Bazaar of Tabriz

2880px-Bazaar_of_Tabriz,_carvaansray.jpg
Gan-Dallazan_Bazar,_Tabriz,_Iran.jpg
Tabriz_Grand_Bazar.jpg
default.jpg

Name of Building

Bazaar of Tabriz

Town or City, Country where the building was originally established

Tabriz, Iran

Date the building was designed and/or first built

12th century

Name of Architect, Builder, or Primary Patron Responsible

Unknown

Culturally Specific Time Period

Silk Road, Iran

Geo-Location

38.08526171767943, 46.29331473635505

Materials

Brick

Size and/or Scale of Building

27 hectares (approximately 70 acres)

Architectural Type

Commercial

Formal Style

Persian bazaar

Building Description

The Bazaar of Tabriz is a historic trading site in Iran and is considered one of the oldest markets still in use and in addition to being the largest covered bazaar in the world. Although no one knows who made the space, the structure dates back to the Silk Road and has been documented throughout history by explorers and scholars alike. Located at the heart of the city of Tabriz, the bazaar is built like a labyrinth with a very irregular footprint, completely shaped by the organic growth of society throughout centuries of trade. However, the structure has a very formulaic interior, with each of its very long vaulted corridors that intersect or extend in different directions to more open spaces. These larger, typically domed chambers function as market squares that specialize in a particular good, like jewelry or textiles. The Tabriz only extends about two levels in height, and the majority of the bazaar is only on a single story. It has numerous entries that connect to the surrounding streets around the structure. This allows a very controlled flow through narrow alleys that widen back onto the street or into the vaulted rooms with merchants. The bazaar is primarily built of interlocking bricks which are locally sourced to make the walls, arches, barrel vaults, and the rib details across the structure. The more decorative aspects of the space utilize glazed tiles, painted plaster, and more patterned bricks to create the earthy and inviting atmosphere that unifies the sprawling complex.
 The Bazaar of Tabriz is both a functional and symbolic structure of Iranian trade and cultural traditions. More than just a commercial hub, it also houses caravanserais, places of worship, and schools for learning, blending the social commerce space with religion, boarding, and education. 

Image source

Image 1: 2880px-Bazaar_of_Tabriz,_carvaansray
Image 2:Gan-Dallazan_Bazar,_Tabriz,_Iran
Image 3:Tabriz_Grand_Bazar
Image 4:default

Creative Commons or other copyright information

Image 1: Creative Commons
Image 2: Creative Commons
Image 3: Creative Commons
Image 4:
https://uwm.edu/libraries/digital-collections/copyright-digcoll/

Student First and Last Name

Sultana Rahim

Bibliographic references for the item

https://visitworldheritage.com
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bazaar_of_Tabriz
https://www.irannegintravel.com/iran-highlight/tabriz-bazaar
https://packtoiran.com/blogs/detail/37/Wandering-through-the-historical-bazaars-of-Iran

Tags

Citation

Unknown, “Bazaar of Tabriz,” World Architecture, accessed June 28, 2026, https://worldarchitecture.artinterp2.org/items/show/58.

Embed

Copy the code below into your web page