|
MASHHAD
Capital
of the immense Province of Khorassan and also for a time of the whole
of Iran, Mashhad is situated in the Kashaf Rud (Tortoise River) valley,
a tributary of Hari Rud, between the Binalud and Hazar Masjid mountains
in a rich agricultural region. Covering an area of 204 square kilometers,
it has for centuries been an important trade centre and junction point
on caravan routes and highways from India to Iran and from north to
south between Turkistan towns and Sea of Oman. Although much of Khorassan
is mountainous, there are many fertile valleys, and the province produces
large quantities of fruit, nuts, sugar-beet cotton, and a variety of
industrial products, particularly in the area of car manufacturing industry.
Located
in an altitude of 985 m above sea level, Mashhad as the country's second
largest town, is connected to Tehran by two roads (875 km, southern
and 925 km, northern), railway and air. It occupies a position in the
northeast of the country very similar to that of Tabriz in the northwest.
Both cities, besides being relatively close to the frontiers, stand
on what have often proved to be invasion routes. In consequence, Mashhad,
like Tabriz, has frequently been attacked and sometimes captured by
hostile forces. Actually, the whole province of Khorassan has been the
funnel through which armies have passed from time immemorial. Mashhad
is also known as a centre of Shi'ite pilgrimage.
Arriving
by plane the first view of the city is that of a very green and well-laid
regular rows of trees. Once on the ground, the traveler is fascinated
by the golden cupolas and minarets. It is interesting to know that the
word of Mashhad - or more correctly Mashhad-e Moqaddas (Mashhad the
Holy) - literally means place of martyrdom (or place of burial of
a martyr).
Mashhad,
with more than two million inhabitants is the third most interesting
tourist pole of Iran after Esfahan and Shiraz. By Iranian standards,
it is not an old town, although its northeastern quarter stands on the
site of Nauqan and Sanabad, (of considerable antiquity).
Although
it had always attracted pilgrims, Mashhad did not become a pilgrimage
centre of the first order until the coming of the Safavid dynasty at
the turn of the 16th century. Having established Shi'ism
as the state religion, the most brilliant of the Safavid rulers, Shah
Ismail I, Shah Tahmasp and Shah Abbas I, gave the city and shrine the
place they have held ever since on the Shiite map, frequently making
pilgrimages there themselves and generously endowing the sacred complex.
Nowadays,
apart from being the holiest city of Shi'ite Iran, Mashhad can boast
of hundreds of thousands of pilgrims from all over the world, including
Yemenis, Iraqis, Indians, but primarily Afghans and Pakistanis, the
two latter comprising on that account alone the vast majority of all
foreign tourists in the region.
Shrine
of Imam Reza
Mashhad
grew around the legendary martyrdom of Imam Reza, and the city's history
is inextricably linked with that of his Shrine. According to popular
belief, Imam Reza, heir to the Abbasid Caliphate as well as eighth of
the Shiite Imams, died in what was then the village of Sanabad in 817
AD after eating some grapes. The story spread that he had been poisoned
on the orders of the Caliph Ma'mum after having in some way arousing
his enmity. Whatever the truth, Ma'mum buried him in a tower in Sanabad
next to the tomb of his own father, the famous Harun or-Rashid, and
in time this burial place began to attract Shi'ite pilgrims. What had
been a small village grew around the Shrine into small town, later known
as Mashhad, but for many centuries its development was slow and until
much later it remained a pilgrimage center of only regional importance.
Because
of its incalculable importance to Iranians, on the Imam Reza's tomb
ahs been lavished the patronage and wealth of kings and princes. However,
since the ninth century it has been ravaged and almost destroyed many
times - but reconstructions and additions have occurred even more frequently.
Much
of the original 9th century shrine over the Imam's grave
was destroyed in the following century; it was rebuilt by Sultan Mahmud
of Ghazni in 1009, but severely damaged by the Mongols in the 12th
century. However, even in the dark years of the Mongol era, Mashhad
developed enough to become capital of Khorassan in the 15th
century, in succession to the nearby town of Tus, and the mausoleum
of Imam Reza was restored in the early 14th century.
In
the early 15th century Shahrokh, son of Tamerlane, enlarged
the shrine, his extraordinary wife Gowharshad commissioned a mosque
on the site. Even under his remarkable reign the city was troubled by
Uzbek invasions, and the population fell dramatically.
