in the 1950s The city square that is known as Imam Khomeini was built in 1867 after the expansion of Tehran during the reign of
Naser al-Din Shah Qajar, on the north of the former site of Dowlat Gate. First, it was called
ToopKhāneh (; which literally means "Artillery Barracks"), because of the many
cannons (In Persian, توپ, pronounced Toop) and soldiers there, protecting the main residence of the Qajar Shah (see
Golestan Palace). After the
1921 coup, it was renamed
Sepah Square, after the building that
Reza Khan worked as War Minister on one corner of the area. After the fall of the
Qajars and emergence of the
Pahlavis, the name remained Sepah Sq, this time with a huge statue of Reza Shah in the center. During the 1979
Iranian Revolution, the statue was brought down by the revolutionaries. The square took its current name,
Imam Khomeini Square (), after
the first leader of the revolution, like many other city squares in the
Islamic Republic of Iran. ==Layout==