Top 10 Beautiful & Safe Places to Visit in Afghanistan 2022
For more videos subscribe to my channel & press the notification button, please.
Band e Amir | Bamyan | the national park of Afghanistan | 4K
Subscribe to our channel -- Make sure to click the Like button if you enjoyed the video. Really helps us grow our channel and produce new content Thank You
#Bandeamir
#bamyan
#Afghanistan
Best Regards !
Great Mosque of Herat
The Taliban captured Herat on 12 August 2021. This video was recorded in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan.
The city of Herat in western Afghanistan long sat at the edge of empires and served as a hub for trade and a conduit for armies. Yet it has been much more than simply a staging post or plaything of political ambition. It has been an imperial capital, a city of extraordinary wealth, and has played host to a cultural renaissance to rival that of Florence.
Herat
Herat Province is located in western Afghanistan on the Afghanistan - Iran border. Herat borders the desolate Afghan provinces of Farah to the south, Badghis to the north, and Ghor to the east. Herat also shares part of its northern border with Turkmenistan. Herat City is the largest and most significant urban area in western Afghanistan, home to an estimated 400,000 Heratis, and is connected to Kandahar City and Kabul via Highway 1, also referred to as the ring road highway.
The provincial population is approximately 1.8 million. Agriculture and animal husbandry are the primary occupations found in Herat although urban commercial and industrial ventures dominate Herat City's economy. Cotton, tobacco, and sesame are among the largest crops produced. Trade is intimately linked with Iran who shares a 400-mile border with Afghanistan.
Additional information on Herat province:
- Population Estimate: 1,890,000
- Area in Square Kilometers: 54,778
- Capital: Herat City
- Herat districts: Adraskan, Chest-e Sharif, Enjil, Farsi, Ghuryan, Golran, Gozareh, Herat, Karokh, Kuhestan, Kushk, Kushk-e Kohneh, Owbi, Pashtun Zarghun, Shindand, Zendeh Jan.
- Ethnic groups: Pashtun, Tajik, Hazara, Taimuri, Qala Nau, Chahar Aimak, Firozkohi, Jamshedi, Karkar, Kuchis.
- Tribal structure: Pashtun: Durrani, Zirak, Nurzai, Alizai, Panjpai, Barakzai, Alokozay, Achakzai, Ghilzai.
- Religious groups: Predominately Muslim; 15% Shia, 84% Sunni.
- Topography: Herat is bounded by the Khorasan deserts in the west, the Hindu Kush mountains in the east, and the Band-i-Baba mountains in the North. The central feature of the province, and most populous region within it, is the fertile tract that contains the districts of Heart, Ghuryan, Owbi, and Karokh. Roughly 40% of the province is either mountainous or semi-mountainous, and the remainder is flat or interspersed with gently rolling hills.
References
-
-
Jihad Museum of Afghanistan in Herat province
The Taliban captured Herat on 12 August 2021. This video was recorded in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan.
Jihad Museum
The Jihad Museum is located in Herat province, Afghanistan. It was built in 2010 as a place for Afghans to understand past conflicts and the history of their nation. Since its opening, the museum has welcomed many visitors, including U.S. congressmen and the deputy commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan. The museum's main purpose is to inform visitors of the mujahideen's plight and to educate Afghans. It is a memorial to the mujahideen (not Taliban) heroes who fought the Soviets in the 70s and 80s as well as to the Afghans who lost their lives fighting.
The Jihad Museum contains several exhibitions that are open continuously and showcase various topics pertaining to the mujahideen battles against the Soviets.
- Weapons: The museum exhibits Soviet weapons used during the war such as tanks, a fighter jet, a helicopter and a light rocket launcher. There is also a large collection of Russian rifles, grenades, plastic land mines, and artillery pieces on display.
Herat
The city of Herat in western Afghanistan long sat at the edge of empires and served as a hub for trade and a conduit for armies. Yet it has been much more than simply a staging post or plaything of political ambition. It has been an imperial capital, a city of extraordinary wealth, and has played host to a cultural renaissance to rival that of Florence.
Herat province
Herat Province is located in western Afghanistan on the Afghanistan - Iran border. Herat borders the desolate Afghan provinces of Farah to the south, Badghis to the north, and Ghor to the east. Herat also shares part of its northern border with Turkmenistan. Herat City is the largest and most significant urban area in western Afghanistan, home to an estimated 400,000 Heratis, and is connected to Kandahar City and Kabul via Highway 1, also referred to as the ring road highway.
The provincial population is approximately 1.8 million. Agriculture and animal husbandry are the primary occupations found in Herat although urban commercial and industrial ventures dominate Herat City's economy. Cotton, tobacco, and sesame are among the largest crops produced. Trade is intimately linked with Iran who shares a 400-mile border with Afghanistan.
