Bandar Abbas
[key], city, S Iran, on the Strait of Hormuz at the mouth of the Persian
Gulf. A port of strategic and commercial importance, it is the focal point
of the trade routes of S Iran. It was long noted for its trade with India.
The town has food processing, textile, and oil refining industries; cotton,
rugs, nuts, and dates are exported. Early in the 16th cent. the Portuguese
established themselves in the region, seizing the islands in the strait and
using the town, which they fortified and called Gamru, as a mainland port.
Shah Abbas I recaptured (c.1615) the town and later the islands. The Dutch
(without the shah's consent) and the English (with the shah's approval)
subsequently set up trading stations there; they called the town Gombroon.
In 1622, Shah Abbas renamed the town Bandar Abbas (port of Abbas) and
developed it into a major port. Bandar Abbas began to lose importance in the
late 1800s, especially after the opening of the Trans-Iranian RR terminal at
the head of the Persian Gulf.
The Columbia Electronic Encyclopedia, 6th ed. Copyright © 2024, Columbia University Press. All rights reserved.
See more Encyclopedia articles on: Iranian Political Geography