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Informations on Gyandzha
About Gyandzha
Ganja IPA: [?æn'?æ] (Azerbaijani: G?nc?) is Azerbaijan's second-largest city. In Soviet times it was named Kirovabad ().
Foundation of the city
According to medieval Arab sources, the city of Ganja was founded in 859-60 by Mohammad b. Khaled b. Yazid b. Mazyad, the Arab governor of the region in the reign of the caliph Al-Mutawakkil, and so-called because of a treasure unearthed there. According to the legend, the Arab governor had a dream where a voice told him that there was a treasure hidden under one of the three hills around the area where he camped. The voice told him to unearth it and use the money to found a city. He did so and informed the caliph about the money and the city. Caliph made Mohammad the hereditary governor of the city on a condition that he would give the money he found to the caliph.
Foundation of the city by Arabs is confirmed by the medieval Armenian historian Movses Kagankatvatsi, who mentions that the city of Ganja was founded in 846-47 in the canton of Arshakashen by the son of Khazr Patgos, « a furious and merciless man ». Khazr is believed to be a corrupted form of the name of « Khaled », while « Patgos » stands for Persian « patgospan », i.e. governor. Arshakashen (Armenian: , meaning "built by Arshak") was one of the cantons of the province of Utik, which was part of Armenia, before 387 AD, and of Caucasian Albania after the division of the Kingdom of Armenia between Persia and Byzantium.
However, modern historians believe that the Persian name Ganja (? / Ganjeh, "Ganja" derives from the New Persian ganj (: "treasure, treasury")) suggests that the city existed in pre-Islamic times and was likely founded in the fifth century A.D.
History
Historically an important city of the South Caucasus, Ganja has been part of Sassanid empire, Great Seljuk Empire, Atabegs of Azerbaijan, Khwarezmid_Empire, Il-Khans , Timurids , Jalayirids, Qara Qoyunlu, Ak Koyunlu, and the Ganja Khanate. Ganja is also the birthplace of the famous poet Nizami. The people of Ganja experienced a temporary cultural decline after an earthquake in 1139 and again after the Mongol invasion in 1231. The city was revived after the Safavids came to power. She was also managed by Ottomans between 1578-1603 and 1724-1735. For a short period, Ganja was renamed Abbasabad by Shah Abbas after war against the Ottomans.He build a new city 8 km to the southwest of the old one , but the name changed back to Ganja during the time During the Safavid rule, it was the capital of the Karabakh (Ganja) beylerbey, one of the four such administrative units and principalities. In 1747, Ganja became the center of the Ganja Khanate.
According to the October 1813 Gulistan Treaty, the Ganja Khanate, together with most of Azerbaijan and Georgia, was recognized as part of Russian Empire after Persia's defeat in the Persia-Russia wars. It was renamed Elizavetpol (Russian: ) after the wife of Alexander I of Russia, Elizabeth, and in 1868 became the capital of Elizavetpol Governorate.. Elizavetpol was a uyezd of Tiflis Governorate before 1868.
In 1918, Ganja became the temporary capital of the Azerbaijan Democratic Republic, at which point it was renamed Ganja again, until Baku was recaptured from the British backed Centrocaspian Dictatorship. In 1920, the Red Army occupied Azerbaijan and in 1935 Joseph Stalin renamed the city Kirovabad after Sergei Kirov. In 1991, Azerbaijan re-established its independence, and the ancient name of the city was given back.
Today Ganja is the second largest city in Azerbaijan. According to the official government data, at the beginning of 2006, the population of Ganja was 305,600. It has an international airport, and is home to the Nizami Mausoleum, re-built in 1991.
Historic Armenian community
In addition to Persian- and Turkic-speaking Muslims, the city has had a numerically, economically and, culturally significant Armenian community . Among the Armenians, the city is known as Gandzak (). The word Gandzak is likewise associated with the concept of treasure or riches - gandz (Arm. - ?). According to the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, Citizenship and Immigration Services Country Reports, pogroms directed against the Armenian population have taken place in Ganja (Kirovabad) in November, 1988 following the expulsion of Azeris from Armenia (see Kirovabad pogrom) . The city's Armenian population (about 1/3 of the whole population) left in 1989, in the process of forced population exchanges that defined the Karabakh conflict .
The city's historically important Christian figures include Kirakos Gandzaketsi (? , 1201-1271, author of the History of the Armenians ), Armenian philosopher Mkhitar Gosh ( , c. 1130-1213) author of the Code of Laws that was used in Armenia, Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia and Armenian diasporan groups in Europe , and Grigor Paron-Ter ( , 1560-1645) - Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem. Among the modern time's prominent Armenian person's of the city were Russian-Armenian architect Karo Halabyan , secretary of Armenian SSR communist party, President Askanaz Mravyan , Marshall Hovhannes Baghramyan , Chief Marshal Hamazasp Babadzhanian and the Olympic champion Albert Azaryan .
Languages
About 99 % population Ganja speak in the Azerbaijani language, only 1 % speak the population in other languages. They basically which speak other ethnic groups on the native language.
Pictures of Ganja
Statues depicting scenes from the works of Nizami, near the Nizami Ganjavi Mausoleum (Ganja)
Statues depicting scenes from the works of Nizami, near the Nizami Ganjavi Mausoleum (Ganja)
Statues depicting scenes from the works of Nizami, near the Nizami Ganjavi Mausoleum (Ganja)
Statues depicting scenes from the works of Nizami, near the Nizami Ganjavi Mausoleum (Ganja)
(source : Wikipedia)
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