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It contains a former royal mansion, a historical weapons museum, and a Persian garden, all open to the public. The culture of Shiraz concerns the arts, music, museums, festivals, many Persian entertainments and sports activities in Shiraz, the capital of Fars Province. Shiraz is known as the city of poets, gardens, wine, nightingales and flowers.
The facility has space for 2,500 stores covering 450,000 square metres (4,800,000 sq ft). [6] [7]The complex includes the Burj Fars International, a 262-room hotel, an indoor and outdoor swimming pool, tennis court, convention centre and a helipad.
Review: Iranian couple fuses cuisines in restaurant whose name means 'beloved' in Persian. Gannett. Lucie Regensdorf. June 24, 2024 at 5:00 AM. ... At DelBar Restaurant in Hobe Sound, the hanger ...
Restaurant Stakeout is a scripted American reality television series on the Food Network. The series debuted on March 12, 2012, with the second season premiering on August 29, 2012. [ 1 ] It is one of the first non-studio shows attempted on Food Network.
The South Miami restaurant, which received little media attention (though the Miami Herald reviewed it in 2019), had one of the best problems a mom-and-pop restaurant can have: Though it was only ...
Shiraz is located in the south of Iran and the northwest of Fars province. It is built in a green plain at the foot of the Zagros Mountains 1,500 metres (4,900 feet) above sea level. Shiraz is 800 kilometres (500 mi) south of Tehran. [52] A seasonal river, Dry River, flows through the northern part of the city and on into Maharloo Lake. [53]
Shirazi salad (Persian: سالاد شیرازی sālād shirāzi) [1] is a Persian salad that originated from and is named after Shiraz in southern Iran. [2] [3] [4] It is a relatively modern dish, dating to sometime after the introduction of the tomato to Iran at the end of the nineteenth century in the Qajar era. [5]
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]