Despite
its new-found importance, Mashhad's location put it at constant risk
of invasion, and it was attacked on several occasions in the 16th
and 17th centuries by the Uzbeks (although they respected
the shrine enough to leave it unscathed), and by the Afghans in 1722.
In the early 18th century the shrine was firmly established
as the greatest of the Shi'ite pilgrimage centres in Iran, and Nader
Shah, although a Sunni of missionary zeal, generously endowed the shrine
and restored Mashhad to stability. Eventually he was himself buried
in the city.
Several
uprisings here in the 19th century were severely put down
by the ruling Qajars, but Mashhad returned to peace under the reign
of Nasser od-Din Shah, who built the ring road, and under the present
regime its continuing importance, in economic and religious matters,
remains secure. In March 1912 the Russians shelled the shrine; it was
later said that the fall of Tsarism was the consequence of this act
of sacrilege.
A
characteristic feature of the complex are numerous courts of sahns,
saqqa khaneh (place of kettle drums), the clock, the Imam's Tomb,
dar ol-hoffaz (reciters' place), Al-lahverdi Khan dome, the golden
dome, University of Islamic Sciences, Astan-e Qodss Library, a clinic,
a safe, office of endowments, a guest house, an ablutions place, shoe
keepers, and its (golden) minarets with specific design and orientation.
In addition to this, a number of well-known Iranian and foreign scholars
and scientists have been allowed to be buried in the precinct's yard
as well as around the town.
However,
the Shrine of Imam Reza and the surrounding buildings do together comprise
one of the marvels of the Islamic world. Under certain constrains it
is perfectly possible even for the non-Muslim to visit it; going to
Iran and not doing so is a little like going to Italy and missing Vatican.
Little else need detain you long, but a day or two here will not be
wasted. The shrine itself is strictly closed to non-Muslims (save under
exceptional circumstances with the special permission of the religious
authorities, applied for through the Tourist Office), but it is not
generally a problem to visit the rest of the complex, so long as you
don't try to enter any of the buildings. You will have to dress extremely
conservatively and behave yourself impeccably, and you should avoid
visiting during large religious gatherings or in the main pilgrimage
season (late June to mid July).
As
you might expect, all roads in Mashhad lead to the Holy Shrine of Imam
Reza. Almost everything of interest is within walking distance of this
most unmistakable of landmarks, and all the public transport radiates
from the ring road which delineates it. The result of so much royal
and private benefaction is, to quote A U Pope, that "perhaps there is
no other group of buildings in the world which give such an effect of
opulence. A gold dome, two gold minarets, two huge gold ivans, massive
silver and gilt doors." But the desire to embellish and modernize has
not always been for the best; in particular much beautiful tilework
has been sacrificed in favour of gaudy mirror-work.
Gowharshad
Mosque
Grand
Mosque of Gowharshad (Masjid-e Azim-e Gowharshad) with its 50-meter
high faience dome and cavernous golden portal, is located immediately
to the south of the Holy Shrine of Imam Reza square and is architecturally
perhaps even more important than the mausoleum. Queen of a mighty empire,
wife of Tamerlane's eldest son Shahrokh, patron of the arts and powerful
personality in her own right, Gowharshad was one of the most remarkable
women of Islamic history. Although most of her major architectural commissions
were at her capital Herat, this mosque in Mashhad is the best preserved
testament to her genius. She built this beautiful mosque between 1405
and 1418: though within the shrine's precincts it is technically and
legally separate. It covers an area of 9419 square meters, and has two
beautiful minarets each 40 meters high. An inscription can be seen on
the margin of the ivan portal, which was partially made upon the orders
of well-known Timurid prince called Baysonqor Mirza. Also there is a
pulpit of walnut wood here, which has been made without making use of
any nail or iron pieces. Sir Percy Sykes, soldier, diplomat and historian,
describes it as "the noblest mosque in Central Asia", and A U Pope as
"the first and the greatest surviving Persian monument of the 15th
century." The facade of its four-ivan court is decorated with brilliant
mosaic tiling of the highest quality; the two stories of the arcaded
rooms round the court are used for religious teaching and gathering.
Behind the ivan can be see the Shrine's golden dome and the two superb
minarets.
Parks
of Mashhad
Four
of the most interesting and beautiful parks of Mashhad are: 1) Mellat
Park, to the west of the town alongside the north of Vakil Abad Boulevard
(take bus lines 17, 18, or 19 from Shohada Square). It covers an area
of 720,000 square meters and is equipped with all sorts of recreational
facilities, a mosque, and a nice pool. 2) Vakil Abad Park, 8 km to the
south east of the town, through which a qanat with drinking water
is gently flowing (take bus lines 17, 18 or 19 from Shohada Square).
