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Yaghoub Mohammadifar

Yaghoub Mohammadifar

Academic rank: Professor
ORCID:
Education: PhD.
ScopusId: 23489536600
HIndex:
Faculty: Faculty of Art and Architecture
Address: Department of Archaeology, Art and Architecture Faculty, Bu-Ali University, Hamadan, Iran
Phone: 081-34220940

Research

Title
Parthian Burials in the Hamedan City, Western Iran
Type
JournalPaper
Keywords
Iran, Hamedan, burials, Parthian, coffins
Year
2019
Journal Iran
DOI
Researchers Yaghoub Mohammadifar ، Esmail Hemati Azandaryani ، Alireza Dailar ، First-Name Last-Name ، Javad Babapiri

Abstract

The city of Hamedan in western Iran is one of the most important historical cities where various archaeological discoveries can be found in its different parts. The location of Tepe Hegmataneh in the city’s historical texture and its unbreakable bonding has made it possible for archeological activities to reveal some of the hidden aspects of Hamedan’s historical identities. At present, 14 places of Parthian burials have been unearthed from the city and its surroundings. Other than the Sang-e Shir or Stone Lion cemetery that was identified with a systematic archeological excavation, the rest was discovered accidentally during construction activities. The burials in Hamedan are of two types: those with coffins and those without a coffin. The burials lacking coffins are simple (dug in the ground) and pit, which are more related to the Stone Lion cemetery, and the coffin burials, too, are scattered in and around Hamedan. These include clay caskets in the form of a boat, humanoid and rectangular stone coffins. Most of these coffins are empty without any material remains. The graves are usually in the northeast-southwest direction, and the skeletons are laid open arched facing right, left, or straight. The grave coverings are all made of thin stone slabs.