For the administrative division of West Azerbaijan province, see
Bukan County. For other places with the same name, see
Bukan.
Bukan (Persian: بوکان, romanized: Bukân and Kurdish: بۆکان, romanized: Bokan)[3] is a city in the Central District of Bukan County, West Azerbaijan province, Iran, serving as the capital of both the county and the district.[4]
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At the 2006 census, its population was 149,340 people in 32,588 households.[5] The following census in 2011 counted 170,600 people in 43,269 households.[6] The latest census in 2016 showed a population of 193,501 people in 56,944 households.[2] The city is situated east of the Siminarud river. The whole county is populated by Shafi'i Kurds who speak Sorani Kurdish.[7]
During the Qajar dynasty, due to the attention and residence of Aziz Khan Mokri and his family, Bukan became important.[8] The history of this city is related to four government figures known as Sardar Aziz Khan family. Bukan was the center of governance and their residence. After the 1978 revolution, it flourished in social, cultural, sports, economic and political indicators. This city is one of the most important and effective cities in Iran.[9]
Pre–Islamic era
There have been several artefacts discovered in Bukan dating back to between 4100 BC and 4400 BC. These artefacts confirm that Bukan was home to one of the first human settlements on the Iranian Plateau.[11]
Islamic era
The city was part of the Mukriyan principality from the late 14th century to the 19th century. As the principality declined, aristocratic (agha) Dehbokri Kurds, who controlled many surrounding villages, took control over the city. The Dehbokri were staunchly against the Mukriyan principality. Despite its small size, Bukan played a major role in the region culturally and politically. In the mid-1940s, the city was incorporated into the short-lived Republic of Mahabad and acquired a printing press and Kurdish books and magazines were published. Later, the town experienced a peasant revolt wherein the peasants succeeded in forcing the aristocrats out. The revolt was ultimately put down ruthlessly by the army.[7]
Up until the 1950s, Bukan was considered a large village but has seen a rapid growth since then.[7] Its population increased from 5,307 in 1956, to 20,579 in 1976[7] and 149,340 in 2006.[7][12]
The people of Bukan took part in the Iranian Revolution in 1979 and in the subsequent Kurdish movement for autonomy.[7] It fell under the control of Kurdish opposition groups, but was recaptured by the Iranian Army on 1 January 1984. According to the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, Bukan was the last Kurdish city in Iran to be captured.[13] On 15 April 1988, Bukan was bombarded by the Iraqi Air Force, in which 19 people died and 160 were wounded.[14]