Andaruni
{{short description|Inner quarters where women lived in traditional Iranian architecture}}File:Haramkhaneh_Tehran.jpg
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Andaruni ({{langx|fa|اندرونی}}) in Iranian architecture, is the inner quarter where the women lived.{{Cite book|title=Neither East Nor West: One Woman's Journey Through the Islamic Republic of Iran|last=Bird|first=Christiane|date=2002|publisher=Washington Square Press|isbn=0-671-02756-5|location=New York|pages=[https://archive.org/details/neithereastnorwe00chri/page/52 52]|url=https://archive.org/details/neithereastnorwe00chri/page/52}}
Private space
In traditional Persian residential architecture the andaruni is a part of the house in which the private quarters are established. This is specifically where the women of the house are free to move about without being seen by an outsider (na mahram). This is also the place where women can interact with their kin (maharim) without following the dress code or without wearing the hijab.{{Cite book|title=Public Urban Space, Gender and Segregation: Women-only urban parks in Iran|last=Arjmand|first=Reza|date=2016-09-13|publisher=Taylor & Francis|isbn=9781472473370|location=Oxon|pages=24}}
In case the patriarch of the house had more than one wife, each wife is given her own section in the andaruni as is the case for her mother-in-law or sister-in-law if they live with the family. The only men allowed in this area are those directly related to the lord of the house (his sons) and the lord himself, which may include boys under the age of puberty, and guests allowed in under special circumstances.
The court (usually in the talar) of the house would usually be situated in the andaruni.
Dichotomy
Andaruni
See also
References
{{Reflist}}
- Farhang-i Vazhe- Haaye- Memari-i Sonnati-i Iran (Dictionary of terms in Traditional Iranian Architecture). Fallahfar, S. 2000. Tehran. {{ISBN|964-350-316-X}}
Further reading
- Djamalzadeh, M. A. [https://iranicaonline.org/articles/andarun Andarun]. Encyclopedia Iranica.
- Nabizadeh, Sima; Uraz, Türkan Ulusu. [http://jfa.arch.metu.edu.tr/archive/0258-5316/articles/metujfa2017108.pdf The Modern Woman Vis-À-Vis The Modern House: The Hallmarks Of Modern Nationhood Through The 1920s-1940s Iran]. June 2017. METU Journal of the Faculty of Architecture 34(1). DOI:10.4305/METU.JFA.2017.1.8
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{{Islamic architecture}}
Category:Persian words and phrases
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