Encyclopædia Iranica
Table of Contents
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KĀZARUNIYA
Hamid Algar
a Sufi order (ṭariqat) so named after Abu Esḥāq Kāzaruni, alternatively designated as Esḥāqiya, especially in Turkey, or more rarely as Moršediya.
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KĀẒEM RAŠTI
Armin Eschraghi
(d. 1844), student and successor of Shaikh Aḥmad b. Zayn-al-Din Aḥsāʾi and head of the Šayḵi movement. The main sources for Rašti’s biography are some of his own works which contain autobiographical information.
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KĀẒEM RAŠTI, MALEK-AL-AṬEBBĀʾ
Hormoz Ebrahimnejad
one of the high-ranking traditional physicians in 19th-century Iran.
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KĀẒEM, MUSĀ
Cross-reference
, Imam. See MUSĀ B. JAʿFAR (pending).
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KAZEMAYN
Meir Litvak
a suburban town in the northwest of Baghdad and one of the four Shiʿite shrine cities in Iraq, known in Shiʿi Islam as ʿatabāt-e ʿāliāt.
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KĀẒEMI, ḤOSAYN
Vida Nassehi-Behnam
(1924-1996), painter. He was part of a group of painters who started a modern movement in painting in Persia. They opened the first art gallery, Apādānā, in Tehran (1949) where they offered courses in painting and organized lectures and exhibitions. It became also a meeting place for artists and intellectuals.
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ḴĀZENI, ABU’L-FATḤ
Faiza Bancel
astronomer, mathematician, and mechanist originally from the city of Marv in Khorasan.
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KAZERUN
Multiple Authors
city and sub-province in the province of Fars, west of Shiraz. This entry is divided into the following three sections: i. Geography. ii. History. iii. Old Kazerun dialect.
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KAZERUN i. Geography
Jean Calmard
the sub-province (šahrestān) of Kazerun is bounded by the sub-provinces of Shiraz to the east, Mamasani to the north, Bušehr to the west and southwest, and Farrāšband to the southeast.
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KAZERUN ii. History
Jean Calmard
From late Safavid times, European travelers provided valuable information on Kazerun (variously spelled) and its region.


