Marivan
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Marivan (Template:Langx; {{errorTemplate:Main other|Audio file "Merîwan.ogg" not found}}Template:Category handler)Template:Efn is a city in the Central District of Marivan County, Kurdistan province, Iran, serving as capital of both the county and the district.[1]
Demographics
Language
The city is populated by ethnic Kurds and the people of Marivan speak Kurdish.[2]
The linguistic composition of the city:[3]
In 2023, the Marivan Cultural and Literacy Council and other institutions began updating entrance signs of the city and its countryside to include Kurdish. As of 2025, 200 village signs have been updated.[4]
Population
At the time of the 2006 National Census, the city's population was 91,664 in 22,440 households.[5] The following census in 2011 counted 110,464 people in 29,743 households.[6] The 2016 census measured the population of the city as 136,654 people in 39,368 households.[7]
Climate
Archaeology
The archaeological site of Tepe Qaleh Naneh is located in the Marivan plain near the city of Marivan. It is a large site that extends to the south and around the modern city.
Lake Zaribar is roughly at the centre of the Marivan plain. The settlement of Qaleh Naneh goes back to the Late Chalcolithic period. During that time, this already became a complex society, and had extensive cultural and commercial links with the neighbouring regions.[8]
A joint Italo-Iranian project, ‘Qaleh Naneh: Text Excavations and Survey in the Marivan Valley’ (QaNaTES), is now conducting the scientific investigations in this region of Marivan. It is focusing on the area of the Lake Zarībār and the valley of Marivan, and their development during the Bronze and Iron Ages (ca. 3000-600 BCE).[9]
The region of Qaleh Naneh is mentioned in cuneiform texts from the time of Amar-Sin (c. 2046–2037 BC), the third ruler of the Ur III Dynasty. A series of ancient place-names is known, that referred to journeys along the mountain roads between Qaleh Naneh area and the Tanjero river valley in Iraq.[10]
So this area has long time cultural and trade connections to the Diyala valley in Iraq. Especially the area around the modern Iraqi city of Halabja is relevant. That's where the Tanjero river joins Sirwan river and together they form the Diyala valley. Traditionally, the Diyala valley provided an important trade route between Iran and Iraq.[11]
At the time of Ashurnasirpal II (883-859 BC), the plain of Marivan belonged to 'the region of Zamua', that was probably politically autonomous. The region served as the western frontier of the Medes during the reign of Diyako. The region continued as a major trade post during the reign of Dariush III.
Some ancient texts also refer to 'a sea of Zamua'. There has been considerable confusion in past scholarship about this location. Although Assyriologist Adolf Billerbeck (1834-1908)[12] identified it with Lake Zaribar as early as 1898, other scholars also preferred to identify it with the much bigger Lake Urmia, that is also located in Iran, but a very considerable distance (about 250km) directly to the north of Zaribar.[13]
See also
Notes
References
External links
- ↑ Template:Cite report
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- ↑ Template:Cite report
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- ↑ Binandeh, A., Di Paolo, S. 2023, A Recent Archaeological Project in the Iranian Kurdistan. Iranian Scientific Archaeological Association.
- ↑ QaNaTES project website
- ↑ QaNaTES: historical background
- ↑ QaNaTES: historical background
- ↑ D.T. Potts 2022, Adolf Billerbeck: A Contribution to the Biography of a Forgotten Soldier and Scholar. Archiv für Orientforschung 55: 117-135
- ↑ QaNaTES: historical background