty of these buildings. You have to see it for your self.
Posted by Safieh Javid on April 1,2009 | 11:06 AM
My wife and two sons and I arrived in Esfahan in 1977 and, like Stephen Ferguson's family, were forced out in Jan 1979. Those places are, in fact, quite beautiful. The traffic was choking even then. The beautiful 33-arch bridge was reportedly built by "Christians" as a reminder of Jesus's age when He began His ministry (in the Koran Jesus is regarded as a prophet of Allah and must be listened to). There was, too, a beautiful bridge whose spillway's created the shape of mosque domes -- truly brilliant (I believe that's the one in the article's photo). I was there to help the Shah's army build its defense strength -- which, for the most part, proved successful when it was attacked by Iraq several years later. I, too, would hate to see Esfahan and it's people harmed by the destruction of its nuclear facility.
Posted by North Witcher on March 30,2009 | 11:11 PM
Thank you for another amazing article! I lived in Esphahan from the end 1978 until my family was evacuated along with about 400 other non-Iranian families living there. I was only 10 years old at the time. I have been to all of the places presented in the article, and for the last 31 years I have wondered what has happened to the wonderful people I knew. Your article has renewed my hope of returning to Esphahan.
Posted by Stephen H Ferguson on March 29,2009 | 07:14 PM
This is a wonderful article! We had the pleasure of visiting Isfahan about nine years ago, and I found it to be the most beautiful city I have ever seen, better even than this article suggests. How I hope they will succeed with the reclamations now under way!! Sorry about the "new" part.... but Paris did the same thing...in the name of commerce. Now I live in fear that someone will blow up the nuclear research facility, taking this world treasure with it. Thank you for "Smithsonian."
Posted by Dorothy Hodges on March 29,2009 | 01:19 PM