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Firozkoh

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Lost summer capital of the Ghorids in Afghanistan
This article is about the ancient city in Afghanistan. For the modern city in Afghanistan, seeChaghcharan. For the city in Iran, seeFiruzkuh, Iran.
Firozkoh
TypeAncient city
LocationGhor Province,Afghanistan
BuiltFounded in1146
Built byQutb al-Din Muhammad
DemolishedDestroyed in1223

Firozkoh (Persian: فیروزکوه,Fīrōzkōh), orTurquoise Mountain, was thesummer capital of theGhurid dynasty, in theGhor Province of centralAfghanistan. It was reputedly one of the greatest cities of its age, but was destroyed in 1223 after a siege byTolui, son ofGenghis Khan. The location of the city was lost to history. It has been proposed that theMinaret of Jam, inShahrak District, Ghor Province, is the only standing remains of the city.

History

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Minaret of Jam

The city was founded in 1146 by a member of the Ghurid dynasty, Qutb al-Din Muhammad. The Ghurid sultanate was brought to prominence in 1150 byAla Al-Din Husayn, al-Din Muhammad's brother, who overthrew the previousGhaznavid dynasty and burned their capital city,Ghazna, killing up to 60,000 inhabitants. A historian of the dynasty,Minhaj al-Siraj Juzjani, wrote that the remaining citizens of Ghazna, imprisoned, were used to transport building supplies to Firozkoh. Juzjani also claims that the blood of the prisoners was combined with mud to form additional building materials.[1]

Throughout the reign of subsequent Ghurid sultans, Firozkoh continued to prosper as the dynasty expanded. Firozkoh was used as a summer capital, as the leadership of the Ghurid sultanate were semi-nomadic.[1][2] The city competed withHerat as a center of Ghurid art, literature, and theology. In 1199, the Ghurid sultan,Ghiyath al-Din, ordered the empire to abandon theKarramiyya sect of Islam in favor ofShafi'i law. This decision was unpopular with the city's residents and led to riots.[1]

The Ghurid empire began to collapse after the successive deaths of Ghiyath al-Din in 1203 and his successorMuizz al-Din in 1206.[1] Firozkoh remained rich for a time—Juzjani wrote that the treasury contained "400 camel loads of gold in 800 chests"—although this claim may be unreliable. In 1215, Firozkoh was attacked and defeated byMuhammad II of Khwarazm. However, the city rebelled against his rule when theKhwarazmenian Empire was attacked by the Mongols. Nevertheless, the Mongols laid siege to the city in 1220 before retreating at the start of winter. In 1223, the Mongols returned and forced the city's ruler, Malik Mubariz al-Din, to evacuate to Herat. The Mongols then razed the city, according to Juzjani.[1]

It is also believed that the ancient city was the home of aJewish trading community, documented by inscriptions on tombstones found in the 1950s. The scholar Walter Fischel published an article reviewing the finds and establishing the connections of the Firozkoh community with other Jewish communities in early Medieval Afghanistan.[3]

Sources describing the city

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The primary contemporary source describing the history, layout, and buildings of Firozkoh is theTabaqāt-i Nāsirī, written byMinhaj al-Siraj Juzjani.[4] Juzjani lived in the city during his youth, but left in 1215 and did not write the work until 1260, while living inDelhi.[1] While Juzjani is generally considered a reliable chronicler, like any source, his words must be put into context and considered a partial perspective on the city and its inhabitants.[2][4]

Recent history

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It has been proposed that theMinaret of Jam, inShahrak District, Ghor Province, is the only standing remains of the city. With thewar in Afghanistan from 2001 to 2021, theTaliban's hold on ancient places was broken, leaving Ghor Province open topillagers. After the 2001 invasion, hundreds of diggers flocked to the Minaret to uncover rumored lost gold. When visited byRory Stewart in 2002, the possible remains of the city had been heavily damaged by looters, and many of the treasures that were found had been sold in markets inHerat,Kabul, andTehran.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcdefThomas, David (2007). "Firuzkuh: The Summer Capital of the Ghurids". In Bennison, Amira K.; Gascoigne, Alison L. (eds.).Cities in the pre-modern Islamic world : the urban impact of religion, state and society (1st ed.). Milton Park, Abingdon, UK. pp. 115–144.ISBN 9780415424394.OCLC 77520630.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  2. ^abVercellin, Giorgio (1976). "The Identification of Firuzkuh: a Conclusive Proof".East and West.26 (3/4):337–340.ISSN 0012-8376.JSTOR 29756314.
  3. ^Boissoneault, Lorraine (2016-02-10)."Afghanistan's Ancient and Beautiful Minaret of Jam".JSTOR Daily.Archived from the original on 2019-05-13. Retrieved2019-05-13.
  4. ^abLeshnik, Lorenz S. (1968)."Ghor, Firuzkoh, and the Minar-i-jam".Central Asiatic Journal.12 (1). Heidelberg:36–49.ISSN 0008-9192.JSTOR 41926758.Archived from the original on 2021-05-20. Retrieved2023-01-15.
  5. ^Stewart, Rory (2006).The Places In Between. Harvest Books. pp. 149–160.ISBN 978-0-15-603156-1..

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