Additional information on Herat province:
- Population Estimate: 1,890,000
- Area in Square Kilometers: 54,778
- Capital: Herat City
- Herat districts: Adraskan, Chest-e Sharif, Enjil, Farsi, Ghuryan, Golran, Gozareh, Herat, Karokh, Kuhestan, Kushk, Kushk-e Kohneh, Owbi, Pashtun Zarghun, Shindand, Zendeh Jan.
- Ethnic groups: Pashtun, Tajik, Hazara, Taimuri, Qala Nau, Chahar Aimak, Firozkohi, Jamshedi, Karkar, Kuchis.
- Tribal structure: Pashtun: Durrani, Zirak, Nurzai, Alizai, Panjpai, Barakzai, Alokozay, Achakzai, Ghilzai.
- Religious groups: Predominately Muslim; 15% Shia, 84% Sunni.
- Topography: Herat is bounded by the Khorasan deserts in the west, the Hindu Kush mountains in the east, and the Band-i-Baba mountains in the North. The central feature of the province, and most populous region within it, is the fertile tract that contains the districts of Heart, Ghuryan, Owbi, and Karokh. Roughly 40% of the province is either mountainous or semi-mountainous, and the remainder is flat or interspersed with gently rolling hills.
References
-
-
-
-
Panjeh Ali Bazaar, Yazd 360° 4K
IRAN/Yazd/ Location: 33.59633,56.92331
Architecturally Qeisariyeh, located between Khan square and Khan School has more space order than other bazaars.
It is protected by two wooden doors (gates) that have high artistic value. The oldest section of this bazaar is called Hadji Qanbar bazaar that was in the 9th century AH. Included in the Amir Chakhmaq cultural-historical complex.
Various parts of the bazaar of Yazd are as follows: Khan, Zargari (Goldsmith), Panjeh Ali, Qeisariyeh, Alaqebandi, Kashigari (tile working), Chit Sazi (chintz making), Mullah Ismael, Afshar, Hadji Qanbar, Mohammad Ali Khan, Jafar Khan, Sadri, Darvazeh Mehreez, Mesgari (coppersmith ), and nokhod Berizi bazaar.
There are two kinds of roofed bazaars in Yazd, which are built on the principles of traditional architecture and civil engineering:
Bazaar-Cheh (Small Bazaar)
These small bazaars usually form the center of the city’s old neighborhoods and they are to meet the daily requirements of the residents of each neighborhood. In other words, the scope of the activities of these small bazaars is the neighborhood, and they include a bakery, a butcher’s shop, a traditional apothecary, a green grocer’s, one or few small workshops, a mosque, and an underground water reservoir. The small bazaars of Kushk No, shah Abolqasem and Qolam-Ali Khorasani are of this type.
Bazaar
What we now see as a network of Yazd’s old bazaars is an extensive urban architectural complex located in the south of the city and includes several bazaar passages, trade compounds, and houses, mosques, squares, schools, underground water reservoirs, caravanserais, and workshops. This complex operates on a regional, and to some extent, a national basis.
This complex, which is indeed the backbone of the old city of Yazd, was divided into half by the establishment of the Shah, during the Pahlavi era and some of its main parts such as the Shoe-makers’ Bazaar, Mohammad Ali Khan Bazaar, and Panjeh Ali Bazaar were demolished.
Jihad Museum of Afghanistan in Herat province
The Taliban captured Herat on 12 August 2021. This video was recorded in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan.
Jihad Museum
The Jihad Museum is located in Herat province, Afghanistan. It was built in 2010 as a place for Afghans to understand past conflicts and the history of their nation. Since its opening, the museum has welcomed many visitors, including U.S. congressmen and the deputy commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan. The museum's main purpose is to inform visitors of the mujahideen's plight and to educate Afghans. It is a memorial to the mujahideen (not Taliban) heroes who fought the Soviets in the 70s and 80s as well as to the Afghans who lost their lives fighting.
The Jihad Museum contains several exhibitions that are open continuously and showcase various topics pertaining to the mujahideen battles against the Soviets.
- Weapons: The museum exhibits Soviet weapons used during the war such as tanks, a fighter jet, a helicopter and a light rocket launcher. There is also a large collection of Russian rifles, grenades, plastic land mines, and artillery pieces on display.
Herat
The city of Herat in western Afghanistan long sat at the edge of empires and served as a hub for trade and a conduit for armies. Yet it has been much more than simply a staging post or plaything of political ambition. It has been an imperial capital, a city of extraordinary wealth, and has played host to a cultural renaissance to rival that of Florence.
Herat province
Herat Province is located in western Afghanistan on the Afghanistan - Iran border. Herat borders the desolate Afghan provinces of Farah to the south, Badghis to the north, and Ghor to the east. Herat also shares part of its northern border with Turkmenistan. Herat City is the largest and most significant urban area in western Afghanistan, home to an estimated 400,000 Heratis, and is connected to Kandahar City and Kabul via Highway 1, also referred to as the ring road highway.
