Meymeh

{{Short description|City in Isfahan province, Iran}}

{{for multi|the administrative divisions|Meymeh and Vazvan County|and|Meymeh District|the city in Ilam province|Meymeh, Ilam{{!}}Meymeh|other places with a similar name|Meymah (disambiguation){{!}}Meymah}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=June 2023}}

{{Infobox settlement

| name = Meymeh

| native_name = {{langx|prs|ميمه}}

| native_name_lang = fa

| settlement_type = City

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| pushpin_map = Iran

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| coordinates = {{Coord|33|26|43|N|51|10|16|E|dim:1km|display=inline,title}}

| coordinates_footnotes = {{Cite map |author=((OpenStreetMap contributors)) |url=https://www.openstreetmap.org/?mlat=33.445278&mlon=51.171111&zoom=15#map=15/33.44528/51.17111|website=OpenStreetMap |title=Meymeh, Meymeh and Vazvan County|date=25 November 2024|access-date=25 November 2024|lang=fa}}

| subdivision_type = Country

| subdivision_name = Iran

| subdivision_type1 = Province

| subdivision_name1 = Isfahan

| subdivision_type2 = County

| subdivision_name2 = Meymeh and Vazvan

| subdivision_type3 = District

| subdivision_name3 = Central

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| population_as_of = 2016

| population_total = 5651

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| timezone = IRST

| utc_offset = +3:30

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Meymeh ({{langx|prs|ميمه}}){{efn|Also romanized as Meimeh{{GEOnet3|-3074829}}}} is a city in the Central District{{efn|Formerly Meymeh District of Shahinshahr County}} of Meymeh and Vazvan County, Isfahan province, Iran, serving as capital of the county.{{cite report|title=Approval regarding the national divisions of Shahinshahr County in Isfahan province|language=fa|website=sdil.ac.ir|via=Shahr Danesh Legal Research Institute|url=https://sdil.ac.ir/مصوبات-هیأت-دولت-دهه-دوم-شهریور-۱۴%DB%B0۳/|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20241009093909/https://sdil.ac.ir/مصوبات-هیأت-دولت-دهه-دوم-شهریور-۱۴%DB%B0۳/|publisher=Ministry of the Interior, Cabinet of Ministers|archive-date=9 October 2024|last=Aref|first=Mohammad Reza|date=6 October 2024|orig-date=Approved 17 July 2024|id=Proposals 580 and 70730; Notification 79240/T61130AH|access-date=24 November 2024}} It is in the vicinity of the arterial road of Tehran-Isfahan.

History

=Ancient history=

Meymeh's significance has largely derived from its position on the route between Isfahan and Tehran. The earliest evidence of the trade routes passing through Meymeh is the presence of two Seljuk-era rebats in the area. One is in Meymeh itself, near a later Mongol-era mosque. The other, now known as Rebat-e Tork, lies further north on the road to Delijan. Originally built as a military outpost, Rebat-e Tork was later converted into a caravanserai.{{cite web |last1=Borjian|first1=Habib |title=MEYMA i. The District |url=https://iranicaonline.org/articles/meyma-i-district |website=Encyclopaedia Iranica |access-date=10 August 2020}}

Textual sources from this time make no mention of Meymeh, but they do appear to mention the nearby town of Vazvan. The 10th-century writer Ibn Khordadbeh described "Rebāṭ-e Vazz" as the station after Borkhvar on the road from Isfahan to Ray (then the main city in the Tehran area). The name "Vazz" is an apparent reference to Vazvan, indicating that it was originally the main town in the area. Meymeh itself is first mentioned by Yaqut al-Hamawi, several centuries later, who describes Meymeh as a wilayat of Isfahan.

However, Hamdallah Mustawfi, the main authority on Iranian geography in the following 14th century, makes no mention of Meymeh. By the Safavid era, the main trade route from Isfahan to Tehran had shifted away from Meymeh, now passing through the towns of Natanz, Qohrud, and Kashan in the Kargas mountains. This remained the preferred route through the time of the Qajar dynasty. Meymeh's modern importance came after the automobile gained popularity in Iran, replacing the camel caravans of earlier times. The arrival of the automobile caused the preferred route to shift from the mountains to the plains of Meymeh and Delijan.

= Meymeh in the 1930s =

The ethnographic writings of Ann Lambton, in 1936–37, provide a snapshot of life in Meymeh and Jowsheqan during the 1930s, when traditional small-town life was just beginning to be affected by the sweeping reforms of Reza Shah Pahlavi. Most people in Meymeh were peasants who owned their own land. The town's agricultural area was divided into 2,016 habbas, with the average holding being 2-5 habbas, although there was one large landowner who owned a large portion of the habbas, along with several thousand sheep and goats. Meymeh also had a carpenter, a blacksmith, a potter, a builder, a brickmaker, a couple of shopkeepers, and two sellers of clothing. There were two public baths and two mosques.

