User:HistoryofIran/Greater Khorasan
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Khorasan (also spelled Khurasan: Middle Persian: Xwarāsān; New Persian: خراسان, pronounced [xoɾɒːˈsɒːn] ⓘ), was a historical region that formed the eastern part of Greater Iran. The region, now split between the present-day countries of Iran, Afghanistan and Turkmenistan, stretched from the Caspian region to the Oxus River.[1] The region was often subdivided into four quarters: Nishapur (present-day Iran), Marv (present-day Turkmenistan), Herat and Balkh (present-day Afghanistan) were the centers, respectively, of the westernmost, northernmost, southernmost, and easternmost quarters.[2][3] The term Greater Khorasan is today sometimes used to distinguish the larger historical region from the modern Khorasan Province of Iran (1906–2004), which roughly encompassed the western half of the historical Greater Khorasan.[4]
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Khorasan was first established as an administrative division in the 6th-century (approximately after 520) by the Sasanians, during the reign of Kavad I (r. 488–496, 498/9–531) or Khosrow I (r. 531–579).[5] It comprised the eastern and north-eastern part of the empire, and was administered by a spahbed (marshal). Khorasan continued as an administrative division in the early Islamic era, where it became a common way of referring to not only the eastern and north-eastern Sasanian realm, but also beyond the Oxus, namely Sogdia and Osrushana. Sistan and Kabul were also counted as a part of the region, though less frequently.[6]
Indeed, Islamic geographers often regarded everywhere east of so-called Jibal or what was subsequently termed Persian Iraq, as being included in a vast and loosely-defined region of Khorasan, which might even extend to the Indus Valley and Sindh.[1] The boundary between these two was the region surrounding the cities of Gurgan and Qumis. In particular, the Ghaznavids, Seljuqs and Timurids divided their empires into 'Iraqi' and 'Khorasani' regions. Khorasan is believed to have been bounded in the southwest by desert and the town of Tabas, known as "the Gate of Khorasan",[7]: 562 from which it extended eastward to the mountains of central Afghanistan.[8] Sources from the 10th-century onwards refer to areas in the south of the Hindu Kush as the Khorasan Marches, forming a frontier region between Khorasan and Hindustan.[9][10]