Table of Contents
-
BAHĀR (2)
Esmāʿil Jassim
a newspaper founded by Shaikh Aḥmad Tehrāni (d. 1957), known as Aḥmad Bahār, in 1917, in Mašhad.
-
BAHĀR, MOḤAMMAD-TAQĪ
M. B. Loraine, J. Matīnī
poet, scholar, journalist, politician, and historian (1886-1951). i. Life and work. ii. Bahār as a poet.
-
BAHĀR-E KESRĀ
M. G. Morony
“The spring of Ḵosrow,” one of the names of a huge, late Sasanian royal carpet measuring 60 cubits (araš, ḏerāʿ) square (ca. 27 m x 27 m). It was divided among the conquering Muslims after Madāʾen was captured in 637.
-
BAHĀRESTĀN (1)
G. M. Wickens
(Spring garden, Abode of spring), an anecdotal and moralistic work of belles-lettres in prose (both plain and rhythmic-rhyming) and verse, by ʿAbd-al-Raḥmān Jāmī, composed in the poet’s old age, in 1487.
-
BAHĀRESTĀN (2)
ʿA.-A. Saʿīdī Sīrjānī
the name of a garden, public square, and complex of buildings in central Tehran.
-
BAHĀRESTĀN-E ḠAYBĪ
I. H. Siddiqui
a detailed history in Persian of Bengal and Orissa for the period 1608-24 composed by Mīrzā Nathan ʿAlāʾ-al-Dīn Eṣfahānī.
-
BAHĀRI
Mortażā Varzi
(1905-1995), (ʿALI-) AṢḠAR, master of the kamānča (long-necked bowed lute).
-
BAHĀRLŪ
P. Oberling
a Turkic tribe of Azerbaijan, Khorasan, Kermān, and Fārs.
-
BAHĀRVAND
P. Oberling
a Lur tribe now living mostly in the dehestāns (districts) of Kargāh and Bālā Garīva, south and southwest of Ḵorramābād.
-
BAHDĪNĀN
A. Hassanpour
(Kurdish Bādīnān), name of a Kurdish region, river, dialect group, and amirate.