3) Kuh Sangui Park, on the foothills of southern mountains of Mashhad,
and in Dr Shari'ati Avenue (take bus line 6 from the south of Haram
Square). It is equipped with a large pool and a restaurant. 4) Mirza
Kuchak Khan-e Jangali Park, in the east of Danesh Street, and the south
of Bazaar-e Reza (17th Shahrivar Square). In the park, there
is a swimming pool, recreational facilities, and a library for children
and young adolescents.
Bazaars
of Mashhad
Mashhad
has three bazaars. The biggest, the two storied Bazaar-e Reza (or Bazaar-e
Bozorg), is 800 m long, 30 m wide, and one of the main shopping centres
in the town. The crafts of Khorassan are all represented in the bazaar.
All kinds of local souvenirs such as fur-cloak, turquoise, Carnelian
ring, gold, perfume, saffron, pelisse, prayer-mat, and rosary may be
found here besides a myriad of foreign articles. There are several escalators
in the Bazaar, which take the visitors to the second floor. The bazaar
has two gates: one in Bayt ol-Moqaddas Square and the other in the 17th
Shahrivar Square. The next shopping centre is called Sara-ye Bazaar-e
Reza, where products such as embroidery, knitwear, shoes, etc, are sold.
The third bazaar, called the Kuwaiti Bazaar, is situated in the 17th
Shahrivar Square, where various categories of products are sold. Make
sure also to visit a workshop where turquoises from the Neishabur mines
are cut and polished. Bazaar is open 8 am to 8 p.m., Saturday to Thursday.
The remains of several old caravansaries, now put to other purposes,
can be seen. Postal services are provided at both ends of Bazaar-e Reza
during the office hours.
Certain
other shopping centers are scattered in the town: 1) Zist-e Khavar Business
Centre, in Dr Shari'ati Square (Kuh Sangui) affiliate with Bank-e Tejarat,
and in building considered the most attractive and the most spectacular
shopping centre in the Middle East; and 2) Shops along Ahmad Abad Ave,
Jannat Ave, Daneshgah Ave, and Modarres Ave.
The
Nader Shah Mausoleum
The
Nader Shah Mausoleum (in Shohada Street, beginning of Azadi Street)
is a curious piece of architecture completed in 1959, consisting in
a heavy slab of concrete which forms a crypt and of a colossal bronze
group representing soldiers led to battle by a sort of an equestrian
commander on horseback (5 meters high and weighing 14,000 kilograms)
bearing a turban and a large ax (Nader Shah). Designed by the late Iranian
sculptor Abolhassan Sadiqi (1897-1995, a follower of the Master Painter
Kamal ol-Molk) and built in Italy by an Italian sculptor named Bruni,
the composition does not lack movement. The crypt shelters the tomb
of Nader Shah, who made Mashhad his capital and operational base for
his campaign against India. A small museum and a library have been set
up nearby: Nader Shah souvenirs, mainly 18th and 19th
century weapons, helmets and armor (altogether 130 pieces, from Afshar
period), and prehistoric bronze objects unearthed during excavations
in the region. It is open daily from 7:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. and from
2 to 4:30 p.m., except Fridays. Tel: (051) 24888.
Gonbad-e
Sabz
The
Gonbad-e Sabz (The Green Dome) a small rectangular mausoleum in the
centre of its own small square on Shahid Bahunar (Khaki) Avenue, is
probably the most interesting and best preserved historical building
in Mashhad outside the Holy Shrine, built by the order of Shah Abbas
the Great. Partly rebuilt in later years, it is in good condition except
for a missing patch of tiles at the base of its green dome. The Gonbad
is almost permanently closed, but inside it is the tomb of Sheikh Mohammad
Hakim Mo'men, author of a famous book called Tohfeh-ye Hakim Mo'men
on medicine. Adjacent to the Gonbad, there is a Khanegha of recent construction
which is being used by the Naqshbandi dervishes.
Museums
of Mashhad
There
are three interesting museums in Mashhad: 1) Museum of Astan-e Qodss;
2) Koran Museum: and 3) Stamp Museum.
