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Hormuz Island
Iranian island in the Persian Gulf
Iranian island in the Persian Gulf
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Hormuz Island |
| settlement_type | Island |
| image_skyline | Iran's Rainbow Island.jpeg |
| caption | Satellite photo of Hormuz Island |
| mapframe | yes |
| mapframe-zoom | 9 |
| pushpin_map | Persian Gulf#Iran |
| pushpin_label_position | top |
| pushpin_mapsize | 250 |
| subdivision_type | Country |
| subdivision_name | |
| subdivision_type1 | Province |
| subdivision_name1 | Hormozgān |
| area_land_sq_mi | 16.2 |
| population_total | ~6,000 |
| timezone | IRST |
| utc_offset | +3:30 |
| coordinates | |
| elevation_m | 186 |
| mapframe-zoom = 9


Hormuz Island (; ), also spelled Hormoz, Ormoz, Ormuz or Ormus, is an Iranian island in the Persian Gulf.
Geography
Hormuz Island has an area of 42 km2. Located in the Strait of Hormuz, 8 km off the Iranian coast, the island is part of Hormozgan Province. It is sparsely inhabited, but some development has taken place since the late 20th century.
Geology
Reddish ochre on the island and its beaches, called Golak by natives, has been exploited for artistic and culinary purposes, and also attracts tourists. Degradation due to overuse of the ochre has resulted in actions by the Department of Environment to protect it.
The satellite images catching the concentric arrangement of the rocks show that Hormuz Island appears to be a salt diapir, composed of ancient seasalt deposits which, due to lack of salt-dissolving groundwater and rains, and due to their plastic deformability, can flow and squeeze just like ice; thus, under the squeezing pressure of other sediments on top, the salt has managed to rise above the surface over many thousands of years, and during that time has been eroded into different shapes. The geological age of Hormuz Island is about 600 million years, and its life out of the water is about 50 thousand years.
Environment
Iran's southern coast is known for its aridity and salty sea water. The island's waterways and wild birds attract many tourists. Hormuz has a forest of mangrove trees: Sea Forest has trees that live in the saltwater tidal area. Sometimes, most of them are submerged in the sea water, but continue to survive. There is a grassy area that grows without the need for fresh water. In a story, this mythical plant is grown from Adam's tears.
The island has been designated an Important Bird Area (IBA) by BirdLife International because it supports Saunders's terns, great thick-knees, and sooty gulls.
History
Main article: Ormus
Early history
The earliest evidence for human presence on the island is several stone artifacts discovered at the eastern shorelines of the island. A lithic scatter was found at a site called Chand-Derakht, which is an uplifted marine Pleistocene terrace. This site yielded a Middle Paleolithic lithic assemblage characterized by Levallois methods and dates back over 40,000 years.Zarei, Sepehr, (2021) The First Evidence of the Pleistocene Occupation in the Hormuz Island: A Preliminary Report, Bulletin of Miho Museum 21:101-110.
Medieval history
The island, known as Organa (Όργανα) to the ancient Greeks and as Jarun in the Islamic period, acquired the name of "Hormuz" from the important harbour town of Hormuz (Ormus) on the mainland 60 km away, which had been a centre of a minor principality on both sides of the strait. The principality paid tribute to the Mongol-ruled Ilkhanate and was an important source of income from maritime trade. The town's ruler decided to shift his residence to the island around 1300, in order to evade attacks by Mongolian and Turkish groups from the interior. The ruler later made peace with the Ilkhans.
Ibn Battuta also visited the island and New Hormuz.

Early modern period

In 1505, King Manuel I of Portugal established a policy of expansion in Africa and Western Asia. During attempts to expand Portuguese influence into the Indian Ocean, the Portuguese duke Afonso de Albuquerque captured the island in 1507 and it was incorporated into the greater Portuguese Empire. The Portuguese constructed a fortress on the island to deter potential invaders, naming it the Fort of Our Lady of the Conception. The island became an emergency stopover point for Portuguese ships traveling to Goa, Gujarat, and nearby Kishm. The Ottomans laid siege to the island under the admiral and cartographer Piri Reis in 1552. In 1575, a group of Augustinian hermits settled on the island and established from here a mission in Isfahan in 1602.
Shah Abbas I of Persia distrusted the local population and was not interested in maintaining the island as a trading centre or military post; instead, he developed the nearby mainland port of Bandar Abbas. Hormuz went into decline. Many of its inhabitants seasonally moved to their fields and orchards around the old Hormuz on the mainland, only fishermen being in permanent residence. The island continued to export small quantities of rock salt and lumps of iron oxide, which were used as ballast stones for sailing ships.
Attractions
Red Beach
The mountain being on the shoreline, makes the red beach and red sea waves an unusual sight. Visitors walking along the shore will encounter areas where sand glitters with metal compounds.
Dr Nadalian Museum

