Ray, Iran
Rey, Rayy, Ray, Rhages or Rages (Persian: ری; Greek: Ῥάγαι (Rhágai); Latin: [Rhagae] Error: {{Lang}}: text has italic markup (help)) also known as Shahr-e-Rey (Persian: شهر ری), is the oldest city in the state of Tehran, Iran. Rey today has been added into the Greater Tehran city. It is linked by the Tehran Metro to the rest of Tehran and has many industries and factories in use. A settlement began here 6,000 BCE as part of the Central Plateau Culture. The settlement was used as a capital by the Medes called Rhaga. In classical Roman geography it was called Rhagae. Its name dates back to the pre-Median.
Ray, Iran Media
- Rey panorama small.jpg
Thumbnail:A show of Shahreri and Bibi Shahrabano Mountain
Map showing the Karaj River in Iran, the dashed portion of the river is intermittent. Urban areas are in red.
- آتشکده ری.jpg
The Bahram Fire Temple (Teppe Mill) is a Zoroastrian fire temple from the time of the Sasanian Empire in Ray, Iran.
- Rafi' bin Harthama Gold Dinar.jpg
Abbasid gold dinar minted in Ray during the governorship of Rafi ibn Harthama, ruler of Khorasan, 9th-century AD
- Tughrul Tower - 6 January 2013 04.jpg
The 12th-century Seljuk-era Tughrul Tower in Ray, Iran.
Naghare-khane, a structure identified as a tomb from before the Mongol invasion, located outside the old city walls of Ray.
- Cheshme Ali in the city of Rey.jpg
The Qajar-era Fath Ali Shah Inscription at Cheshme-Ali, Ray.
- ماشین دودی شهر ری.jpg
An old locomotive that connected Tehran and Ray on one of Iran's earliest railways.
- Aramgah Reza Shah Mausoleum.jpg
The Mausoleum of Reza Shah in the 1950s prior to its destruction.
- Rey map by Ker Porter.jpg
A 1818 map of Ray by Scottish traveler Robert Ker Porter.