Marvdasht () is a city in the Central District of Marvdasht County, Fars province, serving as capital of both the county and the district.
Archaeological excavations have shown that civilized people had already been living in the Marvdasht Plains for millennia when Darius chose the plains of mount Rahmat for his royal residence.
The modern city of Marvdasht was constructed in the 20th century. After the Pahlavi dynasty government built a sugar factory in 1935 (1314 Persian calendar), the city gradually developed around the factory. More and more people left the nearby villages or abandoned their nomadic life to settle in the developing city.
People from farther areas also migrated to the city. In the years before the Islamic Revolution Marvdasht became the most important industrial city of Fars province, as other factories such as the petrochemical complex, Azmayesh (producing household appliances and intended to be biggest in the Middle East), the Charmineh leather factory, the Fars meat complex and the Dadli biscuit company were constructed. These required a huge workforce, and the population of Marvdasht increased until it became the second most populated city in Fars province.
The fertile lands around the city were cultivated to make Marvdasht into the major center of Iranian agriculture, producing more wheat, maize, tomato, cucumber and other agricultural products than any other region.
There are three cities in the county: Marvdasht, Seydan and Kamfirouz. Marvdasht as a county is divided into four districts: Central, Kamfirouz, Doroudzan and Seydan. Marvdasht has cold weather in the hilly areas and moderate climate in other regions.
The excavations took place at the following prehistoric mounds situated in the vicinity of Marvdasht and Persepolis. Prehistoric pottery from the Marv Dasht Plain, Iran The University Museum, University of Tokyo (archived)
At Tall-e Gap many ceramic items were found. The site was identified as an important settlement of the ancient Bakun culture, belonging to the Middle Bakun sub-phase of the 5th millennium BCE Chalcolithic.
|
|