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Naderi Café (Persian: کافه نادری) is a café in Tehran. It is located to the east of Hafez overpass along Jomhouri-e Eslami Avenue. [1] [2] Naderi Cafe was founded by an Armenian immigrant. The café has been frequented by many influential Iranian literary figures such as Jalal Al-e-Ahmad, Simin Daneshvar, Forugh Farrokhzad, and ...
At DelBar Restaurant in Hobe Sound, the hanger steak was seasoned with coarse salt and fresh ground pepper, then flame-grilled to a perfect medium-rare. The thin, flat cut of beef is from the belly.
Khājeh Shams-od-Dīn Moḥammad Ḥāfeẓ-e Shīrāzī (Persian: خواجه شمسالدین محمد حافظ شیرازی), known by his pen name Hafez (حافظ, Ḥāfeẓ, 'the memorizer; the (safe) keeper'; 1325–1390) or Hafiz, [1] was a Persian lyric poet [2] [3] whose collected works are regarded by many Iranians as one of the highest pinnacles of Persian literature.
A family-owned Persian restaurant is coming to Lubbock, and will be the only one of its kind within 300 miles. Cyrus Kabob, a Persian-Iranian restaurant, will open in the former Dimbas, which ...
Roknābād or Ruknābād (Persian: رکنآباد) is the name of a district on the north-east side of Shiraz, Iran, watered by a man-made stream of the same name.It was made famous in English literature in the translations of the 14th-century Persian poet Hafez made among others [1] by Gertrude Bell, who wrote (1897): [2]
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Sudi also quotes from poems of two Persian poets, Kātibī of Nishabur (d. 1434-5) [6] and Ahli Shirazi (d. 1535), in which they express surprise that Hafez had borrowed a line from such a hated figure as Yazid, who was notorious among other things for causing the death of the Prophet's grandson Husayn at the Battle of Karbala in 680.
Hafiz Tanish (Persian: حافظ تنیش) was a 16th-century Central Asian court poet and historian in the Khanate of Bukhara. He is author of the Sharaf-nama-yi shahi, a Persian history book authorized by his suzerain Abdullah Khan II (r. 1583–1598). [1]