*** Welcome to piglix ***

Doulab Cemetery

Doulab Cemetery
Tehran 10th BusinessTrip 136.jpg
Details
Established 1855
Location Ahang Expressway, 10th Farvardin street
Country Iran
Owned by Cultural Heritage, Handcrafts and Tourism Organization
Size 75,000 acres (30,400 ha)
No. of interments 22,000
Website doulabcemetery.com

Doulab Cemetery is a historical cemetery situated in the eastern suburbs of Tehran, Iran. One of the most important Christian cemeteries, it consists of five sections:

The origins of the Doulab Catholic Cemetery go back to the middle of the 19th century. In 1855, the young Dr. Louis André Ernest Cloquet, personal physician to Nasser al-Din Shah, died and was buried in a field situated in the Tehran district of Doulab, close to the Armenian cemetery. This patch of land was to become the burial site for all Catholics of Tehran, foreigners and locals. Dr. Cloquet’s tomb, bearing a small brick cupola, can be seen up till the present day.

From the time of their arrival in Tehran in 1862, the Lazarists, being the only Catholic priests in town, took charge of the cemetery. In those days there were 87 Catholics living in Tehran, all of whom were foreigners or Chaldeans. In 1886, Joseph Désiré Tholozan, a French officer of the Légion d’honneur and physician for the French mission, purchased the terrain for the cemetery. From that time on, the cemetery was at the service of the Catholic community of Tehran, which became ever more numerous and international.

In 1942 an estimated 120,000 Polish soldiers and civilians arrived on the Iranian shore in Bandar Anzali. They had been released from Soviet captivity and were to set up the Polish Army of the East under famous General Władysław Anders. Many were so destitute and starved that they didn’t survive the hardships of the journey and died upon their arrival in Iran or shortly thereafter. Because of that, the Polish Embassy purchased half of the terrain of the cemetery and arranged the graves of their many fellow countrymen, that had died in Tehran, in a convenient and worthy way.

In 1943 the Armenian Catholic community built their own cemetery next to the “Latin” one, the Chaldeans did the same in 1963, and today the complex consists of five parts totaling about 76,000 m². In 2000 the site was listed as a national cultural heritage item (No. 2688) by the Iranian Cultural Heritage Organization (ICHTO).


...
Wikipedia

...