The field project at Bishapur is aimed at analyzing in which this urban area such was firstly planned, designed and built, in consideration of the particular: 1) historical importance of the city (built and founded by the Sasanian king Šahpūr I in the 3rd century AD and living at least until the 10th century AD in Islamic period)3; 2) geo-morphological and landscape complexity of the territory where the city is located [a plain, a river (Šahpūr), water sources: Sarāb-e Ardašīr (Sarābšir) at North, Češmeh-ye Sāsān at East and Sarāb-e Dokhtarān at South, the cave (Šahpūr Cave)] in the geographic context of the Kazerun Karstic Aquifer; 3) rich artistic, epigraphic and iconographic documentation distributed inside and outside the city, along the river with six different rock-reliefs [the I, the earliest (celebrating victories of Šapūr I), the II and the III (commemorating the defeat of Valerian), the IV (portraying an Arab embassy to Bahrām II), the V (Dedication of Bahrām I) and the VI (Victory of Šapūr II)], the famous statue of the king Šahpūr I in a cave and the inscription in middle Persian and Parthian on one of the celebrative columns in the city; 4) unique and impressive architectonic and urban evidences among which the castles (Qal‘e-ye Dokhtār, Qal‘e-ye Pesar), the city (Bīšāpūr), where a palace, a religious building interpreted as dedicated to the female Sasanian divinity Anāhīta6, a Mosque and a Madrasa of the early Islamic time have been identified.

Bīšāpūr and its Territory (Fars, Iran)

GENITO, Bruno
2013-01-01

Abstract

The field project at Bishapur is aimed at analyzing in which this urban area such was firstly planned, designed and built, in consideration of the particular: 1) historical importance of the city (built and founded by the Sasanian king Šahpūr I in the 3rd century AD and living at least until the 10th century AD in Islamic period)3; 2) geo-morphological and landscape complexity of the territory where the city is located [a plain, a river (Šahpūr), water sources: Sarāb-e Ardašīr (Sarābšir) at North, Češmeh-ye Sāsān at East and Sarāb-e Dokhtarān at South, the cave (Šahpūr Cave)] in the geographic context of the Kazerun Karstic Aquifer; 3) rich artistic, epigraphic and iconographic documentation distributed inside and outside the city, along the river with six different rock-reliefs [the I, the earliest (celebrating victories of Šapūr I), the II and the III (commemorating the defeat of Valerian), the IV (portraying an Arab embassy to Bahrām II), the V (Dedication of Bahrām I) and the VI (Victory of Šapūr II)], the famous statue of the king Šahpūr I in a cave and the inscription in middle Persian and Parthian on one of the celebrative columns in the city; 4) unique and impressive architectonic and urban evidences among which the castles (Qal‘e-ye Dokhtār, Qal‘e-ye Pesar), the city (Bīšāpūr), where a palace, a religious building interpreted as dedicated to the female Sasanian divinity Anāhīta6, a Mosque and a Madrasa of the early Islamic time have been identified.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11574/128251
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