Āmol, town, northern Iran, located on the Harāz River. The exact date of the founding of the town is unknown and enshrouded in legend, but it is certain that there has been a town on the site since Sasanian times. During the Sasanian period (224–651 ce), the district of Āmol, together with the neighbouring district of Gīlān, formed a Christian episcopate that followed the tradition of what would become the Church of the East. After the Abbasid conquest in the 8th century, the town became an important trading and scholarly centre, and it was the capital of the province of Ṭabaristān, famous for its ceramic industry. Āmol was sacked in the 11th century and again in the 14th by Timur (Tamerlane). It recovered, however, and an English traveler in the 17th century described it as a fruitful place with groves and well-built houses. Since then the town has suffered earthquake and flood damage several times but each time has recovered, and it is still a considerable town.
The modern town is slightly east of the extensive ruins of the old city, which include the mausoleum of Mīr Bozorg. The 17th-century structure is built on the foundations of a 10th-century one, which was destroyed by Timur. Oranges and rice are grown in the area, and there are nearby deposits of coal and iron. Pop. (2016) 237,528.