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Tirgan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tirgan
Tirgan and Damavand National Day Festival at Amol
Observed by Iran
 Tajikistan
 Canada (by Iranian Canadians and Zoroastrians)
 European Union (by Iranians and Zoroastrians)
 United States (by Iranian Americans and Zoroastrians)
DateTir 13 (July 3, 4, or 5)
FrequencyAnnual
Related toNowruz, Mehrgan, Sade, Yalda

Tirgan (Persian: تیرگان, Tirgān), is an early summer ancient Iranian festival, celebrated annually on Tir 13 (July 2, 3, or 4). It is celebrated by splashing water, dancing, reciting poetry, and serving traditional foods such as spinach soup and sholezard. The custom of tying rainbow-colored bands on wrists, which are worn for ten days and then thrown into a stream, is also a way to rejoice for children.

Overview

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Tirgan is an ancient Iranian tradition which is still celebrated in various regions of Iran, including Mazenderan, Khorasan, and Arak.[1][2][3] It is widely attested by historians such as Gardezi, Biruni, and Masudi, as well as European travelers during the Safavid era.

The celebration is dedicated to Tishtrya, a Yazata who appeared in the sky to generate thunder and lightning for much needed rain.

Legend says that Arash the Archer was a man chosen to settle a land dispute between the leaders of the lands Iran and Turan. Arash was to loose his arrow, on the 13th day of Tir, and where the arrow landed, would lie the border between the two kingdoms. Turan had suffered from the lack of rain, and Iran rejoiced at the settlement of the borders, then rain poured onto the two countries and there was peace between them.

It is stated in Biruni's chronology that "by the order of God, the wind bore the arrow away from the mountains of Amol and brought the utmost frontier of Khorasan between Fergana and Tapuria."[4] Gardizi has given a similar description, although he notes that "the arrow of Arash fell in the area between Fargana and Bactria."

Ceremony

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Tirgan is celebrated every year in Mazandaran Province and Amol in northern Iran, the capital Tehran, Karaj, and the central and southern cities of Yazd, Meybod, Ardakan, Kerman, Bam, Shiraz, Isfahan, Ahvaz, and Farahan. Iranians of the Zoroastrian faith also celebrate this outside Iran, in Europe and the US.

Zoroastrianism

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In the Avesta, a religious text associated with Zoroastrianism, it is said: We praise Tishter, the star of the mighty and glorious, who swiftly moves towards that direction. The star Chisht flies towards it, speeding toward the vast ocean; just as that arrow in the air shot by Arash the archer, the greatest archer of the Aryans, was thrown from the mountain of Airwakhshoth towards the mountain of Khwanvant.[5]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^ Farahan: A Report on Iranian Celebrations
  2. ^ Aftab Markazi: Celebrations in Arak Archived 2011-09-18 at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ 2rism: Celebrations in Mazandaran Archived 2012-07-18 at archive.today
  4. ^ The Remaining Signs of Past Centuries, BiruniEduard Sachau translation (1879)
  5. ^ [Avesta – Yasna (English Translation)](https://www.avesta.org/ka/yt8.htm) – English translation of the Avesta, including Karda 9, Hymn 37.