• 32°38′53″N 51°34′13″E / The Fire Temple of Isfahan is a Sassanid-era archaeological complex located on a hill of the same name about eight kilometers west of city center...
  • The Fire Temple of Isfahan is a great example of ancient Persian design and features elements of Persian-style architecture.
  • While the first Fire Temples were built outdoors, such as the one in Isfahan, they gradually appeared within enclosures during the Achaemenid Empire.
  • The Fire Temple of Isfahan (Atishgah or Atashgah) is the local name for a Sassanid-era archaeological complex (Zoroastrian Fire Temple)...
  • Isfahan Fire Temple is located at a height of 100 meters on Mount Atashgah, in the Marbin section and eight kilometers west of Isfahan.
  • The Fire Temple of Isfahan built during the Sassanid period, the last Iranian empire before the rise of Islam.The view of the mountain ranges circling Isfahan...
  • The small mount of Atashgah (Fire temple of Isfahan) with a height of about one hundred meters is located at the end of the street of Atashgah...
  • Atashgah or the Fire Temple of Isfahan is a Sassanid-era archaeological complex located on a hill of the same name about eight kilometers west of city center of...
  • The oldest monument from ancient times exists in Isfahan and it is a monument similar to a fire temple that is located on Isfahan Road to Najafabad near Menar...
  • Atashgah, a Zoroastrian fire temple located on the outskirts of Isfahan, Iran, is a historical monument of great significance.