Also at this time, Meymeh was the seat of the deputy governor of the district of Meymeh and Jowsheqan. The deputy governor's main responsibility was to preside over the solhiya court that met in Meymeh and was mostly concerned with financial disputes. Traditional education by the mullahs had already been abolished and replaced with secular, state-run schools. Meymeh and Jowsheqan each had a school, and the two of them together were overseen by a raʾis-e maʿāref, or "head of [the department of] education". Each town also had a kadkhoda, or "head of the village", appointed by the governor of Kashan based on the recommendations of the locals. The kadkhoda's responsibilities were mainly concerned with agriculture, especially cleaning the qanats. By this time, however, use of the qanats in Meymeh had declined—of its ten qanats in Meymeh, only two (the Bir and the Mordabad) were still in use. The kadkhoda had three subordinates, or pakars, and there was also a mirab in charge of water distribution.

Despite the decline of the qanats, Meymeh remained a prosperous town. There was little to no emigration to the growing metropolis of Tehran, especially in contrast to neighboring districts. Meymeh enjoyed a fairly constant water supply and good farmland. It also had vineyards. Surplus crops were stored in an old fort in the town. An important tradition connecting Meymeh with Kashan was the festival of Esbandi, which Lambton observed during her time here, although celebration of Esbandi declined dramatically in the following decades and was moribund by the end of the 1960s.{{cite web |last1=Borjian|first1=Habib |title=KASHAN vi. THE ESBANDI FESTIVAL |url=https://iranicaonline.org/articles/kashan-vi-the-esbandi-festival |website=Encyclopaedia Iranica |access-date=10 August 2020}}

= Administrative history =

During the late Qajar period, Meymeh was part of the district of Jowsheqan. Under the Pahlavi dynasty, in 1921–22, Meymeh was put in Jowsheqan boluk of Kashan County. By 1950, the boluk had been made a dehestan (rural district), and by 1954 it was raised to a bakhsh (district), and named Meymeh. Then, in 1957, Meymeh District was transferred from Kashan to Isfahan County, upsetting the residents of Jowsheqan, who had traditionally identified with Kashan more. Thus, the district was split in two, with Meymeh going into Isfahan and Jowsheqan into Kashan.

In 1990, the county of Borkhar and Meymeh was formed by merging those two districts. The capital of the new county was the new city of Shahinshahr. Under this new arrangement, Meymeh remained a district with two rural districts, Vandadeh and Zarkan.{{cite report|title=Approval letter of the ministers of the Political-Defense Commission of the Government Board regarding some changes and divisions of the country in Isfahan province|language=fa|website=rc.majlis.ir|via=Islamic Parliament Research Center|url=https://rc.majlis.ir/fa/law/show/132598|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151001063248/https://rc.majlis.ir/fa/law/show/132598|archive-date=1 October 2015|last=Davodi|first=Parviz|date=9 October 2014|orig-date=Approved 21 September 1386|id=Proposal 43036/42/1/4; Letter 58538/T26118H; Notification 153437/T35370K|access-date=9 June 2023|publisher=Ministry of the Interior, Political-Defense Commission of the Government Board}} In 2024, Meymeh District{{efn|Renamed the Central District of Meymeh and Vazvan County}} was separated from the county in the establishment of Meymeh and Vazvan County and renamed the Central District, with Meymeh as the new county's capital.

Despite all these changes, the borders of the city of Meymeh itself have remained essentially unchanged since at least the original Pahlavi arrangement.

Demographics

=Population=

At the time of the 2006 National Census, the city's population was 5,733 in 1,790 households,{{cite report|title=Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran, 1385 (2006): Isfahan Province|language=fa|publisher=The Statistical Center of Iran|website=amar.org.ir|url=http://www.amar.org.ir/DesktopModules/FTPManager/upload/upload2360/newjkh/newjkh/10.xls|access-date=25 September 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110920083455/http://www.amar.org.ir/DesktopModules/FTPManager/upload/upload2360/newjkh/newjkh/10.xls|format=Excel|archive-date=20 September 2011}} when it was capital of Meymeh District{{efn|Renamed the Central District of Meymeh and Vazvan County}} in Borkhar and Meymeh County.{{cite report|title=Approval of the organization and chain of citizenship of the elements and units of the national divisions of Isfahan province, centered in the city of Isfahan|language=fa|website=lamtakam.com|via=Lam ta Kam|url=https://lamtakam.com/law/council_of_ministers/113034|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240204010546/https://lamtakam.com/law/council_of_ministers/113034|publisher=Ministry of the Interior, Defense Political Commission of the Government Board|last=Habibi|first=Hassan|archive-date=4 February 2024|date=c. 2024|orig-date=Approved 21 June 1369|id=Proposal 3233.1.5.53; Letter 93808-907; Notification 82838/T131K|access-date=4 February 2024}} The following census in 2011 counted 5,449 people in 1,732 households,{{cite report|title=Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran, 1390 (2011): Isfahan Province|language=fa|publisher=The Statistical Center of Iran|website=irandataportal.syr.edu|via=Iran Data Portal, Syracuse University|url=https://irandataportal.syr.edu/wp-content/uploads/Esfahan.xls|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230117221845/https://irandataportal.syr.edu/wp-content/uploads/Esfahan.xls|archive-date=17 January 2023|access-date=19 December 2022|format=Excel}} by which time the district had been separated from the county in the establishment of Shahin Shahr and Meymeh County.{{efn|Renamed Shahinshahr County}} The 2016 census measured the population of the city as 5,651 people in 1,909 households.{{cite report|title=Census of the Islamic Republic of Iran, 1395 (2016): Isfahan Province|language=fa|publisher=The Statistical Center of Iran|website=amar.org.ir|url=https://www.amar.org.ir/Portals/0/census/1395/results/abadi/CN95_HouseholdPopulationVillage_10.xlsx|access-date=19 December 2022|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201019041954/https://www.amar.org.ir/Portals/0/census/1395/results/abadi/CN95_HouseholdPopulationVillage_10.xlsx|format=Excel|archive-date=19 October 2020}}