- Organized
by the authorities of Imam Reza Shrine, the Museum of Astan-e Qodss,
as one of the richest and the most exquisite museums of the country,
is located to the east of Sahn-e Imam Khomeini (a court of the Shrine
named after the late Imam Khomeini) and close to Haram Square. Here,
objects from the 12th century AD are on display next
to valuable collection of carpets, rugs, historic inscriptions by
Reza Abbasi, the first tombstone of the Imam, and samples of relief
tilework. It is visited by thousands of pilgrims everyday.
- Koran
Museum, close to the Museum of Astan-e Qodss, contains highly valuable
gilded manuscripts of the Glorious Koran attributed to the Holy
Imams. It was inaugurated in 1985, and the oldest manuscript of
the Koran in Kuffic written on deer skin, remains from the 7th
century AD.
- The
Stamp Museum, as the biggest stamp museum in the country, was inaugurated
in 1989. Here, a collection of foreign (18 countries) and local
stamps (from Qajar period on) with more than 50,000 pieces, is on
display.
EXCURSIONS
AROUND MASHHAD
Mausoleum
of Khajeh Rabi'
The
fine octagonal 17th -century mausoleum of Khajeh Rabi',
patron holy man of the Sunnite population of Khorassan, is located
in the north west of Mashhad (about 6 km away, which can be reached
via bus line 30 from the west of the Haram Square). Built by the order
of Shah Abbas the Great and restored twice since, the cemetery was
originally a park, and now the simple monument to Khajeh Rabi' seems
a little extravagant in the midst of so many much simpler memorials.
Non-Muslims should not venture inside, but the polychrome exterior
is almost as interesting as the superbly decorated interior. Known
as Rabi' ibn-e Khaysam in historical sources, Khajeh Rabi' was a follower
of the Prophet Muhammad and a commander in the service of Ali, the
first Imam of Shi'ites.
NATURE
OUTSIDE MASHHAD
AKHLOMAD
CASCADE: Located along the Mashhad-Quchan highway at a distance of
84 km from Mashhad and about 16 km from the Asian Road, it is a village
through which a river is passing and leading up to two cascades within
3 kilometers from the village. From the village, the cascade can be
reached on foot. The village is well-known for its fruit, particularly
apples.
GOLESTAN
DAM: It is an old dam with a 120-meters crest, 14 meters height, and
4 km away from Torqabeh, built on a river of the same name around
500 years ago during the reign of Timurid dynasty. Take bus line 18
from the Shohada Square.
GUILASS
SPRING: With an elevation of 1090 meters above sea level, 50 km to
the north west of Mashhad and 21 km to the north west of Tus, its
water flows into a large natural pond with a maximum depth of 10 meters.
It can be reached via the road to Tus or the Mashhad-Quchan highway.
HESSAR:
This is a beautiful village along the road to Torqabeh and Golestan
river and dam (4 km from Torqabeh). There are many gardens around
the village, which are used by the tourists in the summer time. Take
bus line 18 from the Shohada Square.
SHANDIZ:
Located 38 km to the southwest of Mashhad, this is a mountainous area
with many springs and orchards. Leather products and fur clocks are
among the best handicrafts of the region. There are skiing facilities
in the surrounding area. To go to Shandiz, you can take bus line 19
from Shohada Square in Mashhad.
TORQABEH:
This is a beautiful mountainous village with many orchards, 16 km
to the southwest of Mashhad. The orchards are watered with a river
passing through the village. The village has got a nice park as well.
The best known souvenirs of the village are the villagers' hand-woven
baskets.
TUS
- Tus
was a powerful city and regional capital long before Mashhad,
but then the Mongols came. A ridge of clay running through the
plain is all that is left of its ramparts the size of which gives
an indication of how large a city it was. Tus, 22 km north east
of Mashhad on a turning east of the road to Gorgan and alongside
the Quchan road, is the home town of Ferdowsi, not only the poet
of Shahnameh (Epic of the Kings composed in 30 years),
but also the national chronicler (in nearly sixty thousand verses)
of a certain view of ancient Persian history. He died in 1020,
and is now buried under a mausoleum built in 1933 in preparation
for the celebration of the 1000th anniversary of the
poet's death a year later, but rebuilt in 1968 because the first
version was thought too plain. The mausoleum is surrounded by
a beautiful garden. Tus can be accessed by bus from Shohada Square
in Mashhad. Bus line 20 from Shohada Square will take you to Tus.
Tus
Museum
This
is a small museum in the complex of Ferdowsi Mausoleum, which has
a book stand with some offerings in English not easily available elsewhere.
