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Golestan Palaces
uring the reign of the Safavid Shah Abbas I, a vast
garden called Chahar-Bagh (Four Gardens), a governmental residence and a
Chenaristan (a grove of plane trees), had been created on the present
site of the Golestan Palace and its surroundings.
Then, Karim Khan Zand (1163-1193 = 1749-1779 A.D.)
ordered the construction of a citadel, a rampart and a number of towers
in the same area.
In the Qajar period, some royal buildings were gradually
erected within the citadel; for instance, in 1268 A.H. (1813 A.D.) which
coincided with the fifth year of the Nasir al-Din Shah, the eastern part
of the royal garden was extended and some other palaces were built
around the garden, called palaces the Golestan Garden. The group of
palaces located in the northern part of the Golestan Garden, consists of
the Museum Hall (Talar-i-Brilian), the Ivory Hall, the Crystal Hall, and
the Talar-i Narinjistan (orangery hall), which have all been built prior
to the construction of the other parts of the palace.
The
Museum Hall has been built in 1296 A.H. (1878 A.D.).
In the upper section of the Royal Reception Hall of the
Golestan Palace, there is a large bejeweled golden throne, called
Takht-i- Tavus (The Peacock Throne), which must be the same as the Solar
Throne (Takht-i Khorshidi).
The Qajar`s royal residence, the oldest substantial
building in the city, and one of a group of royal buildings then
enclosed within mud walls known as the Arg, the Golestan Palace (Rose
Garden), too, was completed by Fath Ali Shah Qajar. However, its
construction is attributed to the Safavid Shah Abbas I.
Nasser ad-Din shah, influenced by what he had seen
during his first European tour in 1873, added a Museum in the from of a
large, first-floor hall decorated with mirror work, where some of the
priceless Crown jewels were put on show side by side with many other
things of much less value, mainly acquired by the King during his
European tour.
The coronation ceremonies of the last two kings of the
Pahlavi dynasty took place in the first-floor hall, however, after a
re-arrangement, complete renovation and redecoration of the interior
with the intention of reviving the palace`s ancient splendor. 
The last King used to hold New Year and Birthday Salams
in the Coronation Hall, where Ministers, foreign Ambassadors and other
dignitaries in full dress offered their congratulations to the King of
Kings. But generally, the Golestan Place is open to strollers and
tourists.
The Palace garden offered an oasis of coolness and
silence in the heart of the city, Shade is provided by what the
inhabitants of Tehran call (the finest plane tree in town), rose bushes,
blue fountain-bowls and ancient of water recall the charm of ancient
Iranian gardens.
Altogether, here you will see little more of the palace
than the visitor hoping for a tour around Buckingham Palace who is
fobbed off with the Royal Gallery.
But while the state-rooms of the Palace may appeal to
some others will turn to the Palace Library for the discovery of Iranian
paintings, which owes its relative lack of popularity to the
inaccessibility of originals scattered from Cleveland to Istanbul, from
Washington`s Freer Gallery to ST Petersburg, and from the British Museum
to Cairo`s National Library.

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