Nehrəm
Nehrəm is a village and the most populous municipality in the Babek District of Nakhchivan, Azerbaijan. It is located 4 km south of the district center, on the left bank of the Araz River. Its population engages in grain-growing, vine-growing, horticulture, vegetable-growing, and animal husbandry. There are 3 secondary schools, technical and vocational school, club, 4 libraries, kindergarten, music school, the house of schoolchildren, maternity hospital and hospital in the village. It has a population of 13,900 people. The water pipeline was built to the village from 4.3 km distance. Nearby of the village there are workshops of aslant. Until recently, it was Azerbaijan's most populous rural community until surpassed by Ərkivan.
Nehram is a historical village. Imamzada shrine in the village has an ancient history. In the south-west of the village, in the place called Gyzylburun, have been found the ruins of the settlement and cemetery of the Bronze Age. There are residence and cemetery of medieval ages in the territory of the village. The tombstones are content from tombs with inscriptions and stone-sculpted figures of ram.
Etymology
According to the information of the 19th century, in the Nakhchivan province, the water used for irrigation belonged to separate landlords, only in individual cases did it belong to the entire community. One of these communities was the Nehram community. According to researchers, the name was made up with components of words of nəhr and am//əm in the Arabic language and means "water owned by the community".Residents of Nehrəm believe that the name "Nehrəm" is derived from the phrase "Land of Noah" or "Village of Noah." This local legend ties into the broader cultural and historical belief in the region that Mount Ağrı, nearby in Turkey, is the resting place of Noah's Ark after the biblical flood. The association with Noah is strong in Nakhchivan, as it is believed that Noah and his family may have settled in the area after the flood, making Nehrəm part of this ancient heritage.
This belief in the Noah connection is part of the village's cultural identity and reflects the broader historical reverence for Noah's legacy throughout the region.