Geography

=Location=

Meymeh is located on a high plain in the western foothills of the Kargas mountains, which separate Meymeh from Natanz to the east. To the west lies a wasteland, at the other end of which is Khvansar County.

Clustered around Meymeh are the town of Vazvan and the villages of Ziadabad, Azan, Vandadeh, and Khosrowabad. To the northeast is Chaqadeh. To the northwest, the outlying village of Muteh stands isolated on a rural road leading to Golpayegan.

=Climate=

Meymeh has a cold semi-arid climate (Köpper Bsk) with an average temperature of 13.6 °C.

{{Weather box

|width=auto

|metric first = yes

|single line = yes

|location = Meymeh (1999-2010 normals)

|Jan mean C = -0.5

|Feb mean C = 2.1

|Mar mean C = 6.3

|Apr mean C = 11.8

|May mean C = 16.3

|Jun mean C = 21.8

|Jul mean C = 24.9

|Aug mean C = 23.8

|Sep mean C = 19.8

|Oct mean C = 13.6

|Nov mean C = 6.0

|Dec mean C = 2.3

| Jan dew point C =-7.0

| Feb dew point C =-8.1

| Mar dew point C =-7.6

| Apr dew point C =-2.7

| May dew point C =-3.1

| Jun dew point C =-1.7

| Jul dew point C =1.9

| Aug dew point C =-0.4

| Sep dew point C =-3.5

| Oct dew point C =-4.0

| Nov dew point C =-4.7

| Dec dew point C =-4.7

|precipitation colour = green

|Jan precipitation mm = 25.8

|Feb precipitation mm = 9.5

|Mar precipitation mm = 21.2

|Apr precipitation mm = 34.5

|May precipitation mm = 11.9

|Jun precipitation mm = 3.4

|Jul precipitation mm = 2.1

|Aug precipitation mm = 1.7

|Sep precipitation mm = 0.0

|Oct precipitation mm = 2.8

|Nov precipitation mm = 17.6

|Dec precipitation mm = 33.2

| Jan snow days =3.6

| Feb snow days =2.6

| Mar snow days =1.0

| Apr snow days =0

| May snow days =0

| Jun snow days =0

| Jul snow days =0

| Aug snow days =0

| Sep snow days =0

| Oct snow days =0

| Nov snow days =0.3

| Dec snow days =1.9

| year snow days =

|Jan humidity = 64

|Feb humidity = 51

|Mar humidity = 40

|Apr humidity = 39

|May humidity = 28

|Jun humidity = 20

|Jul humidity = 22

|Aug humidity = 20

|Sep humidity = 20

|Oct humidity = 30

|Nov humidity = 50

|Dec humidity = 62

|source = IRIMO(dew point 1999-2005){{Cite web |title=Statistics of 200 synoptic stations: Meimeh(99447) |url=http://www.chaharmahalmet.ir/iranarchive.asp |url-status=unfit |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160217102629/http://www.chaharmahalmet.ir/iranarchive.asp |archive-date=17 February 2016 |access-date=7 December 2024 |website=Chaharmahalmet |publisher=Iran Meteorological Organization |language=Persian |type=asp}}

}}

Economy

=Agriculture=

The economy of Meymeh is primarily rural and agricultural. Irrigation comes from a seasonal river as well as from qanats, although the use of qanats had declined by the 1930s. Major crops at this time included cereals, beans, cotton, fruits, and vegetables. Cultivation of opium was forbidden in 1937. Surplus crops were stored in an old fort. A unique feature of the Meymeh region is the presence of bumkands, which are manmade caverns used to shelter livestock during the harshest part of winter.

Meymeh has historically been known for its dried fruit, sold in Isfahan and Kashan. They are either sold plain or in jowzeqand form, where the dried fruit skin is stuffed with sugar.

=Service industry=

Modern Meymeh also derives economic significance from its position on the Tehran-Isfahan highway. Much of modern Meymeh's service economy is dedicated to stores and restaurants along the main highway.

See also

{{Portal-inline|Iran}}

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Notes

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References

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{{Isfahan Province|state=collapsed}}

Category:Cities in Isfahan province

Category:Populated places in Meymeh and Vazvan County