-stan


The suffix -stan is Persian for "place of" or "country".
It appears in the names of many regions in Iran, Afghanistan, and Central and South Asia, as well as in the Caucasus and Russia.

Etymology and cognates

The suffix -stan is analogous to the suffix -land, present in many country and location names. The suffix is also used more generally, as in Persian rigestân "place of sand, desert", golestân "place of flowers, garden", gurestân "graveyard, cemetery", Hindustân "land of the Indus river".
Originally an independent noun, this morpheme evolved into a suffix by virtue of appearing frequently as the last part in nominal compounds. It is of Indo-Iranian and ultimately Indo-European origin: it is cognate with Sanskrit sthā́na, meaning "the act of standing", from which many further meanings derive, including "place, location; abode, dwelling", and ultimately descends from Proto-Indo-Iranian.
The Proto-Indo-European root from which this noun is derived is "to stand", which is also the source of English to stand, German stehen "to stand", Latin stāre "to stand", Lithuanian stovėti "to stand", Russian стоять "stand", and Ancient Greek hístēmi "to make to stand, to set".
English state originates from the same root, through Old French estat, from status, from stāre. The word stadium likewise originates from the root, through Ancient Greek στάδιον.
The Indo-Iranian word has a Slavic counterpart in the form of Proto-Slavic. In Russian, стан means "settlement" or "semi-permanent camp". In Polish, Belarusian and Ukrainian, stan means "state" or "condition". In Serbo-Croatian it translates as "apartment" in its modern usage, while its original meaning was "habitat". The Slovene word, "stanovanje", referring to an apartment or other closed space of living, is an obvious derivative of stan. In Czech and Slovak, it means "tent" or, in military terms, "headquarters". In Bulgarian, it means "a camp", usually associated with nomadic semi-permanent settlements or military camps. In Romanian, stână refers to a temporary or semi-permanent settlement used for sheep and herds of other domestic animals.
Also in Germanic languages, the root can be found in Stand, and Proto-Germanic "place, location" in German Stadt, stad, sted, stêd and English stead, all meaning either "place" or "city".

Countries

Some of these nations were also known with the Latinate suffix during their time as Soviet republics: Turkmenistan was frequently Turkmenia, Kyrgyzstan often Kirghizia, and even Uzbekistan was very rarely Uzbekia.

Native names

Sub-national units

CountrySub-national unitCapitalArea km²Population /km²Type
GolestanGorgan20,367 km²1,777,01487/km km²Provinces of Iran
KhuzestanAhvaz64,055 km²4,531,72071/km²Provinces of Iran
KurdistanSanandaj29,137 km²1,603,01155/km²Provinces of Iran
LorestanKhorramabad28,294 km²1,716,52761/km²Provinces of Iran
Sistan and BaluchestanZahedan181,785 km²2,775,01415/km²Provinces of Iran
Quetta247,190 km²12,344,40836/km2Province of Pakistan
Gilgit72,971 km²1,800,00019/km2Autonomous Region of Pakistan
Ufa143,600 km²4,072,29228.36/km²Republics of Russia
Makhachkala50,300 km²2,910,24957.86/km²Republics of Russia
Kazan68,000 km²3,786,48855.68/km²Republics of Russia
RajasthanJaipur342,239 km²68,548,437200/km2State of India
GobustanQobustan1,369.4 km²37,13727/km²Administrative divisions of Azerbaijan
TurkistanTurkistan117,249 km22,685,00923/km²Regions of Kazakhstan
Nukus164,900 km²1,711,8007.5/km²An autonomous republic within Uzbekistan
Erbil 78,736 km²5,500,000Autonomous region of Iraq
NuristanParun9,225.0 km²140,90015/km²Province of Afghanistan

Cities and counties

In Afghanistan

In Armenia

In Iran

In Pakistan

In Tajikistan

In other countries

Regions