Sonqor
Sonqor is a city in the Central District of Sonqor County, Kermanshah province, Iran, serving as capital of both the county and the district. It is in the Zagros Mountains, about 90 kilometers from the province's capital city Kermanshah, and consists of two valleys; that of Gavehrud and Shajarud. Sonqor lies between the modern cities of Kangavar and Sanandaj.
Demographics
Population
At the time of the 2006 National Census, the city's population was 43,184 in 11,377 households. The following census in 2011 counted 44,954 people in 13,228 households. The 2016 census measured the population of the city as 44,256 people in 13,996 households.Etymology
The name Sonqor may derive from the Turkic chief Sonqor, a vassal of the Mongols of Shiraz, Fars, who had arrived in the region with his men during the Mongol occupation of Iran.Geography and history
In medieval Iran, Sonqor was situated on the road that ran between Dinavar and Adharbaydjan. The orientalist Vladimir Minorsky argued that Sonqor must have therefore corresponded approximately to the first marḥala on the stretch from Dinavar to Sisar, the name of which is recorded as al-Djarba by Al-Maqdisi and as Kharbadjan by Ibn Khordadbeh, and was 7 farsakhs from Dinavar. The present-day distance between the ruins of Dinavar and Sonqor however, is not more than 24 kilometers. Based on these arguments, Sonqor might have therefore corresponded to the medieval district of Maybahradj as noted by Al-Baladhuri, which was separated from Dinavar under Abbasid Caliph Al-Mahdi and joined to Sisar.Sonqor is separated from Dinavar through the pass of Mele-mas on the "line of heights" that stretches from Dalakham to Amrula. To its northeast, the city of Sonqor is bordered by mount Pandjeh Ali; behind this mountain runs the road from Hamadan to Sanandaj. The upper tributaries of the river that runs to Dinavar also flows into Sonqor, and which ultimately joins the Gamasab river. The second edition of the Encyclopaedia of Islam notes that Sonqor, in the "strict sense", is neighboured by the district of Kulya'i "on the upper course" of the Gawarud. The western dependencies of the Gawarud in turn are Bilawar and Niyabat. Sonqor was important in history for being located on the road followed by Muslim pilgrims who moved from Tabriz to Kermanshah. This route avoided the predominantly Kurdish territory of Sanandaj and followed a detour through Bijar and Sonqor, eventually reaching Kermanshah within a day's march.