Preliminary report of Māhūr tomb, a Mithraism relic at Dezfūl, Southern Iran (original) (raw)
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Historia i Świat 9, 2020
Tomb of Māhūr is located at a village called Mahur Berenji, district of Sardasht a part of Dezfūl, Khuzestan province, Southern Iran. This tomb has been discovered by Karamian and Astraki in 2018. There is a four-legged cross symbol in the above part of the tomb entrance.
2020
Tomb of Māhūr is located at a village called Mahur Berenji, district of Sardasht a part of Dezfūl, Khuzestan province, Southern Iran. This tomb has been discovered by Karamian and Astraki in 2018. There is a four-legged cross symbol in the above part of the tomb entrance.
A Report on the Excavation at the Mala Mcha Graveyard, Kurdistan, Iran
Iran, 55(2), 2017
The Mala Mcha graveyard is located in Iranian Kurdistan, near the ancient Mannaean site of Ziwiya. Abdolreza Mohajerynezhad and Rasol Oshtodan conducted rescue excavations at Mala Mcha in 2012, and 16 graves were uncovered. Although most of the graves had been plundered by tomb robbers the tomb structures, and especially the grave-goods that remained, suggest an Iron Age III date and close relations with neighbouring sites such as Ziwiye, Qalaichi and Changbar. Most of the graves were covered with large flat slabs and contained one, two or three burials, the exception being tomb no. 7 with 14 burials.
Study of Iron Age Burials Ceramics at Khanghah Gilvan Cemetery in Northwestern Iran
The International Journal of Humanities, 2014
Chronology of northwestern Iran is principally based on archeological excavations of the area located around Urmia Lake. Although plain and filled with water, and the outcomes of these excavations are extended to the whole northwestern region. However, northwestern Iran despite having geographical diversities with mountainous plains and low stretches, systematic and comprehensive studies have been lacking until today. Khanghah cemetery in the province of Ardebil has been one of the important archeological enclosures in Iran from where graves of the Middle Bronze Age, Iron Age, and the Parthian period have been unearthed. The excavated Iron Age graves in this cemetery are of pit grave with generally individual form of burial, but in some cases, double burials are also seen there. It seems that direction was not observed in the burials.
KHAJE ASKAR: A 4TH MILLENNIUM BC CEMETERY IN BAM, SOUTHEASTERN IRAN
Iranica Antiqua, 2016
Due to the exciting discovery of major Bronze Age urban centers in southeastern Iran, such as Shahr e Soukhte, Shahdad and Konar Sandal (Jiroft), most scholarly attention has been given to the 3 rd millennium BC. As a result, the cultures preceding the Bronze Age in particular the 4 th millennium BC have been often neglected. In early 2011, the Iranian Center of Heritage and Tourism Organization (ICHTO) of Kerman Province conducted a rescue excavation at Khaje Askar near the city of Bam, in which several graves and complete funerary vessels were discovered (about 15 graves had been bulldozed previously). As a result of the excavations, a total of 9 graves and 53 funerary goods were uncovered; the burial goods included ceramics, stone and clay beads, stone vessels, clay objects, shells and a unique metal blade. In this article, we state the results of excavations at Khaje Askar cemetery and describe the burials and funerary goods and according to a comparative analysis based on the ceramics of other excavated settlement sites of southeastern Iran and Pakistan such as Tale Iblis, Mahtoutabad, Mehr-garh and Shahi Tump, we argue that Khaje Askar cemetery belongs to the Aliabad culture (Iblis IV) and dates to the 4 th millennium BC.
Preliminary Report on the Cairn Tombs of Kuik & Qaleh Bahadori in the Zahāb Plain, Kermānshāh
HISTORIA I ŚWIAT, 2016
In the summer of 2015, a preliminary visit was carried out by the authors with the goal of identifying and documenting archaeological cemeteries as well as giving a relative chronology of them at two villages of Kuik and Qaleh Bahador i in the Zahāb Plain, located in Sarpol-e Zahāb County in Kermānshāh p rovince of Iran. Numerous tombs were identified in four cemeteries. Mostly they were located in the hillside of mountains. The pile of stones on the ground can be an indicator to assess them. Structurally all tombs are the same. All around the tomb's wall was elevated with different size of stones in several rows; after putting the dead body, the tomb has been covered with three or four cap stones. Then the pile of stones was put on top of it. Nevertheless these cemeteries were been looted by smugglers, still some intact tombs can be seen among them. Unfortunately, no cultural materials were found in these areas except for few potsherds; so this caused some difficulties to date the tombs. The morphology of their structure and comparative study with peripheral regions suggest probable chronology of Iron Age III for the tombs. It is evident that certain results will be achieved on the basis of archaeological excavations.
EXCAVATION OF REZVAN TEPE IN NORTHEASTERN IRAN, AN IRON AGE I-II CEMETERY
C ompared to the other regions of Iran, its northeasthas not received as much attention by archaeologists. This may seem somewhat strange, since, given its favorable geographical conditions and critical geopolitical location, it has been home to important human settlement from the prehistoric period until the present. Among the regions in northern and northHDVWHUQ,UDQZKLFKZHUHVLJQLÀFDQWLQWKH,URQ$JH are Amlash, Khaloraz, Marlik, Talesh and Khorvin. This report concerns what was to a degree a salvage excavation at Tepe Rezvan, one of several Iron-Age hill sites in the Kalpoush region of Semnan Province, located along one of the historic east-west routes of communication. The goal of the study was to establish the structure and history of the site and to excavate in its Iron Age I-II cemetery