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SAUJBULAGH, or SUJBULAK

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 235 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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See also:

SAUJBULAGH, or SUJBULAK , the See also:principal See also:town of the Mukri See also:district, in the See also:province of See also:Azerbaijan in See also:Persia, in a fertile valley, between 30 and 40 M. S. of See also:Lake See also:Urmia, at an See also:elevation of 4270 ft. It has See also:post and See also:telegraph offices, and a See also:population of about 7000, mostly Kurds of the Mukri tribe, and exports dried See also:fruit, See also:grain and See also:tobacco. There are many more localities with this name (See also:Turkish, meaning " See also:cold stream," or " cold See also:spring ") in Persia, the most notable, after the above-mentioned Kurdish See also:city, being a district of the province of See also:Teheran, with many villages. The See also:place was temporarily occupied by Turkish troops in See also:January 1908.

End of Article: SAUJBULAGH, or SUJBULAK

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