Empires of Stone and Shadow
From the Ceremonial Ruins of Persia to the Sprawling Metropolis of Tehran
4 stops
Weekend Journey
From a walled garden where poets have been mourned for six centuries to a stone terrace burned by Alexander and still standing, from the world's second-largest public square to a capital of fourteen million pressed against the foot of the Alborz Mountains -- this tour traces the full arc of Persian civilization across the Iranian plateau, from the Achaemenid Empire to the Qajar age and into the modern world.
Itinerary
- The City Where Poems Outlive Empires — In a walled garden at the foot of the Zagros Mountains, poets buried fourteen centuries ago still draw pilgrims who weep over their tombstones.
- Where Alexander Set the Match — Sixty kilometers northeast of Shiraz, the terraces of Persepolis rise from the Marvdasht plain -- a ceremonial capital burned after a banquet and still standing twenty-three centuries later.
- Isfahan Is Half the World — Shah Abbas moved his capital here in 1598 and built a square so large it could house a polo field inside it. The Persian proverb has endured four hundred years.
- The City the Mountains Made — Iran's capital of fourteen million sits at the foot of the Alborz Mountains, where Qajar palaces share a skyline with modern towers and ski resorts rise within an hour's drive.
achaemenid
safavid
history
architecture
UNESCO
heritage
persia