Rafsanjān, Kerman Province, Iran

History | Geography | Environment | Flora and fauna | Pistachio industry | Land rights | Gender disparities | Transport | Education : Universities | Sport

🇮🇷 Rafsanjan is a city and capital of Rafsanjan County, Kerman Province, Iran.

Rafsanjan is the biggest producer of pistachios in the world. Also one of the biggest cooper mine in the world is located there too. In addition the biggest and oldest house of the world is located there. The city is also a major centre of carpet production, although the rugs are sold as Kermani rugs rather than Rafsanjani ones.

History About the origin and creation of this city there are a lot of stories. At the period of Qajar kingdom and on Naser-Aldin-Shah (the king of Iran), Rafsanjan was named az “Anas” and was part of Fars province; after a while it came under the control of Kerman’s government. In the history, Rafsanjan has been named as a significant city due to being on the crossroad between Kerman and Yazd. At the end of Safavieh kingdom, Afghans attacked this city and caused disaster and catastrophe. The low rate of prosperity after mentioned attack was stretched until Qajar’s kingdom and the city was almost ruined until that time. At 1787 Agha Mohammad Khan Qajar attacked to Rafanjan and people decided to acquiesce in order to end the war, so he left the city without killing and death and violence. At 1866 Ebrahim Khan Zahiradole (the government of Kerman) ordered to reshape and rebuild the city. Buildings start to construct and the situation started to improve. At 1913 Amir Mofkhem Bakhtiari ordered to build a strong wall around the city which part of ruins still remain today. This step caused importance and accredit to the city. For the first time at 1938, crossroad was built at the city, which is named as Emem Khomeyni, Enghelsb and Shohada these days. Rafsanjan was also an important city because of being one of the biggest producers of cotton earlier on time. Due to high quality of this product, it was exported to India and Russia. At 1945 Rafsanjan changed to township. These days Rafsanjan is one of the most important and crowded cities of Kerman and has an undeniable role in the economy of state and country. Mines and pistachios are well known not only in Iran, but all around the world.

Geography Rafsanjan is located in south part of the Lut desert, in north-west of Kerman province. The longitude of this city is 56 degrees east and the latitude is 30 degrees south. The Average distance between Kerman and this city is 110 km (68 mi). The city has an airport and railway (Tehran-Bandar Abbas route). Moreover, the altitude is 1,460 m (4,790 ft) and the land-measurement is approximately 10,687 km (6,641 mi). North part of Rafsanjan has a common frontier with Bafgh and Zarand; south part is neighboring with Bardsir and on west side with Anar and Shahre-Babak; finally east side of this city is neighboring with Kerman and Zarand. Rafsanjan has two seasonal rivers named as Shour and Giouderi. The mountains in the area are part of Zagros range, and Sarcheshmeh and Davaran are the most famous.

Environment Rafsanjan has been exposed to the polluting smoke of Sarcheshme, Khatunabad and Shahrbabak copper smelters. On the other hand, up to 14 pistachio orchards are sprayed every year, as a result, dozens of tons of poison are released in the pistachio orchards of Rafsanjan. The level of arsenic contamination in Rafsanjan water is about ten times the permissible limit, and it is strongly recommended to use authorized water purification devices for drinking water, and to ensure the health of the water purification device, the water produced by the device should also be tested.

Flora and fauna Wild plantations and trees include common fig and almonds. Wild animals which are living in mountainous areas are goats, ewes, gazelles, wolves, hyenas, wildcats and some species of birds like pigeons, eagles and partridges.

Pistachio industry Rafsanjan, a semiarid region in central Iran, is renowned for its high-quality pistachio production, generating nearly $1 billion annually. The Iranian government has provided energy and water subsidies over the past several decades, attracting producers to the area, where more than 30,000 people are directly involved in the production by owning or managing pistachio orchards. However, economically viable pistachio production requires specific climatic conditions, such as long, hot summers and sufficient chill in winters, which occur in areas far from surface water resources like rivers or lakes, making the crop water-intensive. As a result, pistachio producers in Rafsanjan have long relied on groundwater as the only source of water for irrigation.

According to reports from the late 1980s, the Rafsanjani family is said to "control" Iran's multimillion-dollar pistachio market centered around the town of Rafsanjan. Ali Akbar Hashemi Rafsanjani, former Iranian president and one of the most powerful members of the regime in Iran, was the head of the parliamentary speaker and had close ties to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) construction firm, which built most of Iran's infrastructure, including dams. These dams were used to redirect water to the agricultural fields of high-ranking members of the regime, including the Rafsanjani family, resulting in a water mafia-like scenario. They also used restricting and opening the dam to flood the region as a means of suppression and punishment.

