Investigating the ways and ligaments of Neyshabur after Islam to the Mongol invasion Based on historical sources and travelogues (1st to 6th century AH)
Subject Areas : Journal of History (Tarikh)Elahe Rezanejad yazdi 1 , Aliye Jahanian 2
1 - MA in History and Civilization of Islamic Nations, Mashhad Branch, Islamic Azad University, Mashhad, Iran
2 - MA in History and Civilization of Islamic Nations, Mashhad Branch, Islamic Azad University, Mashhad, Iran
Keywords: Islamic period, Neyshabur, Road, Travel Writers, Robat,
Abstract :
The expansion of Islamic lands and the needs of Muslims provided the conditions for these lands to come together. Certainly the road and the caravanserai were one of the issues that could fulfill some of this. In the Islamic lands, the Silk Road was a vital part of the highway between East and West. There were numerous subways along this highway, and the important cities on the roads were definitely one of these Neyshabur. Called the east of the metropolis. The geographical and climatic conditions of Neyshabur helped to extend these routes east to Neyshabur, and from there to other areas, until the Mongol invasion and somehow after the Mongol invasion until the Qajar era. The purpose of this article is to describe the ways and ligaments of Neyshabur in a descriptive-analytical way based on library studies. The results show that roads were used for trade and human trade before Neyshabur, both before and during the Islamic period, but population centers such as Neyshabur also emphasized the prosperity and importance of these roads, especially Silk way has added.
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