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Herāt, Afghanistan: ancient minarets
Herāt, Afghanistan: ancient minaretsAncient minarets in Herāt city, Afghanistan.

Herāt

Afghanistan
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Also known as: Harāt
Also spelled:
Harāt

Herāt, city, Herātvelāyat (province), westernAfghanistan. It lies on the Harīrūd River, south of theSefīd Kūh (Paropamisus Range), at an elevation of 3,026 feet (922 metres). Herāt is the focus of one of the country’s most densely populated and fertile agricultural areas, irrigated from theHarīrūd. It is a highwaycrossroads and the economic centre of western Afghanistan.

Herāt, Afghanistan: ancient citadel
Herāt, Afghanistan: ancient citadelA citadel built by Alexander the Great, Herāt, Afghanistan.

Several ancient cities have stood near the site of Herāt. The highly productive agricultural area watered by the Harīrūd was known in ancient times as Ariea (Old Persian: Haraiva). The area is mentioned in theAvesta, the sacred text of the Zoroastrians, and appears in theAchaemenid inscription atBīsitūn (c. 520bce). The Macedonian conquererAlexander the Great took control of the area in 330bce. The capital of Ariea, Artacoana, was subdued, and a new city named Alexandria in Ariea was constructed with a fortress at the city centre. It remains uncertain whether Alexandria in Ariea was built on the site of Artacoana and whether the site of modern Herāt corresponds to either.

During theSasanian period the city increased in importance as a trading centre and also served as an outpost in the Sasanian wars with theHephthalites. The Arabs captured Herāt in 660ce, andIslam soon became the dominant religion. An invasion byMongols in 1221–22 destroyed the city and inflicted great suffering. Herāt was then rebuilt by the local Kartiddynasty beforeTimur (Tamerlane), the Turkic conqueror, took it about 1380.

Tower Bridge over the Thames River in London, England. Opened in 1894. Remains an Important Traffic Route with 40,000 Crossings Every Day.
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Hospitallers; Crusades
Hospitallers; CrusadesCapture of the fortress of the Hospitallers at Smyrna, miniature from a Ẓafar-nāmeh (a life of Timur) by Behzād, c. 1490, from Herāt, Afghanistan; in the John Work Garrett Library, Johns Hopkins University.

Herāt’s greatest era was during theTimurid rule. Timur’s sonShāh Rokh transferred the Timurid capital fromSamarkand to Herāt, where he rebuilt the citadel and thebazaar. Science andculture flourished in the city under the patronage of Shāh Rokh and his successors. The production of books was especially prominent, and an important school ofminiature painting arose in Herāt, exemplified by the work ofKamāl al-Dīn Behzād. Shāh Rokh’s wife Gawhar Shād also left a lasting imprint on the city, commissioning a religious complex that included amosque, amadrasah, and her own mausoleum.

The IranianSafavid dynasty took control of Herāt in 1507. Following a revolt by theAbdali Afghans in 1716, the city alternated between Iranian and Afghan rule. Beginning in the 1830s, the IranianQājār dynasty’s claim to Herāt was opposed by Great Britain, which sought the establishment of an independent Afghan state to shield BritishIndia from Russian encroachment. The Anglo-Persian war of 1856–57 forced the Qājār shah,Nāṣer al-Dīn Shah, towithdraw from Herāt and acknowledge it as Afghan territory. However, the Afghan central government’s control of Herāt remained weak until the territorial and political consolidation carried out during the reign ofʿAbd al-Raḥmān Khan. Even then the city remained somewhat isolated from the rest of Afghanistan; the Herāt-Kandahār highway, built with Soviet assistance in 1960, was the first modern road to connect Herāt to another major Afghan city.

In March 1979 Herātis and Afghan soldiers garrisoned in Herāt staged an uprising against Afghanistan’s communist government, attacking officials and killing about 100 Soviet advisers. The Sovietair force bombed the city in retaliation, killing as many as 20,000 people. Following theSoviet invasion of Afghanistan at the end of the year, Soviet forces gained control of the city from Afghan guerrillas in early 1980 and established a military command there. The city fell to the PashtunTaliban movement in 1995, but the Taliban struggled toexert control over the primarily Persian-speaking populace.

Herāt, Afghanistan: Friday Mosque
Herāt, Afghanistan: Friday MosqueFriday Mosque (Masjed-e Jāmeʿ), 13th century, Herāt, Afghanistan.

Herāt is dominated by its citadel, which was constructed between the 13th and 15th centuries and restored in the 1970s. The city’s Friday Mosque (Masjed-e Jāmeʿ), begun in the 13th century, has been expanded and restored several times. Gawhar Shād’s religious complex has been largely destroyed; the mosque and madrasah were demolished by British engineers in the 1880s to fortify the city against a possible Russian attack, but her mausoleum and several minarets remain at the site. A shrine held in high veneration is the tomb of the poet and saintʿAbd Allāh al-Anṣārī, situated on rising ground north of the city; it was built by the Timurid Shāh Rokh.

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Herāt has wide main streets,extensive bazaars, and some light industry, including handicrafts, textile weaving, cotton ginning, and rice, flour, and oilseed milling. There is an active trade in Karakul furs. An airport is nearby. Pop. (2009 est.) 395,400; (2020 est.) 574,300.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated byAdam Zeidan.

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