Land rights In the region, although communal “garden ownership” (baghcheh-dari) was prevalent among villagers, absentee landlords still held a virtual monopoly over the ownership of the basin's land and water resources. This is due to orchards being exempted from redistribution under the Iranian Land Reform Programme of 1962, which sought to abolish the feudal system and redistribute arable land from large landowners to smaller agricultural workers. At the end of the 80s, a survey done in two Rafsanjan villages revealed that villagers owned only about 17% of the water and cultivated land, while the rest belonged to a small number of absentee landlords.

Gender disparities During the same era, there was a shift in labor relations from the traditional sharecropping contracts, which were prevalent throughout most of the Persian plateau, to wage labor. For pistachio cultivation, the new labor force was differentiated by skill and gender and was exclusively on a wage basis. The laborers, called “ghararis”, who were by definition male and highly skilled in irrigation work, which was an exclusively male task, constituted the "labor aristocracy". They were employed on a permanent basis with a monthly wage, a New Year bonus, and given a small plot of land free of charge with access to the landlord's irrigation water.

On the other hand, female laborers engaged in harvest and post-harvest operations occupied the lowest position in the labor hierarchy. Their work was seasonal, and their labor remuneration was mostly based on a piece-rate basis, with payment made three to four months after finishing work. Additionally, the spinning and weaving of cotton textiles, which used to be a traditional income-earning activity for women, had at the time been virtually wiped out due to competition from cheap synthetic fibers.

Transport Rafsanjan is located in the main road of Kerman-Yazd. The distances between Rafsanjan and other cities are: 12 km (7.5 mi) to Bardsir, 140 km (87 mi) to Sirjan, 130 km (81 mi) to Shahre-Babak, 90 km (56 mi) to Anar, 75 km (47 mi) to Zarand, 185 km (115 mi) to Bafgh and 230 km (140 mi) to Yazd. Local people use both public and private vehicles, however private ones are more popular among citizens than public vehicles. Rafsanjan also has buses, railways and an airport to go to other cities and provinces.

Education: Universities • Islamic Azad University Rafsanjan Branch • Allameh Jafari University • Rafsanjan University of Medical Sciences • Rafsanjan University of Vali Asr • Rafsanjan School of Medicine

Sport Football club Mes Rafsanjan F.C. is based in the city.

Asia/Tehran/Kerman 
<b>Asia/Tehran/Kerman</b>
Image: Adobe Stock efesenko #410278417

Rafsanjān has a population of over 161,900 people. Rafsanjān also forms the centre of the wider Rafsanjan County which has a population of over 311,214 people.

To set up a UBI Lab for Rafsanjān see: https://www.ubilabnetwork.org Twitter: https://twitter.com/UBILabNetwork

Text Atribution: Wikipedia Text under CC-BY-SA license

Antipodal to Rafsanjān is: -124.017,-30.4

Locations Near: Rafsanjān 55.9833,30.4

🇮🇷 Zarand 56.55,30.8 d: 70.1  

🇮🇷 Kerman 57.062,30.29 d: 104.2  

🇮🇷 Yazd 54.333,31.867 d: 226.4  

🇮🇷 Bam 58.35,29.1 d: 270.4  

🇮🇷 Fasa 53.633,28.933 d: 279.5  

🇮🇷 Jahrom 53.555,28.501 d: 316.1  

🇮🇷 Bandar Abbas 56.266,27.188 d: 358.3  

🇮🇷 Qeshm 56.267,26.933 d: 386.5  

🇮🇷 Shiraz 52.533,29.6 d: 343.9  

🇮🇷 Bandar Lengeh 54.867,26.55 d: 441.8  

Antipodal to: Rafsanjān -124.017,-30.4

🇵🇫 Papeete -149.566,-17.537 d: 17062  

🇦🇸 Pago Pago -170.701,-14.279 d: 14931.8  

🇵🇪 Talara -81.267,-4.567 d: 14699.3  

🇵🇪 Chiclayo -79.844,-6.764 d: 14719  

🇵🇪 Piura -80.633,-5.2 d: 14686.4  

🇵🇪 Chimbote -78.583,-9.067 d: 14749.3  

🇵🇪 Trujillo -79.034,-8.103 d: 14730.8  

🇵🇪 Callao -77.15,-12.067 d: 14792.9  

🇵🇪 Máncora -81.05,-4.1 d: 14648.5  

🇵🇪 San Isidro -77.033,-12.083 d: 14782.9  

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