Kurdistan province

Oghuz Turkic varieties can be found in the far-eastern part of the province, including in the cities of Delbaran, Pir Taj, Serishabad, Yasukand, and Tup Aghaj.

[3][11] A significant majority of the people of Kurdistan province follow the Sunni denomination of Islam.

The population history and structural changes of Kurdistan province's administrative divisions over three consecutive censuses are shown in the following table.

In this celebration, people light fires on the mountains and on the roofs of houses, dance, rejoice and stomp their feet.

As the spring equinox, Nowruz marks the beginning of spring in the Northern Hemisphere, better i.e. the moment at which the Sun crosses the celestial equator and equalizes night and day is calculated exactly every year.

Traditional customs of Nowruz include fire and water, ritual dances, gift exchanges, reciting poetry, symbolic objects and more.

According to Iranian statistics, more than twenty thousand people depend on being a kolbar for sustenance.

A soldier statue from Ziwiye hoard
Kurdistan men's clothing
Traditional women's clothing used in all parts of Kurdistan
Hawraman female with traditional headdress decorated by coins
A Kurdish girl lighting a fire during Nowruz
Kurdish New Year ceremony of Nowruz, Palangan village, Hawraman, Kurdistan
A fine old Senneh prayer kilim from the 19th century