thumb|Map of the neighborhoods of Tabriz, including the Lilava neighborhood, during the Constitutional Revolution, 1908. The Lilava district, also known as the Leilabad district is one of the districts of the Iranian city of Tabriz which was predominantly, and at times exclusively, inhabited by Armenians. At the beginning of the 20th century, the Armenian community of Tabriz, which numbered some 6,000, lived in the districts of Lilava and Ḡala (Armenian: Berdaṭʿał). The district played a crucial role in the early years of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation.
thumb|Map of the neighborhoods of Tabriz, including the Lilava neighborhood, during the Constitutional Revolution, 1908. The Lilava district, also known as the Leilabad district is one of the districts of the Iranian city of Tabriz which was predominantly, and at times exclusively, inhabited by Armenians. At the beginning of the 20th century, the Armenian community of Tabriz, which numbered some 6,000, lived in the districts of Lilava and Ḡala (Armenian: Berdaṭʿał). The district played a crucial role in the early years of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation.
One of the historical quarters located in the southern part of Tabriz is Lilava. The quarter is bordered to the north by Miyar-Miyar, to the south by the Yaniq Mountain range, to the east by the Charandab quarter (present-day Taleqani Street), and to the west by Baranava, Ahrab, Gaziran, as well as Khayyam and Lalezar streets.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).