The building was formerly used as a traditional tea house. Following
renovation works in 1982, it was transformed into the present museum,
which due to some deficiencies was soon closed until 1987, when it
was reopened to the public. In addition to a manuscript of the shahnameh
weighing 73 kilograms the museum houses both ethnological and archaeological
sections. The archaeological items were excavated from different regions
of Khorassan, including Khaf, Torbat-e Jam.
Tel:
(051) 25180.
Harunieh
Garden
This
large, crumbling, quadrangular domed mausoleum, in the vicinity of
Ferdowsi's mausoleum, is the only remaining structure of the original
city of Tus. Although popularly associated by the locals with Harun
or-Rashid (whose remains are generally accepted to have been buried
near those of Imam Reza at Mashhad) no one exactly knows for whom
it was built or at which date, and there are no clues inside or out.
It is possible that it may have been erected over the grave of al-Ghazali
(whose gravestone can be seen near the mausoleum); from its style
it appears to date from the early sixteenth century. It is believed
to have been a dervish monastery for some time.
NEISHABUR
Neishabur,
the earliest recorded capital of Khorassan, is located 112 km west
of Mashhad, and was at one time a thriving literary, artistic, and
academic center. This, the home of Omar Khayyam, has had an even more
checkered history than most ancient Iranian cities. Founded in Sassanian
times and named after Shapur, it became the capital of Khorassan after
the Arab conquest, and rose to great importance during the tenth century.
Like Ray and Gorgan, it is one of the main sources of the pottery
of this period. Toghrol Beg, the first of the Seljuks, made it his
capital in 1037.
Neishabur
was damaged by an earthquake in 1145 and by the invasion of Ghuzz
Turkamans in 1153, yet rebuilt by the time Yaqut visited it in 1216.
But its revival was short lived, and it was the first city in what
is now Iran to feel the full force of the Mongol invasion in 1221.
Despite
a further Mongol invasion in 1269, and another earthquake in 1282,
Clavijo found it a substantial city at the beginning of the fourteenth
century. But it was soon overtaken and surpassed by Mashhad, and after
its further destruction at the hands of the Afghans in 1722, Nader
Shah made Mashhad his capital and Neishabur ceased to have even symbolic
importance Curzon was probably right when he said that it "had certainly
been destroyed and rebuilt more than any other city in the world."
Omar
Khayyam (died in 1125), being best known outside Iran due to his Quatrains
(Rubay'yat) which were brought to the attention of the West through
their English translation by Fitzgerald in the 19th century,
is buried here. Khayyam wrote the quatrains as part of his academic
qualifications much as Muslim hakims prepared dissertations
for a Ph.D. Most experts as well as the Iranians themselves agree
that Khayyam was a great mathematician and astronomer, and that is
sufficient cause for honor in his own country. Omar lies buried in
the garden of the shrine of Imamzadeh Mohammad Mahrugh, built about
1570; this is a dome on a high drum with light blue tiles, in a charming
setting, and with a dazzling white interior. The very simple tombstone
sits in uneasy contrast with the questionable modern structure towering
above it, formed of several very tall and narrow tiled concrete lozenges
linked at the edges and redeemed only by inscriptions from the works
of the great man.
Neishabur
is actually redolent with associations of many other famous men: Farid
od-Din Attar, the great 12th to 13th-century
mystic poet, and the most famous and widely-traveled 20th
century Iranian painter of versatile abilities, Kamal ol-Molk Ghaffari,
to whom there are monuments in the same beautiful and historic Mahrugh
Garden. The monument with its beautifully tile decorated dome, as
well as on account of its favourable position, is particularly attractive
and imposing. The founder of the mausoleum is Amir Kamal od-Din Shahmir
Hossein. Meanwhile, a verse inscription from the time of Shah Sultan
Hossein, carved on a stone tablet on the right hand side of the ivan,
denotes that toward the end of the Safavid period, a certain Mohammad
Khan has embarked upon the construction of a mosque and a Musalla
in Neishabur. Both monuments are modern but on a more human scale
than Khayyam's. Attar's mausoleum was restored like Khayyam's in 1934.
Those who have looked at the history of the Sufi mystics, will be
familiar with the name of Attar, of whom the great mystic Jalal od-Din
Rumi declared, "Attar is the soul itself." Attar was killed in Neishabur
during the Mongol invasion.
Because
of being a long drive from Mashhad, visiting Neishabur for many foreigners
will become a tiring though not a disappointing trip.
