Recognition of the Port of Khur Shif and its Importance in the Era of Atabaks and Ilkhanas

Ali Rasooli

Volume 9, Issue 1 , July 2019, , Pages 81-98

https://doi.org/10.22059/jis.2019.73431

Abstract
  In various historical periods, the peninsula of Bushehr has facilitated maritime communications in the middle of the northern coast of the Persian Gulf through important ports such as Lian, Rishehr, and Bushehr. However, from the sixth to the eighth century AH, it seems that this role transferred to ...  Read More

Maelstroms in the Islamic and Iranian Texts

Mohammad Hassan Raznahan; Mehran Rezaei; Mohammad Hossein Soleymani

Volume 7, Issue 1 , June 2017, , Pages 15-28

https://doi.org/10.22059/jis.2017.65707

Abstract
  Maelstroms are powerful and violent whirlpools in the sea, sucking in objects such as ships within a given radius. Not only most of the geographers mentioned the maelstroms, but also cartographers mapped them, to protect sailors from being drawn into them. One of the most recognized maelstroms in the ...  Read More

The Development of the Routes of Hamedan’s Eastern Regions and its Role in the Growth of the Residential Areas (with Emphasis on Dargazin Region)

habib sharafi safa; esmail Ganghis Ardahi; Mohammad Hassan Raznahan

Volume 7, Issue 2 , March 2017, , Pages 49-66

https://doi.org/10.22059/jis.2018.68284

Abstract
  Dargazin was one of the politically and culturally significant regions of Iran in the past, and its historical monuments and mounds shows the importance of this area. Why was Dargazin important in the post-Islamic era and what was the role of the routes in the formation of settlements and the cultural ...  Read More

The Development and Transformation of Bardsir During the Qara khitai Era, Based on Maqdisi’s Viewpoint

Abdoreza Kalmorzi; Mohammad Baqr Voosoughi Voosoughi

Volume 7, Issue 2 , March 2017, , Pages 83-101

https://doi.org/10.22059/jis.2018.68285

Abstract
  Maqdisi in Ahsan al-Taqasim fi Maʻrefat Al-Aqalim offers new definitions for Mesr, Qasabe, Madine, and Qarye, and relates the life of each unit to the others, regarding their roles and functions. Illustrating their connection with each other, he resembles these geographical units to the kings, the hajeban ...  Read More

A Comparative Review of Jorjaniʼs Manuscript of Masalek va Mamalek with Jahan Nameh

Mahmoud Jaafari-Dehaghi; Mohammad Hossain Soleymani

Volume 4, Issue 2 , March 2015, , Pages 1-12

https://doi.org/10.22059/jis.2015.56669

Abstract
  This article is concerned with a comparative review of Jahân-Nâme   by Mohammad bin Najib Bakran and manuscripts of Masâlek va Mamâlek by Abu al-Hasan Sâʽid bin Ali Jurjâni written by during the middle of ninth century AH. From this review it becomes clear ...  Read More

Ardashir Khwarah, from Establishment to fall on the Basis of Historical Texts

Hasan Karimian; Majid Montazer- Zohouri

Volume 4, Issue 2 , March 2015, , Pages 65-83

https://doi.org/10.22059/jis.2015.56678

Abstract
  The round city of Ardeshir Khwarah, with its concentric layout, can be considered as the first city which established by the founder of the Sasanian dynasty as a symbol of the Sasanian royal ideology. Ardeshir Khwarah plays a key role in establishment of Sasanian sovereignty and urban planning. However, ...  Read More

The fall of Mehrjanqadhaq on the Basis of Historical Texts and Archaeological Data

Khodakaram Mazaheri; Mohsen Zeynivand; Bahram Karimi

Volume 4, Issue 2 , March 2015, , Pages 85-102

https://doi.org/10.22059/jis.2015.56682

Abstract
  An Examination of historical text and archaeological data show that Mehrjanqadhaq was one of the important states of western Iran which had been founded and formed in a region now known as Darreshsher or more exactly in Saimara valley. The history of the state goes back to Parthian era. Archaeological ...  Read More

The Siting of Jay and Yahudiya Cities in the Rostāq-i Jay of Isfahan and the Change in the Seat of Power until the Rise of Seljuks

Ali Shojaee Esfahani

Volume 4, Issue 1 , August 2014, , Pages 57-76

https://doi.org/10.22059/jis.2014.52668

Abstract
  The cities of Jay in pre-Islamic and Yahudiya in the post Islamic period were located in a plain delimited from three sides by surrounding heights. This area, referred to in historical and geographical documents as the Rostāq-i Jay, was the most important rural district of Isfahan's khora. With rising ...  Read More