Istisu resort
Istisu resort or Istisu sanatorium is a treatment and recreation centre established in 1927 in Istisu, Kalbajar District of Azerbaijan.
In 1970, the Soviet government included the Istisu resort in the list of resorts that have all-union importance. During the Soviet period, about 50 thousand people were treated here every year. In the 1980s, a water filling plant was built as part of the sanatorium. More than 800 thousand litres of mineral water were produced daily from the Upper Istisu, Lower Istisu, Goturlu and Tutgun mineral water fields. During the First Nagorno-Karabakh War, after the occupation of Kalbajar by Armenian forces in 1993, the resort was completely destroyed. The town subsequently became part of the self-proclaimed Republic of Artsakh as part of its Shahumyan Province, referred to as Jermajur. In 2018, it was reported that work has begun on a privately funded factory to produce mineral water. Kalbajar was returned to Azerbaijan on 25 November 2020, as part of a tripartite ceasefire agreement signed by the Presidents of Azerbaijan and Russia, and the Prime Minister of Armenia, after the 2020 Nagorno-Karabakh war.
History
Istisu resort is located in the town of the same name, in Kalbajar District of Azerbaijan, and at an altitude of. The springs here were formed as a result of swelling and cracking of the Earth's crust after a large seismic event in 30 September 1139, in Ganja. Robert Hewsen writes that, in the early Middle Ages, the royal baths of the rulers of Caucasian Albania were located here, though according to other scholars the healing properties of the springs have been known to the local population since the 12th century. Istisu literally means warm water in Azerbaijani. The resulting water has hyperthermic, carbon dioxide, hydro-carbonate-chloride-sulphate-sodium in it. There are 12 active mineral springs within the resort. The temperature of the mineral water is 58.8 celsius. These spring waters are rich in lithium, bromine, iodine, arsenic, phosphorus, zinc, copper, nickel, magnesium, iron and other chemicals. One of these springs has a fountain up to 8 meters high. Some 4 million litres of water are released annually from hot springs. Most of this water flows into rivers.According to Mirali Qashqai, Istisu is similar in chemical composition and physical properties to Karlovy Vary in Czech Republic, and in some respects it is unique in the world.