The strait at its narrowest is 21 miles wide having two 1 mile wide channels for marine traffic separated by a 2 mile wide buffer zone [http://www.ndu.edu/inss/books/Books_2002/Globalization_and_Maritime_Power_Dec_02/09_ch08.htm, and is the only sea passage to the open ocean for large areas of the petroleum exporting Persian Gulf States.
The opening to the Persian Gulf was described, but not given a name, in the Periplus of the Erythraean Sea, a 1st-century mariner's guide:
There are two opinions about the etymology of this name. In popular belief the derivation is from the name of the Persian God هرمز Hormoz (a variant of Ahura Mazda). Compare the Pillars of Hercules at the entrance to the Mediterranean. Scholars, historians and linguists derive the name "Ormuz" from the local Persian word هورمغ Hur-mogh meaning datepalm. In the local dialects of Hurmoz and Minab this strait is still called Hurmogh and has the abovementioned meaning.
On July 3, 1988, 290 people were killed when an Iran Air Airbus A300 passenger jet was shot down over the strait by the United States Navy guided missile cruiser USS Vincennes. There is still lingering controversy about the event, considered among the most controversial tragedies in aviation history.
Geography of Iran | Geography of Oman | Indian Ocean | Persian Gulf | Straits
هرمز | Estret d'Ormuz | Hormuzstrædet | Straße von Hormuz | Hormuze väin | Estrecho de Ormuz | Hormuza Markolo | تنگه هرمز | Détroit d'Ormuz | Estreito de Ormuz | Hormuški tjesnac | Hormússund | מצר הורמוז | Straat van Hormuz | ホルムズ海峡 | Ormuz (cieśnina) | Estreito de Ormuz | Ормузский пролив | Hormuzsundet | 霍爾木茲海峽
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Strait of Hormuz".
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