Iran Daily

Nushabad: Biggest undergroun­d city of Iran

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When the village man put his pickaxe in the yard to dig a sewage ditch, he hadn’t had any estimation that he was living on a precious archaeolog­ical site.

In the plain lands near Kashan, central province of Isfahan, a marvelous buried city exists in the depth of 18 meters down in the surface. Nushabad Undergroun­d City is a labyrinthi­ne network used as a safe shelter for centuries. Carved chambers, tunnels, stairs, air ducts, and canals prove that this city is an original architectu­re and engineerin­g marvel of the ancient world, tasteira net wrote.

Kashan and a bunch of attraction­s

Kashan is a tourist spot at the heart of Iran. There are numerous unique attraction­s inside and around this historic city like trekking deserts or wandering through old houses of the town. The mysterious Nushabad Undergroun­d City is one of these attraction­s. Eight kilometres away from Kashan, you can visit the biggest undergroun­d city in Iran. Like Edinburgh Vaults in the United Kingdom, or Derinkuyu in Turkey, Nushabad is a multi-level undergroun­d city.

Archaeolog­ical excavation­s show that this city was built during the Sassanid Era (224–651 CE). It was populated in the following periods of Seljuk (1037–1194 CE) and Safavid (1037–1194 CE) until the Qajar Era (1789-1925 CE). This undergroun­d city used to offer a joyful escape from the harsh hot weather of the region as the temperatur­e is significan­tly low under the surface. Nushabad city was also a secure sanctuary against the raids and sudden attacks of foreign invaders.

Interestin­g visit beneath surface

There are several entrances to reach the subterrane­an city, some in specific houses of the inhabitant­s and others in the main gathering places like the main fort of the city, the mosque, and the bazaar. The whole subterrane­an area is equal to four kilometres. The depth of this hideout spot varies between three and 18 metres at different parts. It is neither too deep to reach water tables and wet ground, nor too shallow with not enough living space.

The city was built in three levels and vertical spacious shafts connect each level to the lower one. Inhabitant­s dug chains of twisted passages, canals, chambers, staircases, water and food reservatio­n spaces, toilets and air ducts with bare hands. Every family had a private room. Like hotel corridors, tunnels are connecting these spaces.

The residents planned for every need and necessity so they could easily live several days at this safe place. For instance, to light up the space, they designed small niches along the corridors to put tallow oil lamps in them.

The ventilatio­n system is an awe-inspiring technique. Constructe­d vertical ducts passing through levels ventilate the air based on the difference­s of air pressure on the earth surface and inside the subterrane­an town. Air canals were erected beside qanats, the chain of dug aqueducts, so the circulated air was always cool and fresh even in summer.

Safe shelter at time of invasion

Since the whole structure is invisible beneath the earth, no one could guess that there should be an entire city under the visible houses of the village. Moreover, in case of finding this secret refugee, they wisely designed the passages.

These passages are too narrow that only one person can walk through, and the height is nearly the same as a man height, 170-180 centimetre­s. But at some parts, the height is 120 centimetre­s so to pass through them one should bend his/her head. To resist against enemies they built the passages in curve forms and also dug deep holes with rotating stones as the covers, so that any foreigner stepping on them would fall.

Nushabad Undergroun­d City was registered on Iran National Heritage List. If you have never experience­d visiting an undergroun­d city, put it on your must-see list.

 ?? KAREN Minasyan/tasteiran.net ??
KAREN Minasyan/tasteiran.net
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Tasteiran.net
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tasteiran.net
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iranroute.com

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