The Museum of Dr Nadalian in Hormuz Island, also known as the Museum and Gallery of Ahmad Nadalian in Hormuz Island, shows the work of Ahmad Nadalian (born 1963), whose works have been shown in galleries internationally. His environmental art projects include rock carvings. The museum also displays works by local indigenous women, bones of sea creatures, and dolls made of recycled materials.
The museum was created in March 2009 as the Paradise Art Centre, being renamed in 2012 to its current name. Also at this time, its entrance was redesigned with inspiration from local architecture.
Gallery
File:Hormuz Island beach.jpg|Hormuz Island beach File:Majara Residence.jpg|Majara Residence File:Portuguese Castle (Hormuz).jpg|The Fort of Our Lady of the Conception, Hormuz Island File:Harahormoz.jpg|Hara forests at Hormuz Island File:Beach of the Sculpture valley in Hormoz Island.jpg|The sea cliffs near the Valley of Statues of Hormuz Island File:فرش خاکی - panoramio.jpg|Art made from ochre on the islands beaches
References
Sources
- .الكوخردى ، محمد ، بن يوسف، (كُوخِرد حَاضِرَة اِسلامِيةَ عَلي ضِفافِ نَهر مِهران) الطبعة الثالثة ،دبى: سنة 199۷ للميلاد Mohammed Kookherdi (1997) Kookherd, an Islamic civil at Mehran river, third edition: Dubai
- . کامله،القاسمی، بنت شیخ عبدالله، *(تاریخ لنجة) * مکتبة دبي للتوزیع، الامارات: الطبعة الثانية عام ۱۹۹۳ للمیلاد
- . الوحیدی الخنجی، حسین بن علی بن احمد، * «تاریخ لنجه» ،* الطبعة الثانية دبی: دار الأمة للنشر والتوزیع، ۱۹۸۸ للمیلاد
- . اطلس گیتاشناسی استانهای ایران Gitashenasi Province Atlas of Iran Atlas Gitashenasi Ostanhai Iran
- . دره مجسمه ها Statue Valley Hormuz Island
References
- [https://www.tehrantimes.com/news/417572/Hormuz-the-rainbow-island-of-Iran Hormuz, the rainbow island of Iran] {{Webarchive. link. (2020-03-28 . ''Tehran Times'' (2017-10-14). Retrieved 2020-03-28.)
- "دره مجسمه ها Statues Valley".
- "جنگل حرا mongrove forest".
- . (2024). ["Hormoz Island"](https://datazone.birdlife.org/site/factsheet/8160). *BirdLife International*.
- Cambridge history of India, vol. 1, p.147
- H. Yule, ''The Book of Ser Marco Polo'', 1903, vol. I, p. 110, quoting Abulfeda ("Hormuz was devastated by the incursions of the Tartars, and its people transferred their abode to an island in the sea called Zarun, near the continent, lying west of the old city.") and Odoric for the date.
- (2002). "The Travels of Ibn Battutah". Picador.
- [http://dergiler.ankara.edu.tr/dergiler/18/1574/17072.pdf Pîrî Reis’in Hürmüz Seferi ve İdamı Hakkındaki Türk ve Portekiz Tarihçilerinin Düşünceleri] {{Webarchive. link. (2012-12-02 Ertuğrul Önalp. Prof. Dr. Ankara Üniversitesi, Dil ve Tarih-Coğrafya Fakültesi, İspanyol Dili ve Edebiyatı Anabilim Dalı. {{in lang). tr
- (5 January 2010). "Christianity in Persia and the Status of Non-Muslims in Modern Iran". Rowman & Littlefield.
- "HORMUZ ii. ISLAMIC PERIOD – Encyclopaedia Iranica".
- "Hormuz island red beach".
- (31 August 2021). "About".
- (30 September 2021). "The Museum and Gallery of Dr. Ahamd Nadalian in Hormuz Island".
- "The Museum of Dr. Ahmad Nadalian in Hormuz".
- Rasaneh, Sirang. (12 June 1906). "Dr. Ahmad Nadalian Museum & Gallery 2022 Tourist Attraction in Hormoz Island".
- "WWW.RiverArt.Net- Environmental Works by A. Nadalian هنر رودخانه: آثار دكتر احمد نادعليان".
- (2021). "Speak the Wind". Mack.
- "Speak the Wind - Book review".
- Colberg, Jörg. (16 August 2021). "Speak The Wind".
- Grieve, Michael. (19 July 2021). "Hoda Afshar captures the wind and rituals of the islands in the Strait of Hormuz".
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