Where Empires Frayed

Iranian Azerbaijan, Ancient Forests, and the Caspian's Radioactive Riviera

4 stops Weekend Journey

From the divided homeland of Iranian Azerbaijan to a Caspian resort town that accidentally became the most radioactive inhabited place on Earth, this tour explores the north of Iran — the lush, forested, politically complex edge where Mongols, Russians, Persians, and Armenians left their marks on a land unlike anywhere else in the country.

Itinerary

  1. The Bazaar at the Edge of Persia — Built, destroyed, and rebuilt so many times that resilience is in its foundations, Tabriz commands the northwest gateway of Iran from a volcanic high valley — its bazaar the oldest covered market in the world, its revolutionary spirit still felt in the city's walls.
  2. A People on Both Sides of a Line — In 1828, a treaty drawn in a village called Turkmanchay split the Azerbaijani people between Russia and Persia. Today, more Azeris live on the Iranian side of that line than in the entire Republic of Azerbaijan.
  3. The Forest That Survived the Ice Age — North of the Alborz Mountains, Iran transforms entirely. Here, forests that are 25 to 50 million years old cling to slopes above a sea that has no outlet to any ocean — and a brick tower built a thousand years ago still holds the record as the tallest ever built from pure brick.
  4. The Most Radioactive Address on Earth — The town that gave its name to the world's most important wetland conservation treaty also contains a neighborhood where background radiation levels run eighty times the global average — not from any accident, but simply because the rocks glow.
nature history forests caspian azerbaijan silk-road UNESCO heritage unusual