[4] Darius the Great, the Achaemenid Persian monarch, mentions Pâtišvâreš in the Behistun inscription as one of the territories under his rule.
In his inscription at Ka'ba-ye Zartosht, the second Sassanid Persian monarch Shapur I, refers to the region as Pâdešxâr.
Mohammad Hassan Khan (Etemad Saltaneh's Tadvin Fi Ahval Jebal Shervin, History of Savadkuh) mentions it as the old name of the ancient area of Savâdkuh.
[3] Savadkuh County's population history and administrative structure over three consecutive censuses are shown in the following table.
The main part of this county is located in a valley, in the central Alborz region, where the Tâlâr river passes through it.
The most important rivers flowing in the city are Tâlâr and Babol-rud, which originate from the Alborz mountain range southeast and southwest of Savadkuh.
It was constructed mostly by Austrians before World War II and during the reign of Reza Shah under the leadership of an engineer named Walter Aigner.
It is located in Mazandaran Veresk district of Savadkuh, 85 kilometers south of Ghaemshahr and connects two of the mountains in the Abbas Abad region.
The Master Carpenter for the construction of the lumber concrete forms was Giacomo Di Marco, from the Friuli region of Italy, and detailed in the book he authored.
As a result, the engineer and his family stood under it when the first train passed the bridge (local accounts claim that Reza Shah had asked them to do so anyway).
[15] The Lajim inscriptions includes the first documented example of the word qubba referring to the domed structure of the building.
This cave is located between the railway station of Pol-e Sefid and Surkh Abad, in the vicinity of Do Ab.
The cave has a simple area or hall, with a ceiling 80 m. in width and height, and is considered spectacular in the world.
Savadkuh is the birthplace of Reza Shah, the founder of the Pahlavi dynasty, and Habibollah Badiee, a noted musician.