The provincial population is approximately 1.8 million. Agriculture and animal husbandry are the primary occupations found in Herat although urban commercial and industrial ventures dominate Herat City's economy. Cotton, tobacco, and sesame are among the largest crops produced. Trade is intimately linked with Iran who shares a 400-mile border with Afghanistan.
Additional information on Herat province:
- Population Estimate: 1,890,000
- Area in Square Kilometers: 54,778
- Capital: Herat City
- Herat districts: Adraskan, Chest-e Sharif, Enjil, Farsi, Ghuryan, Golran, Gozareh, Herat, Karokh, Kuhestan, Kushk, Kushk-e Kohneh, Owbi, Pashtun Zarghun, Shindand, Zendeh Jan.
- Ethnic groups: Pashtun, Tajik, Hazara, Taimuri, Qala Nau, Chahar Aimak, Firozkohi, Jamshedi, Karkar, Kuchis.
- Tribal structure: Pashtun: Durrani, Zirak, Nurzai, Alizai, Panjpai, Barakzai, Alokozay, Achakzai, Ghilzai.
- Religious groups: Predominately Muslim; 15% Shia, 84% Sunni.
- Topography: Herat is bounded by the Khorasan deserts in the west, the Hindu Kush mountains in the east, and the Band-i-Baba mountains in the North. The central feature of the province, and most populous region within it, is the fertile tract that contains the districts of Heart, Ghuryan, Owbi, and Karokh. Roughly 40% of the province is either mountainous or semi-mountainous, and the remainder is flat or interspersed with gently rolling hills.
References
-
-
-
-
Jihad Museum of Afghanistan in Herat province
The Taliban captured Herat on 12 August 2021. This video was recorded in Taliban-controlled Afghanistan.
Jihad Museum
The Jihad Museum is located in Herat province, Afghanistan. It was built in 2010 as a place for Afghans to understand past conflicts and the history of their nation. Since its opening, the museum has welcomed many visitors, including U.S. congressmen and the deputy commander of NATO forces in Afghanistan. The museum's main purpose is to inform visitors of the mujahideen's plight and to educate Afghans. It is a memorial to the mujahideen (not Taliban) heroes who fought the Soviets in the 70s and 80s as well as to the Afghans who lost their lives fighting.
The Jihad Museum contains several exhibitions that are open continuously and showcase various topics pertaining to the mujahideen battles against the Soviets.
- Weapons: The museum exhibits Soviet weapons used during the war such as tanks, a fighter jet, a helicopter and a light rocket launcher. There is also a large collection of Russian rifles, grenades, plastic land mines, and artillery pieces on display.
Herat
The city of Herat in western Afghanistan long sat at the edge of empires and served as a hub for trade and a conduit for armies. Yet it has been much more than simply a staging post or plaything of political ambition. It has been an imperial capital, a city of extraordinary wealth, and has played host to a cultural renaissance to rival that of Florence.
Herat province
Herat Province is located in western Afghanistan on the Afghanistan - Iran border. Herat borders the desolate Afghan provinces of Farah to the south, Badghis to the north, and Ghor to the east. Herat also shares part of its northern border with Turkmenistan. Herat City is the largest and most significant urban area in western Afghanistan, home to an estimated 400,000 Heratis, and is connected to Kandahar City and Kabul via Highway 1, also referred to as the ring road highway.
The provincial population is approximately 1.8 million. Agriculture and animal husbandry are the primary occupations found in Herat although urban commercial and industrial ventures dominate Herat City's economy. Cotton, tobacco, and sesame are among the largest crops produced. Trade is intimately linked with Iran who shares a 400-mile border with Afghanistan.
Additional information on Herat province:
- Population Estimate: 1,890,000
- Area in Square Kilometers: 54,778
- Capital: Herat City
- Herat districts: Adraskan, Chest-e Sharif, Enjil, Farsi, Ghuryan, Golran, Gozareh, Herat, Karokh, Kuhestan, Kushk, Kushk-e Kohneh, Owbi, Pashtun Zarghun, Shindand, Zendeh Jan.
- Ethnic groups: Pashtun, Tajik, Hazara, Taimuri, Qala Nau, Chahar Aimak, Firozkohi, Jamshedi, Karkar, Kuchis.
- Tribal structure: Pashtun: Durrani, Zirak, Nurzai, Alizai, Panjpai, Barakzai, Alokozay, Achakzai, Ghilzai.
- Religious groups: Predominately Muslim; 15% Shia, 84% Sunni.
- Topography: Herat is bounded by the Khorasan deserts in the west, the Hindu Kush mountains in the east, and the Band-i-Baba mountains in the North. The central feature of the province, and most populous region within it, is the fertile tract that contains the districts of Heart, Ghuryan, Owbi, and Karokh. Roughly 40% of the province is either mountainous or semi-mountainous, and the remainder is flat or interspersed with gently rolling hills.
References
-
-
-
-