Walking through the historical museum facing the street is the Forty Pillars Palace. At the ticket office at the door, we bought tickets for foreign tourists of 200,000 riyals per person, and the price displayed in Iranian text and numbers, the tickets for locals are 3,000 riyals, which is only equivalent to RMB 0.6 yuan. Such a large fare gap will inevitably affect the current industries such as hotels and taxis, and they will start learning from the government to treat our foreign tourists as "non-nationals" in price increases. The Forty Pillars Palace is one of the most important palaces of the Safavi dynasty (AD 1501-1736), completed in 1647, where the Safavi dynasty Abbas II received foreign envoys. Walking into the courtyard of the Forty Pillars Palace, I saw a magnificent palace at the top of the rectangular pool, with tall columns rising up to a tall dome. The palace actually only had twenty pillars, and because of the reflection of the water in the pool, it was named the Forty Pillars Palace. Around the pool and under the pillars of the palace pillars, there is a strange cat-like animal, said to be the lion of Iran, very demeanorless mascot. The walls of the colonnade are surrounded by pictures of the restoration process, and some of the colonnade is now being repaired with scaffolding. Through the colonnade, into the indoor hall, the small hall inside is a mural of varying sizes, huge murals on the characters, vividly recorded the glory of the Persian dynasty. According to the information, one of the large murals with group images reflects the scene of the Persian Empire's capture of Delhi, which can be seen at the time of the Persian Empire's territory. The small murals inside the palace, although colorful characters are vivid, always have traces of the remnants of the historical years.