Imam Reza shrine (Persian: حرم اما رضا) in Mashhad, Iran is a complex which contains mausoleum of Imam Reza, the eighth Imam of Twelvers. There is also museum, library, cemetery, mosque and some other buildings.
It is the center of tourism in Iran and between 15 and 20 million pilgrims visit the shrine every year.[1][2]
In 818Imam Reza was martyred by Al-Ma'mun and was buried beside the grave of Harun. After this event this place was called as Mashhad al-Rida (the place of martyrdom of Ali al-Rida). Shias and sunnis started visiting there for pilgrimage of his grave. By the end of the 9th century a dome was built on the grave and many buildings and Bazaars sprang up around it. During more than a millennium it has been devastated and reconstructed several times. [3]
In 993 the holy shrine was ruined by Saboktakin, a Ghaznavid king. However in 1009 his son SultanMahmood Ghaznavi ordered the shrine to be repaired and expanded. About 1150SultanSanjar, a Seljuq king, renovated the sanctuary and added new buildings after miraculous healing of his son in the shrine. Later Sultan Muhammad Khodabande, an Ilkhanate king, who converted to Shiism renovated the holy shrine about 1310.[4] The celebrated Muslim traveler Ibn Battuta visited Mashhad in 1333 and reported that it was a large town with abundant fruit trees, streams and mills. A great dome of elegant construction surmounts the noble mausoleum, the walls being decorated with colored tiles. Opposite the tomb of the Imam is the tomb of Caliph Harun al-Rashid, which is surmounted by a platform bearing chandeliers.[1]