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Fin Garden
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Key Information
Fin Garden (Persian: باغ فین Bagh-e Fin) is a historic Persian garden located in Kashan, Iran. It contains Kashan's Fin Bathhouse, where Amir Kabir, the Qajar era chancellor, was assassinated by the order of Naser al-Din Shah Qajar in 1852. Completed in 1590, the Fin Garden is the oldest extant garden in Iran.[1]
History
[edit]The origins of the garden may be anterior to the Safavid era; some sources indicate that the garden has been relocated from another place, but no clear picture of it has been found.[2]
The settlements of the garden in its present form was built under the reign of Abbas the Great (1571–1629), as a traditional bagh near the village of Fin, located a few kilometres southwest of Kashan.[3]
The garden subsequently suffered from neglect and was damaged several times until, in 1935, it was listed as a national property of Iran.[2] UNESCO declared the garden a World Heritage Site on 18 July 2012.
Structure
[edit]The garden covers 2.3 hectares with a main yard surrounded by ramparts with four circular towers. In keeping with many of the Persian gardens of this era, the Fin Garden employs a great many water features.[3]
National Museum of Kashan
[edit]The Naional Museum of Kashan, built in 1968, is situated in the western part of Fin Garden. It contains archaeological, ethnological and crafts. The archaeological objects were excavated in Chogha Zanbil, Teppe Hasanlu, and the nearby site of Tepe Sialk.[4]
Gallery
[edit]-
Kushak, part of the Bagh-e Fin Garden in Kashan
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The Kushak is located in the central part of the garden.
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Detail of the ceiling of the Kushak.
References
[edit]- ^ "The world's 50 most beautiful gardens: Asia, Africa, Australasia, and the Americas".
- ^ a b Iranian Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism Organization. "Bagh-e Fin (Fin Garden), Kashan". Unesco tentative list. Retrieved 2008-04-15.
- ^ a b "Bagh-e Fin". gardenreview.com. Retrieved 2008-04-16.
- ^ "National Museum of Kashan at Fin Garden, Kashan, Iran". Retrieved 2025-06-20.
External links
[edit]Fin Garden
View on GrokipediaFin Garden (Persian: bāgh-e Fin) is a historic Persian garden situated in the village of Fin near Kashan in central Iran, originating from the Safavid era in the 16th century and embodying the quintessential chahar bagh layout with its four quadrants divided by axial water channels supplied by subterranean qanats.[1][2] The garden spans approximately 2.7 hectares enclosed by high walls and features ornate pavilions, pools, and cypress-lined paths that symbolize paradise in Persian tradition, with its hydraulic engineering enabling lush vegetation in an arid environment.[3][4] Renowned for its architectural harmony and historical significance, it served as a royal retreat and gained lasting notoriety as the location of the 1852 assassination of Amir Kabir, the reformist Qajar chancellor, who was murdered in an adjacent bathhouse on the orders of Naser al-Din Shah amid political intrigue.[5][2] Inscribed in 2011 as part of UNESCO's Persian Gardens World Heritage ensemble, Fin Garden exemplifies enduring Iranian landscape design principles while preserving elements from subsequent Zand and Qajar periods.[1][3]
Overview
Location and Physical Description
The Fin Garden, known as Bagh-e Fin, is located in the village of Fin, approximately 6 kilometers southwest of central Kashan in Isfahan Province, central Iran, at coordinates 33°56′47″N 51°22′21″E.[4][1] This positioning places it in a relatively elevated area detached from urban surroundings, enhancing its seclusion.[4] The garden spans 7.6 hectares and is enclosed by a high curtain wall punctuated with circular towers.[1][6] It follows the classic Persian charbagh layout, symmetrically divided into four quadrants by intersecting water channels that distribute spring water from a central pool fed by local qanats and a natural spring.[6][7] Lush vegetation, including ancient cedar trees, lines the pathways, while key structures such as the central Kushak pavilion and an adjacent bathhouse complex define the site's architectural core.[8][7] The design emphasizes water's visual and acoustic elements, with cascading channels and pools creating a serene, paradisiacal environment.[6][8]