Ghadamgah
Mausoleum
With
close resemblance to the Khajeh Rabi'e mausoleum, this charming octagonal
mausoleum, set in a small walled water-garden, is on the Mashhad road,
26 km from Neishabur in the village of Ghadamgah, the "Place of the
Foot", so named because inside the mausoleum there is a stone slab
with what are believed to be the (very large) two footprints of Imam
Reza, who stopped here on his way to Tus. This 17th-century
monument, which can hardly accommodate more than half a dozen pilgrims
at a time, has also some fine inscriptions and stalactite moldings.(moqarnas).
It is no problem for non-Muslims to visit or to photograph inside.
The mausoleum possesses four spacious ivans on four sides and its
interior has been covered with fine octagonal enameled tiles. An inscription
in Thulth found in the monument, gives the name of the calligrapher
as Mohammad Hossein.
There
are many other sites worthy of visit in Khorassan, but of rather difficult
access.
ADDRESSES
AND TELEPHONE NUMBERSACCESS AND DISTANCES:
925
km to Tehran. 960 km to Kerman. 1044 km to Rasht. 696 km to Sari.
1489 km to Tabriz. 975 km to Zahedan. 939 km to Yazd.
ACCIDENTS:
There
is an emergency clinic on the north side of Ahmad Abad (Feizieh) Street,
81000. For emergencies you may also dial 118.
AIR
AGENT:
-
-
Iran
Air, on the south side of Sanabad Street 832096.
-
-
Iran
Air, Modarres Crossroads (Darvazeh Tala'ie) 51492.
-
Iran-Air
Tour, Ahmad Abad Avenue 809011-5.
-
-
Asseman
Air, Imam Reza Avenue (Tehran), 57200.
AIRPORT:
-
-
The
airport is at the end of Bolvar-e Jomhuri-e Eslami, 315001-6,
999556.
-
-
Flight
Inquiries: 319955-7.
BANKS:
-
-
The
central branch of Bank Melli Iran is on the east side
of Imam Khomeini Ave 25031-6.
-
-
Bank-e
Mellat, Imam Khomeini Ave, Modarres Intersection 20087,
22560.
-
-
Bank
Mellat, Modarres Ave 51094.
-
-
Bank-e
Ostan (Provincial Branch of Band Saderat), 20831-5, 24714-5.
-
Bank
Saderat Iran, Imam Khomeini Ave 22171-3.
-
Bank
Sepah, Shirazi Street 20001.
BUS
TERMINAL:
There
are hundreds of buses to most major cities everyday. The bust
terminal is located at the end of Imam Reza Avenue, incorporating
17 cooperative bus companies, each with their own booking office.
Two separate platforms have been provided for the arrivals and
departures by bus. The bus terminal is equipped with a prayer
hall, a restaurant, long distance telephone service, and shopping
facility for the travelers. Tel: 99001-7.
CITY
DIALING CODE NUMBER:
The
dialing code for Mashhad is 051.
DRUG
STORE (24-HOUR):
-
-
Imam,
Imam Reza Hospital Square, 91166
-
-
Mehr,
Imam Reza Ave, 48391
-
Nahid,
Imam Khomeini Ave, 43544
-
Piruz,
Imam Reza (Tehran) Ave, Danesh Intersection, 91691
-
Sanabad,
Sanabad Street, 62292
-
Twenty-Second
Bahman, Daneshgah Ave, Next to the Faculty of Medicine,
98015.
EMERGENCIES:
For
emergencies dial either 115 or 118. There is an emergency clinic Ahmad
Abad Street.
FIRE
STATION:
Central
Station in Shohada Square, 112, 22222.
GOVERNOR'S
OFFICE:
Ostandari,
Enghelab-e Eslami Street, 95051-5.
Farmandari,
Pasdaran Ave, 58061-4.
MEDICAL
SERVICES:
- Ghaem
Hospital, Ahmad Abad Street (Feizieh), 800001-9
- Imam
Reza Hospital, Imam Reza Square, 93031-9
- Mashhad
Clinic (24-hour), Shohada Square, 815533
- Shahid
Kamyab, Fadaeian Eslam Street (Nakhrissi), 92121-9
- Dar
osh-Shafa-ye Imam Reza (Dentistry Ward), Shahid Sadr Avenue, 319449.
MUNCIPALITY:
On
the southwest side of Shohada Square 22177-9.
|