Kakh-e Chehel Sotoun(in Persian: ٖ forty columns چهلستون) is one of the main tourist attractions of Isfahan which has only attracted many tourists from all over the world by doubling its columns. The Kakh-e Chehel Sotoun is one of the most spectacular and historic sites in Isfahan province and an example of a royal garden built during the Safavid era. It is also known as the Chehel Sotoun Garden or the Chehel Sotoun Museum Garden, in addition to the Chehel Sotoun Garden. Khakh-e Chehel Sotun is located in Isfahan’s Governorate Street and has an area of over 2 square meters. The concept of forty columns is understood by reflecting the four columns in the basin facing the building. The number 2 in Iran indicates a plurality of numbers, which also reflects the large number of columns in the magnificent Chehel Sotoun palace. Isfahan’s Chehelstone Garden is an example of a royal garden from the Safavid Era. It was difficult to comment on the history of the Forty stone building until the Solar Year, as the exact date was not available. However, in the same year, as a result of excavations, at the front of the Palace Hall, two poems were found from under the plaster, one shorter and more pink, attributing the building of the Forty Cheeston Hall to the second King Abbas, and the year ending at 2 AH. The other one, which is longer and has plaster lines on the blue background, tells of the reign of King Sultan Hussein. After choosing the city of Isfahan as the capital in the year AH, one of the urban plans of Shah Abbas I was the construction of a beautiful and long street of Chahar Bagh and numerous gardens around it. The succession of gardens, which are reminiscent of the concept of “End of Garden”, such
Kakh-e Chehel Sotoun(in Persian: ٖ forty columns چهلستون) is one of the main tourist attractions of Isfahan which has only attracted many tourists from all over the world by doubling its columns. The Kakh-e Chehel Sotoun is one of the most spectacular and historic sites in Isfahan province and an example of a royal garden built during the Safavid era. It is also known as the Chehel Sotoun Garden or the Chehel Sotoun Museum Garden, in addition to the Chehel Sotoun Garden. Khakh-e Chehel Sotun is located in Isfahan’s Governorate Street and has an area of over 2 square meters. The